WHY MY NEIGHBOR WANTED CHAIRS WITH HOLES—AND WHAT I LEARNED TOO LATEMy elderly neighbor, Mr. Dalen, once asked me to buy him two or three of those plastic lawn chairs with holes in the middle. I couldn’t find that exact kind, so I grabbed regular white patio chairs instead. When I dropped them off, he thanked me politely—but he stared at them like they didn’t belong. I brushed it off at first. Who gets emotional over a plastic chair? Still, something about his quiet disappointment lingered with me. The next day, I offered to return them and keep looking. That’s when he finally explained. He and his late wife, Nadine, used to sit outside in the rain with coffee, listening to the drops fall. The chairs with holes let the water drain through so they’d never sit in puddles. “These ones’ll pool,” he said gently, nodding at the solid seats. It wasn’t about comfort. It was about memory. About preserving a ritual that made him feel close to her, even years after she’d passed. A few days later, I noticed his lawn unmowed and his mailbox overflowing. After a wellness check, we learned he’d fainted from dehydration and exhaustion. He was okay, but while he recovered, I drove all over searching for those exact chairs. I finally found them at a small roadside hardware store two counties away. When I set them up in his yard and he came home from the hospital, he stopped in his tracks. He didn’t speak—just sat down as a light drizzle began, eyes closed, as if she were right there beside him. We shared coffee in the quiet rain that afternoon, and I understood something important: it was never about plastic chairs. It was about holding onto small things when you’ve lost something enormous. Those holes weren’t design features—they were a doorway to a memory. We all carry love in ordinary objects. Sometimes it’s a song or a scent. And sometimes, it’s a simple chair that lets the rain fall through.

My elderly neighbor, Mr. Dalen, once asked me to buy him two or three of those plastic lawn chairs with holes in the middle. I couldn’t find that exact kind, so I grabbed regular white patio chairs instead. When I dropped them off, he thanked me politely—but he stared at them like they didn’t belong. I brushed it off at first. Who gets emotional over a plastic chair? Still, something about his quiet disappointment lingered with me.

The next day, I offered to return them and keep looking. That’s when he finally explained. He and his late wife, Nadine, used to sit outside in the rain with coffee, listening to the drops fall. The chairs with holes let the water drain through so they’d never sit in puddles. “These ones’ll pool,” he said gently, nodding at the solid seats. It wasn’t about comfort. It was about memory. About preserving a ritual that made him feel close to her, even years after she’d passed.

A few days later, I noticed his lawn unmowed and his mailbox overflowing. After a wellness check, we learned he’d fainted from dehydration and exhaustion. He was okay, but while he recovered, I drove all over searching for those exact chairs. I finally found them at a small roadside hardware store two counties away. When I set them up in his yard and he came home from the hospital, he stopped in his tracks. He didn’t speak—just sat down as a light drizzle began, eyes closed, as if she were right there beside him.

We shared coffee in the quiet rain that afternoon, and I understood something important: it was never about plastic chairs. It was about holding onto small things when you’ve lost something enormous. Those holes weren’t design features—they were a doorway to a memory. We all carry love in ordinary objects. Sometimes it’s a song or a scent. And sometimes, it’s a simple chair that lets the rain fall through.

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