My old neighbor, Mr. Dalen, once asked me to buy him a few plastic chairs — specifically the kind with holes in the middle. I couldn’t find that exact type, so I brought home regular patio chairs instead. He thanked me, but the look in his eyes told me something was wrong. I brushed it off at first. After all, they were just chairs… right? But Mr. Dalen wasn’t someone who fussed over nothing. He was in his late 70s, gentle, quiet, always wearing the same tan fishing hat.
He’d lived alone since his wife, Nadine, passed five years earlier. I often helped him with small chores, so his odd reaction stayed with me. The next day, when I offered to return the chairs and look for the other kind, he hesitated before saying, “You know what those chairs are for?” I guessed wrong. He answered softly: “Rain.”
He told me how he and Nadine used to sit outside under an umbrella, listening to the rain. The chairs with holes drained the water so they never sat in puddles. “These ones’ll pool,” he said. “Not the same.” A few days later, I realized something was off — unmowed grass, overflowing mailbox. A wellness check revealed he’d collapsed from dehydration. While he recovered, I searched everywhere until I found the exact chairs he wanted.
When he returned home and saw them set up, he sat down, closed his eyes, and let the light drizzle fall through the holes. “Black coffee?” he murmured — just like Nadine used to make. In that moment I understood: it was never about the chairs. It was about holding onto the small pieces of someone you’ve lost. Sometimes memories live in the simplest things — even a plastic chair with a hole in the middle.