Thursday, March 15, 2007

Crystal cave

It was a pleasant evening in old Charleston's historic district, and we were all walking in the market area. The city in recent years has come alive with nightlife. People were out in droves, gawking at the sights, dining in restaurants, popping in and out of gift and souvenir shops, stopping for dessert and ice cream, window shopping, taking in the scene. So were we: my brother and I were accompanying my sister and my niece and nephew visiting from the Seattle area. It is rare and a special time indeed when all three of us siblings are together for an outing.

Our goal was a curious and very busy shop in the market that my nephew likes go to to every time he comes to Charleston...It's called Black Market Rock and Mineral Shop, I believe. What an interesting place. What a loaded name... Lots and lots of rocks and rock-made gifts and objects of curiosity. Imports. There are boxes of rocks and all sorts of eclectic gifts. Stuff you've never seen before. Like I say, it was packed with people. Curiosity, I guess, is part of it. Novelty. Never know what you'll find in a place like that.

I was never a rockhound. I always liked those little open box sets with all the main types of stones and minerals represented. You probably remember them. They always contained pretty quartzes and crystals and fools gold...and this and that. I can't remember the details. Fool's gold always intrigued me, though, for both symbolic and literal reasons. But it's been years since I even looked at rocks much.

So I was wandering around the store, picking up and examining for some time bits of polished petrified wood, which I find quite amazing and beautiful. Ever since i visited Petrified Forest National Park in Arizona years ago, I have never forgotten how beautiful those rocks are. I was looking for just the right pattern in those little pieces of wood turned to rock. Special shapes and colors. Piece after piece. Nothing really struck me as too exceptional, aside from the extraordinary fact that what I was holding was once part of ancient trees. Mind-boggling. But I was looking for something I didn't find on that table.

But then at the next display shelf, the agates were arrayed before me, beaufiul and polished agates. Lots of spectacular colors -- purples and crimson and lavenders. Their shiny surfaces gleamed in the store's special lighting . I was absorbed in these agates, not knowing too much about them, but intrigued.

Then, I saw what I later discovered were geodes. Ordinary round rocks, incredibly hard, but cut in two and hollow with crystals inside. After the initial shock of seeing something so incredibly beautiful and strange, and which triggered long-ago memories of looking at these types of rocks when I was a child, I knew that one of them would be coming home with me that night.


Sure enough. There is was. It was different from the others. I peered into the narrow opening and there beheld a miniature cavern, the roof and sides of which were covered with the most delicate and sparkling crystals. They glittered in the light when I later used my flashlight to illumine the interior.

My nephew and the others were not too impressed with my purchase. Or they didn't seem to be anyway.

"It's a magic cave. It opens into another world," I said to the 9-year-old boy, wondering what his reaction to my adult foolishness would be.

"Yeah, right," he replied.

Well, think what you want, I said to myself, amused that one so young would not appreciate what I had just said and discovered.

But what on earth was I t alking about? It's not such a mystery.

It's 4 am as I write this, and I am staring at the opening to my geode's little cavern. Where is my flashlight and magnifying glass? I think I'll step inside my crystal cave tonight.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I can't help but feel a little sorry for the child who doesn't find magic in the beauty of crystal formations. I know exactly what you mean by the delight in holding and seeing an Aladdin's cave of treasure in your hand.

Wonderful post.

Anonymous said...

I can' t but agree.I often wanted to compose in my site something like that but I guess you' r faster.
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