Quote:
Originally Posted by SilentKnight
Point taken.
I come from a long lineage of military ancestors - so I just naturally attach significant value to heritage items like that. I guess everyone's different as you say.
|
I'm the same way as you. Certain things from my family have a meaning to me and I hold a value to them.
A good example is when my grandma on my mom's side died my aunt got her china. It wasn't anything real special or expensive, but they grew up using it so it meant something to my mom, her sister and two brothers. A few years later my aunt took some of the plates and had clocks made out of them. They are pretty cool looking. She gave one to my mom and each of my two uncles. It is one of my mom's prized possessions. When she dies my brother or I will take it because it also means a lot to us. A handful of years back when one of my uncles died his two kids were cleaning out his place. They knew what the item was and instead of even asking if anyone wanted it, they just threw it in the trash.
There is a woman that works at a grocery store I shop at regularly. She is likely in her late 70's and just works there part time as something to do. She is very nice. One day she and I were talking about my buying storage units and she told me about something she and her husband have. Her husband is older then her and was an 18-year-old communications operator at the end of WW2. He was stationed in Hawaii at the time. When the word came down from the pentagon that a cease fire with Japan had been reached and the war was over they sent communications via teletype to their four main hubs and those hubs then relayed the information via radio etc to other bases, ships, communications outposts etc. He was stationed at one of those hubs and was working when the teletype came across. After they did their job and relayed the info, he rolled the teletype up and kept it. He still has it. It is one of only four originals from that day and he has no idea what became of the others so it may be the only surviving original. I have no idea if it is valuable or not (I assume it is), but it means a lot to him and she is worried their kids will throw it out because they don't care about it. I told her to take it to someone to have it appraised and even if it has no real value if her kids don't want it arrange for it to be donated. Any number of museums would love to have it.