Digging a hole to plant some purslane, I found a penny, old, worn, thin, dirty. I rinsed it in the kitchen sink and squinted, then took a picture I could enlarge. 1982. I was 18. Graduated from high school that May, then off to college in August. Feeling grown, feeling alone, feeling hopeful. The world ahead bloated with possibility.
If I hadn’t planted the purslane, the penny might have remained buried for years or longer, much longer, until it aged into a relic from a time no one would remember.
Like this time will one day be – the demons and the dangers and the demagogues of this era rubbed thin and rusted and hard to even read. Buried. Spent. Their bloated possibilities nothing but history, nothing but the dirt-caked bones of a time no one will know.