Someday, I hope all of us get handed a shaker. Not the kind that is salt, but a real, honest
to God bright yellow, egg-shaped noise maker.
And I hope when we are given the shaker, that each of us, with great vim
and vigor, will shake with reckless abandon to contribute to the song of life
that swirls around us.
Bright yellow egg-shaped shakers, it appears, are highly
prized items in senior settings. We
discovered this quite by accident while playing music in a small adult family
home. One of the residents, who recently
celebrated her 98th birthday, expressed frustration every time we came because
she could not sing, though she loved music. One day I found at the bottom of my
purse a leftover shaker from band practice, which I handed to her.
Throughout the hour, she experimented with the sound. Basic shaking came first. Then as her confidence grew, so did her repertoire
of sounds until she soon could do not only the first beat, but the subtleties
in between the measures as well. As we
were saying our goodbyes, she remarked, “I can’t sing, but I loved doing
this. I was able to participate.”
Because of this reaction, we began to bring other eggs
shakers to pass out before performances.
And we noticed something unexpected. Sometimes, like our 98 year-old
friend, making rhythm came naturally.
However, other times, the shakers would sit unused until between songs. Watching
from the front I would see listeners pick up the egg and roll it around in
their hands, as if examining it under some kind of microscope. Then experiments would begin in the pause
between songs. A shake here, a roll
there…like explorers in uncharted territory.
For some,however, the shakers became an invitation to boldness. One senior, notable for a sometimes surly
response to the world, became the lead shaker in a large group setting. From her chair at a table, her shaking of the
egg became more complex and rhythmic until it seemed the very movement itself compelled
her out of the chair and across the room to where we stood. Leaning on a support post beside me, nearly
blind and hard of hearing, she stood and sang full volume, her feet, moving in
time to the shaking of the egg in her hand.
The shaker moved her from discontent to bold
leadership. When an old favorite tune
ended, she stood, marched up to us again, and started a new chorus of the song,
leading the room in an acapella reprise of one of her favorite songs. In the end, when we went to greet after the
music was done, she announced, “This was the best day of my life.”
But there is a catch to the shakers. Though we arrive at our senior sing-a-longs
with a certain number, and though we always say we are collecting them, new "owners" are reluctant to give them up. They
get slipped under napkins on the table or into pockets or into purses. We know this is true because as we wander, we
hear the telltale signs of the rattlesnake-like rhythm punctuating the
air. A little like a game of hide and
seek, when we are near, quiet reigns.
But as we move away, we hear the quiet rattling dares of captive eggs in
the hands of their kidnappers.
After seeing this pattern develop, it occurs to me that apparently,
that egg-shaped shaker is not just a noise maker. It is a symbol of what happens when people gather to relive memories through music and create new ones through participation. It
is a symbol of curiosity about things that are new. And it is a symbol of what a person can still do well when other abilities are gone.
Someday, good Lord willing, it will be me sitting in that
dining room while someone is singing the songs of my youth… Crosby Stills and
Nash, Simon and Garfunkel, the Beatles, and, yes, Arrowsmith.
And I hope when they do, that someone hands me a shaker. Something small that fits in the palm of my
hand and is brightly colored so I don’t lose it through blurred vision. Something that gives me permission to be part
of the music and not just a silent subject.
And when they do, I want to shake it with every fiber of what’s
left of my body. I want to shake it as
my primal victory cry to the world that I made it…I sang my song…I lived my
life. And no matter what lies ahead, I
want to shake with all of my being to announce to the world that I will live, to
my last breath, not on the sidelines of life, but celebrating the life song I
was given with a joyful noise.