The Luck of Picking Up Pennies
It had been a long day full of sunshine, sweat, and shoes soaked from the rapids of a raging theme park river. The boys were 20 minutes away from passing out with bellies full of pizza and the constant construction of lifelong memories being built inside their heads. We had said goodbyes to friends, taken last photos of the wondrous everything, and walked out of gates that are better rushed into. There was nothing left but a tram ride and the taking of it.
We walked across the bricks of the courtyard until we reached the one that we had purchased the week that Zane was born. That was over six years ago. It still rests where it always has, and until progress takes it away, always will. It is a tribute to trips taken, and it will one day serve as a memorial to the trips we had, our names etched beneath the feet of pending grandchildren and those that follow, but today it a big dot on the map of our existence announcing, “YOU ARE HERE,” and our happiness is greatly implied.
The man was old by most standards, though he seemed quite spry, and the twinkle in his eyes was as soothing as it was contagious. He stood beside Zane who was kneeling on his bare, tan knees in a sea of similar stones — an expanding forest of cement stumps with names carved upon them by those in various states of returning, and those that may never come again. The old man stood and watched with a smile both knowing and amused, and from time to time he glanced to me, my wife, and our older son, Atticus, who was watching Zane just as intently but twice as oblivious.
Finally, Zane looked up and noticed the man dressed in white as he stood leaning on a dustpan with a broom pressed tightly against it.
“Is that yours?” asked the man as he nodded toward the brick.
“Yes,” said Zane, and then he looked at the names once more. He traced each letter with his finger as he read them aloud.
“You know,” said the man, “they say that everything at Disneyland is magical.”
The boys didn’t move. My wife only nodded.
“These grounds are part of Disneyland. That means your brick is magic.”
We thought about that for a moment. Then the old man took something small and bright from the apron at his waist and held it between his thumb and forefinger for all to see.
“I found this new penny on these grounds. Right here. That makes it part of Disneyland, too. That makes it very magic.”
He bent down and held the penny in front of my son.
“Take a little bit of the magic home with you,” he said.
He handed the penny to Zane who took it without hesitation, that in itself a rarity for a little boy that always turns sheepish at the word of a stranger. We sat there for a minute and watched him roll the penny around with his fingers before squeezing it tight in his palm and burying it at the bottom of his pocket.
“Thank you,” he whispered.
The old man nodded and swept at something that only he could see.
We walked away a little lighter, somehow fresher and somewhat new. It never dawned on any of us to turn back around.
I suspect that if we had the old man would not have been there. Magic is full of tricks like that, and there is plenty enough for everyone.












That’s the kind of magic you just don’t get here in your old stomping grounds of the great soggy northwest.
daniel´s last [type] ..Ciaran’s 5th Birthday Celebration
I found a nickel in a Starbucks parking lot. That’s something.
Most excellent post.
That man was totally Dick Van Dyke, wasn’t he?
Didactic Pirate´s last [type] ..To The Reader Who Emailed First
That would have been supercalifragilisticexpialidocious!
Though I would have been happy as a kid to find a quarter, of course, there’s something about the warm brilliance of a penny that still touches something in me, despite how relatively worthless they are. I mean, there must be a reason we call them “lucky pennies,” but we don’t bestow any similar title on other lost currency. Pennies ARE magic. Little golden drops fallen from the sun, and hardened into perfect shining circles.
neal´s last [type] ..On being home alone
The delivery helped.
No doubt. I’ve got two mutually exclusive desires as I age: become a crotchety old man who sits on his porch with a shotgun, OR fill my pockets with pennies and help children to see the magic in our world. Ah, competing interests.
neal´s last [type] ..On being home alone
Both have appeal. Have you considered a compromise? Spend most of your time with the pennies and the kindness, and once a week you can have Get Off My Lawn Tuesdays or some such.
Or I could bean people with pennies, everyday.
neal´s last [type] ..On being home alone
Excellent, as usual. That’s about all I have to say about that.
Thank you, that’s enough!
Beautiful write and I love how that brick is aging so gracefully.
(Several years back I heard the expression, “pennies from heaven” and was told what it meant. Ever since, I’ve picked up every coin or bill I find and put them in their very own jar. While I don’t believe in heaven, I do believe in magic. Whenever that jar is full I make a donation to a cause close to my heart. From there, the magic happens as good works continue.)
Cheryl´s last [type] ..Why? Your guess is as good as mine.
I’m with you. I’ll take magic any day of the week.
What an amazing little story.
Holmes´s last [type] ..The Ewings Came In The Mail
Thanks, Holmes!
A silver dollar would have really been magical.
Great story Whit. Entertaining as always.
seattledad´s last [type] ..A Sublime Parenting Moment
Or a fifty.
Holy Crap, Whit!! This is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever read. Truly.
Wow, that’s high praise indeed (assuming this isn’t the first thing you have ever read!).