Beanie Babies were all the rage in the '90's. They were the hottest thing to collect and everyone was collecting them.
Our neighborhood toy store received a new shipment every few days and people lined up outside the door. No one waited until they were unpacked. The box was placed on the floor like a dog bowl as grown women pawed through it. Once I bumped knees with a woman and looked up to see an NBC News anchor on the floor with the rest of us.
I don't even remember the appeal of these small stuffed creatures, but all the kids wanted them. There were even books explaining which ones would be worth the most money one day.
I was counting on selling the Princess Diana and the 2000 Commemorative one for my daughter's college tuition.
Beanie Babies fizzled out eventually. But not before I had spent a small fortune on them.
That was the year my mother died. When I married my husband seven years earlier she never spoke to me again. If you marry a black man I will never speak to you again. She kept her word.
It was strange to learn that I was included in her will. It seemed as though it was an afterthought. As if she hadn't expected to give it. I certainly hadn't expected to receive it.
I set out to spend every penny of that money on my daughter. On things I thought a good grandmother would buy for her beloved granddaughter.
My mother had never acknowledged my daughter's existence. So I did what any mother in need of a good therapist would do. I used the money to buy Beanie Babies. Lots of them. Too many to count.
Because a good grandmother would have bought these things.
I was crazy with grief and anger. It was one thing to disown me but to not acknowledge my child was more than I could bear.
I dealt with the loss, the grief, and especially the anger by purchasing every Beanie Baby that company produced.
My daughter had them all. They are stuffed in bags in her closet. We discovered that the "Princess Diana " and the "2000 Commemorative" ones were not going to pay for a Happy Meal at McDonalds let alone college tuition.
Once my daughter even asked why she had so many of them. Because your mother is crazed with grief and the only sane solution is to collect Beanie Babies. Silly girl.
It was a sad time. I could not wrap my mind around a grandmother who would not be a grandmother. I could not wrap my mind around this beautiful child being rejected by someone who never met her.
I stormed that toy store on a daily basis. I sat on the floor rummaging through the just opened boxes, searching for the newest ones. It became a compulsion of enormous proportions.
I was not just buying Beanie Babies. I was buying love.
Here's love from your grandmother, I would think as the cash register rung up each purchase.
What my daughter didn't have, she didn't miss. I felt it all for her. I cried the tears and screamed in the pillow and bought the damn Beanie Babies.
I wanted her to have it so bad. The doting grandma, the extended family. People who loved her madly besides her dad and me.
In the end, none of it mattered. My daughter grew up knowing that she was loved more than anything in the world by her parents. She didn't need a grandmother when it got right down to it.
I was the one who needed it. I needed my mother to love me and to love my daughter. I was the one who set out to fill up the holes in my life with Beanie Babies. And I spent my inheritance trying.


Salon.com
Comments
Another great post--for me though, it's legos:)
Here's the thing..Hallmark Gold Crown stores carried them for so long...and those little stores with the one or two little ole ladies working them would getr TRAMPLED when the doors opened for the day on a new shipement
Your title grabbed me..and your writing still does.
Rated
I set out to spend every penny of that money on my daughter. On things I thought a good grandmother would buy for her beloved granddaughter.
Damn, Joan!!! Girlfriend. This is great writing! Turn this one into a short story. This is so beautiful and rich. Honestly, I got your e-mail and I was all "Oh Bore, a stupid Beanie Babie Story... who's the gross person who's writing that boring stuff!" And then I saw it was you who had sent it and I was like "OK, I'll go see what she came up with."
So I had very low expectations but I like you and so I was willing to give this post a try.
This is great, great stuff.... Turn it into a short story, please!
Wonderful, Joan. I love it. r.
p.s. I think you might like the poem I posted called Red Tulips.
xoxoxoxo
Exquisitely written- Rated.
This is a powerful admission... Thanks for defining what many can't define for themselves...
@Eden, it makes me so sad to hear about your mother and your sons. Cliche as it may sound, it is their loss.xo
@JD, yes! We trampled the employees which is why they just shoved the box on the floor and let us fight it out amongst ourselves.
@Kathy, yes, but do you have the Princess Diana?
@littlewillie, my friends with younger kids tell me webkinz are all the rage.
@Sheila, thanks for stopping by.
@Patty, "Who's the gross person who is writing that boring stuff?" That is hilarious.
@FusunA, donating them is a very good idea. Thank you for coming by.
@askme, thank you for reading and commenting.
@LadyMiko, I still love troll dolls.
@mypsyche, thank you for coming over.
@Aunt Mabel, I think I was too old for smurfs, and my daughter was too young. We just missed them entirely.
i knew a mother/daughter relationship should and could be different. and i proved it with my caitlin. you did too. we did good, friend. love to you.
There was a great opportunity in a firm that traded energy, called Enron.
Some innovative banks, like Washington Mutual.
And of course, investment banks are money machines, so an investment in, say, Bear Sterns or Lehman.
Or a more conservative investment Like Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac or AIG. All AAA.
But beanie babies?
PS - Somebody robbed our local McDonalds once to steal all the Beanie Babies for the Happy Meals ... devastating. I still have a pink flamingo ;)
You've given me tears this morning, but they're a mix of both sadness and happiness - the latter for my privilege to be reading someone as brave and loving as you. (r)
I am so sorry you missed out on this. It was my grandmother who took care of me when my mother had to go to work. It is my mother who takes care of my children when I am the one who does it now. I know what you needed and wanted for your daughter and it angers me that you did not have it.
As an aside, I never got the Beanie Babies craze. But then, maybe that's because I'm wicked allergic. (Maybe you can sell them on eBay 8-).
r
Being a grandmother is one of the best things that ever happened to me. I can't say what it means to anyone else. Mostly, I'd say something got in the way and no one expects to die without resolving a problem. No one wants to be that person, but sometimes they are because reality and our personal expectations just don't line up all the time.
One way I know myself is as Aidan & Eric's Grama. We spend almost every cent we have for vacations visiting our grandsons, even though there are lots of other places we'd like to travel. We've made our reservations for Portland for Spring break at the end of this month.
We drive down across Washington North to South to get him, & bring him to visit our home. Then we have as much fun as we can while he's here and take him back in time to return to school. His parents live in a big public transit city and don't own a car, so they have passed the transportation challenge on to us by default. They do give us gas money sometimes. We stay in a hotel when we take him back because their home isn't really comfortable for an extra married couple, let alone older folks. But this is the way it is and we have adapted our lives to it because we think that one of the most important things we can do with our lives is to love our grandchildren as fully and completely as we can.
I never bought the Beanie Babies because that isn't what boys want. Legos, omigod, does Aidan have the stacks and stacks of Legos and Matchbox cars. Both boys love music, so we have gotten them lots of small musical instruments to encourage their creativity. Last birthdays, good digital cameras.
I'm sorry about your mom, but you seem to have turned out wonderfully to the benefit of your own daughter. That's a strong and loving way to live your life and if it takes Beanie Babies to find your way to it, well good on you for finding a way.
Thanks, writer Joan. Kisses,
Marcela
Loved it ,and I am sure your beanie babies are grateful to be under your care.
Not that I want it for myself or anything. Just asking.
Unless it's in the original box.
However, I have found that those things are actually useful. We occasionaly have beanie wars (they have just enough heft to throw, but not enough to cause pain) which is great laughter therapy and since they are stored in our living room coffee table, all young children who come to visit have interesting things to play with (our collection is mostly comprised of unusual animals and reptiles.)
This is so powerful...heart wrenching...I'm glad you're on the other side of it. Much love to you.
Steph
@Nick, not much of a financial planner, am I?
@Kathy, cool!
@froggy, Thanks for reading. I was the mother I'd wished I'd had too.
@Reader, many thanks for your kind words.
1_Irritated_Mother, Thank you for reading. I am not at all surprised about the Beanie Baby robbery.
@AHP, At first it seemed I was giving her what she was missing. She really wasn't missing anything.
@Sophieh, I appreciate you stopping by.
@Ann, we try to fill those holes, its true. Some ways just look a lot stranger than others.
...now about that Brooklyn Bridge I would like to sell you...
rated, of course
Then we saw the actual beanie babies.
"Oh my god, M, look! Isn't this puppy so cute?"
"Oh, oh, Lainey, there's a shark! Little Johnny loves sharks! I have to get this for him."
"Hey, let's get a bunch for their Easter baskets!"
And that, as they say, was the beginning of the end. I, too, have bags of beanie babies upstairs.
"I could not wrap my mind around a grandmother who would not be a grandmother."
It really is amazing the depths one will go to not let the love in...thank God you overcame anyway Joan...and it shines through and through in all that you write. Truly.
This is so well written. The sadness is never cloying; the perspective of hard-won self-knowledge comes through. But you don't lose any of that remembered edge of grief/love/anger either. Great job.
@Craze Czar, I wanted that one, but that NBC anchorwoman yanked it out of my hand.
@Kyle, I'm glad you came by and glad to hear you were part of the BB madness.
@v. I always appreciate your comments so much. but who ever heard of a BB allergy?
@Karin, many thanks for reading.
@Dr.S.F., thank you so much for such an insightful comment. Aidan and Eric are lucky boys.
@Cartouche, "somewhere in the ether" is an amazing image. If they could read it, would they care anymore now than they did when alive? I'd love to think so...
@Marcela, you have missed nothing by not knowing about Beanie Babies. I am going to look for Anne Lamott's writing right now. Thank you.
@Fernsy,your comments always hit the target. It is true, I have no prison record or track marks. But during that dark period, it was close.
@Owl, Thank you for reading. i really appreciate you.
@Bell, Ha! Beanies make a tad more sense than mother abandonment but not much. I love the comment and you.
@Con, Let's check the official Beanie Baby guide. Assuming there still is one.
@Scanner, it was absurd to think we'd be rich off of them one day!
@Caroline, I'm glad you saw funny in this too.
@writeaway, I'm so glad to hear that your BB collection has been put to good use.
@Jill, Thank you so much for always coming by.
@Steph, I really appreciate that!
@skel, self discovery is so painful.And sometimes a little bit funny.
@Spin Dr., thanks so much for reading.
@Steve, you make me laugh, Sweetie!
@Adam, I appreciate that so much.
@WAH, *blushes* and thanks profusely...
@Lainey, See? Don't be hating on the Beanies. They really were adorable.
@Sparking,I love the way you said this. I think you are just an incredible person.
@Blue, OF COURSE there is a dolphin BB. Let me check my closet for you. thank you for such kind words...
About the Beanie Babies - I have a closet-full myself from when my oldest (ok, I'll admit it: and me) was into them. When our kids are in their 30s and nostalgic for their childhoods, the Beanies will probably be in demand again.
@Lisa, when the Beanies come back I'll be ready!
@Robin, you did the perfect thing with the money.
@Brown Eyed Girl, I never thought about the pre-owned germs.
@toddpony, thank you for such kind words.
@Ll2, I think we all looked nuts.
@susanmihalic, there are always holes to fill. thank you for reading.
Having spent my whole life wishing for a mother's love, I know exactly how you feel. When my mom passed away last November, the only thing I mourned was not having a mother to mourn. At twenty five, I decided that no one was responsible for my happiness but me, and shortly thereafter I met my husband and found the love I had been craving. I realized that my mother had denied herself so much joy not knowing me or my children. Her loss - not mine. I'm so glad you found the real love of your life.
R
The bear with the peace sign is my favourite :)
@Donna, I know how good you must feel to be the mother you wished you always had. I know I do too.
@Lea, I have a feeling you are a wonderful grandmother.
@Scarlett, yep, got that one too.