Motivational Story: Record Faith

I couldn’t believe what I had just heard! Hands cupped around his mouth
so his words wouldn’t travel to the ears of eavesdroppers, and flipping
his head from shoulder to shoulder to ensure no one would be privy to
his divulgence, David repeated his whispered announcement, “I have $500
saved.”

This wouldn’t be such a shock if it weren’t for the fact that David is a
mentally challenged adult. Where on earth did he get that kind of money?
He pulled me aside and answered my unspoken question, so excited that
his words tumbled pell mell of his lips, faster and faster until I could
barely keep up with his stream of consciousness. Eventually I got the
gist of his monologue.

When he was a little boy he had made weekly trips with his mother to a
local department store. He was mesmerized by the window displays and
eagerly stood with his nose pressed against the glass until his breath
clouded his view. Then came the display which would change his and many
other lives 30 years later. It was a Victor Five Victrola, the kind that
needed to be wound by hand before placing the needle on the record, the
machine which bore the symbol of a black and white dog, ear cocked to
its side. Not missing a beat, he expounded on a history lesson about
Columbia Records and their music machines, information gleaned from his
trips to the library. There was nothing he didn’t know about that golden
age of music.

His mother died, and he eventually was able to live independently,
supervised by an agency. It was through the agency that he obtained
work, cleaning toilets of public facilities five nights a week. Every
week he squirreled away his paycheck, never forgetting the Victrola. He
was on a mission to find and buy a phonograph like the one he had once
admired through plate glass.

Visibly exhausted from revealing his secret, David paused long enough to
pull out a tattered Polaroid photo from his back pocket. He lovingly
waved it in front of my eyes and proclaimed, “There it is! Victor Five!”
He had found the object of his desire exhibited at a museum and had been
faithfully visiting it every chance he could get. The colored piece of
paper was a constant reminder of his goal.

I tucked away his confession into the back of my mind, only to dust it
off when I wandered into one of my favorite antique shops a few months
later. In the back of the shop, tacked in the corner of a bulletin board
over the owner’s desk, was a Polaroid picture just like the one David
had shown me. I hastily inquired as to why it was there and unknowingly
opened the door to a personal witnessing of the triumph of the human
spirit.

David had gone to every antique shop in the city and had left a picture
of his beloved Victrola with each of the shopkeepers. If any one of them
was to come across a Victor Five, he wanted to buy it. Rain or shine,
the owner at Century Antiques counted on David to stop at his Waterbury
store at least twice a month to check on the success of his quest. He
hadn’t put any effort into looking because he honestly didn’t think
David had the money for such an expensive piece. After all, David was,
well, not “like us.” Didn’t he know that it was next to impossible to
find that particular antique? But, being a kindhearted soul, the dealer
had taken a liking to David and posted his Polaroid.

I commanded him to take the mission seriously. If David was short the
required amount for the purchase, I knew it wouldn’t be impossible to
find enough people to chip in to make up the difference. There was a
core group of people in our church who were fond of him and would dig
into their pockets to help him reach his goal.

It took some time, but the antique shop came through with flying colors.
For months, the owner’s son, Chip, had made phone call after phone call
in the tri-state area and eventually struck it rich. A Victor Five had
been found! He personally drove to the source, brought the machine back
to his shop, and called me with the news. “I can’t believe it. It’s a
miracle that I found one in such beautiful shape, or that I found one at
all!”

The cost to David? Not a nickel more than what it had cost the dealer.

The profit for the dealer? The pure joy of seeing David when he flung
open the door to the shop, stopping speechless in front of the
phonograph, clapping his hands together in prayer, and looking up to
heaven and saying, “Thank you, thank you for my Victor Five.”

So, if you drive down the street past David’s apartment, you will most
probably hear music. David will be playing his Victrola, and the world
will be a little nicer.

Irene Budzynski

Irene Budzynski is a registered nurse in New England whose writing
reflects the impact of special people in her personal and professional
life. Her goal is to share the beauty of the quiet heroes among us whose
names never appear in newspaper headlines. Irene can be contacted at:
irene_budd@yahoo.com

2 Comments so far

  1. kenneth daniels on September 30th, 2007

    A touching story of faith ,perseverence,hard work
    & never letting go of your dreams. How wonderful it was for the the people recieved so much in being involved in being part of David’s dream coming true

  2. [...] Universal Maximus wrote an interesting post today on Motivational Story: Record FaithHere’s a quick excerpt…so his words wouldn’t travel to the ears of … an agency. It was through the agency that he … Irene Budzynski is a registered nurse in [...]

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