My wife
and I enjoyed a vacation in California a full thirty years ago. (It is suddenly
startling to think three decades have come and gone since that trip). We
visited Monterey, San Francisco, Muir Woods, Yosemite National Park, and
Sonora.
We passed
through Sonora at lunchtime, and as a result, Jean and I decided we’d try the
local Shoney’s buffet restaurant. As we walked in we noticed that the
waitresses were outfitted in light blue, long-sleeved blouses, and dark green
floor-length dresses; so much like the character in, “Anne of Green Gables.”
As we sat
down, our waitress stepped up to our table, and it seemed to me that things
were getting “curiouser and curioser.” For our twenty-some year old server,
whom we quickly learned was named, “Jamie,” (not sure if we ever got a last
name) was a close doppelganger for
Megan Follows, the actress who portrayed Anne in that popular television
series.
Of
course, we inquired whether anyone had ever called the similarity to her
attention. And she responded with a smile and a polite, “Well, not today,” and
proceeded to take our orders. Having finished our meals, we left a generous tip
for our momentary friend, walked out the door, got in our car and drove away.
I suppose
we had driven a couple of miles when I looked at Jean and said,
“This
might seem weird, but I’d like to go back and get a picture of Jamie. She looks
so much like that television character, and it would be another nice memory of
our trip.”
With
this, my wife said she had been thinking much the same thing, and so I turned
the car around and we went back to Shoney’s. Having arrived there, we went in,
and explained to Jamie that we’d love to have a photo of her as a momento of
our trip. She quickly acquiesced, suggested we walk out on the unenclosed front
porch, and smiled for the picture. And with that, we thanked her, bid her
farewell, and we were off.
In the
intervening decades, I can’t begin to tell you how often we have reminisced
about our trip, and more often than not referred to the now, almost 50 year
old Jamie, more than any other person or
place.
“I wonder
how she’s been doing?” (and) “Perhaps she’s married now.” (and) “I wonder how
long she worked at that restaurant.” (and) “I wonder if she remembers us the
way we remember her?”
While it
is doubtful we will ever see our momentary acquaintance again in this life, we
never cease to think of her, refer to her as a sort of long lost friend, and
even pray for her. Oddly enough, she’s just never all that far from our minds.
Goodnight
Jamie. Where ever you are.
By William McDonald, PhD. Excerpt from (Mc)Donald's Daily Diary. Vol. 20. Copyright pending
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