The Man Who Walked with Purpose
A story about legacy, identity, and the quiet dignity of a man who never stopped moving forward. There is a photograph on the mantelpiece in my grandmother's house in rural Ohio. It is black and white, slightly faded at the edges, and it shows my grandfather standing at the doorway of his hardware store — the one he opened with his brother in 1967 and ran for thirty-one years. He is not looking at the camera. He is looking down the street, one hand resting on the wooden door frame, the other curled lightly around the handle of a walking cane. He passed before I could ask him about that cane. I spent years wondering about it. Not because it was rare or obviously valuable, but because of the way he held it — not like someone who needed it to walk, but like someone who simply belonged with it. Like it was part of the sentence that was him. The Things Men Carry There is a quiet language in the things men carry through their lives. Not the loud things — not the trophies on th...