Pearl earrings. They came in a red box with gold lettering I unwrapped in the restaurant parking lot on a humid evening before my college graduation where we milled around, waiting for our table.
My father's gift.
One year later, in the same place, I put them on; my father walked me down the aisle to marry a good man. Wrapped in a princess dress. Towing a six-foot train.
My mother's dream.
They stayed in my jewelry box for one decade plus five. Years while I played hide and seek with depressions and wondered who that person in the mirror was.
My straight persona.
When I think of that now I remember-- pearls are made of pain. The substance the oyster makes to coat the grit, or whatever makes its way into the shell.
The process transforming the ugly, raw, pain into the lustre of something priceless.