Remember art class in the big room with spray painted concrete ground where you were given a tiny mosaic square and asked to recreate it on a much larger piece of canvas when you knew full well you weren't an artist and you never would be? You spent the time mixing blue and white acrylic paint together on a small piece of a former gallon of milk, adding and adding until there was more than you would need but the color matched perfectly and of that you were proud.
Now you're older and you know a bit more about hue and saturation and how difficult it can be, working with imprecise mediums, to do that, to make something to fit a very precise set of guidelines with no missteps, no miscalculations, no question as to its perfection. You wonder if the color really did match back then, or if you are remembering something that never really happened, if you wanted it bad enough that it changed your recollection.
That day, everyone's large square canvas pieces went together into designated spaces on the wall to make a composite image and all the blues were different shades and that made you frustrated and nervous and disappointed in the other third graders sitting around in a circle on wobbling stools wearing dad's old dress shirts as smocks and throwing brushes at each other and giggling as eight-year-olds do. You stared at the tidal wave on the wall made up of all these disparate pieces and you told yourself that you'd notice when things matched as though they were meant, as though they were destined and divine.
You see the waves lapping at the beach as we stare out at the vast Pacific. We stand on the shore and you tell me that my eyes match perfectly the colors of the Sitka spruces reaching their arms out wide behind me. Your flannel shirt matches the gray November sky. It took all the way to Oregon until it happened again, but you keep your promise to yourself.
You notice the matching colors. You smile to yourself and look down at me. You grab my hand and pull me closer.