My grandparents are gone, the property’s sold, but the elephant abides.
In the 70s, my grandparents owned Taylors Furniture and Gifts, a small shop in a two-story building my grandfather built. Huge windows faced the highway. In good weather, Nana lined up rockers and swings out front.
I recently found a business card touting their Gifts, Wicker & Rattan Furniture, Rockers, Ladderback Chairs, Barrels, West Virginia Glass, and unspecified “Mexican Items.”
Mostly I remember the store through Nana’s left-behind collection of photographs and newspaper clippings.
And the artifacts (think wicker monkeys and Fostoria glass) that still circulate in the family.
And the elephant.
Papa Taylor bought a pink elephant statue in Michigan, an animal nearly ten feet high to the top of his regal fiberglass head. Papa brought it back to West Virginia and parked it in the small square of lawn in front of the store. He faced that elephant toward U.S. Route 60, a busy two-lane then that’s swelled to four plus a turning lane now. The animal’s uplifted trunk curls behind him, as if to spray his dusty back, his riders, or the store with imaginary water.
Papa gambled that such an unexpected creature would make people stop for a photo, and then stick around to buy a fetching coffee table or a trash can shaped like a frog.The pink elephant is the spirit animal of that stretch of highway lined with grocery stores, car lots, pawn shops, strip malls, and fast food restaurants. On a nicer road, the elephant would be an eyesore. But there, he blends right in, an eccentric neighbor who causes a double take before he wins you over. He’s a non-native species that’s an emblem of our small town.
Papa and Nana printed the pink elephant on their business checks and collected pink elephant knickknacks in the house. For years after my grandfather died, my mom would find a token pink elephant for Nana at Christmas: a pendant, a statue, a tea towel. In the last days of her life, as she lay in bed in hospice, Nana slept with a plush pink elephant tucked under one arm.
My grandparents lived near the store, in the last house that Papa ever built, a split-level perched above the highway. We lived on a road down the hill from them, a road that Nana called a “holler,” as in “how are things up the holler?”
Our holler was close, claustrophobic, leafy in the summer, a handy place to store your shadows. In a holler, you’re tucked into the hills and most of the mailboxes bear the same last name. You learn not to look at the Christmas lights unless you’re in the passenger seat. You learn the curves and gamble sometimes on what’s around the bend. Could be fog, could be wind, could be nothing.
The pink elephant was a handy landmark so friends and pizza delivery people could find us. We weren’t far from Rt. 60, but you had to know where turn. The holler didn’t draw attention to itself which was part of its charm.
Now I live in the Pacific Northwest, far from my native holler and its attending elephant. With no tattoos, I feel a bit naked in this part of the world. I’ve thought about getting one of a stylized pink elephant, an elephant as it might look if it sauntered out of illuminated manuscript or a cathedral window. The ink would mark where I’m from.
“What does it mean?” People always ask that about tattoos. I could say that it represents that tall, hollow elephant on Rt. 60. It reminds me of grown-ups climbing ladders and hoisting up grandchildren to sit on the elephant for photos because it’s our birthright.
I could remind them that the pink elephant means starry visions when you’re in an altered state.
Pink elephants, the internet assures me, do exist. Behold the albino elephant, available in white or pink. And, affirms the internet, the pink elephant stands for what a charmed childhood and a badass tattoo must always be: “something extraordinary.”
Nicole’s work has appeared in Image, Mid-American Review, Hotel Amerika, DIAGRAM, Sonora Review, The Ocean State Review, Western Humanities Review, Tampa Review, Quarterly West, North Dakota Quarterly, and in Permanent Vacation (Bona Fide Books, 2011) and Jesus Girls: True Tales of Growing Up Female and Evangelical (Cascade Press, 2009) and elsewhere. She is an assistant professor of English at Whitworth University in Spokane, Washington, and the web editor for Rock & Sling and How to Pack for Church Camp, an online anthology of creative nonfiction about summer camp. She is on the Twitters at @heynicolesheets.
Love the story I was born and raised In Huntington and loved that pink elephant. ..Get the tat 🙂
I know this pink elephant very well. I live almost two hours from it but we would go to this town because my grandparents had friends there or to shop at the mall or to go to Billy Bobs (chuck e cheese like place) or Camden Park. I always loved that pink elephant and I wanted my papaw to buy it for me my whole life. But this story makes me laugh a little to because I use to beg them to let me stop and see if I could take my picture with it but they would always say no Pitney were not stopping to let me bother these people for a picture and now I find out that was the point I still visit the area quite often with my girls who love the pink elephant I think next time I will see if who ever is there now will let us take a photo with the pink elephant.
The pink elephant is already a landmark and a “timeline” for my daughter on our trips from downtown to the mall. We’ve only stopped for pictures with it once (so far) in her short 2 years of life, despite the fact that she asks every single time. For me, it’s a reminder of how simple and adventurous our lives can be, if we just stop to see the elephant.
Love the Pink Elephant, my grandson always said he knew he was closet to Nana’s house when he saw the pink elephant. Thanks for posting.
We love passing the pink elephant. My kids would always want me to stop and take their pictures with it. Thanks for sharing the stories.
My grandpa helped build the Taylor’s house behind the shop. Thanks for sharing your story of the pink elephant.
I love the elephant! Thanks for sharing.
Don’t get the tattoo…
….would you put graffiti on a church?
…or a bumper sticker on a Maserati?
My dad’s cpa office was upstairs for many years 2000-2010 ish, he had a nice view of the ” part that jumped over the fence, last” as he would say
Never knew the story behind the elephant but I can say that I have relatives from Brazil with pictures of themselves with it. They were quite fascinated with the landmark.
Wow! Love this.
Man, how many times I’ve used that pink elephant as I gave directions or tried to figure out where something is on route 60!
I completely love its story. Thank you for sharing it. And, most definitely, get the tattoo!