What does it mean to treasure something simply because someone before you did?
In this tender and reflective episode, Deborah Carl shares the story of a delicate set of Desert Rose china — not just porcelain, but a piece of family mythology. A young woman — her grandmother — heads west to marry a pilot-in-training before he deploys to North Africa. Along the way, she buys china she’ll ship back across the country… only to learn she could’ve bought it closer to home.
But this story isn’t about convenience — it’s about intention, memory, and how the things we carry with us carry us in return. Deborah, the eldest granddaughter, chose the set of dishes patterned with roses — ones she loved as a child. As an adult, though, it’s the layered stories they hold that matter most.
Join us as we trace the quiet path of legacy through a set of floral china and discover how what’s left behind often says more than what’s spoken aloud.
Connect with Deborah Carl HERE
In This Episode:
Why her grandmother bought a set of china out west before marriage
The soft, sometimes silly family stories that become sacred over time
The difference between what we inherit and what we choose to keep
How objects become anchors to the people and histories we’re still trying to understand
What happens when the “prettiest” thing in the room turns out to hold the heaviest meaning
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