I want some plaques

I performed at The Iron Horse in North Hampton last month — my first time in this storied location.

While I was sitting, waiting to take the stage, I noticed this small plaque on the side of a beam beside me.

It’s hard to read in the photo below, but it says:

Anju Soparkar Diggs
loved watching shows from this spot.
Remember her, and enjoy the show!

I love this. We need more of this. Human beings are so easily forgotten. Even when remembered, it’s often only a name and a few benign biographical details.

But Anju Soparkar Diggs? I knew a little about her that night and am happy for it.

I, too, loved watching the show from that spot.

I also found her obituary online. She died in May of 2021. She sounds extraordinary.

So, in the unlikely event I someday die, I want plaques like this, too, placed all over the world on my behalf.

Here are just a few suggestions:

At The Bitter End in New York: “Matthew Dicks loved performing on this stage more than any other.”At the 15th hole at Rockledge Country Club: “Matthew Dicks put more balls into this pond than anywhere else.”In the classroom I’ve occupied for 24 years and counting: “Matthew Dicks spent 24 years in this classroom, making kids laugh and teaching them to be confident and kind.”On the entrance gate to Yawgoog Scout Reservation: “Matthew Dicks spent his boyhood here, and a large part of his heart will always be here.”On the front door at 3 Commonwealth Avenue, Townhouse #1 in Attleboro, MA: “Matthew Dicks lived here with James Bengiovanni in a riotous, joyous home that became known as The Heavy Metal Playhouse. It probably saved his life.”In Grand Central Terminal in New York City: “Matthew Dicks proposed to Elysha at the top of the stairs, and reader, she said yes.”At the top of the castle at the top of Mount Carmel in Hamden, CT: “Matthew Dicks climbed this mountain with a friend named Elysha but came down with his future wife.”At the McDonald’s on Prospect Street in Hartford: “Matthew Dicks spent seven years managing this restaurant, learning more here than any of the colleges he was attending at the time.”At the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City: “Matthew Dicks told his first story on this stage and unknowingly changed his life forever.”On the steps at the back of Blackstone Millville Regional High School: ” Matthew Dicks asked Laura Marchand — his first love — to be his girlfriend while sitting on these steps and miraculously remained friends until the end of her days.”On the largest tree in from of Wolcott School: “Matthew Dicks and his students spent their pandemic days under this tree, turning a potentially terrible school year into something truly special.”On the front door of our home: “Matthew and Elysha Dicks raised two beautiful children in this sometimes underfurnished, sometimes too small home that was always bursting at the seams with love.”

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 10, 2025 05:52
No comments have been added yet.