Behold the baseball glove: Talisman and totem, tactile symbol and wearable nostalgia, proof of the human race's occasional bursts of genius.
There is nothing in the world like a baseball glove, nothing so dear and perpetually near. Take it from the 12-year-old me.
As a child, I read and saved every article on sports I could find, watched every game we could pull in with the antennae on our small, boxy television, and played every sport and sports board game available.
My bedroom walls were rumors hidden behind sports posters and pennants. Ticket stubs, baseball cards and sports books obscured the floor, along with footballs, basketballs real and Nerf, and baseballs.
It sounds silly to say that all of those things were my life, but that's the way it felt to a painfully skinny, socially awkward, sickly kid whose family moved every few years. All those primary colors and faded memories made the bedroom more museum than refuge.
Even then, if you had forced me to choose between a room filled with memorabilia, books, collectibles and other equipment, and my baseball glove, I would have taken the glove.
My first glove that didn't feel like melted plastic was a Rawlings Brooks Robinson infielder's model. I had to have Brooks' name on it. Living in southern Pennsylvania and then outside Baltimore, Robinson became the ideal idol for millions of us. He was a spectacular fielder, a clutch hitter, a winner, and a nice man willing to sign unlimited autographs.
If you lived near Baltimore and didn't have Brooks Robinson's autograph, you had turned him down.