Keepsake (Encore)
38 min
•Feb 12, 20262 months agoSummary
This bedtime story follows a narrator who discovers a box of childhood keepsakes while searching for lost socks, triggering nostalgic memories of summer camp, first love, and personal growth. The episode explores how preserving small moments—like seed pods from a rainy day kiss—can serve as meaningful reminders of joy and excitement across decades.
Insights
- Nostalgia and memory preservation serve as powerful tools for self-compassion and maintaining connection with one's younger self
- Small, seemingly insignificant objects can anchor profound emotional memories and provide comfort during difficult periods
- The act of reminiscing and reviewing past experiences can shift cognitive patterns and improve sleep quality
- Older brains may learn more slowly but develop superior understanding and perspective compared to younger brains
- Intentional curation of meaningful keepsakes creates a personal narrative that reinforces identity and values over time
Trends
Growing interest in mindfulness-based sleep and relaxation content as alternative to pharmaceutical solutionsIncreased consumer demand for natural, botanical-based wellness products with transparent ingredient sourcingRising popularity of narrative-driven wellness content that combines storytelling with mental health benefitsShift toward CBD and CBN-based products marketed for sleep quality and natural sleep cycle supportConsumer preference for multi-formula supplement bundles designed to work synergistically for specific health outcomes
Topics
Sleep quality and natural sleep aidsNostalgia and memory preservationPersonal growth and self-reflectionBotanical and herbal remediesCBD and CBN wellness productsChildhood memories and keepsakesFirst love and formative experiencesCognitive development across lifespanMindfulness and meditation for sleepEmotional wellness and self-compassion
Companies
Cured Nutrition
Sleep supplement brand offering CBD and CBN-based products marketed to support deeper, restorative sleep without grog...
People
Catherine Nicolai
Creator, writer, and narrator of Nothing Much Happens podcast; produces and reads all bedtime stories featured on the...
Bob Witterschheim
Audio engineer responsible for production and technical quality of Nothing Much Happens podcast episodes.
Quotes
"You have done enough for the day. It is enough, and now you are safe, and all that is left is for you to rest."
Catherine Nicolai•Pre-story introduction
"Young brains, I thought jealously, as I tied the bracelet awkwardly around my wrist. They're like magnets sweeping through a field of precious metals, collecting skills and ideas with ease."
Narrator (from story)•Mid-story reflection
"Maybe I was a faster learner when I was younger. But now I was a better understander. I could see from angles I just didn't know about then."
Narrator (from story)•Mid-story reflection
"A little message for my younger self, to me today, about how exciting life can be. About how moments can stick and warm you through years later."
Narrator (from story)•Story conclusion
Full Transcript
Get more Nothing Much Happens with bonus episodes, extra long stories, and ad-free listening, all while supporting the show you love. Subscribe now. Hi, I'm Catherine Nicolai, and if you're looking for something gentle to listen to that isn't news or true crime or self-improvement, I made this for you. Thanks from the village of Nothing Much is like easy listening, but for fiction. Cozy, warm, calm stories about ordinary moments that feel a little magical. They're grounding, soothing, and quietly uplifting without being cheesy, relaxing without putting you to sleep, and just dreamy enough to remind you that there's still sweetness in everyday life. Make for your commute while you're tidying up or when you want a little escape that feels simple and good. Search for stories from the village of Nothing Much wherever you listen. You already know how much good sleep matters, because when you sleep well, everything feels a little easier. Your mood, your focus, even how your body feels the next day. When you don't, it can feel like you're dragging that tiredness with you everywhere. That's why I want to tell you about the sleep bundle from cured nutrition, which I've been using as part of my own wine-down routine, and which I gifted to another friend today. What I appreciate about it is that it's designed to help your body ease into rest, rather than knocking you out or leaving you groggy the next morning. The sleep bundle combines two formulas that work together to support deeper, more restorative sleep. It includes there's end capsules, which are made with calming botanicals like zelarian root, chamomile, ashwaganda, and magnesium, along with broad spectrum CBD to help quiet the mind and relax the body. The bundle also includes their CBN night caps or night oil, which support deeper sleep quality through the night. I take them about an hour before bed. Usually while I'm dimming the lights, getting into my reading, I like that they work with my natural sleep rhythms. I wake up feeling rested, not foggy, and that makes a big difference. Right now, the sleep bundle is already 10% off, and you can take an additional 20% off at checkout with my code Sweet Dreams, the discount stack. Plus all orders over $100 automatically qualify for free shipping, including the sleep bundle. Visit curednutrition.com slash nothing much, and use my code Sweet Dreams at checkout for the extra savings that's c-u-r-e-d-nutrition.com slash nothing much coupon code Sweet Dreams. Welcome. It's a bedtime stories for everyone, in which nothing much happens. You feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Catherine Nicolai. I write and read all the stories you hear on nothing much happens. Audioengineering is by Bob Witterschheim. We are bringing you an encore episode tonight, meaning that this story originally aired at some point in the past. It could have been recorded with different equipment in a different location, and since I'm a person and not a computer, I sometimes sound just slightly different. But the stories are always soothing and family-friendly, and our wishes for you are always deep-brassed and Sweet Dreams. Now let me say a little about how to use this podcast. I have a story to tell you, and it exists really simply as a soft place to rest your mind. I'll read it twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through. Just follow along with my voice and the simple shape of the story. And before you know it, you'll be deeply asleep. If you wake in the middle of the night, you could listen again, or just think back through any details from the story that you can remember. Doing so shifts your brain out of default mode, and when that happens, you'll fall right back to sleep. This is brain training, and it does take a bit of practice, so have some patience if you are new to this. Our story tonight is called Keepsake, and it's a story about stepping back through time to remember a particular rainy day. It's also about sunflowers. The things our younger selves can teach us, and a scrap of something saved for years in a box. Now, turn off your light. Don't away anything you've been looking at or playing with. Get as comfortable as you can. You have done enough for the day. It is enough, and now you are safe, and all that is left is for you to rest. Take a slow, deep breath in through your nose, and out through your mouth. Nice. One more. In. And out. Keepsake. It had started as a hunt for a particular pair of socks. They were thick and warm, and I felt pretty sure that they were dark gray with snowflakes on them, but I hadn't seen them in a while. They went all the way up to my knees, and when I just couldn't get my feet warm in the cold days of winter, they always did the trick. But they didn't seem to be anywhere. I went through my dresser drawers, then searched the basket of lone socks on the shelf in the laundry room, hoping that maybe they had been separated in the wash. And we're happily reunited, just waiting to be rolled into a ball to spend some quality time together. But they weren't there either. That led me to the hall closet, which didn't seem like a likely place for them to end up. But it was worth a try. And as soon as I opened the door, I fell under the spell of curiosity and nostalgia. Has this happened to you? You go up to the attic to get the extra leaf for the table, or down into the basement to bring up the giant suit pot that you only use a couple of times a year. And somewhere along the way, a box catches your eye. And before you know it, you're sitting on the floor with old school papers in your hands, and a fan of grainy photographs spread out around you. Sometimes you get caught, someone comes looking for you. And all you can do is shrug your shoulders, and hold up the program to a play you'd seen 20 years before, and say, do you remember this? Well, that's what happened to me, standing in the doorway of the hall closet. My chilly feet forgotten, as I reached up on tiptoe to slide a shoe box off the top shelf. It wasn't labeled. I don't know why I reached for it, except that part of me must have remembered it. The lid looked like it came from a different box, and didn't fit on properly. Letters and pictures were pushing their way out. Fading it off, my face broke open in a sudden smile. Small treasures, scraps of paper, a keychain from a roadside store a thousand miles from here. I'd strange how you can go years without looking at things like this. Those and scribbled notes. But then when you see them again, you remember everything about them. And envelope with a phone number scrolled across it. The smudged printing on a flyer for a concert. These stubs curling at the edges from the weeks they'd spent in a pocket before they went into a box. I could remember who that number belonged to. The telephone pole I tugged the flyer down from, and the shoes I'd worn to the movie. In that first box was another, and another. I pulled them all down and carried them to my bedroom, where I could curl up with my blankets as I reminisced. I found a friendship bracelet from summer camp. And I remembered how we would not the strings onto safety pins. And then fasten the pins onto our jeans or shorts. So we could pull the strings taught while we braided. It had taken five minutes to learn, and then we'd become bracelet making machines. Swapping for favorite colors. And pulling out our projects as soon as dinner was eaten. Braiding and nodding until we couldn't see what we were doing in the twilight. And then we'd probably forgotten all about it a week or two later, when we learned how to make pinched pots in the ceramic shed. Or to fletch arrows, or build rock carons on our afternoon hikes. Young brains I thought jealously, as I tied the bracelet awkwardly around my wrist. They're like magnets sweeping through a field of precious metals, collecting skills and ideas with ease. I thought that my older brain wasn't capable of picking up new things. After all, who had just learned to ice skate backwards fairly reliably? Me was the answer. Maybe I was a faster learner when I was younger. But now I was a better understander. I could see from angles I just didn't know about then. In one of the boxes, I found photos of myself as a child, blowing out five candles on a cake. Running in Grandpa's garden beside his sunflowers, to show how they've grown twice as tall as me, riding my bike without training wheels. I carried the sun flower picture into the bathroom and fitted it into the corner of the mirror. Being that remembering my young, sweet self each morning when I brushed my teeth might lead me to stay kind to her all day. Back on the bed, I flipped through pictures of my middle school years, playing in the school band. My best friend and I dressed identically as some joke. A shot of me looking out of the window of the car on our way to a summer vacation with a book forgotten in my hand. At the bottom of the stack was a small bound journal. A kind that comes with built-in pockets in the cover, which I remembered carrying with me nearly every day in high school. There were pages of poetry. I didn't read them. Thinking it was probably best just to remember that I had liked to write it. But at the time, it had seemed terribly important and gripping and probably revolutionary. A thing the world had never heard before. And that that feeling rather than the actual poems was who I was then. In the margins were lyrics from favorite songs. Written out in sticky blue ink, there were lines from movies and quotes that had spun my young head around. A list of places I would travel to. As I was sure I would live. And all the books I had read one summer. I flipped all the way to the pocket in the back cover of the journal. It looked empty, but when I prided open, there were a few small transparent bits like ovals of wax paper. It took me a moment to recognize them. And then another to remember why I'd saved them. They were seed pods about the size of quarters, silvery two, and with tiny round seeds still in each one. They grew on a plant called Lunaria, or sometimes called a money tree. And the pods grew beside purple flowers in the summertime and could be cut and dried by hanging them upside down somewhere. I tipped them onto my hand and felt my breath go deep with the memory of this moment. They had been drying in a small potting shed on the far corner of our property where the land dropped down toward the creek. We'd been out walking on a cool October day as far as we could along one side of the creek. And then we're a fallen tree lay across the stream, had crossed it to walk on the other side. We weren't trying to get anywhere. First, spending time in the way of teenagers who can't get enough of it. And it had felt like no time at all. And then a sudden gust of wind and rain came hammering through the leaves. And we jumped from one muddy bank to another and climbed the hill back toward the house. We'd come up right behind the shed and the rain was so heavy that we just pulled open the door and took shelter inside. It had smelled like drying eucalyptus and unvarnished wood. And the rain was wonderfully loud on the tiny roof. We could see our breath in the air. And that had been my first kiss. And wet clothes with muddy boots under a clutch of Lunaria stems. I'd come back later to clip a few of the seed pods. And they'd stayed in the pocket in this journal, in this box tucked into the closet. Just waiting for me to find them again. A little message for my younger self, to me today, about how exciting life can be. About how moments can stick and warm you through years later. It had started as a hunt for a particular pair of socks. They were thick and warm. And I felt pretty sure they were dark gray with snowflakes on them. But I hadn't seen them in a while. They went all the way up to my knees. And when I just couldn't get my feet warm in the cold days of winter, they always did the trick. And they didn't seem to be anywhere. I went through my dresser drawers, then searched the basket of lone socks on the shelf in the laundry room, hoping that maybe they had been separated in the wash. And were happily reunited. Just waiting to be rolled into a ball, to spend some quality time together. But they weren't there either. That led me to the hall closet, which didn't seem like a likely place for them to end up. But it was worth a try. And as soon as I opened the door, I fell under the spell of curiosity and nostalgia. As this happened to you, you go up to the attic to get the extra leaf for the table, or down into the basement, to bring up the giant suit pot that you only use a couple of times a year, and somewhere along the way, a box catches your eye. And before you know it, you're sitting on the floor with old school papers in your hands, and a fan of grainy photographs spread out around you. Sometimes you get caught. Someone comes looking for you. And all you can do is shrug your shoulders, and hold up the program to a play you'd seen twenty years before. And say, do you remember this? Well, that's what happened to me, standing in the doorway of the hall closet. My chilly feet forgotten, as I reached up on tiptoe, to slide a shoebox off the top shelf. It wasn't labeled, and I don't know why I reached for it, except that part of me must have remembered it. The lid looked like it came from a different box, and didn't fit on properly. Letters and pictures were pushing their way out. Lifting it off, my face broke open in a sudden smile. All treasures, scraps of paper. A keychain from a roadside store, a thousand miles from here. It's strange how you can go years without looking at things like this. Permanentos and scribbled notes, but then, when you see them again, you remember everything about them. An envelope with a phone number scrolled across it. This much printing on a flyer for a concert. Movie stubs curling at the edges, from the weeks they spent in the pocket, before they went into a box. I could remember who that number belonged to. The telephone pole, I tugged the flyer down from, and the shoes I'd worn to the movie. Behind that first box was another, and another. I pulled them all down, and carried them to my bedroom, where I could curl up with my blankets as I reminisce. I found a friendship bracelet from summer camp, and I remembered how we would not the strings onto safety pins, and then fasten the pins onto our jeans or shorts, so we could pull the strings taught while we braided. It had taken five minutes to learn, and then we'd become bracelet-making machines. Swapping for favorite colors, and pulling out our projects as soon as dinner was eaten. Braiding and nodding until we couldn't see what we were doing in the twilight. And then we'd probably forgotten all about it a week or two later, when we learned how to make pinch pots in the ceramics shed, or to fletch arrows, or build rock cairns on our afternoon hikes. Some brains I thought jellously, as I tied the bracelet awkwardly around my wrist. They're like magnets sweeping through a field of precious metals, collecting skills and ideas with ease. But that my older brain wasn't capable of picking up new things. After all, who had just learned to ice skate backwards fairly reliably? Knee was the answer. Maybe I was a faster learner when I was younger. But now I was a better understander. I could see from angles I just didn't know about then. In one of the boxes, I found photos of myself as a child, blowing out five candles on a cake. Standing in Grandpa's garden beside his sunflowers, to show how they'd grown twice as tall as me. Holding my bike without training wheels. I carried the sunflower picture into the bathroom and fitted it into the corner of the mirror, thinking that remembering my young sweet self each morning when I brushed my teeth. It lead me to stay kind to her all day. Back on the bed, I flipped through pictures of my middle school years. Playing in the school band. My best friend and I dressed identically as some joke. A shot of me looking out of the window of the car on our way to a summer vacation with a book forgotten in my hand. At the bottom of the stack was a small bound journal. The kind that comes with built-in pockets in the cover. Which I remembered carrying with me nearly every day in high school. There were pages of poetry. I didn't read them. Thinking it was probably best just to remember that I liked to write it. But at the time, it had seemed terribly important when gripping and probably revolutionary. A thing the world had never heard before. And that feeling rather than the actual poems was who I was then. In the margins were lyrics from favorite songs written out in sticky blue ink. There were lines from movies and quotes that had spun my young head around. A list of places I would travel to. Places I was sure I would live. And all the books I had read one summer. I flipped all the way to the pocket in the back cover of the journal. It looked empty. But when I prided open, there were a few small transparent bits like ovals of wax paper. It took me a moment to recognize them. And then another to remember why I'd saved them. They were seed pots. About the size of quarters, sovery too. And with tiny round seeds still in each one. They grew on a plant called Lunaria. Or sometimes called a money tree. And the pods grew beside purple flowers in the summertime. And could be cut and dried by hanging them upside down somewhere. I tip them onto my hand and felt my breath go deep with the memory of this moment. They had been drying in a small potting shed on the far corner of our property. Where the land dropped down toward the creek. We had been out walking on a cool October day. As far as we could, along one side of the creek. And then, where a fallen tree lay across the stream. That crossed it to walk on the other side. We weren't trying to get anywhere. Just spending time in the way of teenagers who can't get enough of it. And it had felt like no time at all. And then, a sudden gust of cold wind and rain came hammering through the leaves. And we jumped from one muddy bank to another. And climbed the hill back toward the house. We'd come up right behind the shed. And the rain was so heavy that we'd just pulled open the door and taken shelter inside. It had smelled like drying eucalyptus and unvarnished wood. And the rain was wonderfully loud on the tiny roof. We could see our breath in the air. And that had been my first kiss. In wet clothes with muddy boots under a clutch of Lunaria stems. I'd come back later to clip a few of the seed pots. And they'd stayed in the pocket of this journal in this box tucked into the closet. Just waiting for me to find them again. A little message from my younger self to me today. About how exciting life can be. About how moments can stick. And warm you through years later. Sweet dreams.