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Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep

The Jewelry Box (Encore)

Thu, 27 Mar 2025

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Originally Aired: March 23rd, 2020 (Season 5, Episode 6) Our story tonight is called The Jewelry Box. It’s about an heirloom handed down through a family, a jeweled broach pinned on the lapel of a jacket, Spring sunlight, and some good advice for when things break. Visit bioptimizers.com/nothingmuch and use code NOTHINGMUCH for 10% off any order Listeners receive 20% OFF any AquaTru purifier! Just go to AquaTru.com and enter code NOTHINGMUCH at checkout. Visit our partner page to learn about the products featured in our ads. NMH merch, autographed books, and more! Subscribe for ad-free, bonus, and extra long episodes now, as well as ad-free and early episodes of Stories from the Village of Nothing Much! Search for the NMH Premium channel on Apple Podcasts or follow this link. Listen to our daytime show, Stories from the Village of Nothing Much, on your favorite podcast app. Join us tomorrow morning for a meditation.

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Chapter 1: What is the theme of The Jewelry Box episode?

Chapter 2: How can Bioptimizers Sleep Breakthrough improve sleep?

67.732 - 100.225 Katherine Nicolai

Bioptimizers has flexible dosing, which I really like. My wife needs just a little bit, and I take a little more. And for folks looking for an option without melatonin, this is it. Ready to transform your sleep and wake up feeling refreshed. Visit bioptimizers.com slash nothingmuch and use code nothingmuch for 10% off any order. Don't settle for another restless night, my friends.

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101.166 - 140.28 Katherine Nicolai

Try Sleep Breakthrough Drink risk-free with Bioptimizers 365-day money-back guarantee. And this is all in our show notes if you forget. Visit bioptimizers.com slash nothingmuch and use code nothingmuch for 10% off any order. Welcome to Bedtime Stories for Everyone, in which nothing much happens. You feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Catherine Nicolai.

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141.341 - 171.986 Katherine Nicolai

I write and read all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens. Audio engineering is by Bob Wittersheim. 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.

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172.986 - 210.557 Katherine Nicolai

I sometimes sound just slightly different, but the stories are always soothing and family-friendly, and our wishes for you are always deep rest and sweet dreams. Let me say a little about how to use this podcast. Our minds are busy, now maybe more than ever, and a busy mind can keep you up all night. So let this story that I'm about to tell you become a resting place for your mind.

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213.059 - 251.293 Katherine Nicolai

Once your mind settles, you will find sleep. I'll tell the story twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through. If you wake in the middle of the night, you can listen again or just walk yourself back through any part of the story you remember. This will disrupt the wandering and get you back to sleep. This is brain training, so have a bit of patience if you are new to it.

253.694 - 293.236 Katherine Nicolai

Over time, you will find you fall asleep faster and stay asleep longer. Our story tonight is called The Jewelry Box, and it's a story about an heirloom handed down through a family. It's also about a jeweled brooch pinned on the lapel of a jacket, spring sunlight, and some good advice for when things break. In the village of Nothing Much, I'm sure they never have to worry about their tap water.

294.196 - 316.692 Katherine Nicolai

Unfortunately, like all of you, I live in the real world, and I don't always trust what comes out of my tap. That's why I use AquaTrue purifiers. They use a four-stage reverse osmosis purification process. and their countertop purifiers work with no installation or plumbing.

Chapter 3: What are AquaTrue purifiers and their benefits?

317.793 - 343.769 Katherine Nicolai

It removes 15 times more contaminants than ordinary pitcher filters, and are specifically designed to combat chemicals like PFAS in your water supply. The filters are affordable and long-lasting. I love this part. My old filter had to be changed every month, and I forgot all the time. But AquaTrue filters last from six months to two years.

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344.71 - 373.361 Katherine Nicolai

Just one set of filters from their classic purifier makes the equivalent of 4,500 bottles of water. That's less than three cents a bottle. Plus, you'll save the environment from tons of plastic waste. And the water tastes really good. I don't worry about PFAS or harmful contaminants anymore. Today, my listeners receive 20% off any AquaTrue purifier. Just go to AquaTrue.com.

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375.063 - 419.291 Katherine Nicolai

That's A-Q-U-A-T-R-U dot com and enter code NOTHINGMUCH at checkout. That's 20% off any AquaTrue water purifier. When you go to AquaTrue.com and use promo code N-O-T-H-I-N-G-M-U-C-H. Now, it's time to set down anything you've been looking at or working on. Switch off the light and slide down into your sheets. Pull the blanket over your shoulder and feel how good it is to be safe in your bed.

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Chapter 4: What is the significance of the jewelry box in the story?

421.552 - 477.368 Katherine Nicolai

Let's all take a breath in through the nose and out through the mouth. Nice. One more. In And out. Good. The jewelry box. On my dresser, beside the stack of books that are waiting to be read. And the framed photo of my sweetheart and me on one of our first dates. there's a jewelry box. It's made of dark walnut and lined with green velvet.

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479.71 - 510.995 Katherine Nicolai

That must have been a bright emerald when it was first fitted into place by my grandfather's hands, but has faded over the years into the soft green of reindeer moss. He crafted it many years ago for my grandmother, out in the workshop in his garage. It was a rare creation for him.

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Chapter 5: What is the story behind the jewelry box heirloom?

512.436 - 556.973 Katherine Nicolai

He was mostly a fixer, a mender, who could step in when the furnace was on the fritz, or when the attic stairs were stuck. He'd stand with hands on hips, and just look at the problem for a while, picturing where the trouble was and how to sort it out. Then he'd slip a screwdriver from his shirt pocket and go to work. But for this box, he'd been starting from scratch, not mending, but creating.

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560.305 - 596.043 Katherine Nicolai

He'd sketched out the shape with a flat carpenter's pencil onto the pages of a steno notebook in the garage and gone looking for the right piece of wood. When he found it, he'd measured and cut and fitted the box together, the edges of the wood dovetailing like puzzle pieces. Then he divided the interior with thin slats and lined it all with green velvet.

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599.505 - 637.176 Katherine Nicolai

He'd let me watch as he created slots for grandma's rings, hooks to secure her necklaces, and a soft raised mound to loop her bracelets around. The top tray lifted out to reveal an open space underneath, inlaid with more velvet. The box was meant to be a surprise for her, and he'd asked me if I could keep a secret before he'd let me into the workshop.

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Chapter 6: How does the jewelry box connect past and present?

641.199 - 681.698 Katherine Nicolai

I'd kept my promise and got to be there on her birthday as she unwrapped it. I remember how quiet the room was as she ran her soft, creased hands over the smooth edges that he'd spent ages carefully sanding and shaping. She lifted the lid and looked down at the velvet and then up at Grandpa with such a bright, happy smile on her face. that we all beamed back at her.

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684.959 - 713.459 Katherine Nicolai

She was a laugher, not a crier. And she laughed now, clapping her hands like a little girl, and leaning over to plant a kiss on Grandpa's cheek. The jewelry box had sat on her vanity table for the rest of her life, next to her tubes of lipstick and tiny precious bottles of perfume.

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716.9 - 755.033 Katherine Nicolai

I remember sitting on the edge of her bed, my bare feet swinging, as I watched her make herself up for a Saturday night out with Grandpa. She'd picked out her favorite necklace and lifted the tray out to peruse her brooches. I nosily looked over her shoulder as she did and saw a few yellowed envelopes addressed to her and Grandpa's hand. She saw me looking and winked at me in the mirror.

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757.515 - 802.604 Katherine Nicolai

She still had their love letters. When the box came to me, I'd gratefully found I could still smell a bit of her perfume whenever I lifted the lid. Now it held my rings, my bracelets and necklaces. In the compartment underneath were my own love letters, the stubs of concert tickets, and one of Grandma's brooches. It was fragile, with a thin pin at its back that had been mended more than once.

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806.407 - 844.453 Katherine Nicolai

On its face was a collection of bright red stones, circled with gold, in the shape of a ladybug. Her wings were dotted with glossy black jewels. I suspected none of them were real gems. They were probably polished glass, what they used to call paste. But they were precious to me. I was careful with what Grandma had passed on to me. But I wasn't afraid to wear her brooch.

846.035 - 880.614 Katherine Nicolai

I had her china, too, and used it nearly every day. Once, when we'd been drying dishes in her kitchen, and a slippery plate had slid out of my hands to crash into a million pieces on the black and white tiles of her floor, I turned a teary face up to her, and she caught my chin in her hand and kissed the tip of my nose, saying, Baby, it's a thing, not a person.

883.999 - 926.116 Katherine Nicolai

It made me feel so unashamed and immediately realigned with what actually mattered. To this day, when something breaks, I stop and ask myself, is it a thing or a person? And like her, I can usually laugh instead of cry. I'd pinned her ladybug onto the lapel of my jacket today, as I'd gotten ready to go out the door, just feeling the need to have her around me.

929.399 - 960.972 Katherine Nicolai

When I'd stepped out of my apartment and into the narrow alleys of the oldest part of downtown, I stopped to look up at the way the spring sunlight shone on the tops of the buildings, Autumn sun is brassy, in the best possible way, but spring sunlight is bright gold, and I was happy to need my sunglasses as I walked.

964.034 - 997.806 Katherine Nicolai

At the corner shop, I stopped to buy a newspaper and a lemon muffin dotted with poppy seeds to tuck into my bag for later. The man who ran the shop had been sweeping the front steps when I came in, and his grandson stood proudly behind the counter, his chin just clearing the stacks of newspapers. He added up my purchases and with a serious face told me how much it would be.

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