Some families keep their emergency savings in designated envelopes. My mom had her Old Coat Pocket Fund, better known as her OCPF.
Unexpected Money
There have been a few times when we’ve received money that we didn’t expect:
- $30 in the pocket of a pair of pants we’d purchased at a thrift store; a refund from an overpayment; a birthday check.
- We’ve had considerably more change in our wallets since the library dropped its fee for overdue books.
- One quarter in college I went in to pay my tuition, only to find that someone else already had! I never did find out who.
- From time to time I check the Washington State Department of Revenue website to see if anyone I know has any unclaimed funds. Today I found my brother, but, alas, not myself.
Mama’s OCPF
As a mother of five little kids, my mom didn’t have a lot of discretionary funds. But she did have a savings plan. She called it her OCPF (Old Coat Pocket Fund). Whenever she’d end up with a little bit of money — maybe a few dollars left over after paying for two full carts of groceries, or an honorarium from speaking at a women’s luncheon, or a little babysitting money — she’d take it to her bedroom and stuff it in the pocket of an old coat hanging in the back of her closet. Then she’d forget about it. As far as I know, she didn’t keep track of how much was in that pocket and would, for months at a time, even forget she had such a system.
Emergency Fund
Then one day an extraordinary need would arise. Maybe two or three kids all needed shoes at the same time, or there was an opportunity for one of us to go on a school trip. We’d bring the need to our parents and suddenly Mom’s face would light up. She’d disappear and when she returned she’d have a few dollars in her hand. It was usually just the amount that was needed. Her OCPF paid for lots of short family trips, like our Why-Not Days (I’ll tell you about those next time) or a night in a motel at Mt Rainier. Her Old Coat Pocket Fund got us through emergencies and bought us a lot of family fun.
I’ve just checked the pockets of my old coats. What a shame. There’s nothing in them but holes.
Ginger
I love this story. We always knew my mom had a secret stash, but never knew where. When she passed away and we were cleaning out the house, we found it in the top/back of the linen closet. It must have gone untouched for years, because there was no way she could have reached it.
Patti, it’s fun to hear this about your mom. I wonder if this might not have been a common practice of people in our parents’ generation. Having come through the Depression I suspect they were better “savers” than those of us in later generations.
Ginger
What a memorable and sweet way to teach a child about faith in God‘s provision!
Deanne, I can’t say we saw too many huge demonstrations of God’s might and glory in our family, but we saw lots of everyday examples of God’s faithfulness in the lives of common folk who depended on a great God.
[…] shared two stories with you from my childhood in my last couple of blog posts (here and here). I especially enjoyed hearing from readers in my comments as well as on Facebook that […]