The Day Canada lost a little piece of its Magic!
On Monday, February
4, 2013 the Royal Canadian Mint officially stopped circulation of
our Canadian Penny. And although the
Mint had actually stopped production of the coin earlier in 2012, this past
Monday will forever remain in my heart, and in the heart of many Canadians as “the day the Penny died.”
From now on actual cash purchases will be rounded out to the
nearest 0 – nickel – or dime, and retail stores will not have to accept our
Penny at all. Meanwhile the Mint will be
doing its best to take the estimated 6 billion coins out of circulation; a
momentous task that could take up to 4 years.
Now I understand the logic behind it, I really do; by not
producing a 1 cent coin that costs 1.6 cents to make, we will save 11 million
dollars per year. But is it truly worth
it?
Canadian icon Joni Mitchell’s’ song “Big Yellow Taxi” comes
to mind with the lyrics,
“Don’t it always seem
to go - That you don't know what you've got - Till it's gone’
They paved paradise - And
put up a parking lot.”
To many of us our Penny, complete with its beautiful bronze
maple leaf, is a constant reminder of being Canadian. It’s something we always have laying around on
desks, in drawers and jars, and constantly gets in the way until we really need
it. It offers a sense of history, familiarity
and sharing (take a penny – leave a penny).
If I seem a tad overly sentimental it is for good
reason. A magical reason.
As one who started studying the art of magic at the tender
age of 8 (I wasted my first seven years) the precious Penny is one of the first
props I learned my skills with.
Along with a very worn deck of cards I spent hours practicing making these
coins appear, disappear, multiply and even transform into nickels and dimes (I
couldn’t afford quarters in those days).
Where ever I went I always made sure I had my magical
Pennies with me if ever I was asked to perform.
To me they were magic!
And now they will be gone, as will a little piece of
Canadian and magical history.
That is sad.
“Don’t it always seem
to go - That you don't know what you've got - Till it's gone’
They paved paradise -
And put up a parking lot.”
Well life does go on and things must change. But no matter what happens to our Penny I
will still hold it in high esteem in my memory and my heart (and in jars on my
desk). And that after all that is where
real magic does happen.
PS: Well at least
there not messing with our $20 bills!
PPS: To get an idea
of what some people are doing to commemorate the Penny check this out
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