Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Every Life is Important

The news filtered from the living room television. I could hear bits and pieces from the kitchen: "thousands of refugees fleeing into nearby countries, boat loads of starving escaping horrors I will never fully comprehend, ISIS killing and pillaging, Ebola outbreaks, Putin pontificating, Israel threatening, politicians polluting, Trump trumpeting, senseless shootings, the wealthy and movie and sport idols strutting in front of cameras."

The lead stories focused on the sensational and the negative. Those who control most of the power and the money make use of their power and money to profit themselves at the expense of the environment and the rest of humanity, referred to as the other 90%.

From kings, emperors, popes, empires and invaders to terrorists, large narcissistic corporations, and those in power through money or position, we hear the stories of greed and corruption in both the history books and the modern news media.

But there are, in the midst of the sensational exploiters, the inspiring exceptions. There are some with wealth who actually use it to help others.

Last week Bob and I listened to Charlie Rose interview Warren Buffet and Bill and Melinda Gates. They have a foundation dedicated to donating millions of dollars to causes such as health care and education. They made their millions and are now spending their time giving it away for the betterment of humanity.

Their belief is that "every life is important." They act on this belief by giving away the money they made to help others. What a gift to the world! What a gift to themselves! They are in the top 10% and they have found meaning in their lives. Better yet, they are being joined by others of wealth.

What a joy to know that there are those who care and share. They had a choice to spend it on themselves and seek every pleasure available to them, but they searched for purpose through giving.

It warms my heart and gives me hope. There is good out there, even among the top 10%.  Yes, Virginia, once again, there is a Santa Claus!



Friday, July 24, 2015

What About Barney?

Growing up I watched my father live his life with enthusiasm. He hated his job deep in the recesses of an iron ore mine, but took pride as an underground foreman in maintaining a high safety record and encouraging the spirits of those under his leadership. He loved the fresh air, the woods, the lakes and farming, but to support his family he worked for many years in the damp and darkness of the tunnels under the earth on the iron range of northeastern Minnesota. It was a job he did with excellence and to the best of his ability.

As a young girl I would often meet him after work. I would stand, peering down, by the edge of the mine shaft, face in the rising, metallic smelling steam, waiting for the elevator to rumble up to the surface with that shift of miners, unrecognizable under layers of red dust. I always picked out my father from the weary group as they walked out past me, squinting in the harsh rays of the sun. He would greet me with a huge smile and wave as he walked to the showers and washed off the red ore and changed clothes before giving me a hug as we left for home.

                                           Forty years in the bowels of the iron mines.

At the dinner table we shared news, ideas and plans. My father never dragged us down into his working day troubles. He took an interest in the news of the world and our schooling, always encouraging the four of us to pursue a college degree. He, like many fathers, wanted his children to achieve more than he had with his eighth grade education.

While above ground he fished the lakes, hunted in the woods and edged as close to farming as he could with a huge garden, rabbits, a pasture for making hay and a Jersey cow that he purchased before the banks closed during the onset of the great depression.

I remember the summer days when I would accompany him on his weekend drives into the countryside while searching for a hobby farm. I think deep down he always knew that my mother would never move to a farm far from town. But he would scan the ads in the paper, "Small farm for sale" and together we would check them out. I shared his love of the country and farm animals. He pursued his dream for many years, and never once did my mother deign to take a look. She was settled in town and that was that.

Each of us follows a path searching for that which brings meaning to our lives. We read, reflect, admire our heroes, and observe. At times we act. I am grateful to have spent many of my years living with a model who found meaning through his work, love of learning, and caring connections with those around him.

My father set an example of a strong work ethic even into retirement when he volunteered to help others, be it shoveling snow, hauling wood or fixing a broken appliance. Neighbors, nuns, friends and acquaintances were all included in his circle of care and regard. In the evenings he would read. Our home was filled with magazines and newspapers. He was always curious about the world, past and present. After my mother was killed and he moved in with us, he continued to relish work, reading and making friends with neighbors.

While we were at work he would spend his days cutting wood for our fireplace and taking his daily walk down the alley with his dog before settling into his afternoon adventures with books or the Discovery and History channels on the TV.  He moved in with us shortly before his 87th birthday. I wanted to celebrate his birthday but since his move from northern Minnesota was recent, I thought he was still a stranger in our Twin Cities suburb.

I wondered to Bob, "I want to have a party for Dad, but he has no friends here yet and I don't know who to invite."

Bob replied, "Your dad talks about the next-door neighbors (he admired the wife's nice legs). Why don't you ask them to join our family to make the day a more festive occasion?"

"What about inviting Barney?" our neighbor said when I invited her and her husband to join us. "He and Doris will be hurt if you don't invite them. They admire your Dad."

"Who is Barney?" I questioned.

That was only the beginning. Each one I invited asked about someone else. By the time of his celebration there were 15 neighbors who joined us in our festivities. During the day when we were at work or school, my father had charmed himself into the neighborhood we never had time to get to know. It was less than two months since he joined our household and every retired neighbor in our block had come to enjoy the time they spent visiting with this man, my father, with his friendly, upbeat manner.

As one of the guests reflected, "This is the first time our neighborhood has every gathered together and it is all because of your father!"

For the next six years, until a few months before his death at 92, the neighbors came over to celebrate another year of exchanging stories and laughter with my father, a man who shared his love of life, work, learning and the world around him. His positive spirit was contagious. At his funeral, miles from the town he had spent his life in, the church and visitation were filled with not only his family members who lived in the area, but also by the neighbors who had been strangers to us, but who had entered our lives through this remarkable man.

Everyone searches.....for happiness or whatever they believe brings them that elusive nirvana. Some seek for meaning by making money, through buying things, using drugs, firming relationships, seeking fame, practicing meditation, religion, pursuing causes, volunteerism or love, and the list goes on.

Through the years I observed my father find meaning in his life through pride in his work, dreaming his dreams, connecting to others and nourishing a thirst for knowledge. He never had time to be bored or depressed. His focus was always on others. He lived deeply in the present and looked forward to the future.

 
                "I want to keep on living because I wonder what will happen next."  Raoul Goulet

Friday, July 17, 2015

Strawberry Season

Our garden has flourished, what with all the rain this season. Without so much as a "how do you do", our rhubarb, asparagus and walking onions returned once again. In fact, with each rainfall the asparagus continues to supply our evening table, long after the usual season for that vegetable.

We plant tomatoes each year, along with the lettuce. But surprise, surprise, the strawberries returned, peeking out among the fresh lettuce and ever present weeds. They followed soon after the rhubarb retired for this year. For a few weeks there was one red one each day and each day Bob would pick the one and bring it in and lay it on the counter.

While we both enjoy the lettuce, onions and asparagus in our daily salad, the strawberries would continue to multiply on the counter until I would savor them. Suddenly, in the middle of July, there are numerous red berries popping up in our garden. Today I asked Bob, "Why don't you eat some of the strawberries that you picked?"

"Oh, I had one", he replied. Bob knows that I love the delicious red berries. I wonder if he saves them for me? It could be. That would be just like him. (Just one of the many reasons I married this man).


Friday, July 10, 2015

A "Tail" of Rescue

This story was told to me by my friends, Eloise and William.

William is a photographer. A few weeks ago his photography group was driving through a remote area of the Badlands of South Dakota. "Look over by the side of the road. I think I see a coyote lying in the tall grass."

The driver pulled over and Will got out to get a closer look. A head lifted up from the prairie grasses. Will was hesitant to get closer, but then he saw a tail wag. He thought that was a good sign so he walked over and discovered an emaciated dog, unable to get up but still able to wag his tail.

Fortunately the driver was an animal lover and encouraged Will to bring the dog into her van. Will lifted the dog, mostly skin and bone, into the van. The dog slept the entire trip home.

Before Will brought the dog into the house he approached Eloise and told her that they may have a guest for the night since the Humane Society was closed.

Eloise thought it best if they kept the dog for a few days until they gave him food and he looked more presentable for a possible adoption. After a few days they brought the dog to the vet to have the fleas, tick and worm removal and to get his shots. It turned out that the dog was about a year old and, other than dehydration and some infestation, was in good health.

This Hot Springs couple had been in the process of looking for a Golden Retriever to replace the one they had put down. Needless to say, this abandoned dog, almost to the point of starvation, came into their lives with a wag of his tail. They adopted him, or, perhaps it was the other way around; he adopted them. Whichever way it was, this is the tale of a wag of a tail that saved the life of one dog and brought a bundle of joy to a loving household.

They named him Inktomi. (Inky for short)
Photo by William Ing           

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Hot Springs Fourth of July

July 4, 2015. We had entered the parade with our blue electric car, vivid yellow signs on every side proclaiming "No Uranium Mining in the Black Hills. Protect our Water." Citizens clad in bright yellow shirts from all over the Black Hills walked in front carrying signs and handing out flyers about the dangers of losing our most precious resource to the temporary gain of a few jobs for the benefit of foreign countries who lusted after our uranium deposits laced throughout the edges of our Black Hills.

We followed directly behind a truck pulling a boat, also a sign of the loss of precious water and contaminated fish in our streams and lakes if in-situ uranium mining comes to our tourist-loving Black Hills. Behind us followed two elderly ladies in wheel chairs, also protesting the pending loss of our most precious resource, our pure water. Bringing up the rear were some protesters on motorcycles carrying similar yellow signs.

"Why do you need to go on a vacation?" questioned one of the anti-uranium guys. "I thought you were retired."

We were sitting together after the parade enjoying a cook-out picnic with the group who had entered the parade.

"Retired? replied my husband. "We have never been so busy since we 'retired' to this peaceful rural community in the southern Black Hills."

"There is no escape from involvement in a rural area", I chimed in. "We have a VA to protect for our veterans, crystal mineral waters to save from pollution and fund raisers and causes that we believe make a difference to our environment, our city and our future."

I will never forget when we left the Twin Cities that some of our friends warned us, "You will get bored in the boonies!" Well, I beg to differ. Life is never constant. There are always battles to be fought, if through parades, marching, crossing picket lines, talking up at meetings, or through the power of the pen in writing or editing.

Oh, yes, we can use a vacation. But what a gift during our retirement years. We can use a break from our work. It is a precious gift....no boredom. We continue to fight. We continue to live life! We are filled with gratitude.
Photos courtesy of William Ing
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