Today at the grocery store, I noticed a young couple with two adorable little girls. The younger, who was being carried by her dad, gave me a very sweet smile every time I passed them. The older girl was full of energy and running around her parents while they shopped. They ended up in the check-out line right ahead of me. I, therefore, overheard conversation between the older girl (who was probably about 4) and the check-out clerk as to who was going to drink the beer that was being purchased.
This brought to mind my 3 or 4 year old self sitting on my Dad's lap while he drank beer with his friends at our kitchen table. I asked if I could have a taste and was given an emphatic "No!" I suspect that I was an abnormal child, and that most kids wouldn't react this way, but I remember being furious and indignant. I thought, "Huh...he sits here and drinks more than one bottle, and he won't even give me a taste. That is UNFAIR! If it's not good for me, how can it be good for him?"
It is probably a very good thing that my Dad gave up drinking alcoholic beverages when I was 7 years old. I can only imagine how my attitude would have escalated into open defiance, if this "injustice" had continued. Also, I would have eventually figured out that there was a correlation between the alcohol consumption on Friday night and the entire Saturday being wasted sleeping on the couch. This lack of ambition when there were things to be done distressed my Mother. Sooner or later, it would have distressed me too.
I did not understand the significance at the time, but when my Father decided to quit drinking, a celebration of sorts occurred, and my brother and I were allowed to pour the remainder of his stash down the toilet. I have a distinct memory of this and the foam in the toilet bowl.
I have wondered many times as an adult what kind of problems I would have had and would have created for my parents as a teenager, if my Dad hadn't made some major changes in his life.
So today, I am thinking about those two sweet little girls and wishing the best for them and their parents.
Wednesday, August 14, 2013
Monday, August 5, 2013
What is Wrong with This Picture?
Yesterday with my husband at the wheel, we rounded a corner
and came upon three boys on skateboards in the middle of the street. They were smack dab in the center of our
lane, but they were focused on the on-coming car in the other lane. My husband had to brake and had to use the
horn before they even realized we had come up behind them.
A few blocks later as we approached an intersection, I
commented that there were more kids in the street ahead of us…but….when we got
closer, we realized they weren’t kids. A
couple, who appeared to be in their 50s or 60s, was crossing the street. Actually it was hard to tell their ages. The man walked erectly and seemed sturdy, but
the woman was unsteady and her back was bent both forwards and sideways. With great effort, she was pushing a shopping
cart which had one wheel wobbling around at an awkward angle. In the cart were two 24 can cartons of beer.
“Oh,” I sighed, taking in the wobbly cart, the abundance of
booze, the frail woman doing the heavy work as the man sauntered along, “What
is wrong with this picture?”
“Everything,” my husband sadly replied.
Friday, July 26, 2013
I Want to Die on a Windy Day
I want to
die on a windy day,
So as my
spirit slips away,
And leaves
my flesh behind to stay,
I can fly
upon the wind.
As color
fades to pale cast,
And I leave
grief behind at last,
I’m breaking
free and moving fast,
Soaring upon
the wind.
Time for me will
be no more.
I’ll slip
through the eternal door,
Free to
float and dip and soar,
And dance
upon the wind.
Now I live
at sluggish pace,
My movements
are not filled with grace,
But my
spirit then will leap and race,
At light
speed on the wind.
When it’s
time, don’t be surprised,
If as I sigh
and close my eyes,
Mighty gusts
from breezes rise.
I’m somersaulting
in the wind.
Thursday, July 25, 2013
Last Man Standing
We just returned from the National Senior Games in
Cleveland. My husband participated in
the 5K and 10K runs and came home with one ribbon and one medal for his age
group. My husband has been a runner
since junior high, but not so with all of the participants. One of the fascinating things about the
Senior Games is that some of these people were not athletes in their youth and
have come late (very late) to the notion of physical exercise being beneficial
and rewarding.
The day before the 5K, which was held at the Cleveland Zoo,
we were walking the race route to get a feel for the course and fell into
conversation with another couple who were doing the same thing. The wife of the participant told me that her
husband had had two heart attacks, and that his whole family was
overweight. He had taken up running
after the second heart attack and had lost 80 pounds during the past year. He was now more or less obsessed with
exercise and diet to the point that she had gone off to their second home in
Florida to get a break from it. She
commented that she no longer enjoyed eating since he had put himself, and her,
on a restrictive diet. She, by the way,
did not need to lose weight.
The dear lady couldn’t quite wrap her mind around the
strange world that runners retreat into prior to a race. There is no other topic worthy of conversation. Everything revolves around and is focused on “the
race.” As the wife of a long-time
runner, I assured her that this was “normal,” and that a week later she should
expect the whole race to be relived. He
will be making remarks like…”A week ago right now I was_______.” He may be wearing his medal under his shirt
and pulling it out to be admired by anyone who mentions “the race.”
The first eight runners in each age group were
recognized. Places 8 through 4 received
ribbons, while 3, 2 and 1 got bronze, silver and gold medals. At the awards ceremony, it was interesting
that as the older age group results were read, sometimes there were not as many
as 8 participants to be recognized. In
fact, in the 10 K, age 85-89, there was only one male participant, who
automatically received the gold.
After about age 85, the participants, both male and female
find it difficult to step up and down from the podium. They may be able to run/walk a 5 or 10 K, but
the little step up to the podium becomes a barrier, and they need to steady
themselves by holding on to someone to make that step up.
As each age group is called forward, one can’t help but
notice the increasing frailty, fewer participants and slower recovery
time. As hard as we try to take good
care of our bodies, eventually they deteriorate. Something breaks or wears out. We may be able to put off the inevitable for
a time, but no one lives forever. There
were no participants 95 or over.
But…if you live long enough and can still show up and put
one foot ahead of the other, you might just win the gold!
Wednesday, July 10, 2013
The Dangling Muffler Escapade
Just before lunch today, I heard a terrible racket coming
down the street. The noise stopped in
our driveway causing me to dash to the window.
My husband had pulled into the drive with the muffler dragging below his
car. The racket was the muffler scraping
the pavement all the way up the street. He
hurried in, grabbed the keys to my car and hurried out so as not to miss his
noon Rotary meeting.
For some inexplicable reason, as I pondered the vehicle in
the driveway, I saw it as an irresistible challenge. I have no idea what makes me do things like
this, especially since my husband didn’t expect me to take care of it. But, I crouched down next to the car and
tried to pull the muffler off…no luck. I
then decided that perhaps I could wire it up off the pavement, so that the only
noise on the way to the muffler shop would be the unmuffled engine noise. I figured at least the rattle and scrape
sound could be eliminated. A coat hanger,
bungee cord and 30 minutes later, I had the muffler ever so slightly above the
ground.
I went in the house, washed off the dirt acquired from my
under-the-car activity, made myself a PBJ sandwich, and headed for the muffler shop. There was a bit of metal-on-the-pavement
sound along with the rumble of free exhaust, but not nearly as loud as
earlier. I thought my solution had
worked, until I hit a bump. A thud
and a look in the rear view mirror revealed the muffler was now detached and in
the middle of the street behind me. The bungee cord and coat hanger were still
hooked to the under-carriage of the car.
I pulled over and used a blanket from the car to protect my hands while
picking up the now hot muffler.
The rest of the trip to the garage was uneventful, except
for strange looks from other motorists and pedestrians. The manager at the muffler shop said I
shouldn’t have bothered to pick up the muffler.
He said that people troll the city picking up scrap metal, and it would
have probably been picked up before I even got to the shop. I told him that I was just trying to tidy up
after myself.
I sat in the waiting area, ate my PBJ and looked at old
magazines. When my husband got home, he called my cell phone wondering where his car was.
The muffler is now fixed…it was actually under a life-time
warranty. Of course, the labor, the
bracket and the pipes on either side of the muffler weren’t on warranty. Funny how that works. A life-time guarantee plus $200 will get your muffler fixed.
I’m still trying to figure out why I saw that dangling
muffler as a challenge. If I could answer that question, it might explain some other curious things about my life too.
Saturday, July 6, 2013
Waiting for Life...Waiting for Death
It is a sad thing to watch a young person “waiting for life”
to happen to her. I have seen this
phenomenon more than once. A young person sits on the sofa in front of
the television, mindlessly and indiscriminately watching whatever comes on,
because she can’t think of anything better to do. She wanders around the house, or pokes around
in the refrigerator, or stares into space, or checks email or snail-mail
repeatedly, as though something significant surely must drop in front of her
any minute.
At the other end of the continuum is the elderly person
whose strength, sight, hearing or mental acuity have failed him. He sits in his favorite chair staring
blankly, nodding off now and then, sighing, and occasionally shifting position
ever so slightly. Perhaps, someone will
visit him, and he will rouse from his lethargy for conversation. Life is passing him by and he is “waiting for
death.” The elderly person may or may
not be able to change his circumstance.
The young person is the sadder of the two, because she can
change her circumstance and chooses instead to wallow in a bog of mental and
physical inactivity.
For goodness sake, get out and DO SOMETHING!!!!
Go for a walk, read a book, start a craft project, clean
something, volunteer somewhere….maybe at a nursing home or senior residence
that has elderly people “waiting for death.”
There is just no excuse for “waiting for life!”
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Inescapable
“Can anyone hide in
secret places so that I cannot see him?” declares the Lord. “Do not I fill heaven and earth?” Jeremiah 23:24
What a different world we would live in, if all men
understood and believed this. Our deeds
are not covered by darkness or hidden by closed doors. There is no way to whisper quietly enough
that our words are not heard….in fact, our thoughts are heard. No mountain is high enough, no water is deep
enough, no tunnel penetrates far enough, and no desert is remote enough to
escape the all-seeing eye and all-hearing ear.
Because…
God Himself fills heaven and earth.
For the one who loves God and desires to do His bidding,
this is a blessed comfort. For the one
who ignores God and has no desire to be directed by Him, it ought to produce
terror. The only reason it doesn’t is
that men can convince themselves that He does not exist or is powerless. But, just because men can delude themselves,
does not change truth. If God exists, He
does so whether or not men believe in Him.
The person who does not know or love God sees evidence of
His presence every day, but does not recognize it. The person who loves God sees Him and the
work of His hands everywhere and gives thanks.
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