Faith

This is another excerpt from 50 things that really matter.

There’s an old story about Jeb and the flood that tells us something important about faith. Old Jeb was trapped on his roof as the floodwaters were rising around his house. As he sat there, a neighbor passed by in his rowboat, offering to take him to higher ground.

“Don’t worry about me,” said Jeb. “I have faith: The Lord will protect me.”

A while later, the floodwaters still rising, a rescue squad arrived in a powerboat and ordered Jeb to evacuate. “No need,” Jeb insisted. “My faith is strong. I’ll be fine.”

A few hours later, when the wates reached the eaves, a National Guard helicopter hovered overhead and lowered a line. But Jeb wouldn’t grab hold. “The Lord will provide,” he said.

Not too long after, Jeb’s house went under, and Jeb with it. When he arrived at the pearly gates, he was none too pleased.

“Lord, I had such faith in You!” cried Jeb. “How could You have abandoned me?”

“Abandon you?” replied the Lord. “What are you talking about? I sent you a rowboat, a powerboat and a helicopter!”

Like many of us, Jeb had great faith, but it was a faith built only on miracles that come with flashes of light and trumpet blasts. In truth, Gof often responds to or faith in humbler ways. It might be a kind driver who lets us merge when we’re stressed from sitting in heavy traffic. Or it could be a newspaper article that describes a support group we desperately need. Or perhaps it comes in a song on the radio that brings us a cherished, fortifying memory.

Each day, angels visit the footsteps of the faithful, leaving gifts that quietly offer God’s grace, comfort and protection. All we have to do is recognize them and pick them up.

By Doug Hill, 50 things that really matter, Rodale Press for Hallmark

There isn’t much more to be said. The point is simple. Faith is believing in things and opportunities we can’t see, but it also is taking advantage of the things, people and opportunities that are given us. If we believe God is in control, then we have to believe He brings people into our lives for a reason.

We all look for the “flashes” of miracles, but we ignore the everyday miracles right in front of us.  That’s what happened 2,000 years ago. People were mesmerized by the miracles, but couldn’t figure out the message. That has happened through the ages. That continues to happen today.

Chances are, we are going to see few “flashes” of miracles in our lives. But there will be times when we get by — and not know how we did it. That’s our fish and loaves miracle. There will be times when our illnesses go into remission. That’s our healing miracle, even if it’s just temporary.  There will be times when we see the hand and heart of God with complete clarity — perhaps just a precious few times. That’s our burning bush. Truth be known, the burning bush is there all the time. We just fail to see it.

Take time to witness the little ordinary everyday miracles. Watch spring spring. Enjoy the sunshine even on a cold, windy day. Hold a baby. Dance in the rain. Sing. Soak in life.

Those are a part of faith.

Each day, angels visit the footsteps of the faithful, leaving gifts that quietly offer God’s grace, comfort and protection. All we have to do is recognize them and pick them up.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Thinking can get you out of a problem, worry can get you into one.

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Rockin’ Robin

I saw my first robin yesterday. I was on a back road and the plump little red breast started flying out of a field toward my car. I figured he/she would veer away, but no, he/she veered straight for my windshield. Fortunately my deceleration and his/her maneuverability averted disaster, but I can at least say I saw the first robin of spring.

I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing. Those who know me know I love winter … the whiter the better. So, when Mr./Mrs. Robin shows up, it’s a sure sign winter has ended 😦 and spring is at hand.

Those who know me also know I’m a four season guy — although I could do with less summer than any of the other seasons. But I’m all for spring. I’m ready for it. I even look forward to it {except for the allergies the budding trees bring}. It’s time to put winter in the rear view mirror.

Spring brings longer, brighter days — a welcome relief in upstate New York. It brings baseball, road trips without checking the Weather Channel, flowers and green grass. It brings days with temperatures slowly reaching up into the 40s and 50s and 60s with generally cool, comfortable nights. It brings a rebirth in spirit. It brings the singing of birds.

After spotting Mr./Mrs. Robin I checked my {okay, Karen’s} rose bushes. Most of them — each planted to recognize a grandchild, along with one for her and another for her mother — are already showing signs of buds … little green protrusions on still brown stems after just a few successive days in the 50s. They weren’t there last week when I checked.

So I’m looking forward to a string of sunny days so I can clean up the gazebo and bring out the wicker furniture. We may still be a month or so away from moving Karen from her spot on the mantle to her perch on a table in the gazebo overlooking her rose bushes and the evergreens, but now that Mr./Mrs. Robin has signaled the onset of spring, I can’t wait.

As Virgil Kraft said, “Spring shows what God can do with a drab and dirty world.”

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Behind every argument is someone’s ignorance of the facts.

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He Is Not Here

Once again, I’m dipping into some words from my pulpit days at Tyre Reformed.

I’m not a preacher so you’re not going to get a sermon this morning. But I am a journalist and editor, so you’re in for an editorial comment.

My wife may have disagreed with me, but I feel my training as a journalist has made me a listener. And I know one of my God-given gifts is discernment. It is with that background I offer these thoughts on the Scripture we’ve heard.

As a journalist, we’ve been trained to not only listen to words, but to connect the rhetoric to a broader picture. Often, what is said is secondary. The real story is the circumstance in which those words are uttered.

I intentionally chose the four readings we’ve heard [Matthew 28:1-8; Mark 16: 1-7, Luke 24:1-9; John 20:1-8].

Four witnesses. Essentially, they recount the same story from four different perspectives, each subtly different, yet remarkably the same. The skeptics may dismiss them as repetitious. Of course, they reason, the stories are the same. It is to reinforce a message … not necessarily true. Of course the Scripture of the New Testament fulfills the prophecy of the Old Testament. The New Testament is hollow without fulfillment.

You know what I say to the skeptics?

Be damned … and that’s exactly what will happen.

I can say this because of the four accounts we heard. He is not here. That’s the story.

We have a tendency at this time of year to focus on the cross. For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life (John 3:16). It is the suffering Jesus we look to. We remember the pain we caused. We know He died on the cross for our sins. We know He died on the cross for our sins. Praise God.

If that was the end of the story, though, I seriously doubt we would be here today celebrating the empty tomb. I seriously doubt this cult we call Christianity would have grown and flourished. I seriously doubt we would have any real understanding of what it was God did for us through His Son Jesus Christ on Calvary.

It’s ironic. Those who were closest to this man Jesus Christ knew Him only superficially. The Twelve, the followers, the people of the time saw Him and His miracles and looked at Him as the Messiah. Only they were looking in the wrong place. They were looking at the temporal …. They were seeing only the fluff … They were awed by the miracles … They were expecting liberation in their lives …

Yet those who were furthest from Jesus knew Him better. They recognized this Jesus was not a threat to the temporal life. They knew this Jesus was after people’s eternal soul. They knew when people accepted Jesus and His teachings they would view life differently and not accept the tired teachings of the day. They knew they would lose control. They saw beyond the fluff and the miracles. And that is why this Jesus was so dangerous.

Doesn’t that same irony exist today? As Christians, followers of Christ, don’t we complacently sit back and watch as the world self destructs? Haven’t many of our church leaders compromised the foundation of our Christian belief — this book … Holy Scripture — for the sake of political correctness? Haven’t we Christians allowed the agnostics and atheists around us — the minority few — to dictate to us what we can and can’t do in the name of Christ? Haven’t we heard enough about tearing down crosses in cemeteries and taking prayer out of school and allowing the wanton carnage of innocent life in the womb?

It has been 2,000 years since the Word of God became flesh and dwelled among us, but the world was not thereafter immunized from evil. Given the extraordinary development of modern science and technology, we have witnessed instead a dramatic increase in our capacity to inflict ever more horrifying evils upon one another and the created order itself.

We know Christ. We say we follow Christ. Yet we allow this to happen.

The anti-Christians also know Christ … better than we. And the legion of Satan is doing its best to make sure we are blind-sided. It was that way in the beginning. Our readings stopped short. In Matthew 28: 11-15, for example, we are told of the great cover-up. The chief priests and elders told the guards to say His disciples came during the night and stole Him while we were asleep … and this story has been widely circulated among the Jews to this very day. And it remains that way to this very day.

No, the story didn’t end with Jesus’ death. It couldn’t have ended there. There had to be another ending. There had to be a connection that brought the whole business of redemption full circle. And that connection is the empty tomb.

Christ came into this world as a bridge, allowing sinful man an avenue, an access back to God. That bridge is the empty tomb.

Easter is at the heart of Christian faith and worship. The empty tomb is the  saving event that gives the entire New Testament its theological shape and direction because the Resurrection is the centerpiece of the paschal mystery, the Lord’s passing over for the sake of our salvation from life through death into eternal glory at the right hand of the Father. If Christ has not been raised, Paul wrote, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins (I Corinthians 15:17).

The death-to-resurrection dynamic remains at the core of the whole Christian life, and indeed, of all human life as well. We can only truly live if we are prepared to die to self and to live for others, in fidelity to the truth. As Jesus told us Himself, Unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds (John 12:24).

Today will echo the traditional profession of faith “He is risen.” The air will be filled with “Alleluias” and the mood in our churches will be appropriately festive.

On Monday morning, however, the world will look just about the same as it did yesterday. Violence, poverty, homelessness, oppression, hatred, greed and injustice will continue unabated. The light of the risen Christ, so joyfully proclaimed today, will not have penetrated the earthly nooks and crannies of sin and apathy.

This shouldn’t shock or disorient us. We know sinners don’t automatically cower under the shadow of the cross, nor does the world become instantly cleansed by the sunlight of morality at the first intonation of the Easter Gloria.

And yet we continue to plod along, stumbling along just like the chosen ones waiting for the infusion of the Spirit, ready to do whatever we can to push back the forces of evil by becoming ourselves weak and imperfect instruments of the grace of the Risen Lord.

Because He died, we are saved. But because He lives we live alive in the hope, knowledge and confidence all Christ said, did and promised — as documented in this book, Holy Scripture — is true and accurate. But it’s not the words. They can be interpreted in many ways. It’s the message. He promised to be with us always. He promised us a resurrection. He promised us eternal life. Not an easy life … just an eternal life.

Because He lives. Not because he lived. He lives. In the present tense, an active verb.

That’s the miracle of Easter. That is what Easter is all about.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Never be diverted from the truth by what you would like to believe.

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Honest Work

This is another excerpt from 50 things that really matter.

When my husband, Matt, was about 10 years old, his grandfather started taking him to the family cherry tree orchards on Saturday afternoons. Matt would work alongside the farmhands, whistling as he went, to let his grandfather know he wasn’t eating any of the cherries intended for the bushel. A full day’s work netted Matt 50 cents, If his grandfather bought him a hot dog and a soda, they called it even.

As a teenager, his dad would call up from the breakfast table, “Two minutes!” Matt knew better than to challenge — he was dressed, fed, and our raking leaves or tilling soil before the sun had risen over the ridge.

I was horrified by these stories during our first years together. I mourned for his lost childhood, thinking gratefully of my Saturday mornings in front of cartoons, slurping cereal. After we were married, though, I noticed how quickly he’d be done with his chores while I was still cursing over the dishes. His focus was intense but cheerful. He got the job done well and quickly because he put himself completely into the task — because he’d learned to enjoy honest work.

No matter if he’s cleaning the gutters or finishing a report, Matt embraces each project as an opportunity for expression. His lovingly stirred spaghetti sauce says, “I feed and nourish our family.” His well-weeded garden says, “I savor my connection with the earth.” Through example after example, he demonstrates the key to happiness in whatever we do. Matt’s lesson: All work — on the field, in the factory, or on the computer — can be honest and fulfilling, it we approach it from a place of devotion.

As Matt has shown me, honest work is our contribution to the community and to the world, the outward manifestation of our soul’s purpose. Just as the trees keep the air clean, give us shade, and shower us with fruits and nuts, so too are we each charged with our task, creating the future, one brick — or compost pile or database or cherry pie — at a time.

By Mariska vanAalst, 50 things that really matter, Rodale Press for Hallmark

Matt and I may have a different approach, but we share a common conviction. Work isn’t work if you do it joyfully and with complete attention. Matt was brought up with a strong work ethic that obviously carried on into his adult life. He enjoys creating … a garden, a meticulous home, reports. And because he has joy, it isn’t work at all.

Today, there are too many people who believe work is a four letter word. Okay, it is, but with a pejorative tone. Too many of us spend more time looking at the clock or scrolling through the Internet or gossiping or sneaking a couple extra minutes before and after lunch and breaks than actually working.

I was never a hands-on guy. I gave up on gardening when I harvested more weeds than vegetables. My gutters are actually garden rows. My bushes have a mind of their own … and I’m okay with their free expression.

But if I take on a task I take it on 100%. True, as a writer, most of my “work” is mental, which is why I tend to tune out people and time as deadlines tick closer and closer. My cerebral muscles get a workout as I attempt to find just the right word at the right time.

Honest work never hurt anyone. In fact, it is a partnership with God and His plan. I don’t care if you’re digging ditches, mowing lawns, a work-at-home entrepreneur, working in an office or factory, designing buildings, are a CEO  or even just writing stories, if you whistle while you work (sometimes to yourself), approach it not as a jooob 😦 but an opportunity 🙂 and recognize its God-given value you’ll not only find the hours fly by but the satisfaction is immeasurable.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: A person is not rewarded for having brains, only for using them.

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Five Minute Friday — Broken

Here’s this week’s installment of Five Minute Friday. You might remember the task is to write for five minutes on a specific prompt word.

The initiative was started by Lisa-Jo Baker (http://lisajobaker.com/2013/03/five-minute-friday-broken/) who thought about writing and how often our perfectionism gets in the way of our words. And she figured, why not take five minutes and see what comes out: not a perfect post, not a profound post, just five minutes of focused writing.

There are a couple hundred bloggers who pause to post on the prompt word of the week. It’s fun getting the prompt, thinking about it for a couple of minutes and getting to work producing something readable (you hope) in just five minutes. You should link over and read some of the posts. They don’t disappoint.

The prompt this week is BROKEN.

Here goes. The timer is set for five minutes {clock starts now}

I walked in the kitchen nook and discovered a small Precious Moments saucer in pieces, broken on the floor. I don’t know how it happened. Did someone hit it? Did the everyday vibrations push it off the edge? Was there a sudden breeze?

It didn’t matter. It was broken, pieces and shards scattered all around. It wasn’t an heirloom, but it was something I gave to my wife a long time ago. It was far from being irreplaceable.  Yet, I tried to super glue it together, knowing with missing chunks and glue residue cutting through the words, it was never going to be whole again.

As I was going through the exercise, I was reminded I, too, have been shattered on the floor, broken physically, emotionally and spiritually. But while I attempt to super glue myself back together — with the same results as the saucer — I know there will be a time when … STOP

I will be made whole again. This Good Friday reminds me of that truth. Our Lord was beaten, battered and crucified singularly for me and collectively for all of us. It wasn’t the end of the story, just a piece of it. The story ends with the glory of an empty tomb and a Jesus made whole.

That five minutes whisked by quickly… Happy Easter, everyone. Jesus Christ lives! Alleluia! Alleluia!

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: The mind is a computer.  You get out of it as much as you put in.

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The Empty Tomb

There are two “major” celebrations on the church calendar – Christmas and Easter. One we celebrate with joy and festivity. The other we generally celebrate quietly, with a little more reserve and certainly a lot more reverence and solemnity.

The latter, of course, is Easter – actually a compilation of the days that begin on Palm Sunday and end with Christ’s resurrection, encompassing His passion and His reprehensible death along the way.

But to look at Easter season with sadness, I feel, is missing the whole point. These few days are the foundation of our entire faith. Without the pain, suffering, death – and most important – resurrection, Jesus was just another kind-hearted man with a vision.

Certainly, the agony is worth remembering. In fact, the agony is worth feeling. But it is the resurrection we should focus on … and that should give us reason to celebrate – really celebrate.

When I was growing up – as, probably, most of us can remember – the emphasis of Lent was denial. And being just average kids, we looked forward to Sundays because we could “forget” the denials – candy, ice cream or whatever. It was a “day off.”

Then came Holy Week. The palms were nice, but again, the focus shifted immediately into the passion and for the next few days, Jesus’ suffering was drummed into our heads. Good Friday was a day of quiet, reflecting on Jesus’ death.

Somehow, that was almost the end of the message. Easter Sunday was anti-climactic. We spent so much time dwelling on the death of Jesus, His resurrection almost got lost.

At Christmas, we celebrate the birth of Jesus. Despite the commercialism that has grown, as a faith community we can sense the joy of the season. It is truly a celebration.

What about Easter? Is that same joy present? Is there any joy present?

I don’t think so.

Over the years I’ve theorized about why. Perhaps it is because there is no fixed date. Perhaps it is because we are, generally, still depressed from a long winter.

But perhaps it is also because we reduce the entire Lenten season – particularly Holy Week and Good Friday – to the suffering Jesus. As humans, we don’t like suffering … in ourselves or in others.

As a result, our minds and emotions shut down around Good Friday. It’s just too painful for us to watch this Jesus die this death. It becomes even more painful when we consider He died for us, our sins contributed to the weight of the cross, the sting of the nails, the labored breathing, the disgraceful death.

The focal point of the season should be 36 hours later … Easter, the empty tomb. We should have our eyes on that empty tomb at Easter – just as we have out eyes fixed on the crib at Christmas.

While sharing the Eucharistic meal, we should recognize the Jesus of the empty tomb. While recalling the passion of Jesus, we should be looking to that empty tomb. While reflecting on the crucifixion, we should contemplate its meaning as a necessary step from this world to the empty tomb. As we ponder the mystery of the risen Christ at Vigil, Sunrise or Easter services, we should see the mystery in light of that empty tomb.

A moved rock, nothing but a shroud, an empty tomb. That’s the foundation of our faith. Jesus’ resurrection makes it possible for us to be resurrected. And just as Jesus replaced His spot in the tomb for a place at His Father’s table, so, too, will our tomb be emptied and we will join Father, Son, Spirit and our fellow believers at that same table.

That’s cause for celebration.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Having a good idea is one thing – developing it successfully is another.

This originally was written while I was editor at the Catholic Standard, newspaper for the Archdiocese of Washington, DC, and re-published in my newspaper, Reveille/Between the Lakes. I thought I would share it with this audience as well.

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Wednesday Writing XVI

Well, it’s Wednesday so it’s time to add to our collaborative community story.

We’re following a flashback of our main character, Samantha. The story thus far is on my blog under “Story.”

Here’s where we left off.

Chad brought a Christmas tree and had it decorated when we arrived. We spent our days skiing and sledding and building snowmen. We drank gallons of hot chocolate. We not only celebrated Christmas but JR’s and Kate-D’s birthdays. At night after the kids were settled in, we snuggled in front of the fireplace … and then some. It was like a second honeymoon…

Of course, all good things come to an end and the kids and I returned home. Chad finally made it back — on Valentine’s Day with a dozen red roses. He never ceased to amaze me.

Later in the summer, Chad and I were in the PX doing some shopping. Out of the blue, he says, “Do you think we should start going to church?”

Stunned, I stopped in my tracks. “What?”

“Do you think we should start going to church?” he repeated.

“Is something wrong? Are you okay?” I answered, instinctively, thinking he may be melancholic since we just buried his father a couple of months ago.

“I’m fine,” he insisted. “Forget it. I just thought the kids should start learning about God.”

Now, Chad and I were brought up in the church and we were believers. But we never really practiced our faith after we got married, except for maybe a Christmas or Easter service and weddings and funerals.

“I’m not against it,” I said as I started wheeling my wobbly-wheeled cart back down the aisle. “You just caught me off guard. Why don’t we get a coffee and talk about it?”

Well, that’s exactly what we did. Chad explained faith and church attendance had become a fairly regular topic in the office. He thought it might be time to do something. After all, he reasoned, JR was almost 10 and Kate-D was seven. “We know what we believe, but what about them?”

“Sure, hon. We can go to church. That was never an issue. I just wanted to make sure you’re okay, that’s all,” I said.

Since we both grew up in the Catholic church, I figured we would be heading to St. Paul’s down the street. But Chad suggested Grace Community Church in Huber Heights about 12 miles away. He said a couple of the members of his team went there and spoke about it favorably.

I was skeptical, but we packed up the kids and went to Sunday’s 10:50 contemporary service. The kids went off to children’s church and Chad and I encountered a totally different worship experience. Everyone was friendly and helpful. It was a casual atmosphere with a message that focused on our relationship with Jesus, not a bunch of rules and regulations. It had uplifting music, not stale hymns, with horns and drums replacing the organ. I can’t speak for Chad, but I left with a warm feeling.

Chad suggested we stop at IHOP after the service and we went around the table sharing our views about the church. The kids were just as enthusiastic as I was and over our pancakes we decided to make this a Sunday tradition.

Over the next few months, we got more involved at Grace … bible studies .. family-focused activities … the kids got involved in AWANA. Chad and I found new friends and a home outside our home.

Of course, not everyone approved of our decision. Chad’s Mom and my Dad tolerated the decision, but Mom was … well, Mom. How could I do such a thing? How could I turn away from God? What was she supposed to tell Fr. Pat? Or her friends?

And I thought back to my encounter with the glimpse of white as the sun tried to peek out from behind the clouds on my way out here. It didn’t succeed, but first a ray rained into the picture, followed by a halo of rays. As I caught the rays out of the corner of my eye, my mind drifted back to the time I was driving Kate-D to swimming practice with JR in tow. There was a similar canvas in the sky that day. They thought the light was heaven shining through. Interesting they made that connection. And it led to a brief discussion about Jesus and heaven.

To think, we might not have had that conversation if Chad hadn’t suggested a trip to Grace Community Church …

There you go, readers. What’s next?

All you have to do is put down your thoughts and get them to me. You can post your ideas as comments on the blog – but remember everyone will see them, so the “surprise” factor might get lost – or you can e-mail me directly at revblt@rochester.rr.com. Each Wednesday I will continue the story on the blog, along with that week’s attribution and periodically update Reveille/Between the Lakes readers. The complete story thus far is available on my blog under “Story.”

I hope we can have some fun with this.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: You have to know a lot before you know how little you know.
.

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Memories

We recently moved to a small town dotted with cemeteries dating back to well before the Civil War. Wandering through them on early-morning and late-evening walks with my dog, I often stop to read the carefully carved, worn stones. The dates — from birth to death — reveal so much. There are parents and grandparents. There are soldiers and their widows. And children — infants even. I like to say their names aloud, in some small way confirming that these people really did exist — that even though they left this world long agop, they’re still a precious part of some family’s memories.

My grandma died almost 35 years ago, and I have not been back to her grave since we buried her. I still have split-seconds of wanting to call her — maybe to tell her about the new dress I just bought or the good-looking guy I saw at the grocery store. She always wanted to know the latest piece of news, no matter how trivial. My mother says those momentary thoughts keep Grandma in my heart.

Maybe. But just as important to me now is the thought that perhaps another woman is walking with her dog through the cemetery where Grandma is buried. If so, I hope she will brush off the headstone to read the dates and to say my grandmother’s name aloud, doing her part to keep Grandma’s memory alive.

By Ellen Maio, 50 things that really matter, Rodale Press for Hallmark

Before I read Ellen’s words, I thought the little tome was about making memories. After all, once you make a memory, it’s there forever. And, Lord knows, I have included a ton of memories in my blogs — 56 times to be exact, or better than a third of the time.

After reading her thoughts, though, I had a different take. It’s all about making a difference. Most of us don’t make a big difference in the world. But we all can and do make a big difference — for good or for bad — in our own families and with our sphere of friends.

We write obituaries, bury our dead and write those inscriptions to give others a glimpse — albeit a very short one — into our lives. It’s a way to say I was here.

Ellen remembered her Grandma because she took the time to listen, “no matter how trivial.” What a great tribute.

In today’s busy society, we often don’t take the time to listen, to interact, to make memories.

This morning as I was visiting other blogs, I discovered http://thismansjourney.net/2013/03/22/weekly-image-of-life-getaway/. In short, the Island Traveler planned a mini vacation with his family that included a visit to Natural Bridge Wildlife Ranch, San Antonio’s Riverwalk for an overnight stay and a fun trip at Six Flags the next day. Whatever was left, they were hoping to spend it at the Tangier Outlet in San Marcos. But his son got sick and even missed his class field trip to the Houston Zoo.

With the mini vacation shortened, all plans could have been scuttled, but instead, more memories were made.

As the Island Traveler reports in his blog, “Everyday we are given chances to enjoy life. To just escape from our worries and make a quick getaway from it all. They may not last forever but it’s long enough to fill our hearts with happiness and serenity that will inspire us to face another challenge ahead.”

And everyday moments like that are what memories are made of. It’s a way to tell those wo follow us we were here … and made a difference in the lives of or families and friends.

Make memories … every day.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Minds are like parachutes – they only function when open.

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Warm Spring Days

When I was young, it wasn’t love that filled my thoughts in the spring. It was baseball.

I loved everything about the game — the crack of the bat, the thrill of chasing a ground ball across short green grass, even watching the games on our old black-and-white TV. Yet looking back now, no ceremony was quite as important to me as the annual ritual of playing catch with my dad.

Dad was never much of a baseball fan, but as green leaves began to sprout on barren branches and warmth returned to the air, he would grab his old mitt and head out to the yard with me just the same. There was something therapeutic about playing catch with him. The hum of the ball as it sailed through the air. The friendly pop as it hit the leather netting. We may have been 50 feet apart, but the flight of that ball connected us, forming as strong a bond as any father-son talk ever could have.

I was never the star of my Little League team, yet Dad never cared about that. Every year, he would be out there, waiting to field any errant throw I sent his way.

As I grew older, I realized that our game was a reflection of our relationship — that even if a problem didn’t involve a glove and ball, Dad would always be there to handle anything I threw in his direction. His devotion to our springtime ritual showed his devotion to me — not only to my love of baseball but also to my life.

I’ve often heard it said that “the devil is in the details.” Now I realize that in my relationship with my father, love was in the details.

By Wyatt Myers, 50 things that really matter, Rodale Press for Hallmark

As I read Wyatt’s words, I was drawn to the eulogy I read at my Dad’s funeral last year. I know not everyone had a special relationship with their father, but the point I think he was making — and why it matters — is that special relationship with someone … your mother, grandmother, grandfather, brother, sister, cousin and/or friend.

I know some of you have already read my thoughts on dad, but I thought this could be an appropriate time to widen the audience.

When I stopped in to see Dad my first question was how he felt. For the past few months he invariably would say, “Lousy.” I would press him but he never had any specific aches or pains … he just felt “lousy.”

Well, I suspect today he would tell me, “I told you I felt lousy.”

When I was about 14 or 15 years old, I had no idea what to get dad for Father’s Day. He didn’t have any passionate hobbies, wore ties only on Sundays and for funerals and I don’t ever think I saw him in a sweater or scarf . I could  make him something in shop, but everything I made either didn’t work or ended up as an ashtray … and dad never smoked.

Then it hit me. As I was watching the Donna Reed Show — remember that show? — a young Paul Peterson sang the song My Dad. It encapsulated my feelings for my dad.

So, I bought him the record, a vinyl 45. That was my gift to him.

I was never quite sure how he received it. Dad was never very emotional. There was no real reaction, no surprise at the silliness of the gift, no tugging at the heart strings, no mist in the eyes … just the obligatory thank you. And I don’t know what happened to the record over the years. I don’t know if he considered it a treasure or trash.

I do know he listened to it at least once on that faraway Father’s Day. But this is an appropriate time to share it again.

He isn’t much in the eyes of the world
He’ll never make history
No, he isn’t much in the eyes of the world
But he is the world to me

I don’t ever remember a time when I was growing up when I couldn’t count on Dad being there. No, we didn’t throw the ball around a lot and we rarely, if ever, had one on one time. But he was there in the background shaping my life not by what he said but by what he did. I don’t ever remember him getting angry and there was never any profanity spewed. Okay, maybe there was the occasional damn it or Jesus Christ, although I think the latter may have been more of a prayer for help than taking the Lord’s name in vain. At any rate, the outbursts were the exception rather than the rule. In fact, my first “damn” story was him telling me when he was in France during a rainstorm during World War II and he got annoyed at the water filling the trench. He yelled out “Damn it!” And it struck him. Dam the source and stop the water.

I don’t know why that story stuck with me over the years, but it somehow served as a lesson to do what has to be done, regardless of the circumstances.

Another lesson I remember came earlier when I broke my finger during what had been up to that time a successful final Little League season. The injury ended my “career” behind the plate. As we left the doctor’s office with my finger heavily bandaged and in a splint, my eyes welled, not because it hurt, but because my 12 year old world had just crashed and burned. He put his arm around me — an oddity in itself — and told me to be strong. This wasn’t the end, just another opportunity. In his own way, he taught me to face adversity not with self-pity but head on and look for ways to grow, perhaps in a different direction.

In retrospect, it wasn’t much of a pep talk and definitely not one of those proverbial father-son moments … but at the time, it brought some sense to a 12 year old.

One other incident stands out in my mind. I was clowning around on the stairs to the attic. Okay, I was practicing my fielding skills. I would throw a ball up the stairs and try to catch the carom as it bounded back down. And I got braver and braver, moving from the landing up a step at a time. Of course, the steps won and down I went … right into the wall. There it was … a big butt hole in the wall, as visible as all get out from our living room.

I figured for sure dad’s volcano would erupt and I tried to figure out how I was going to explain THIS. When he came home, I just told him.

Nothing. No yelling. He just shook his head. The hole was fixed, but always remained a visible reminder until I was just about ready to move out and Mom and Dad had the wall re-papered.

Dad’s role was to be a protector and provider. He had his share of trials and disappointments, but never complained. I don’t know most of them. I know Mom had a number of miscarriages, but they tried to protect me from the ugliness of the world and kept me out of the loop … and I remained their only son. So, I probably contributed to those disappointments more than I even realized.

My dad, now here is a man
To me he is everything strong
No, he can’t do wrong, my dad

Throughout the years, the one constant in my life was Dad. We didn’t always agree as I was growing up and, actually, after I grew up. But I knew I could always go to Dad and together we could solve anything.

He encouraged my attendance at Don Bosco Tech so I “could learn a skill.” I think financially he was glad I chose to commute to Manhattan College rather than board at Notre Dame or Boston College, but he was disappointed when I floundered and bounced around from the engineering to liberal arts program with a less than stellar academic record. He encouraged my transfer to Dominican College and I think he was proud when I finally got that diploma. He thought I was too young to get “involved” with Karen and I’m sure perplexed why I would want to get married at 21. He couldn’t quite understand why I worked at the Paterson News instead of finding a “real job.”

But he was supportive of every decision I made. I can still see his head shaking when I bought my sporty red and white Studebaker Silver Hawk (“You better be careful with that,“ he said, “The police will be out for you.” I’m sure he was thinking about my heavy foot). When I bought a new car the day before my wedding or when I told him I was moving to Illinois, he may not have understood and may not  have made the same choices, but he recognized this was my life and he respected it. That was another lesson I learned as my children grew and embarked on their lives.

And, of course, he had a heart of gold. Many, many, many times he bailed me out when I overextended, not only financially but by talking things through, offering options and encouraging me to keep on going.

And, it wasn’t just me. He helped many in the family as well as friends. He made the world just a little bit better.

My dad, now he understands
When I bring him troubles to share
Oh, he’s always there, my dad

I often thought Dad and I were nothing alike. In many ways, we aren’t. He was super organized. I’m not. He planned everything and didn’t like surprises. I tend to wing it and treat each new day as a new adventure. He was always neat with everything in its place. Me? Well, not so much. I don’t mind a little dust; at least it gives me a place to write notes to myself. He was never emotional, to the point I can count the number of times he said “I love you” on less than half the fingers on one hand. I remember him telling me and my family he didn’t expect tears at Mom’s funeral. I tend to be emotional, to say “I love you“ and have been known to shed a tear or two, albeit mostly when I’m alone. He lived in one area all his life until his fall. I’ve lived in five states. He would put a couple thousand miles on his car a year. It was just for transportation. Last year I put on 46,000 miles … a trend started from my first days behind the wheel. Driving is my therapy, my sanctuary.

But over the years — and especially over the past few years — I realized we are so very much the same. My traits can be traced back to Dad. I discovered our mannerisms are almost identical. Our temperament. Our sense of family. Our outlook on life. Our values.

We share the same dry, unexpected sense of humor. Over the years, he would blurt something out of the blue that lit up the room or start a muffled laugh during a serious moment.

Dad was the epitome of commitment. He wouldn’t quit and he wouldn’t let me quit. He was hard working and the embodiment of blue collar America. He wasn’t a “religious” man but had a deep faith. And he did things quietly. He relished being in the background with the spotlight on others. He passed those values on to me.

When I was small I felt ten feet tall
When I walked by his side
And everyone would say “That’s his son”
And my heart would burst with pride

The past few years have been tough on Dad. Yet, through the debilitating illnesses, he managed to keep his sense of humor. On good days, he would organize his nightstand drawer — endlessly. His mind would tell him he could do things his body couldn’t, but he would try. He was never imposing on the nurses or aides and felt they had better things to do than tend to him.

The past few years have been tough on me as well. I tried to visit him every day, but it was difficult seeing this independent, strong man reduced to dependence and a wheelchair.

But even in this situation, Dad continued to teach me life lessons. When Karen was diagnosed with cancer, he was there. When she died, he was there. A well placed word or sentence, like 50 years prior, brought some sense to a senseless world.

Even facing his own death, he maintained that same sense of peace … and organization … and humor.

It almost became a ritual going over his funeral plans. For days on end he would ask me to go over the plans … plans he made.

One day, he said to me, “I just don’t understand it.” Dutifully I responded, “Don’t understand what?”

“What happens,” he said.

“What happens about what?” I asked completely lost and not knowing where this conversation was going.

“You know, when I die.”

It caught me off guard. I told him I didn’t know, but figured this could be a “faith” moment to discuss ethereal things like heaven and relationships with Jesus. So I started, “Well, you have a deep relationship with God so …”

He cut me off mid-sentence. “I’m okay with God,” he said. “I mean, how am I going to get back to New Jersey?”

Again, we had been over this about 100 times already, and it was just one of about 100 more. But I pressed on. “The nursing home will let me know. I’ll let the funeral director know. He’ll pick you up, get you ready and drive you to New Jersey. We’ll have the funeral there and you’ll be buried by Mom.”

He thought for a minute. “The undertaker will drive me there?” he asked.

“Yes,” I responded.

He had a glazed look on his face, so I asked him what was wrong. “Nothing,” he said. “I just thought you were taking me down in your truck.”

All I could do was laugh as visions of the film Weekend at Bernie’s flashed through my mind.

Another time, he told me he dreamt he had died. He said it was so real, so I naively asked him, “What was it like,” to which he responded, “I don’t know. I woke up.”

Then there was the time he asked me if I saw his name in the newspaper. I said no and asked him why his name would have been in the newspaper. He said, “Because I died and my obituary was supposed to be in the newspaper.”

I assured him he did not die because we were talking and he seemed to agree it must have been a dream. But he told me to check tomorrow’s paper. “Okay,” I said, “Why?” He answered, “Just to make sure. It’s after lunch so maybe it was too late for today’s paper.”

This past spring, I was complaining about gas prices. A couple of days later, he asked if prices were still rising. I said yes and he shot back, “Is that going to make a difference for my funeral.” I didn’t understand where he was going so I asked him what he meant. He said, “You said everything was paid for. Do you have enough to get me back to Paterson?” In one of my flippant moments, all I could say was, “No, we just have enough to get you to the Delaware Water Gap.”

Dad, we had enough.

And he wondered what his funeral would be like. He told me not to make a big deal about it because there aren’t too many people left who know him. He was right. The numbers are dwindling. But he was also wrong. He left a positive mark on the world that can’t be erased or forgotten.

To be fair, he was ready to die a few years ago and it bothered him when he woke up day after day. Only God knows why and how he hung on as long as he did. But I’m so thankful he did. It gave me a chance to really get to know my Dad, not only as Dad, but as a man.

My dad, oh I love him so
And I only hope that some day
My own son will say
“My dad now here is a man”
Paul Petersen – My Dad Lyrics

Awhile ago, I awoke to an “incident.” Out of the closet in my room came this dashing young man with wavy hair wearing tan slacks with cuffs on them and a ribbed t-shirt. There was a young blond with a pastel blue dress and bright white apron tending to some flowers. The man smiled and said, “Excuse me, Miss.” At that moment I immediately recognized it was Dad, simply from the inflection of his voice. “Where am I?” The girl turned around and stood up. It was my Mom. “I’m here to take you home,” she said. She took his hand and they turned toward the closet, which now radiated with brightness. They walked in together as a crowd of people gathered around them.

My head tells me it was a dream. But I know I was conscious of everything around me … the clock, the traffic outside. My heart tells me it was a vision.

I don’t know what it was. But I believe that’s how Dad walked into the Promised Land.

I love you, Dad.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Experience is a hard teacher.  She tests first and teaches afterwards.

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Wisdom

After college and before I figured out what I wanted to do with my life, I bartended for two years in Boulder, CO. To pass the slow winter days, I befriended the elderly saxophonist who played outside the restaurant.

Eugene “Lucky” Hudson had lived each of his 75 years with a passion for experience that took him all over the country, playing juke joints and living out of suitcases. Every afternoon, I would wipe the bar, and he’d listen to my stories — quibbles with co-workers, laments about holiday demands, wounds left over from spats with friends. Regardless of how silly or insipid that day’s complaints were, Lucky would listen with his whole body, nodding and humming and closing his eyes, “tsk”ing and laughing with his whole belly. At the end of my rants, he’d wipe his beer mustache with the back of his hand, fix me with his huge brown eyes, and say, “Well, let me tell you something about people …” and off he’d launch into a story.

At the time, I’d wonder what an anecdote about working a farm in Alabama or sporting around the jazz clubs of San Francisco had to do with my problems. I saw only the specific details of his situations, the distinct personalities he described. Now, with the benefit of a few experiences of my own, I see those details as markers, giving tangible form to the real messages behind his words.

When I remember those words, I no longer hear about the rough drought back in 1939 or the gleam of a fin-tailed Cadillac. I hear his low, smooth voice saying, “Your momma just needs to be loved — don’t question it, just do it” or “Forgiveness is our chance to create divinity — granting it only begets more.”

What swims back to me with complete and ruthless clarity are the lessons he tossed around as effortlessly as seeds from a farmer’s hand. Those seeds took root, and I’m only now hearing his wisdom as he heard my woes.
By Mariska vanAalst, 50 things that really matter, Rodale Press for Hallmark

As I read Mariska’s words, I remember my journey to whatever wisdom I have. As I got older, I realized the world didn’t revolve around me and my thinking evolved into the realization we are all intertwined in one way or another. My experiences could help you. Your experiences could help me. That interconnection still amazes me.

Wisdom isn’t about knowing everything … or even anything. It’s about experiencing life, learning its lessons and passing it along. Listen to the stories … not just the words. Listen to the lessons. Apply those lessons to your situation. And don’t be afraid to pass your story along {a good way is an e-book my Deanna Kohlhofer — by way of full disclosure, my daughter — available at http://journeywithd.com/ebooks/}.

THOUGHT TO REMEMBER: Enthusiasm is very good lubrication for the mind.

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