Nothing stays the same.
July 6, 2012
We are on “vacation” in Iowa. I put that in parentheses
because we—my husband and I, my daughter Anna and her husband and two
pre-schoolers--are staying with my soon-to-be 89-year-old mother. Don’t get me
wrong; I am glad and thankful to be here and to have them all with me, but it
is not relaxing for me, what with the shopping, cooking, cleaning up, laundry,
etc. But I digress. What started my train of thought was the family picnic on
July 4. My cousin Debbie mentioned that it felt funny going to the Carlton
Church without Carl being there and to the 4th celebration without
Ray. Earlier in the day, it had crossed my mind that it had not been many years
since Gerald, Vernon, Carl, and Ray would have all been there. I commented that
nothing stays the same, and it really doesn’t. We shouldn’t expect it to,
and we really should try not to feel sad when it doesn’t. Another change we saw
that day was that a new generation is coming up. Judy Dobson generously brought
toys and costumes for Emily’s kids. Since Anna’s kids were there too, they got
to join in the fun. Joey became a knight in shining armor; Nora transformed
herself into “bat girl”; and Jackson made the cutest, fiercest little pirate
you ever saw! And so, change is not a bad thing. Something in our make-up
resists change, and it IS heart wrenching in a way. But we must not let fear
and reluctance to change or nostalgia about the past keep us from relishing the
present.
1 comment:
Barb, I'm not trying to be grandiose in saying "Wonderful". I really enjoyed this one though. Somehow reading it early this morning slowed me down a bit and helped me to see more appreciatively. And trust me, at the beginning of the day, that makes the outlook a little more promising. Thanks!
Post a Comment