Driving home, I thought of how thankful I am to have had a day like this. My thoughts turned to other items to be placed on my list. Of course, at the top of my list are all those current day things; my family and the love we share, seeing how my daughters have matured into such wonderful women, and how Miss Martha has somehow managed to put up with me for all those years. And yes, Jules, I well remember when MY baby turned two.
In keeping with the original mission of this blog exercise, there are things from my childhood that made the list as well:
- A mother who taught me to read before I started school. I knew all about Dick, Jane, and Spot well ahead of the curve. Thanks for her having cultivated and nurtured a voraciousness that exists to this day.
- A father who was a kind, gentle, and funny man with a heart as big as the moon. He gave me so much that I was unaware of receiving. Such things as, "Pride goes before a fall", "A fool and his money are soon parted", and "A Southern gentleman never takes his coat off when eating". To this day, if you can get me in a suit, it could be 200 degrees and I'll be at that table, coat and all.
- A town that imparted a wholesome atmosphere. In that day and time, there would be rumors of a girl who would, now, sadly, there are often rumors of a girl who wont. No doors had to be locked, and most of the time car keys were in the ignition or laying on the front seat. The only reason to close the car windows while you were in the movie was if rain was imminent.
- For having the opportunity to see Saturday westerns and Superman serials. To watch Walt Disney himself show in person on television the progress being made on Disney Land in California. To ride stick horses while firing cap pistols, to build huts and attempt to dig tunnels, to lie on my back under a tree and read on a hot summer afternoon, to pick early cherries from a neighbor's tree that overhung the sidewalk, and to help turn the crank on our old ice cream freezer until I had to give way to bigger muscles, all this and so much more "made the cut" on my list.
Who knows what the economic future is....or any future for that matter? But whatever is to come, it can never take away the past. So my unsolicited advice to you is, celebrate your past, dwell on all the good you have seen and been a part of, for it has been but prologue to what you have become thus far, and where you go tomorrow.
4 comments:
Good post, Jack. I did a little worrying yesterday as I watched our plummetting investments...but then my Butch and I relaxed, like Doris Day, decided "ce sera, sera" and no amount of worrying was going to change a thing. And that what we have together and what we have HAD together far outweighs concerns for the future.
Maybe what is happening now is a good wake up call for our materialistic society.
Glad to see you back. Love the Pelosi golf shot. LOL
Thanks Sherri. Good call on the Doris Day attitude. I sometimes think as the old saying goes, "The inmates are running the assylum."
Best,
Jack
Dad, this is yet again an excellent post! I missed ya'! Thanks for reminding us that we all have TONS to be thankful for. Yea, sometimes life can really throw ya' some curves, but the good stuff FAR outweighs the curves. LOVE YOU MUCH!!!
I have learned not to drink anything when reading your blog or Bryan's blog because your golf reference have me lmao.
My son Jake says, "the monkeys are running our government." lol
Glad to see you back and posting again.
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