It’s interesting to hang out on Tuesday mornings and just
look around at the patrons here at my favorite Tuesday hanging place. I wonder
sometimes what is happening in everyone’s lives. Grandma and Grandpa with their
two toddler grandchildren, a lone business man hard at work and wired for sound
with his tablet snuggled in close to his laptop, several tables of retirees
grabbing Tuesday morning coffee and chatting, a suit and a blue collar cheerfully
engaged in casual conversation, a seventy-something with her paper and
crossword puzzle; I guess it’s just living, each in his or her own way.
We see such small slices of other people’s lives, and yet
there’s a wonderful and unseen richness to it all, a richness that we often
take for granted. Or we ponder it so much that we grind to a halt, second
guessing our lives and what we’re making of them. I’m just a natural ponderer
so I find myself doing this all the time, but that’s me, just living in my own
way. When people see me here on Tuesday mornings they may completely ignore me,
give me a passing glance and nod, or wonder what in the world I’m writing about
for hours at a time. They have no idea what a small slice of my life my writing
is. Some may even think I’m a full-time professional writer – who knows?
Little do they know that I’m a cheerful Grandpa to two
toddlers, or a senior board member at the chamber of commerce, that I own and
manage three businesses, that I’m an amateur plumber about to repair a toilet
at Mom’s condo, that I’m meeting a delivery guy in four hours to help set up a
new lift chair for Mom, that I did four loads of laundry yesterday, that I cook
a pretty decent pot roast, or that I enjoy singing in the
church choir and biking and kayaking and watching sappy movies, oh, and
pondering!
There’s really a lot of richness in all that, and it makes
me happy. Am I a little disappointed in how some things have worked out? Sure.
Would I do some things differently? Sure. Do I have regrets? Some. Am I on the
lookout for the reason I’m here and am I trying to make it better? Always.
I can’t imagine what it must be like for Mom to be stuck in
assisted living just getting from day to day. I think I’d need to be active and
if I couldn’t be physically active I’d be mentally active. I suppose I’d look
for the reason to live and act on it whatever it might be. Despite all her pain
and discomfort Mom still says God must not be done with her yet because she’s
still here. I hope she takes that as a sign that she is still important, that
she can still make a difference, and that she just needs to figure out for herself
what that difference can be and how she’ll act on it.
Is there richness to her life? You bet. Maybe her current
state obscures that richness or at least her awareness of it. Just by being here
she makes a big difference in the lives of her daughter and son-in-law, her
grandchildren and great grandchildren. I pray that the good Lord opens her
weary eyes, helps her see what a difference she makes and inspires her to keep
on.
Looking for the richness in life and living…Pops
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