Hand on my shoulder – up North

Hand on my shoulder - up North

I went to our place up north to work by myself on several projects, and one of the chores to finish before I went back home was to mow the lawn. Simple enough, and normally goes pretty quick if all the equipment runs well. Some of the grass is out in the open, and some is under some good-sized trees, and there are a couple acres to take care of. On this occasion, I was in a bit of a hurry for some reason, but just going about my business. Mowing one of the paths between trees, and with trees overhead also, I was cruising forward when suddenly I felt pulled backward physically, like a hand had been placed on my chest and pulled me backward while my head echoed with a voice yelling “BACK UP!” I instinctively stomped on the hydro drive pedal in reverse, and narrowly, I mean by a couple inches, missed being slammed by a long log the diameter of my head, now lying in the path in front of me. Shaking, I got off the tractor and wrangled it back off the path and into the woods. It was heavy, and unexplainable. I hadn’t seen it when it was in the air above, and I couldn’t really tell even where it came from. All I know is that I was pulled back, physically helped, that day.

Someone was watching out for me that day.

I lost a friend last week

prayer

A very good friend of mine took his own life last Wednesday. He had struggled with depression for several years, but I’m sure that the isolation of COVID-19 contributed. How could it not? He had been a multi-site department manager in healthcare, but had lost his job a few years ago, and never was able to shake that loss or shame, never found that “what next?” moment in his life after that. I tried to get together with him a number of times, but now I feel as though it was not nearly enough times for me to feel OK. I tried, but not enough. How I wish I had made even one more effort to reach out to him, have a beer, a coffee, anything. He was tremendously talented and a smart guy in areas that I know nothing of. He always seemed to gregariously attract helpers for any home project or tree cutting adventure, and was quick to lend a hand in return. I don’t think any of us realized, or at least were willing to admit, that he was churning inside so deeply.

A second friend, a fellow who is even a few years younger than me, is holding unconsciously onto the last threads of his life while having been in hospice for the past two months due to a genetic neural disease that has dragged at him for years. I learned so much from him over the years of working together. He had been in the Peace Corps in Ecuador and had a great understanding of Latin American cultural perspectives, absolute advanced command of Spanish, and a love for the benefits that dairy cows and farms can bring to families in developing countries, just as I do. He married later in life, and leaves behind a wife and 14-year old daughter. He was so proud of both, always popping up his latest photos when I’d see him, and telling me how smart his daughter was in school. What a wonderful mentor and example.

A third friend posted on LinkedIn that he had seen his first COVID-19 death notice of someone that he knew, and shared how it hits a person differently, cuts through the arguments, when it is someone you knew. I think that’s true whether it’s COVID-19 or any other cause of loss.

Three friends suffering. Three friends in need of connection. We need to stay connected, especially with the folks that we know in our heart of hearts need help. Just a call maybe, until we can get together.

Moments when we need connection. Moments of Grace. 

The Jewel Tea Truck

hope

In the subdivision where I spent my earliest years growing up, there were several dozen kids within five years of my age, and we all spent summers outside of our houses, often cruising the neighborhood in large groups on our bikes. Simple riding could turn into races once in a while, and my first summer with my new “racer” was an exciting one. It was a rebuilt older single-speed bike, but one that had the skinnier 26″ tires than some of my counterparts who had fatter tires on their bikes. Amongst all the kids, only my oldest brother had a 3-speed. So we started a round-the-block race, which in our case were not city blocks – the subdivision had a cross street only about every 12-15 homes. At the first intersection, we came to a “T” in the road, and the group headed right while I turned left at full throttle. I was looking backward over my shoulder, yelling at my brothers that they were going the wrong way (while I must have been the one going the wrong way, as everyone else turned right). The next thing I knew, I was on my back, looking into the face of a truck driver who had a terrified look on his face and tenor to his voice. As I had turned left, I had ridden my bike full-tilt right into the hood of a Jewel Tea truck. At that time, Jewel Tea trucks delivered small quantities of household goods, consumables, etc. to homes in the neighborhood. Sort of a low-tech Amazon delivery service. I had hit the truck and sailed over the hood, across the entire street, and landed on my back on soft grass in the ditch on the opposite side where the panicked driver was offering me, then all the kids, candy, gum, anything he had that kids might like. He kept saying, “You rode right into me! You rode right into me!” I think that he wanted to confirm to all of us kids that he hadn’t driven into me, that I had ridden into him. Funny, I realize now that we never got his name or his license info or anything. I had to limp my “new” bike home, frame bent and unable to roll the back wheel. The much greater injury for me was that when my dad got home from work, I got punished in the worst possible way – he refused to fix my bike until I had learned my lesson. Six weeks with no bike in the summer.

Someone was watching out for me that day.

Palm Sunday miracle

God moments

Our little St. Peter’s Church had beautiful stained glass windows. It had a small organ, small choir, but we made good music. Our pastor always believed that we could do big things, even if our congregation was small. Even though it was a task that should be performed by a deacon, he taught me how to sing (chant) the Great Litany during Lent, and it remains one of my favorite service elements of the church year. The significance of The Great Litany is deep: It is the oldest original English language rite, dating to 5th century Romans, it is all-encompassing and focuses prayers for ourselves and for the world, and it is the strongest way to begin “keeping a Holy Lent.”

After the service on Palm Sunday, one of our traditions was to strip all the vestments from the altar, and cover all the icons in the entire nave and sanctuary with purple drapes, to be lifted off on Easter. Our parish was very “Catholic” in a sense – they had a very visible Mary shrine, with many votive candles below her. It is believed that sometime the night of Palm Sunday, one of the purple cotton drapes fell from Mary, and onto the burning candles below. It smoldered and smoked, filling the sanctuary with smoke and keeping the fire as a slow burn. Eventually, the fire slowly spread to the floor and first pews near Mary, but continued as a slow fire, almost like coals or embers, they would say later. The heat within, though was so great as to have melted and distorted the brass candelabras standing on the altar nearby. Late that night, a person who lived nearby was passing by the church and noticed what they thought were some low lights on in the church, and when they peered in a window, saw that there flames near the floor in the corner. They called 911, and the firefighters described the blaze as amazing that it was so hot, yet so muffled by the smoke itself, and they were able to contain it with mostly foam, avoiding lots of water damage, but they had to break out a single stained-glass window by the Mary shrine to get at the source. Opening a main door would likely have caused a huge backdraft and immediate spontaneous combustion explosion. In the end, there was lots of smoke damage, several pews and the floor caved into the basement near the Mary shrine, but a lot less structural damage than the firemen expected to find.

The Mary statue hung on a standard plaster and lath wall, not a brick wall, and immediately on the back side of that plaster wall was the sacristy, a small anteroom where some of the nicest ones of the pastor’s vestments were kept in big, flat drawers, and on top of those drawers, just lying on the top of the table, were the candles set up in preparation for the upcoming Easter services following Holy Week, basically directly behind Mary. Remember that the sanctuary was hot enough to have distorted and melted brass candelabras. Behind a simple wood door and plaster wall, the Paschal Candle lay unblemished. Not melted, not marked, not damaged in any way. We held our Easter Vigil and Easter weekend services at a neighboring church down the street, and we used the Paschal Candle that had been prepped the week before.

Thank you, angels.

Hand on my shoulder – staying safe

prayer

A few times each year I need to take big junk to our local recycling center. Metal stuff – old fencing, pipe, or a tank or the like. Either in the truck, or on this occasion, I needed my large trailer to haul the stuff. Going to the recycling center is always a great chance to catch up on the most local of news – what’s going on in our township. The exit heading out of the recycling center is wide open from a visibility standpoint, level, two driveways, allowing for entering and exiting vehicles to each have a space, and you can see way up and down the road in front easily. Ideal, really. I pulled up to the stop sign at the exit, looked left, looked right, and was putting my foot on the gas to pull out when I felt a hand on my shoulder again, urgently pulling me back, and this time I heard a loud “Look left again!” I slammed on my brakes at the sound and the feeling, and there on my left was a big Harley or GoldWing, full speed just a few car-lengths from my truck and trailer.

Someone was watching out for me that day. And the motorcycle driver.

Early morning fog bank

hope

October 11, 2002. Early that morning, my wife and I packed up our things and we were headed for Milwaukee. We left before breakfast, thinking that we would eat once we got further down the road. We were going to babysit our grandkids while our son and daughter-in-law flew out on a short trip. We were on a tight schedule, coordinated so that they could leave for the airport in plenty of time. Just before we got on the interstate, I insisted that I just needed a quick donut from the convenience store, even though she didn’t want me to delay us. As we got on the interstate, there was more low fog, as I-43 runs along Lake Michigan’s coastline pretty tight in some areas. A few miles south of Sheboygan, the fog really started getting heavy, we slowed down a lot, and I had to hit my brakes hard as I saw a vehicle in front of me pull over hard and the driver jumped out – turned out he was a local volunteer fireman that had been directed to divert traffic off the interstate. He frantically waved us to get off the highway at the exit ramp. I rolled down the window to ask what was up and he just screamed “Get off the highway! There’s a huge pileup just ahead! Get off now!” We took a meandering parallel way on back roads south and got back on I-43 a few miles later. One of the kids called us, as they knew our morning schedule, and they wanted to know if we had seen the big pile-up. We had not. They said it was all over the news, that there was a big pileup in the fog near Oostburg. People who experienced it said it was suddenly a “wall of fog”, and we can attest to that. In the end, there were ~40 vehicles involved, 10 deaths, and 39 injured in the deadliest traffic incident in Wisconsin’s history. The first responder who waved us off the highway turned out to be our lifesaver that day, but the donut played a part, too. Had I not stopped for the donut, we would have been at that spot 2-3 minutes sooner, and never have seen the first responder.

Days and weeks later, I would learn that a fellow I used to work with was driving an LP gas delivery truck that exploded at the scene, leaving him burned over 75% of his body, but miraculously alive, and a high school classmate of mine narrowly avoided the vehicles, but found himself way up the hill alongside the scene, having gone through a barbed wire fence into a plowed field.

Someone was watching out for us that day.

Hotte tumbide

God moments

I had the wonderful opportunity to visit India in 2019. My first stop was in Tiptur, Karnataka, about 3 hours’ drive west of Bengaluru. They speak a language called Kannada there. Hoṭṭe tumbide (sounds like “otay toombiday”) is a Kannada phrase that means “Full stomach”. When I learned the phrase, I had just finished a very filling lunch meal with 5-6 Karnatakan fellows, and while I indeed had a full stomach from the fantastic lunch presentation and meal, they helped me understand that hoṭṭe tumbide had a second meaning or connotation, that one’s life was full, a feeling encompassing gratefulness and peaceful satisfaction, one which transcended the fullness from the meal itself. I found myself feeling that hoṭṭe tumbide feeling, along with a desire to help others experience that feeling. It lent itself well to using it as a general greeting. The locals certainly found it engaging and positive.

The day we were there was an Indian holiday, and many families and children were everywhere, all dressed up and enjoying the gorgeous day together. As we were leaving the restaurant, I saw a couple getting themselves situated on a scooter with their little girl. No, it did not look safe to me, having been schooled on car seats as we are in the U.S. As I walked by them, I couldn’t help but lean over, smile, and tell them very quietly, “You have a beautiful daughter.” The little girl seemed to leap straight out of her mother’s arms and into mine – I was completely surprised by her move and really just caught her and scooped her up, glad that I didn’t drop her! I was even more surprised when she just put her little head on my shoulder. One of my business associates was quick with his camera, as you can see. What a darling girl and the parents were as proud as could be. In the part of rural India where I was, white folks were not a big chunk of the people I saw, and I thought she might be more scared than welcoming, but instead I felt like one of the family. Hoṭṭe tumbide. Gratefulness.

I am grateful for that wonderful moment of Grace.

How my mom inspired me

My dad did, too, but that’s another story. My mother was what you would call an extremely hard-working, high-achieving champion of her beliefs and her family. I am the 3rd son born to my parents, and after I was born, my parents started adopting. They didn’t stop until they had adopted 13 more – 5 from Korea, 3 from the Philippines, and 5 mixed-race from the U.S. All considered “hard-to-place” kids. Both of my parents were highly involved in the equal rights movement of the ‘60’s in Milwaukee, taking us to picket for our first time when I was only 5 years old, protesting the prohibition of black membership in social clubs like the Elks. She took us all along as kids while she taught English to migrant worker families (some of whom ended up lifelong friends), but most of all, our parents taught us to appreciate other cultures, foods, music, people who didn’t look like us or talk like us. It shaped us all, and I didn’t really appreciate that for many years. She also taught us to live thankfully, with gratefulness simmered into our sauce, and with a song on our hearts and a smile on our face.

Our family gathered recently and we buried the ashes of our parents, together in the same container, after they had both donated their bodies for medical research. It had been 6 years since our dad’s passing, and 2 years for our mother’s ashes to come back to us. Neither of them wanted to be recognized or remembered in any special way, but we knew how important family was to them, for us to help each other to have connections, to find connections, to make connections. Generations of relatives and their memories attended and now surround them in the cemetery where we placed their cremains. One of my favorite sayings is that “Children are a message we send to a time we will not see.” If that’s true, well, they sent a whopper of a message. Our parents were inspired by so many people in their lives: Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Harry and Bertha Holt, Pearl Buck, each other, people too numerous to count. We as their children had them, Skip and Becky, mom and dad, to challenge us, to inspire us, throughout our lives with them, and even after they’ve gone. They saw their purpose as way beyond their beginnings, and I believe they challenge us all to continue that tradition, to spread our wings and make the most of the time we have with each other, at home, and in the world around us, and to be grateful every day for the wonderful experiences we are able to enjoy. It is the core of the table prayer we all learned and prayed together: “GIVE US THANKFUL HEARTS, AND KEEP US EVER MINDFUL OF THE NEEDS OF OTHERS.”

I don’t think that was by chance that they taught us that.

Carrying baggage around

Our dad's last week - moments of grace

“Take things that are light enough to carry and heavy enough to remember.”

– Quoted from a speaker at the Kaufmann School Graduation May, 2019

The collection of stories I’ve gathered and recorded are the stories that have guided me to believe very deeply and personally that there are forces around us, angels, if you will, who watch out for us, nudge us, teach us, and occasionally humble us. You will note that some come from my early childhood years; others are very recent. I have felt the effects at home, in our communities, and certainly while traveling the globe. I don’t feel controlled by them, more so, the feeling is one of love and caring, connectedness. The experiences have become numerous enough that I felt it was time to start writing them down.

When I shared just a couple of these stories with my cousin, he called them “God moments”. I’ve also just recently heard of a term called a “God wink”. Others call them “moments of Grace”. Good to know that other folks may have experienced some of these as well.

God wink:

God wink (plural God winks)

  1. An event or personal experience, often identified as coincidence, so astonishing that it is seen as a sign of divine intervention, especially when perceived as the answer to a prayer