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.

Easter weekend in Shenyang

Easter weekend in Shenyang

On one of my China trips, I finished my China business in Shenyang, and had the weekend before I continued on to Japan on Monday. Easter weekend as it turned out. Now Easter is not a huge holiday across China, but this one was an especially reflective and spiritual one for me as it turned out. I took a short train ride from Changchun to Shenyang, and I had read ahead about a very special museum located there. It is the home of the 9.18 Museum, a chilling museum which tells such an important story, commemorating September 18, 1935, the day Japanese forces invaded China and subsequently occupied Shenyang and the surrounding peninsula. It displays disturbing photos depicting the carnage of war. The exhibition is cruel, but it tells the critically important history of the early-mid 20th century between Japan and China and how important the peace is. I visited the museum on Saturday and it was a somber learning experience with my Chinese guide. He really did not want to take me there, but I wanted to learn. I now can completely understand why the Chinese are distrustful still of Japanese people.

Shenyang is also the home of the largest Catholic cathedral in China, the Sacred Heart or NanGuan Cathedral. It turned out that it was only two or three blocks from the hotel I had chosen in the heart of the city. Friday was Good Friday, and I walked over to the cathedral to check it out and say a quiet prayer. When I got back to my room, it was just coming up on sunset, and through the incredibly dirty windows, I looked out on the silhouette of three construction cranes that instantly had me thinking of the three crosses, outlined at dusk. Easter Sunday service was the absolute most packed, standing-room only service I have ever experienced, the organ music was great, and I stood out like an albino moose in a herd of reindeer, head and shoulders taller than any other person there, and easily the whitest. They were kind, but that is most certainly not the way to just “blend in” with the local population.

All in all, a tremendously spiritual and introspective Easter weekend. A “moment of Grace” that lasted several days.

Our dad’s last week

Our dad's last week - moments of grace

After a year of enduring a multitude of procedures, chemo, and radiation for his bladder cancer, Dad was sent home from the hospital with hospice support after his ureters became blocked in the end. Doctors estimated he had a week as his kidneys backed up, but he had decided, with a great deal of discussion and forethought, that if this happened, he did not want any more surgeries or the rest of his time to be spent in a nursing home. His call.

He had been our mom’s caregiver for several years as her Alzheimer’s progressed, and she really didn’t process what all was happening, but she still had smiles for all her children who came to spend some final time with Dad. He appreciated the visit from his next younger brother at the hospital to say final goodbyes, and you could see that there was peace between them, washing away whatever it was that had caused a rift in their family for decades. He was extremely relaxed and thankful, almost blissful, when I shaved him at the hospital and he could just enjoy the warm washcloth on his face afterward. Funny how it’s the simplest things that can produce joy in these times.

Hospice helped set up a hospital-type bed in their living room, and we settled in with the fire crackling, and Dad was able to switch easily from family memories in one direction and gazing out on the pond they had come to enjoy so much in their retirement years. The days went by quickly together, catching up with siblings, preparing meals together, with Dad having less and less interest in food as the days went by. In the final hours, we sang songs together, held his hand, told him one more time about our favorite memories together and how much we loved him. He came from that greatest generation, the generation that grew up immersed in the Depression, graduating high school only to go straight into military service, then raising a family through the turbulent ’60’s, and his case, working to help put a man on the moon. He had survived two decades of farming, and kept learning new skills his entire life – sewing and becoming a paramedic were two he added during retirement.

The day he would pass away, there had been a steady, beautiful snowfall, building up over a foot of new snow – the thick, fluffy snow that hangs and piles up on every spruce bough and twig. His breathing continued to become more labored, and even the morphine seemed unable to keep him comfortable. Time seems to stand still when your emotions are wrapped up this deeply, but the first strange element was that just as Dad’s breathing wavered, then restarted, for just a minute or two, the power flickered on and off, on and off, then went completely off. We had the light of the fire still, and we lit candles quickly. Everyone had their last chance to give Dad a kiss, a hug, a hand squeeze, a whispered goodbye and “I love you, Dad.” As we heard his last breath, a rich, deep voice behind me, with love and a feeling of deepest admiration, said simply, “A mighty oak has fallen.” It took a moment to sink in, but I turned to my siblings and asked through my tears, “Who just said that? Who said that?” “Said what?” they asked. “Said that ‘A mighty oak has fallen’,” I said. “That was so beautiful.” My sister had heard the exact same thing, and sensed it with the same tone. We remain convinced that it was Dad’s younger brother Darell’s voice, the same Darell whom Dad had felt such great loss for since he died in an Air Force training accident in 1955. That he always felt was the most senseless loss of potential. A classmate of our mom’s, Darell was the epitome of everything fun and good that could be blessed upon a person. Leadership, athleticism, a warm smile and loved by everyone who ever had the good fortune to meet him. We sang Amazing Grace together in the candlelight.

A couple hours earlier, my wife and our daughter had gone back to the little motel up the road where we were staying, and I had to go tell her that Dad had passed. As I drove out the driveway into the absolute darkness, huge snowflakes still softly falling in my headlights, I noticed that up and down the highway as I drove, no other homes were without power, as they had lights on in the yards, and the power was on at the motel. I recounted Dad’s final moments with them, and they quickly got dressed and jumped in the car with me. By the time we got back to the house, the power had come back on, just as mysteriously as it had gone off earlier.

Over the next few hours, I finished calling the siblings who weren’t there. Fernando (one of our adopted siblings) shared that not long after he had come to the farm and our family, Dad had explained that the boys were now in their forever family, that there would be no more moves or rejections for them. Dad had then given him a hug. As Fernando explained through his tears, he said that he had stood there and cried like a baby while Dad hugged him, and he told Dad that he could not remember when the last time was that he had been hugged. By anyone. He was 16.

The next morning, Fernando texted me and shared that he kept a poem and picture of an oak tree above his own two boys’ beds:

The strongest oak of the forest is not the one that is protected from the storm and hidden from the sun.

It’s the one that stands in the open where it is compelled to struggle for its existence against the winds and rains and the scorching sun.

He told me how that poem always reminded him of Dad, sheltering him, Adriano and Roberto as new arrivals, despite the winds that blew, and encouraging them to face the winds of life head-on. So I called him and shared the events of the night before, this time including the “Mighty Oak” part.

Fast forward

In the spring of 2019 we came together with extended family to inter the ashes of our parents in a cemetery in Fergus Falls, Minnesota, Mom’s hometown. Two of our mother’s classmates attended. After talking with one of them for a while, the conversation turned to things serious and spiritual, so I decided to share the story above, about Dad’s final night. The classmate shared with me the following sincere advice: “You were visited. Don’t ever doubt it.

A moment of Grace.

Pub Cabin Music and Beer Therapy

God wink

Having just returned from a trip to Utah, my brother-in-law brought a 6-pack of Wasatch Brewing’s Polygamy Porter to a big music jam that we held in our backyard. It’s apparently a very dark beer, and uses the catchphrase “Why have just one?” I thought it was kind of unusual (the beer name, I mean), and no, I had not had it nor heard of it before (the beer). Our Pub Cabin Music Jam was publicized via invite over a couple months, and I worked to get local musicians to join us just for some good food, drink, and making music. Over 100 people attended.

One fellow I invited had played mandolin over the years, but said he had really stopped playing, but after a pretty substantial amount of coaxing, said that he would come, but probably not play. At the party, after having been there for half an hour or so, he walked up and said to me that he had been in a pretty dark place for the past few years, and really had pretty much given up on life, but that he appreciated the invitation. In fact, he was so glad that he had come, because there was something about the day that made him feel like he had reached a significant turning point right there, right at our Music Jam. He could feel that life was turning around for him, and he could feel so much positive energy that he felt rejuvenated, uplifted. You know what was stranger? He came to the party wearing a Polygamy Porter t-shirt, and said that he had never been to Wasatch Brewing, but his nephews liked to bring funky t-shirts back from their travels for his collection.

Strange coincidence, or moment of Grace?

Mikel

Mikel - Moments of Grace

Mikel had a very slight build, I guessed 25-ish, with an engaging smile and an earnestness about him that I found difficult to ignore. While I usually quickly say “No, thank you…” to the credit card promoters in the airport terminal, or just try and avoid making eye contact, Mikel was serious about wanting to engage people. After I spoke with him a bit, his earnestness might also be able to be seen as unusual drive to make his day happen. I sensed that he had come from a state of very deep poverty, and I was correct as I learned more about him. He asked what I did, and when I said that I was in my own business as a consultant, he right away asked how I might help him be more successful in his own quest to be a global consultant, that he was trying to get started. I tried to share that my own network of contacts that made up my initial business came from 35+ years of work in a somewhat specialized field, and that you can’t create that experience any other way than by a lot of years doing something, but that he should believe in his own success as very possible if he keeps engaging people the way he did me.

Staying positive…

After we talked about his goals and ambitions, he asked me how I stayed so positive and optimistic while starting a new business. I explained that much of it for me comes from having faced threats to my life and survived, and that those experiences make me value the people and relationships I’m allowed to enjoy and develop, even some as short as the one I shared with him, that his perseverance was infectious. He then shared that he had grown up in a war-torn place in eastern Africa, and I expect that one of the reasons he was so small was due to really poor nutrition for many of his early years. He had seen horrible things happen around him, had lost the sight in one eye, and he felt really lucky to be able to pursue his dreams in America, that many people he knew when he was young would never have the opportunities he now had.

Thank you, Mikel, for lifting me up that day.

I decided to let Delta know how much I appreciated their young credit card fellow.

————— Original Message —————

To: wecare@delta.com

Subject: OCSD-Share a Compliment-General Feedback-Other General Feedback

I met a wonderful young man today, and I just wanted to share my experience. I don’t know if he is a full-fledged Delta employee or a contractor, but he connects very well with people and deserves to be recognized as a sincere and positive contributor in the airport there in Atlanta. He was in the B terminal I believe between B24 and B32 perhaps, promoting the Delta credit cards today. His name is Mikell (not sure of spelling), and while I usually brush these folks off after years of frequent travel, he seemed really sincere and pleasant, so I talked with him a bit. He really did want to know a little more about me, and in just a few minutes, I really felt lifted up by just having had the chance to meet him. He is a really decent guy, and I thank him for being there today. Nice job, Mikell. The world can be a thankless place sometimes, but you are making a difference just by showing interest in people you meet.

—————————————————-

Hello David,

RE: Case 02059332

Thank you for writing us regarding your experience with Mikel, one of our American Express vendors in the Atlanta airport. While our American Express vendor team work hard every day, I was very pleased that Mikel left such an impression on you. This is the impact we want our employees to make on our passengers.

We are glad that your experience exceeded your expectations. I have forwarded your kind words to our Airport Customer Service Leadership team so they can commend Mikel for his exemplary customer service and also use him as an example for others to follow.

David, thank you for being the best part of Delta and a valued SkyMiles member! I hope that you have a wonderful weekend and we look forward to seeing you on another Delta flight soon!

Regards,

Curtis C. Speziale Jr

Customer Care

Are our lives planned or random?

Being comfortable with people who look or sound different

I think from time to time that we all need to ponder whether our life is or was planned, our experiences through childhood considered by our parents, what God’s plan is for us, and how much we’ve taken the best advantage of the gifts of all kinds that we’ve been granted. We are all left to wonder whether our circumstances and experiences were random? Fate or destiny? Planned?

From my earliest childhood memories, I recall positive experiences being with people from widely different backgrounds. From meeting and playing with families of different races in the inner city of Milwaukee, even during the race protests of the early ’60’s, having numerous international college students eating with us and spending time at our house, learning songs from Korea, Nigeria and Ghana, words and foods from Japan, having real Mexican tamales become a lifelong favorite taste after hanging out in the onion sheds with kids in the migrant camps. Then there were the regular new family arrivals, with five Korean and three Filipino siblings each bringing new words, tastes, and music.

I believe that our parents planned for us to be open and comfortable with cultures and people who didn’t look or sound like us. It was conscious and proactive on their part, and I don’t think I fully appreciated the blessing wrapped into it until I was offered the opportunity to write my own job description and take on an international business development challenge for 6+ years late in my career. The people I was working with had observed how freely and positively I interacted with international visitors, trying to learn a few phrases (pronounced correctly!) with each one. I guess that I had always taken that ease or ability for granted. In fact, I believe that it was taught and nurtured from very young on.

Traveling – it leaves you speechless, then it turns you into a storyteller – Ibn Battuta

I am grateful for all of those life experiences. For me, they are a lifelong collection of moments of Grace.

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.