Thursday, November 27, 2008

For All The Food I'm About To Eat (and really shouldn't)

. . . I Give Thanks

For all of you who might not know it, I'm a rich man. Well, rich in friends. I am sitting in the Connecticut kitchen of one of my favorite North Carolina friends--Alecia Adams Evans--watching her buzz around in her footies (I’d offer to help her with the cooking, but everyone would be sorry). I’m savoring the smells of the turkey cooking, onions simmering on the stove, and pumpkin and southern pecan pies (or, as we call it in North Carolina—PEE-can pie) cooling down, punctuated by the aroma of a freshly brewed pot of coffee. Her husband, Jeff and daughter, Eva, stayed overnight in New York City so that Eva could attend the Macy's Day Parade. They're taking the train up shortly—along with a family friend, Larry, after which time, we'll sit down together to Thanksgiving dinner.

About eight years ago, Alecia, who lived in NYC at the time, ran into a friend at a restaurant in Rhinebeck, NY. Her friend asked for her number, and Alecia shouted it to her across a crowded room. Turns out Alecia’s friend was not the only person writing her number down. A handsome, divorced artist and renown cosmetic dentist based in Manhattan, and the father of two grown children--Jeff Evans, also managed to jot her number down. He called her and explained how he had gotten her number, promised he wasn’t a stalker, and offered to meet her anywhere, anytime if only she would. Well, the rest is history. They began to date, fell in love, and got married. Alecia wanted to have a baby, and Jeff, who had had a vasectomy, had it reversed so that they could. Alecia had dreamed of living in a house with a covered bridge. Jeff managed to find a 1745 traditional New England saltbox with its own covered bridge in New Preston, Connecticut. Alecia and Jeff have decorated the house thoughtfully, creatively, lovingly . . . beautifully. Although I almost drove past it last night in the dark Connecticut night, she had left the outdoor lights on, and--and, as I started to drive past it, I somehow knew I was "home."

She showed me to my room, and I wandered around upstairs a little—enjoying all the charming touches they’d used to transform their beautiful house into a beautiful home—and imagined how at home they must feel living there, since I--as their guest--felt totally welcome. Alecia was already cooking up a storm when I arrived. She finished up all she could do in the kitchen the night before Thanksgiving, and we moved to the den, where we sat by the fire and reminisced. It was so nice to catch up. I love Alecia’s lilting, unapologetic North Carolina accent, and her southern sensibility. I find it wonderfully familiar and comforting.

Today, Thanksgiving Day, is a nippy but sunny day, and I took a walk around the brook that encircles their property. From the brook, I looked back at their sweet house, and wondered about those who had lived here before them, and if, once upon a time, another house had stood where their house now stands? What families had lived, loved and prospered here before them? How many Thanksgivings had been celebrated before ours?

Thanksgiving has always been my favorite holiday (although I am a huge fan of Christmas music). I like that someone long ago had the good sense to create a moment to pause and give thanks. I thought about how blessed I am, and how lucky I was about to be to sit down to a lovingly-prepared meal in the home of dear friends. I thought of how many people in the world might stave off starvation with even a forkful of what I was about to enjoy in great abundance.

I had friends who went on an environmental road trip called YERT (Your Environmental Road Trip . They would send wonderfully-insightful videotaped segments about what they were encountering in the fifty states they visited—and the environmental work that is at hand for us to be a responsible, hands-on, more earth-friendly nation. And, in watching their segments about the United States, I realized we are one of seven continents, and I began to think a little more globally.

I’ve always wondered why Presidents of the United States always end their speeches with only “God bless America.” I, too, hope that God blesses America, for I have enjoyed (and benefited mightily from) the many advantages of having lived my life in America. But I hope God will also bless the six other continents. (I expect he does, even if our Presidents forget to ask God to bless the world.)

Tonight, on CNN, there was a two-hour special about heroes from all walks of life and all parts of the world who are called to minister where it is sorely needed. Even more touching is that they do it to no acclaim--expecting no reward. They do it because it is needed. That is their calling. And almost all of them say that, in the course of giving, they get back much more than they could ever give.

So, on this Thanksgiving, I pause to give thanks for the many, many blessings in my life:
  • how rich my life is in good friends;
  • that we have a new, and wonderful, intelligent President of our country;
  • how I was fortunate to grow up in a loving home;
  • that I had two amazing dogs once--toy poodles named Maxie and Beau who taught me how to be a better person;
  • for those who leave the world a better place than they found it;
  • for the human body that does all it can (sometimes, in spite of us) to keep us up and running;
  • for the human spirit that defies the odds every day in every way;
  • for music and its ability to bring hearts together when mere words fail us;
  • for love—for I cannot imagine a world without it;
  • for education, so that knowledge can replace fear—and we can learn from our mistakes, and do better
  • and for the world--which I hope will be a better place because of our having been in it.
Happy Thanksgiving.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free

A Chance For A Truly United States of America
I couldn't be more proud of the amazing and historic event that transpired tonight in the United States. Barack Obama was elected President of the United States! After witnessing the eloquence of both John McCain in his concession speech, and Barack Obama in his acceptance speech, and watching the CBS news correspondent, Byron Pitts, speak of his mother's response to Obama's being elected, to which she replied, "I've got four words: Glory Hallelujah! Glory Hallelujah!" Pitts spoke of his mother who was raised in the segregated south (where I was raised as well) not daring to look into the eyes of a white man or woman. He showed a picture he keeps in his office of a 1960's strike of sanitation workers holding signs that read "I Am A Man." He mentioned that one of the sanitation workers photographed was working the night shift this very night-- some forty-six years after that picture was taken. While it makes me weep bitter tears that, in my own lifetime, an African-American sanitation worker felt the need to hold up a sign to remind the rest of us that he was a man, it gives me tremendous hope for where we're going. To watch Jesse Jackson weep tonight seeing his own reflection in the eyes of the President-elect of the United States; to watch Oprah Winfrey, a strong and accomplished African-American woman who has championed women's causes, and has contributed so much to making the world a better place for all of us be unable to hold back her own tears as she sees the first African-American President-elect of the United States make his acceptance speech is powerful stuff. To hear of the one-hundred-and-six year old African American woman casting her vote by touching a computer screen, and trying to imagine the America she's known. With the election of Barack Obama, I am reminded of the story line from African-American novels and films about a leader rising up, being "the one" to lead the African-American people into a more fully-integrated (humanly, not racially) life. I don't know if Barack Obama will be "the" one, but he certainly has the potential to be. He is so clearly called to service, and is an intelligent, articulate, eloquent, passionate, level-headed leader. He sees the "big picture" of humanity--our inter-relatedness, and how we need one another--as clearly as anyone in my lifetime has. It is our differences as well as our commonalities that make life the rich and beautiful tapestry it is. One of my favorite hymns speaks of Jesus being "Risen with healing in His wings." The mere thought of all the healing that lies ahead in both our country, and the world, is thrilling, and the possibilities seem endless. I am reminded of the lyrics of a song by Richard Lamb and William Taylor--sung by Nina Simone--called: "I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free"

I wish I knew how it would feel to be free.
I wish that I could break all the chains holding me
I wish I could say all the things that I should say
Say 'em loud, say 'em clear
for the whole round world to hear

I wish I could share all the love that's in my heart
Remove all the thoughts
that keep us apart
I wish you could know what it means to be me
Then you'd see and agree
that ev'ry man should be free

I wish I could give
all I'm longin' to give.
I wish I could live like I'm longin' to live
I wish I could do all the things that I can do
Though I'm way overdue
I'd be startin' anew

Well I wish I could be like a bird in the sky
How sweet it would be
if I found I could fly
I'd soar to the sun,
and look down at the sea
Then I'd sing 'cause I'd know how it feels to be free

I think Barack and Michelle Obama, Jesse Jackson, Oprah Winfrey, Byron Pitts' Mom, the 106-year-old voter, the sea of supporters in Grant Park in Chicago, and Democrats everywhere, all felt tonight a little of how it feels to be free. I know I did.