Heirloom Quality

Last week, my youngest son, Jeremiah, sent me a picture. In it, he’s in a rocking chair with his one-year-old daughter, Miah, sitting on his lap. They’re reading The Spooky Old Tree, a Berenstein Bears book. Jeremiah is almost the same age I was when I used to read that book to him, his twin sister, Susan, and their older brothers. I would often recite the story at night when I would lie down with the twins, frequently using a hokey German accent to amuse myself and add a bit of Old World charm. “Once upon a teime, theh vere tree little behrs…”

I would also deliberately flub up the refrain in the story. Instead of going through the list of the little bears’ props–”one with a light, one with a rope and one with a stick”–I would ad lib “a jar of pumpernickel jelly.” The twins would laugh and correct me, “No, Papa, ‘one with a stick'” or whichever item would make the story right. I would pretend to not quite hear them and come up with some other ridiculous item. Eventually, they’d get me straightened out on the matter and we’d go on with the story.

They loved the game almost as much as I did and The Spooky Old Tree joined other Bears’ stories and Uncle Reemus tales that became part of the interwoven fabric of their growing up. Along with the songs of Guy Clark, John Prine and Don Williams and a host of other singers, the stories are a rich part of the heritage I have tried to pass on, a part of what was passed on to me when my mother sat me on her lap and changed her voice for each character as she read about Brer Rabbit, Duck and His Friends and Clarabelle the Clown.

We never know what particular traits, habits, and customs our children will choose to share with our grandchildren. But we ought to stack the deck toward those that will bring us the deepest satisfaction, the greatest pleasure. Those that will preserve the finest elements of our nature and make for pictures that touch our hearts with gladness.

H. Arnett
3/4/14

Jeremiah Reading

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Tour Guide

When she was ninety-two, Dorothy Reynolds told us “You two need to be doing the things you want to do now, before you end up like me and can’t do them anymore. If there’s somewhere in the world you want to go, you should go there now.” At that time, Dorothy couldn’t move from her bed to her wheelchair without some help but her mind was sharp as a tack. It was still sharp the day she died two years later and I still think about her traveling advice.

We went to Mexico the year before she died and to Hawaii a couple of years after. In Mexico, we shopped, ate goat tacos and toured a cemetery. It was an omen for driving in Matamoras during rush hour traffic.

In Hawaii, we watched a polo game on the North Shore of Maui, snorkeled off Waikiki and went scuba diving at Big Island. We’ve talked about getting passports and traveling to Europe. I’d like to go to Ireland and Scotland during their warm season but I’m not sure they have one. Randa would like to go to Greece and Italy. We might compromise and go to Puerto Rico or Bermuda or maybe we’ll win a lottery and go to all of them.

If we never get to any of them, it will not be a huge disappointment to me. Frankly, I find the idea of traveling in a foreign land quite intimidating, particularly in one whose language I neither speak nor comprehend. I have these fears of getting lost, getting ripped off, getting mugged, or ordering some dish that is unspeakably disgusting.

Come to think of it, they’re pretty much the same fears I have of traveling in Milwaukee.

But, for love of Randa, I’ll probably confront and conquer these fears or at least learn to live with them. They’re really no bigger than the fears I had of remarrying twenty-five years ago and that turned out to be a pretty good visit. Having the right Guide makes all the difference.

H. Arnett
3/3/14

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Blessing for the Last Day of February

A red ball sunrise
crests the last ridge
before Wathena,
emerging between the long dark branches
of the maple
at the east edge of the ditch bank
below the house.

A few thin blue streaks
stretch from south to north
while a darker bank of gray
begins to show its shape
along the northern horizon.

Whether this day brings you
rain or snow or sleet
or the brightest skies
you have ever seen,

I hope that it brings you good,
that you speak gently to those you love,
that strangers smile and nod
and that all you meet
find their day better for that moment of passing.

And when evening changes to night,
may you lie down in peace,
close your eyes with a satisfied sigh,
and have sweet dreams.

H. Arnett
2/28/14

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The Joy of Learning

During our annual spring in-service for our teachers yesterday, I conducted a session that introduced a few active learning strategies. Among these teachers, whose ages varied from around thirty to nearly seventy, it was very rewarding to see them eagerly join together in learning new methods and sharing examples of how they could use them in their own classrooms. After forty minutes or so of demonstrating these ideas, I asked them to share examples of other activities they’d used.

Our biology teacher had been to a conference not long ago and picked up some interesting kits. These kits included colored plastic pieces that snap together to form models of molecular structure. Each element was made in a different color. He paired us up, handed us bags of pieces and then gave us instructions for a discovery learning goal. Some folks were able to finish more quickly than others but it seemed that everyone enjoyed the challenge of figuring out how to join hydrogen and oxygen to the base compound. We were all somewhat amused and pleased to find out we’d just built simple sugar molecules.

What was particularly striking to me, though, was to witness this biology teacher’s demeanor in sharing the activity. I’m pretty sure that he has been teaching for at least twenty years but he had the enthusiasm of someone fresh out of grad school. Everything about him during that ten minutes–his voice, body language, facial expression and his mannerisms–showed clearly that he has not lost his joy of learning and teaching.

That is one of the hallmarks of good teachers and, in fact, is a common trait of successful people in every vocation. Throughout their careers and throughout their lives, they continue searching for new knowledge, new ideas, new techniques. They are always open to the possibility of better.

And they usually find it, too.

H. Arnett
2/27/14

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One Strong Cup of Coffee

Without having done any research on the question, I’m nonetheless going to guess that it was fairly typical of west Kentucky culture that I took my first taste of coffee before I started to school. Now, it may have been another year or two before I took my second taste; I don’t remember for sure. I’m guessing we were taking our first sips of coffee at about the same age kids in east Kentucky were taking their first draw off a cigarette. It’s hard for some cultures to hold off on instilling their vices in their young. Some worse than others, of course.

I don’t know that there’s any way to soften the first sting of smoke in the lungs but I do know that two spoons of sugar and an ounce of cream significantly alter the character of a cup of coffee. But I also found out at age eight that the coffee some folks make would require an apostolic miracle to convert it into something a little kid would enjoy.

We were guests in the home of one of the families at Horton’s Chapel Church of Christ in Muhlenberg County. We were guests because it was Sunday and because Dad was the preacher. Back then and there, it was customary for different families to feed the preacher and his family on Sundays. Since it was a hundred mile round trip from our farm to the church, the arrangement was more than customary politeness.

Among the provisions of customary politeness was an inflexible law laid down by my parents that you if you served your own plate, you ate everything on it. All of it. The same rule applied to your beverage. Had I known, had I any inkling of an idea, the multiplying factor this family applied to the amount of coffee grounds used for making a cup of coffee, I would never have asked for coffee.

Other than tasting my first green persimmon, I had never been so astonished at the difference between expectation and realization. Two teaspoons of sugar and a dash of cream barely affected the bitterness of that brew! With a maturity far exceeding that of my years and possibly surpassing that even of my father, I managed to suppress a monstrous vomit reflex into a stifled hack. My eyes must have looked like tea saucers.

I pondered the situation before me and knew that it was useless to ask for mercy. Even bringing up the issue in front of our hosts would risk parental displeasure, if not eternal damnation.

So, I asked for more sugar, dumped in more cream and stirred as if stirring could stop the sun from moving in the sky. Two hours later, I finished the last syrupy sip of that torturous concoction and slowly slid the mug onto the counter in the kitchen. “Thank you,” I said to the woman in the kitchen, without the least inflection of sincerity.

As we rode through the rolling hills of Logan County after church that night, on our way back to the farm in Todd County, Dad looked over at me and asked, “So, how was that cup of coffee you had over at the Dillons’ house this afternoon?”

Even in the dim glow of the dash lights of that Impala station wagon, I could see that he was grinning a bit. I think it was a while after that I began to realize that our heavenly Father, too, is pleased when we finish what would be easier to abandon. Especially in those times when there’s not enough sugar in the world to make the bitter sweet.

H. Arnett
2/26/14

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Josh Blue

I knew a man years ago in Kentucky, who may very well be the most crude and vulgar person I ever met. Normally, one has to watch cable TV to see someone that offensive. It wasn’t simply a matter of him using coarse language; vulgarity permeated subject matter, word choice and manner of expression.

He was also one of the most generous and helpful people I’ve ever known. He did at least five hundred dollars worth of excavation work for me and wouldn’t take a penny for it. I heard other stories, too, of people he’d helped in similar and in other ways as well. I couldn’t help remembering him yesterday when I was visiting some friends and we watched a recording of comedian Josh Blue.

Now let me say at the outset that Josh Blue was nowhere nearly as crude and vulgar as my Kentucky friend. In fact, in this performance at least, he wasn’t even slightly vulgar. He did make frequent use of a few words that I don’t enjoy hearing on a recording or live and in person, either. In spite of my discomfort, though, I found myself laughing out loud time and time again. His comedic insights were spot on, original and thought provoking.

Josh Blue has a foppish wad of wildly frizzy reddish blond hair and piercing blue eyes. He is an American citizen who was born in Africa and now lives in the States. “Technically,” he says, “that makes me an African-American.” Using a few subtle traits of black culture, he weaves that bit in throughout his routine. Another primary element is his cerebral palsy.

As you probably know, the condition precipitates obvious physical abnormalities and lack of motor control that causes awkward limb movement and degrees of slurred speech. It is that element primarily that makes it easy for people to grossly underestimate the intelligence of those affected by palsy. Humans have a universal tendency to think that people they can’t easily understand are mentally deficient, even when the difficulty is caused by nothing more than a regional accent.

Josh doesn’t simply acknowledge his palsy; he makes it the hallmark of his shtick. Using his disability as a focus of social commentary, observation and keen humor, he draws us into looking at our own fears and discomforts and joining him in the tragi-comic experience of being human.

His performance was far more than entertaining. It was instructive, convicting, reflective and ultimately, healing. Whatever causes us to acknowledge our own faults and frailties, our own imperfections and prejudices and moves us toward greater understanding and acceptance of others, has at least some merit. I prefer that such experiences come without profanity but found this one more than worth the distractions.

I’m not saying that all of you would agree with me about watching a Josh Blue performance. I do hope that we would all agree that the more we acclimate ourselves to positive interaction with the “differently enabled,” the more we improve the human condition.

H. Arnett
2/24/14

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Comfort

I have seen close enough
the long aching pain
the death of a child brings a mother.

I know, too,
in a different way,
what it is like to lose a brother.

I have heard
deep, choking sobs
break loose in the night,

felt warm tears
against my own skin,
known the emptiness of words.

I have felt fear
in the agonizing nearness
of death’s deep shadow,

been gripped by awe
at the wonderful witness
of others’ faith held near.

I have felt the chill
of anger,
sorrow’s growing heat,

and have walked
in some of those places
where no one goes by will.

In the longest shadows
where grief grows so heavy
it can snap bones,

it is the sound of voice
and not the words,
tells us we are not alone.

Dawn softly glows
beyond the distant ridge
and the full moon begins to fade;
even after the sleepless night
yet shall come the Day.

H. Arnett
2/21/14

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Loving the Weather

Well, one thing about the weather in northeastern Kansas: it’s hardly ever boring. We’ve gone from minus twenty wind chills to sixty degrees in less than a week. Exactly a week ago today, we finished up getting about ten inches of snow. I say “about” because with the way the wind was blowing during and after, it’s hard to say. Some spots were blown clear and others had drifts a few feet deep. Tonight, our forecast lays out a ninety percent chance of rain and thunderstorms. For tomorrow, a ninety percent chance of snow with one-to-two inches of accumulation. By weekend, we’ll either have a small hurricane or it’ll be clear and cold or something other than what we have right now.

I love the change; gives us all something new to complain about it. Looking toward the night, I’m concerned about the effect hard rain will have on this one-inch layer of mush lying on top of ground that’s still frozen underneath. I don’t think it’s going to be pretty. But for all my worrying and fussing and fretting, about all I could do about it is throw down a tarp over my favorite hundred square feet of bare ground. I guess I could pray for soft, slow rain.

I guess I could as sort of a last resort just believe that no matter what happens, by God’s good grace we’ll get through it and it’ll all work out okay in the end. And in the meanwhile, just be thankful that it’s going to be fifty degrees above zero instead of it going the other way.

I’m not the most optimistic person that I know but I still have to say that I’ve never seen a day so bad that I couldn’t find some good in it. Helps when I look for it…

H. Arnett
2/19/14

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A Heart-Healthy Lunch

It seemed all but impossible to clear the walkways at Highland Community College last week. The combination of a wind chill at minus twenty, winds at plus twenty and ten inches of powdery snow created quite the challenge for Barry and his ground crew. While the rest of us stayed in our warm little homes last Wednesday, they were out in the cold fighting the snow. They began their fight at two in the morning, worked for eight hours or so and came back that afternoon to resume the battle.

They shoveled out basement entrances, cleared paths and parking lots to a surprising degree and yet, thanks to the powder and the wind, there were still places where an inch or two of snow drift still covered the walks. With daytime highs below twenty for a week, there wasn’t much melting. On this Wednesday, with a slight warming and some salt at the bottom of the pile, there was enough loosening that a heavy-duty scraper would work perfectly for loosening up the packed crust.

Feeling a bit like I was throwing starfish back into the ocean, I decided to do my lunchtime workout on the sidewalk around Yost Hall. Instead of doing intense interval training on the elliptical machine, I did non-intense on the concrete. In about forty-five minutes, I managed to semi-clear about two hundred feet of walkway. The scraper worked great for breaking up the ice and packed snow, not so well for clearing it off the concrete. A shovel would have been nice but I hadn’t thought to bring in a shovel.

While I was doing my bit of scraping, several students moved around me to walk in the street so they wouldn’t interfere with my effort. A couple of other employees thanked me for doing what I was doing. One teacher asked, “Is this what they mean by ‘other duties as assigned?'”

Another quipped, “I bet we’re the only college in the country that has a PhD out shoveling snow today.” In fact, we had at least one other one on our campus later that afternoon when Dr. Mosher decided to do a bit of clearing around the Administration Building. I’m pretty sure there were lots of others across the country, doing what they could to help out at other places where the severity of the storm exceeded the usual capabilities.

Whether that’s true or not, I do know that I got a pretty good workout. Even if it wasn’t the usual one, I’m pretty sure that I increased my respiratory and cardio rates. I also helped make a small area of my world a little safer and a bit more comfortable. Sometimes, a bit of selective exercise on our part can help more than one heart.

H. Arnett
2/14/14

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Beyond Winter’s Testings

The first hints of light show
above the dark bank beyond the ridge.
Pink streaks will brighten to red
by the time I fill the feed bucket
and head to the horse shed.

The growing glow silhouettes
bare branches along the fence line
as I pick my way
through the thinner traces of snow.

The gelding’s sides and flanks
and lower face are spiked
with heavy lines of frost.
Our breaths eddy into the air.

Even through leather gloves
I feel the cold of steel
as I lift the latch
and open the door to the hay.

Thin drifts of steam sift over the surface
of the heated water tub;
I force the handle of the hydrant upward
and water charges from the end of the hose.

The dawns are earlier now
and the dusks come later.
Even though winter’s hold is still heavy,
and the north wind sends slivers into my skin,

this season will end,
flowers will bloom,
buds will turn to blossoms
and grass will be green again.

In the bitter testings of our long winters,
suffering produces perseverance,
perseverance produces character,
and character yields a tempered hope
that does not fracture in the quenching cold.

H. Arnett
2/12/14

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