Tarot Blog Hop: Finding Balance




Welcome to the Mabon Blog Hop.  I’m super excited to be participating in this hop because Autumn is my absolute favorite time of year.  Our wranglers,Jenn Waltner and Louise Underhill, have challenged us to post on the theme of balance and how it can be restored. I’ve decided to use a spread I created to ask the elements for guidance on how I can bring more balance into my life. I’ll be using the Tarot de St. Croix for my spread as this deck always makes me think of Fall.

North: Message from the Bones
The seven of swords, as interpreted by Lisa de St. Croix, tells me that I need to clear space in my life for what is important and I need to focus on my goals. These are important messages as I am getting ready to embark on a serious effort to lose weight and I need to really focus on this goal and to make time in my life to exercise and pay attention to what I eat. The more traditional meaning of the swords, stealing or retrieving something, is also valid in this reading as I’m taking back my health. This card also dovetails with an emotional journey that I’ve been taking to heal from ancestral damage. I grew up believing that my weight was a function of genetics and that there was nothing I could do about it. However, when I look back at my mother’s eating habits, I realize that she was trying to lose weight while eating cookies, soda, and other unhealthy foods. In hindsight, the messages about not being able to lose weight because of genetics, do not match up with the eating habits she demonstrated.

East: Message from the Mind
The fool tells me that I need to let go of my need to know my destination and to just trust that I will be taken where I need to go and provided with what I need. This is a very apt reading for me as I am a control freak and it is hard for me to embark on journeys with uncertain outcomes. It’s very interesting that I pulled this card as the message from the mind, because I’m applying for a graduate program in Spirituality, Culture, and Health and the rational part of my brain that I have always relied upon to make decisions is telling me that there is no return on investment in this program and that I will be wasting my money. However, my heart is telling me it is right for me and that it will lead me someplace amazing. This card is an affirmation that I need to just leap and trust that the path will unfold.

South:  Messages from the Spirit 
My initial read of the hermit was that the cards were telling me that I would never have anyone in my life and that I would always be alone. However, as I have taken time to reflect, I’ve realized that that is the interpretation of my all or nothing mindset. The more gentle message from the cards is that I am a person who needs a lot of alone time and that I need to learn to balance my need for solitude with a relationship. I need to make sure to make time for myself no matter what the circumstances. It is a reminder to myself to not get so caught up in someone else that I lose myself. Messages from the Emotions

East:  Messages from the Emotions
The World is telling me to embrace all of my emotions and to not segregate them based on what I believe are good or bad emotions. All of my emotions can help me to grow and to become my best self. The world is also telling me that by opening my heart to embrace my own emotions, I can be connected to the all of my brothers and sisters in spirit around the world. This message is incredibly timely for me as I am someone who shields herself and doesn’t like to open up to the world around me. I need to be like the world and stand naked in the middle of my own world and own it. I need to own who I am and what I feel.

Message from the Source 
The four of wands has many messages for me. The first is that I will find my own personal power by creating a life of ritual. I need to live in sacred space as that is where I find my own sanity and healing. This card, like the World card, is also telling me to be naked and vulnerable as I move through life. I need to be open with other people and to stop hiding who I am. Lastly, Epona is telling me that I am at a crossroads and I have a decision to make as to where I am going moving forward.


Summary
Overall, these were incredibly powerful cards to draw and provided a lot of guidance as to how to move forward with my life over the next few months.

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Balancing the Scale

Over 26 years ago, Brian Dugan brutally raped and murdered a young girl. I wrote the below in memory of Dugan’s victims and today, the date he got sentenced to death. Although there is no bliss in this decision, it does prove that the scales of justice will eventually balanced out.

Jeanine and Missy’s Legacy

“There’s a man at the door wearing a tracksuit. I don’t know what he wants. I didn’t answer,” that was the text I got from my daughter last Tuesday when she was home alone from school. My heart leaped into my throat and images of my daughter being raped, beaten, and bludgeoned before I could race the five minutes home to save her tormented me.

“Lock all the doors, “ I texted her back and sat fidgeting in my chair as I waited for the message light to come on my phone signifying that she was still there, whole and in one piece. One minute passed, two, when it hit three, I prepared to make a quick exit to rush home and I debated whether the text I had warranted a call to 911.

Finally, the red light came on and the text that seemed as if it was centuries in the writing flashed across my screen, “He’s gone. I locked all the doors.” I settled back into my chair and no one in the room realized the life and death drama that had played out in my mind as I waited those endless seconds for my daughter to text me the all clear.

At seventeen, my daughter is seven years older than Jeanine Nicarico was on the day she was attacked and ultimately murdered by Brian Dugan in her own home. Like my daughter, Jeanine had been home sick from school at her seemingly safe home in the Chicago Suburbs.

Despite my daughter’s almost adult status, I still think about Jeanine every time I agree that she can stay home from school. I think about all the things that can go wrong in my seemingly safe suburb. The day Robert Maday escaped, my daughter was safe at school, but she was going home to an empty house with several doors unlocked. Fortunately, one of her friends took her home and made sure she was safe before heading to his own house.

I was a junior at Kaneland high school when Jeanine Nicarico was murdered and at the time I was, like all teenagers, invincible and bad things like what happened to Jeanine would never dare to invade my pristine world. Two years later when Missy Ackerman disappeared in Somonauk, the tragedy still seemed far removed from my safe little world even though I happened to be in Somonauk while they were searching for Missy and saw the buttons with her name on them.

It was only when I had kids of my own that the horror of what happened to Jeanine and Missy hit home. I realized that life was indeed very fragile and I now had two innocent and defenseless children that were mine to protect from the great big scary world. My husband and I kept our kids close as they were growing up and we made sure that up until they were in Junior high they were never home alone for more than a few minutes. We made sure we knew where they were and who they were with at all times. Memories of Missy haunted me whenever I thought about letting our daughter take her bike and head out for a few hours.

Our son was six foot something and 175 by the time he hit high school so I wasn’t very worried about leaving him home alone as I figured he could fend off any would be attacker. Our daughter’s another story as she’s just over five feet tall and just over 100 lbs and it would be pretty easy for a determined attacker to overpower her. Unfortunately for her, her size has meant that her father and I are much more protective of her than we were her brother and every time I leave her home alone, the specter of what happened to Jeanine and Missy haunts me and I agonize over whether or not to truly let her stay home alone. Most times I don’t want to endure the “Oh Mom” eye roll that would ensue if I shared my concerns, but every now and then I share my concerns and reinforce the rules of staying home alone: lock the doors, don’t answer the door, don’t have anyone over, etc. etc.

If life were fair, Jeanine would be thirty six now and Missy would be thirty-two. Maybe they’d be mom’s themselves, worried about the safety of their kids running out to play, but instead because of a single madman, they’re both frozen in time as smiling little girls who’ve left a generation of parents hugging their children just a little bit closer at night because they know the boogieman’s real.

Glimpsing Balance

My eyes started to open to what balance truly meant the last weekend I spent in Europe. We spent our last Friday night in Germany as a project team drinking and meandering through Bremen, Germany. We strolled down the cobblestoned streets of the Schoor, tossed back a few at the Ratskeller, and then headed down to a small bar on the water front to drink some more and toast our successful implementation. As I sat there drinking with my friends, I realized the Continental way of life was fundamentally different than life in the States: stores closed at 6:00 pm and only opened one Sunday out of the month, dinner typically took two to three hours, and work got left at work.

My reality was jarred further when after three hours of sleep, I headed for 36 hours in London. The first thing I noticed was that London was much more like America than Germany. The pace was faster, stores were open later, and it was a lot less relaxed than Bremen. The juxtaposition made me realize that maybe our American way of life is too fast paced and maybe I needed to slow down and enjoy life a little more.

I spent two incredible days exploring the Tower of London, Westminster Abbey, and the streets of London. I realized several things during those magical days that helped bring me a little closer to finding that elusive thing called balance:

      • A visit to Churchhill’s cabinet war rooms made me realize that although there is some truth to American’s perception the Brits wouldn’t have survived without us, what we fail to realize that if the Brit’s hadn’t persevered, hadn’t sacrificed, and hadn’t hung tough, there wouldn’t have been any war to win.
      • A trip to the Tower of London, opened my eyes to the fact that a lot of people lived and loved and died long before I was born and people would continue to live, love, and die, long after I was gone. Although the technology that inhabits my daily life may be different, the basic human needs, wants, and desires are the same. The struggle to find balance is universal.
      • Despite being built as a monument to God Almighty, for me Westminster Abbey was a monument to all that is good about humanity. It’s a monument to creativity, to hard work, and a belief in something greater than yourself.

 

I wish I could say that I returned to the States and my life magically changed into something more balanced. Looking back, I’m not even sure that I realized at the time that I had changed and that the almost imperceptible change in perspective that came about after that trip would help me get a lot closer to understanding what balance was.

Ordinary Bliss

I turned down a great opportunity today in the interest of balance. I was up for an integration manager position at a huge and well known company. It would have been a decent bump in pay, the work would have been interesting, and I would have been challenged. It also would have meant traveling and living out of a suitcase three to four days a week for the next six months and a twice daily commute of 45 minutes to an hour.

Two years ago, I would have jumped at the chance. I would have told myself that the travel was only temporary and that I could suck it up and do it for six months. I would have put a positive spin on the 45 minute commute by telling myself that I could listen to books on tape and make it educational. I would have told myself that if I left work at 4:30, I’d make it home by 5:30 and still have all evening. However, I’ve been around the block enough to know that those are all lies. The travel would have ended up being longer than six months because after project A, project B would have come along and I’d have kept traveling. I rarely leave work on time so I would have ended up getting home at 6 or later ever night.
This is my life and it is the only one I get so six MORE months spent living out of a suitcase, is six more months I don’t get to be home and enjoy my family. Six months more months I’m eating out most nights. Six months more that I’m so tired and stressed out when I do get home that all I want to do is sleep. Six more months of not having a routine at home. Six more months of missing out on getting into an exercise routine. Six more wasted months of my life.
It’s only been in the last three months that I’ve started to feel like I have balance in my life and that work isn’t taking over every aspect of my life. I’ve started leaving work on time, not working at home, and spending time doing things that are important to me. I’ve been taking my daughter out to sushi almost once a week, I’ve been going downtown to have dinner with my son several times a month. I’m still working on spending more time with hubby, but I’ll get there.
I’ve been writing again, both on my blog and working on a book. I’ve started walking several times a week and I cook dinner most nights instead of eating out or grabbing fast food because I’m too tired to cook. I’ve even started enjoying cleaning house. In short, I’m appreciating the sacred and the beautiful in the every day and I’m not ready to throw my life out of balance again for a job.
My job isn’t perfect, but it’s five minutes from my house and the proximity lets me have a real life instead of a life that’s all wrapped up in work and getting ahead. My goal is to be able to work for myself one day and right now I have time to work on that dream as I have time to spend writing and putting proposals together.
Maybe this means I’m finally growing up and realizing that all the glitz, the glamour, and the money isn’t worth it if deep down you’re not living a life of balance and bliss.

Sky Blue Balance

I first read about the color sky blue pink in a Reader’s Digest article where the writer had talked about her grandmother’s description of sunset as sky blue pink. That was one of those wonderfully wordy descriptions that has stuck with me and every time I look up at the sunset, I think about how beautifully sky blue pink the sky is.

Sunset and sunrise book end the day between wonderful displays of nature’s glory. Sunrise always seems to be alive with possibilities as the first rays of sun peep over the horizon and spread their light across a world just waking from slumber. The sensation of watching the world go from darkness, to the rosy haze of dawn, to daylight is like watching a miracle happen. It’s a reminder that the sun has come up and given us the promise of another day.

It’s been raining a lot in Chicago the last few weeks and the other day my alarm went off and I almost turned it off thinking it was a mistake because the sky was still dark and gray. I pulled myself out of bed and, looking at the clock, realized that despite the darkness, it really was time to get up. Looking out the window, I saw that this was one of those days where there’d be no defined sunrise, just a lightening in the gray.
If sunrise is the promise of another day, sunset is a gift that comes at the end of the day and reminds us that despite whatever we’ve gone through during the day, there is still beauty and wonder in the world. Many would say that tall buildings detract from the beauty of nature, but I think tall buildings enhance the beauty of sunsets. I was driving back to work to pick something up the other day around 6 pm and the sun was starting to set. Its reflection in the glass magnified the rosiness of the sunset and created magnificent shadows. As I watched that beautiful sunset, I felt as if all the cares in the world were melting from my shoulders.
Sunset and sunrise provide balance in life as they draw the boundaries between light and dark and in the olden days they mirrored the boundaries of people’s lives. In the days before electric light, daylight was the time to hunt and gather and night time was the time to sit around the fire and socialize and share time with those you loved. The days were not equal throughout the year with the long days of summer being the time to work ahead and fill the larder with the food you’d need throughout the long winter. I’m trying to use sunrise and sunset to create balance in my own life and to leave my employer’s work at work at the end of the day and to fill the night with activities that bring me joy. It isn’t always easy, but I’m trying to lead a more balanced life.

Butterfly Bliss

The Butterfly Effect, otherwise known as Chaos Theory, says that small events can trigger larger events. The most famous example used of the Butterfly Effect is that a butterfly flapping its wings in Central Park can impact the weather in China. Charley Forness over at Scribe for the Tribe has decided to apply the Butterfly Effect to life changes that he wants to make. His thought is that by making small changes on a weekly basis, they’ll add up to big results. This isn’t a list of tasks that you’ll achieve for the week, but a list of repeatable changes that you’ll incorporate into your life with the hopes of them becoming habits. Positive and directed life changes are one of the most blissful things I know as they make your life more positive and blissful.

I’ve been pondering Charley’s self challange all week and weighing whether or not I want to publicly declare my goals and put them out on the web for everyone to track my progress. I finally decided that one of my fundamental beliefs is that the best way to make change in your life is to write down what you want and publicly claim it. What could be more public than posting your goals on the Web for everyone to see?

So without further ado, here are my goals and my butterflies for the week.

Goal–Lose 30 lbs by 12/31/2009

  • Walk at least 20 minutes three times a week
  • Drink three bottles (aluminum ones) of water a day

Goal–Have Sean’s tuition and the taxes paid by 12/31/2009.

  • Cook dinner at home six nights a week to save money.
  • Update the budget in my online budget tracker.
  • Cut my driving to use only one tank of gas a week.

Goal–Build my online presence

  • Post five book reviews at Amazon
  • Comment on at least 10 blog entries around the blogosphere

Goal–Build KUDOS Power

  • Post three articles on KUDOS Power
  • Post three articles at free article sites with links back to KUDOS Power

Goal–Build better relationships with my family

  • One dinner or activity with John this week
  • One dinner or activity with Cat this week

I’ll report back on my goals every week so that you can all track my progress.

Bamboo Balance

Walking through the tall stalks of bamboo while the lyrical sounds of a babbling brook filled the air made me forget for a few minutes that I was in the middle of downtown Chicago. I was spending the day at a conference at the Hyatt Center and the outer concourse of their building is a bamboo forest in front of floor to ceiling windows. Bubbling fountains emulate the sounds of a mountain stream. Glass benches provide places to sit and contemplate or just people watch.

It was interesting to see the balance the bamboo brought to this very high tech and busy office sprace. You could see the stress leave people’s shoulders as they came off the elevator and walked through the bamboo forest. A sense of peace seemed to come over people as they sat on the benches and talked to their coworkers or engaged in calls with their families.

The cold marble of the opposite wall was softened by the reflection of the bamboo on the black shiny surface. The juxtaposition of the corporate civility and the wild bamboo made me realize that sometimes balance wasn’t at the center of the teeter totter, sometimes balance means going back and forth between the extremes of life. The sadness and grief of losing someone is balanced by the joy of remembering the happy times you spent with them, the extra hours spent working on a project are balanced by an extra long vacation at the beach, the time spent in the corporate jungle is balanced by time spent in the woods.

I’m not the only one finding lessons in bamboo lately. Charley Forness over at Scribe for the Tribe wrote an excellent article about achieving success by emulating bamboo and his lessons were on my mind when I walked into the Hyatt Center and saw the bamboo grove. As I sat in that peaceful oasis, I was especially thinking about his advice to not listen to your critics and to just become who you were meant to be. I’ve spent a lot of time in my life listening to people tell me why I shouldn’t do something and I’ve realized its time I started listening to myself. That’s the only way I’m really going to become the person I was meant to be and that is true bliss.

Balance Between the Worlds

Beaches are among the most magickal places on earth as they serve as an ever changing boundary between the world of water and the world of earth. I’ve always loved standing on the beach and letting my feet be licked by the water: sometimes the water just kisses my toes and a few waves later it splashes my knees. It’s a magickal place that’s not quite earth and not quite water.
We went to Illinois Beach State Park today for Caitlin’s birthday and the beach was wild and deserted: a place of beauty and mystery. We walked over the dunes to where giant glacers had moved the earth herself to create rock creations. The earth isn’t done changing though as these rock creations are now being licked smooth by the waters of Lake Michigan. The rocks are uneven and create crevices where water pools as the tide washes in and out.
Caitlin ran and danced with the waves running into the shallow waves, then stepping back as the waves came higher and higher. She laughed and played and I grew nervous as she walked deeper into the water and started to call her back, but then she pulled herself back and sat on the damp sand in the land between the earth and water. She crossed her legs, stilled herself and became the picture of calm as she stared out at the boats on the water.
Feeling uneasy about her being so close to the water, I wouldn’t let myself relax until my husband came over and perched on the pier above both of us, sitting like a silent sentinal. I knew that once he was there I could relax as he would watch out for both of us. I found myself a niche in the water smoothed rocks where I could dangle my feet in the water and I let myself feel the waves kiss my toes and the sun kiss the back of my neck and I let the tension flow out of my body and be watched away by the waves.
Looking out at the lake, I could see the sun reflecting off the blue water and colorful sailboats skimming across the waves. Life felt uncomplicated as if all that mattered where the elements of sun, surf, and sand. The deep sense of calm I felt driving home is something I will strive to recapture on days when life seems hectic, rushed, and way too complicated.

Lessons in Balance

My dad died last November and I miss him tremendously. He was one of the greatest men I know and I’d like to share his eulogy with you so that you’ll get a sense of who he was and why I am who I am and some of the lessons I’ve learned that help bring me back to balance.

How do you say goodbye to a man who loved you before you were even born? To a man who dried your tears, taught you to drive, and taught you to be true to yourself? The only suitable tribute is to share the lessons I learned at his knee and to strive to live up to his expectations.

Before I share the lessons I learned from my dad, I’d like to set the stage by sharing a few facts. Leonard J. Collins was born to Thursa Aud Collins and Leonard Chester Collins on December 30, 1935. He came home to two older brothers who he adored. When my dad was three, his father died and his mother moved her family to Poplar Bluff, Missouri, where my dad would grow up without much money, but surrounded by the love of his extended family. I look back at the photos of my dad growing up and in most of them he’s surrounded by “the boys” as he and his cousins were known. When my dad told stories about growing up, he glossed over the fact that his family was dirt poor and instead focused on the lighter side of life like the neighborhood dog, the swimming hole, and running around with his cousins.

My father married my mom, Charlene Babcock, on February 20, 1965. I came along in 1966 and my brother in 1970. My dad worked for General Mills for 29 years before retiring in 1994. He kept in touch with the friends he made at General Mills up his very last day on earth. My parents moved to Mount Carroll a few years after my dad’s retirement where they become beloved members of the community and made friendships that have helped my mother weather the last two weeks.

Those are the simple and stark facts, but they don’t begin to tell you who my daddy was. My dad was a great and powerful man. He would disagree with that assessment as he saw himself as a simple, humble man who loved his family and did the best that he could. His greatness came from his modesty, from his willingness to help his fellow man, from his love of animals, and his willingness to sacrifice for those he loved. His power was not the flashy power of a performer, the practiced polish of a politician, or the power that money brings. Instead his power was love and like the power of water, it surrounded you, embraced you, and made you better. Lao-Tzu stated: In the world there is nothing more submissive and weak than water. Yet for attacking that which is hard and strong nothing can surpass it. That was my father’s power. He changed you by setting an example and by living his life the best way he knew how. He didn’t preach, he rarely lectured and he didn’t threaten, he simply led by example.

Here are the lessons I’ve learned from my father.

Sacrifice to provide for your family

My father worked seven days a week most weeks to provide for my brother, mother, and me. He was gone before I got up in the morning and came home tired and exhausted and in need of a nap. At the time, I never questioned the fact that my dad wasn’t home on weekends like other kids’ dads and assumed he worked because he wanted to. Now that I’m grown up and making similar sacrifices, I realize that there’s nothing he would have wanted more than to spend time with my brother and I, but that he realized the need to sacrifice himself to provide for us.

Money can’t buy love, but sacrificing yourself to provide for your family is one of the truest acts of devotion

Do Your Best

When I’d bring home a B, my father always asked why it wasn’t an A. At the time, I thought his expectations were unrealistic, but since I’ve became a parent, I’ve realized that he knew I could do better and that by challenging me, I would do better.

My dad firmly believed in an honest day’s work for an honest day’s pay and he always made that fair exchange. He taught me to go the extra mile and to do my best because I was the one that would know if I hadn’t. He knew eventually I’d have to answer to myself and hoped that by prodding me to do better, I’d learn to prod myself.

Little things matter

Despite having a dad who worked seven days a week; I never felt like I missed out on his time or attention and I always knew that my brother and I mattered to him. I look back at pictures of my childhood and my dad was always at school plays, parent teacher conferences, and all the other events that fill a child’s life.

I know there were also a lot of nights when he came home and despite being tired from work, he would give in to my whining to go to the park, to go to the mall, go for ice cream, or to go walk around O’hare.

During the summer, we’d meet my dad for lunch or we’d go for ice cream after work and I always knew that he was there for me.

Catch them Being Good

When I was growing up, I always thought it was lame when my parents bragged about me and my brother. I’ve since learned that it’s a parent’s prerogative to brag about their kids and that all that bragging made me want to live up to my parents’ expectations.

It’s funny that the compliments my dad paid me behind my back meant as much or more than the ones he gave to my face. I’ll never forget walking into my dad’s hospital room in Iowa City and having the nurse say, “Oh, you must be his daughter who’s managing that big project in Georgia. Your dad’s really proud of you.” Despite how sick he was, he’d also managed to tell the nurse all about his wonderful son and his grandchildren.

Take care of others

My dad didn’t have much time for volunteering when I was growing up, but when he and my mom retired, they both spent time volunteering at Good Sam’s and helping out those who couldn’t help themselves. I always thought it was so funny to hear my parents, who were retired themselves talk about helping out the “old people.”

Despite living hundreds of miles away from his mamma, he always made time to visit her several times a year and to make sure she visited us. I have many happy memories of driving down to Poplar Bluff to visit my grandma.

Experience Life

I visited DeKalb, IL a few years ago and got to talking to the clerk at the gas station. I was shocked to learn that she’d never been to Chicago and that she’d never really traveled more than 20 miles from where she was born. I felt sorry for her as my parent made sure that my brother and I experienced as much life as possible. We traveled every summer, to Florida, to Colorado, to Texas, to Gettysburg, and to a host of other places. We even visited East St. Louis and the South Side of Chicago a few times, but I don’t think those trips were planned.

At each of those places, my parents made sure that we learned something. In Mobile, AL, we visited a battleship and learned about life at sea. In Gettysburg, we visited battlefields. At Mount Rushmore, we learned about our past and experienced a thrill of patriotism when we sang the national anthem and watched the lights flash across the faces of four of our most famous presidents.

My parents also worked hard to teach my kids about life and my dad liked nothing better than to take Sean and Caitlin to the Lock and Dam to watch the boats or to see the eagles, to local museums, to the zoo, and to other places where the kids could experience life and grandma and grandpa could experience the joy of being grandparents.

Forgive Others

My daddy was a man who believed in forgiveness and I experienced that forgiveness first hand. The first day I got my learner’s permit, my daddy took me driving and I drove into a ditch and wrecked the car. My daddy never held it against me. He just came home, we reported it to insurance and that was the end of it until my son turned 16. Then my dad and mom both had tell Sean the story of when his mom started driving and implore me to show him the same grace that I was shown.

My father’s forgiveness also extended to animals. We took my dog Luke out to visit my parents last summer and the first thing Luke did was to bite my dad’s dog Blue. My father was upset, but he forgave Luke and always looked forward to seeing him….as long as it was at my house.

Honor Your Elders

My brother and I were taught as children that our friends’ parents were Mr. and Mrs. not Jane and Bob. That we should open the doors for our elders and we should always give up the seat on the bus to someone older than ourselves. Those things mattered to my father and as such, they matter to me.

No elders were to be more honored than parents. Those of you who knew my grandmother Elaine knew that she was not always the easiest woman to be around. I once asked my daddy why he was so patient with her and he responded that that she was my mom’s mother and she deserved respect. And anytime I complained about her, he reiterated that I was to treat my grandmother with respect no matter what.

Love animals

Animals always held a special place in my daddy’s life. No trip to St. Louis was complete without a trip to the zoo and our home was never without a dog and my dad embraced most of the dog’s that I brought into my life.

One dog that my father had that my brother and I considered a questionable choice was Gizmo. Gizmo was a little yippy dog who was always begging. My parents had inherited Gizmo and once when I asked my dad how he could love Gizmo, he looked at me and said, “Because no one else does.” I learned a powerful lesson that day and I’ve tried very hard to be a little less judgemental.

My dad came by his love of animals naturally. I remember being at my grandmother’s once and she was complaining about this big old Tom cat that kept hanging around her house. My dad looked at her and said, “Well, Mom, he wouldn’t hang around if you didn’t put food out for him every day.’

Blue, my dad’s most recent dog, also benefited from my dad’s love. Blue came to my parents as an abused and abandoned dog about 13 years ago. When he first came into my parent’s lives, he wouldn’t let anyone pet his face and he shied away from most people. After a year or so living at my parents and being loved unconditionally by my dad, Blue became a lot friendlier and learned to love having his ears scratched.

Embrace your family

Family always mattered to my dad. He was close to his brothers and cousins and always made sure that my brother and I knew we had a family we belonged to. Although he wasn’t able to replicate the wild times he had running with “the boys,” he and my mother made sure we spent time with our extended families on both sides. We saw our cousins on my mom’s side regularly and several times a year, we’d head down to Poplar Bluff, Missouri to spend time with my father’s family.

Those were cherished times as we roamed the same streets my dad had roamed as a child, visited the store where he bought his soda pop, and visited our cousins and great aunts. Once a year was the big family reunion when we got spent time with the Easons, the Paytons, the Auds, and the Collins. I was never sure exactly who belonged to who, but I always knew I belonged because I was Junior’s daughter.

Family to my dad wasn’t only the people related to you by blood. My father drew people to him with his smile, his faith, and his loving spirit. As I look around the room, I see people my father knew for over forty years, people who he knew from General Mills and, no less cherished, people my parents met after they moved to Mount Carroll.

I know my father cherished all of your friendships and you were all an important part of his life.

Never be afraid to say I love you

I spent my 21st birthday at my Grandmother Collins’ bedside. She was critically ill and all the brothers had been called home to see her. That day was immensely hard as I watched my daddy cry and tell his mamma he loved her.

That day he told me to never be afraid to tell people you love them and to do it often so you never have to worry about someone leaving you without them knowing you loved them.

That’s a lesson I’ve taken to heart and I always make sure those I care about know how I feel.

In honor of my daddy, I’d like you all to turn to someone you love and let them know.