Wednesday, March 20, 2019

BRIDGES TO THE PAST (March 2 - 22, 2019)

Indiana Cabin


Male Cardinal
Returning from warm Florida to chilly Indiana proved to be a difficult adjustment.

Temperatures in the single digits and snow on the ground and in the air were not what we had hoped for in the middle of March.  Yet even with all the climatic discomfort, we found it good to be back in the Hoosier state with family.  Technically, we call Indiana, "home".  We pay state taxes and drive with an Indiana license on our person.  Truth is that we spend only about three months there each year.

Eventually, the snow and cold turned into birds singing and flowers beginning to force their way through the warming soil.  The area around our little cabin in the woods began to come alive.  It was wonderful to see the signs of spring starting to emerge from the frosty winter.

Our next stop will be Edisto Island, South Carolina, where we plan to spend time relaxing and enjoying the low country until the beginning of May.  The Wyndham Resort at Ocean Ridge has been a regular stop for the Dicers since the 1980s.  This out of the way, slow paced, beautiful place is exactly what we enjoy.

REFLECTIONS


One of the primary reasons for the visit this time was to say "Happy Birthday" to my wife's mom, Lois.  She has navigated this realm for 90 years now.  Now, in an Alzheimer's Care Facility, she spends her days in the present with few memories of the past.  Here, with us one minute, and then gone; gone away to a place that we have yet to experience.

There is an old railroad bridge, built in the late 1800s, that looms above a trail I walk here in Indiana.  It is known as "The Haunted Bridge" and stories are told of bridge builders dying tragically during construction, returning to haunt the structure.  Every time that I walk beneath it, I think about its' history.  I think about those who planned it; those who dreamed of a day when the big steam powered locomotives would cross the flowing waters of White Lick Creek as they puffed their way westward.  I think about what this, now suburban, neighborhood might have looked like in those long ago days.  For me, it is a bridge to the past.  It is a reminder of how things change.

Memory is an amazing aspect of our humanity.  The ability to remember times past and to reflect in the importance of the memory is something that we should cherish.  I am not an expert in how the mind functions.  I don't understand all the intricate wiring; the electronic bridges, that come into play for us to be able to remember.  I do know, from personal experience, that as we grow older those connections begin to fail; memories fade.

Our "bridges to the past" are fragile.  Just as the haunted railroad bridge has become scared and damaged by years of use, so too our bridge to the past.  Constant rumblings back to forth will take their toll and our trains of thought will be derailed.  Try as we might to prevent it, our memories will fade into a fog that encompasses all of our living.  I am not trying to be morbid, just saying that, for many of us, this is what's ahead.

Therefore, I chose to do all I can to keep the memories flowing.  I will simply reflect from time to time about my childhood on the chicken farm in Goodells, Michigan and at the lake house on Lake Huron.  I will look back on photos and yearbooks from the years at Port Huron (MI) Northern High School and Olivet Nazarene University.  I will review my ministries.  I will treasure memories of family and friends.  I will, until I can no longer.  Simply put......cherish your past, live your present, and, as best as you can, imagine your future.

Haunted Railroad Bridge, Avon, Indiana

Friday, March 1, 2019

GATORS IN LIFE (February 6 - March 1, 2019)

Wyndham Cypress Palms

The winter part of our Wyndham Resort Wanderings came to a close as we boarded the Delta flight back to Indiana.  It had been a three month journey spent on Grand Cayman Island and at the Wyndham Cypress Palms Resort in Kissimmee, Florida.  The final three week segment in Florida was spent with temperatures in the mid 80s (10 degrees above normal) while our midwest friends suffered through snow, ice, and sub zero temperatures.

Joyce and Gary Miller
Once again, we were blessed with a visit by some long time friends that we hadn't seen in over 30 years.  Joyce and Gary Miller were members at the church I pastored in Tipp City, Ohio back in the 1980s.  They now live in Virginia.  It was as if we had never been apart.

I will return to Indiana having lost about 12 pounds!  Lots of walking in the morning quiet and coolness and being a little more careful about what I ate made the difference.  I'd like to lose another dozen pounds before embarking on our Alaskan cruise at the end of May.  We all know that cruises add pounds.



REFLECTIONS


During my morning walks, I found myself thinking about how wonderfully blessed I am.  I spent considerable time in prayer just thanking the Lord for all the goodness that has been a part of my life.  Oh, there have been some gators cross my path from time to time but for the most part I managed to come out of those confrontations uninjured and able to continue my journey.  Gators tend to be pretty unmovable.  They find a place in the sun and just lay there.They are not afraid to let you know they are there.  I think they enjoy knowing that you know that they are there and that they are the alpha predator.  Problem is that from time to time they get hungry and lay in wait for the unsuspecting critter to wander by.  That's when they are dangerous.  They let their presence be known until it's time to feed.  Then they head to the dark, shaded places and bide their time.

Your best bet is to give them space, walk around them, and stay out of their dark hiding places.  Just continue your trek, knowing that you are wiser than they are and are able to avoid a confrontation that could prove to be fatal.  Fatal.....to the gator that is.