I Love My Mom!

My mom read books every night. Mysteries mostly. She would take me along with her to the Akron Public Library every Thursday night, where she would direct me to the children’s shelves while she selected at least 4-5 books for the next week’s reading. She would read from late evening until 2-3 am every night.

Being so artistic, she also enjoyed writing to people. The following was sent to me along with a couple of crochet doyleys. What an amazing woman! Insightful, able to teach by fable, ability to laugh at the moment, and uplift the soul.  Mom, I love you!

Andersonville, GA

I visited my Great, great grandfather, Wesley Marken’s gravestone at Andersonville, GA. Myriad thoughts have gone through my head in the last 24 hours. Suffice it to say, the experience was awesome. I found myself quite emotional as I arrived at the museum. As I explained to the museum attendants that I was there to visit my relative’s grave, they began spouting historical trivia that could only be described as rewarding as they took so much glee and satisfaction in sharing their knowledge. They reminded me so much of my nephew Scott Bitner. He is a fine teacher and loves history. I knew he would be keenly interested.

Some of the things that left an impression on me were;

    • the horrific conditions that the POW endured, virtually no water for 33,000 men, limited rations, little to no protection from the elements, loneliness, desperation, fear, little to look forward to. It was described by POWs as hell on earth and living death.
  • historically, I learned that the camp was opened in 1864 in February. By August the Confederates figured that it was not a good idea and moved most prisoners elsewhere.
  • The last 4000 were left to die as they were not strong enough to move. My gggrandfather was one of those. He was hospitalized Oct 13 and died that day. Men did not want to be separated from their comrades and would rather die with friends than in the hospital.
  • Why would my gggrandfather leave his wife, family, and a 2 year, 9 month old son, to join a regiment in the Union army, when the war was clearly being won by the Union. Gettysburg was over, battles were taking place more in the south than the north, Washington was safe. Did he want to provide for his family financially? Was it an older brother that had died and he wanted revenge? Was he strongly opposed to the reunification of the States? Was he led to believe that he would be posted to protect the rail line in Baltimore, and therefore safe from injury or death? The emancipation proclamation had already been signed into law. Was he a strong believer in freedom for all?

I find it interesting that there were soldiers on both maternal and fraternal sides of my family. My grandfather’s grandfather fought in the Civil War. My father’s great grandfather most likely came over from Salzburg, Austria to fight as a Hessian in the Revolutionary War. My father was in the military in WWI. I was in the Army during the Vietnam Conflict.

I met a really nice young girl at a Chili’s in Milledgeville, GA today and we were talking about this. I told her that I had been attracted to the Army in 1967 because their motto was, “Join the Army, see the world”. She laughed and remarked, you missed the “join the Army” part and only saw the “see the world” part. I laughed out loud because it was so true. So, thank you Mechea. You made a difference in my life today.

Christmas 2013

With ice storms in Ontario and thousands without hydro, how grateful am I that I have been able to spend Christmas in Raleigh with sister, Molly, and her kids and friends. I had to make the traditional Christmas card photo in front of the fireplace – smiles.

And I had to include my faithful bud, Peanut, who continues to travel with me on my adventures. For those who are not familiar with Peanut, check YouTube search for Jeff Dunham. It will make you laugh.

Molly’s grandchildren posed in numbered shirts to reflect eight wonderful girls and boys who blessed the Christmas pandemonium. Good food and great company.

From left and oldest to youngest: Kore Marie, Sterling, Leah, Curtis, Inari, Nathan, Zander. Missing number 3 tuned in by Skype: Kayia. How CUTE!

And when the food is good, relaxing afterwards is mandatory.

Lunch With Aunt Maude

Life is full of chances. Sometimes we just don’t take enough before it’s too late!

I had the greatest opportunity to have lunch with my Aunt Maude. She is turning 98 on December 29th. When I called my cousin to arrange a visit, I suggested that my sister and I would come to the house to see them. My cousin, Ruth, said oh no, she will want to meet you guys half way at a Cracker Barrel. That meant an hour and a half drive for them and us, each way.

When they arrived, I found out that Maude had fallen some six weeks ago and cracked her pelvis, so she was using a walker. This perfect women had left the hospital and come home for no more than a couple of days before she announced, “That’s enough of that”, and got up to get on with her life. How determined is that? She is such a go-getter and so is her daughter, Ruth. Neither of them can sit still very long.

I noticed that she had a smile on her face and was just happy to be alive and kicking. So many elderly people fall and break something and that is it. They become bedridden and get pneumonia and succumb. My sister says that Maude has always been the happiest person. She has always been my favorite aunt, and I told her so. As we were leaving, she said, I am just so happy you came for a visit. Tears, right?

It reinforces my belief that happiness, genuine happiness that comes from the soul, increases longevity. That is just one of the reasons I look for humor and excitement in everyday events, starting from as soon as I wake up and announce that something really wonderfully exciting is going to happen today. It is then that I expect and find wonderfully exciting things happening all day. It is just a great feeling of accomplishment when I can say about something that turns out to be really exciting, “There, I knew something really wonderfully exciting was going to happen today!

Although I recognize that I come from a long living family stock, most of my relatives have become infirmed and passed away at a much younger age than my Aunt Maude. I want to grow up to be just like her!

Sister Molly Recording Family History

Kids; I have told you that siblings are not chosen by us and more than likely, most people tolerate their siblings more than have them as best friends.

My sister, Molly, and I have always seen more eye to eye than our brothers.

Here is a recording I made of her telling the history of our mother shortly after I moved to Raleigh, NC in Oct 2013

On Tears

Emotions are part of the human experience. They are not bad nor good, they just are. Laughter can lead to a flow of tears. So can joy, sadness, anger, pain and loss. Real men don’t cry, so my eyes just sweat a lot.

I have always been an emotional guy. Some women take that for sensitivity. Some take it for weakness. Me, I take it for experiencing the most that life has to offer at any given moment.

Often over the years, I have been embarrassed to express feelings to the point of tears. Try as hard as I can, I just cannot turn off that overwhelming feeling that bubbles to the surface like lava from a volcano, under great pressure that cannot withstand being held at bay under any circumstances. I’m not talking about the wetness that turns the eyes red. I’m talking about the wetness that runs down the cheeks and requires a sleeve to sop up the excess.

My tears can come from something as simple and un-daring as singing the national anthem. There are songs that I have learned to sing that took me dozens of rehearsals to eliminate the uncontrolled spilling of emotion. And don’t even try to stop the flow of tears when it comes to talking about family. I’m an emotional guy and still feel the need to apologize for it.

My sister Molly says that when two people tear up, it is the divine in each that is touched and connected. I agree. All I have to do is watch an old Johnny Carson show and watch him laugh to the point of tears over something that his guest would say. There is something that happens at a soul level that brings us all to the same level of humanity.

If anecdotes are the snippets of life that have significant meaning, then I say learn to laugh to the point of tears, as well as wetly express that undulating sob from the bottom of your being when wrought with pain. Your soul needs the release for both.

On Death & Dying

One of the profound discoveries we all make as we get older is that none of us are going to make it out alive. I often tell people that I expect to live to be 120 and shot by a jealous husband. It’s a joke, son.

Somehow, I think we all know deep down that all that there is about our existence, falls into the knowledge that it is always NOW! No matter how much we want to believe differently, we come into this existence by ourselves and go out on our own. Oh sure, if we are lucky, there is someone there to help us enter into this world, and hopefully, there will be someone we love close to us as we leave this plane of the universe and enter into the next. This reality, in my opinion, is that we come in alone, and exit alone. That should not be a fearful event, but a cheerful event as we look forward to the next adventure of our spirit. I do believe that we are spiritual beings in the process of changing and experiencing this journey.

Yesterday I was reminded of that when I was suddenly summoned by the universe to contact my brother Mike. I soon found out that he was in the hospital. I had been unable to reach him or my sister-in-law, Liz due to the fact that all the telephone numbers I had were no longer in service. That alone gave me some angst. I finally sent Liz a message through a social network and shortly thereafter received a phone call. She informed me that Mike needed to be moved from the hospital in Cleveland to a rehab unit the next day, which was really a euphemism for moving him into a long care unit.\r\n\r\nI told her that I would meet her at the hospital to help in any way I could, and to see my brother, for what I was afraid would be the last time. My brother is thirteen years older than I am and was my hero as a youngster. I remember a time when he drove many hours from summer training in the reserves in Kentucky to arrive at home late at night. He was so tired that he fell asleep in the car in the driveway rather than come into the house to sleep. Been there, done that! He had bought me a rubber Indian tomahawk complete with feathers, as a present, He was probably 18-19 which would have made me five or six. I remember being so excited and felt loved

Mike, wearing his wife’s, Pat, wedding veil. He had a great sense of humor in his early years.

Seeing my brother in his condition had a profound effect on me. He was so angry at the world, his wife, Liz, the hospital staff and even me who he had not seen in several years. When I asked him for a hug as I arrived, he flatly stated that I was in cahoots with his wife, who he gave a stare of disgust and hate as we arrived. I soon realized that he was not the person I had previously known in my life. Although I allowed it to initially hurt me, I soon realized that the change that had occurred was a result of dementia, drugs, and strokes that had taken the brother I once knew.  How could I be offended or angry with this new person? I quickly gained my compassion and began to rebuild a relationship with an entity that was not my brother.

Since then I have had several revelations. What grandiose ideas do I harbor that would allow me to think that I could have caused this in any way and that I needed to release my emotional attachment to the past. I was there to make a difference.

My sister Molly had reminded me earlier, that forgiving oneself means to let go of the “hope” that the past could have occurred any differently. It is that hope that we hold onto so tightly that creates the internal pain. The more I remind myself of that understanding, the more content I feel.

I have been able to spend more time with my sister in the last several weeks than in over nearly fifty years. Tonight I had the great opportunity to record her voice explaining how my family came about and some of the best stories. I will be adding that recording to this autobiography soon.

Mom, Mike, Molly, James – 1982

Mike, Pat, Kathy, young Michael

Speak no evil, see no evil, hear no evil!

That visit caused me to pay attention to how I want my later years to pan out. Sometimes examples come into our lives to show us how we don’t want things to be.

My father passed away at age 83 from a stroke. My mom had sat down and written out her goals for the next ten years, the night she passed away in her sleep. Having worked in hospitals for nearly ten years, I had experienced death on many levels. No matter how intellectually we observe death, the emotional side cannot be swept under the carpet, nor depleted from our experience. The fact that we cannot make it out alive means we need to plan for the future before our memories fail and we become a different person than we knew ourselves to be.\r\n\r\nI can only wish that I go quickly, surrounded by loved ones. In the meantime, reason dictates that plan we must.

Thanksgiving 2013 – Canadian

Thanksgiving occurs on two different dates, depending on whether you are in Canada or the US. Canadian Thanksgiving comes first due to the simple fact that fall comes earlier to Canada.

Every year I have attempted to celebrate both holidays, for remembrance and to be able to have a reason to have two festivals of scrumptious meals. My favorite dessert became, over the years, a pumpkin pecan pie with chocolate drizzle and topped with coffee Hagan Daz ice cream. Ummm…

I made this pie for my family and friends in Raleigh, NC to celebrate my Canadian heritage Thanksgiving, October 14, 2013.