“I Never Knew… I Never Knew…”

In response to the article about the beauty of sand a friend sent a message about a story he’d read about from Tom Brown of Tracker School fame. I like it and wanted to share it with you:

Reminds me of a story Tom Brown (The Tracker) relates, and which is included in at least one of his books, about finding a retired fisherman on a beach at dawn. The fisherman had spent his entire working life in that area, and decided to retire on the beach.

Tom picked up a handful of sand, and was marveling at its beauty when the old man said “What you got there, son?”. Tom answered, “sand.”

The old man said “Just sand?”, at which point Tom decides to walk away in disappointment and sadness, as the old man had missed the beauty that surrounded him.

A moment later, Tom heard a noise, and turned around. He saw the old man holding a handful of sand, tears running down his cheeks, saying “I never knew… I never knew.”

Russ

Posted in Beauty, Nature, Stories That Touched Me | Tagged , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Like Father Like Son

A friend just sent this wonderful article from Flying magazine about how airplanes can help fathers and sons connect with each other. It is a bit long but includes two heartwarming stories that I found well worth my time.

Like Father Like Son

By Lane Wallace / Published: Jun 25, 1999

Craftsmen in Kansas riveted together my old Cessna 120 many years before I was born. On quiet evening flights I would sometimes think about that, imagining the men who had built her and the pilots who had flown her before my mom even knew my dad’s name. Sometimes I almost thought that if I listened hard enough, I might hear some of her other pilots talking or feel their hands on the controls. We might have lived in different times and known different worlds; but we were linked by a plane that had touched all of us as it passed through our hands and lives.

Airplanes may not have hearts beating under their cowlings (although I know some people who would argue this point). But they have a powerful way of connecting the hearts of those who know or fly them — sometimes when we least expect it.

Several years ago I was standing inside a vintage B-24 “Liberator” bomber that was on display for a day at a North Carolina airport. A middle-aged man walked slowly through the plane and then approached the pilot and asked if he might sit in the cockpit. The pilot explained that the cockpit was off-limits for tours, but something in the man’s eyes made the pilot hesitate. He asked the visitor if there was any special reason he wanted to sit there. There was a long moment of silence. Then the man answered quietly, “My father was a B-24 pilot. My mom was pregnant with me when he left, and my dad was killed in a raid over Europe somewhere. I never knew him. But I thought maybe if I could sit where he would have sat when he flew … where he would have been when he died … ”

The man stopped, unable to continue. But no more words were necessary. The pilot silently gestured the man into the left seat of the cockpit. I stood back and watched as the man gently ran his hands over the instruments, caressing the control yoke and the throttles, reaching out through the airplane and the years to touch the father he’d never known.

For several long minutes I just watched his hands, sensing the father in the son, as if the airplane had melted the years and men into a single moment and person. Then I glanced up and saw the tears streaming silently down the man’s cheeks. Fifty years later he was touching his father, perhaps for the very first time.

Our link to our parents is a complex relationship that perhaps we only really begin to understand when we’re faced with its loss. Who we are is intertwined with the joy and pain of our interactions with them; their expectations of us and our needs — met and unmet — that we looked to them to fill. Our parents are the foundation on which we build ourselves. And no matter how mature and self-sufficient we become, and no matter how imperfect our parents are, they’re still that last line of defense that stands between us and the oblivion of the universe.

So to lose a parent is more than just another tragedy. It is to have our universe explode, stop, and collapse in on us again. Regardless of how old we are, we’re suddenly six years old again and daddy or mommy is going away, and there’s nothing we can do to stop them. In a single, ripping moment, the solid ground drops out from under one of our feet, leaving us unbalanced, scrambling for footing, and suddenly aware of the abyss that lies just beyond our fragile, protected world.

In an ideal world, we only have to face this loss after we’re grown, having had the benefit of a solid, stable childhood and having had the time to develop the strength and support of an adult network of family and friends. But life isn’t always ideal, in this all-too-imperfect world.

We adapt, as Charles Darwin said. We may not even feel the loss on a daily level. The remaining parent is the family we know. But the loss is there, somewhere inside. And we yearn for completion. A friend recently traveled back to the forests of France where his father was killed in the Battle of the Bulge. What was he hoping to find there? I’m not sure he even knew. But somewhere, among the trees and the ghosts, he was likely hoping to find something that would help complete the ground underneath him; give him a sense of connection with a piece of his universe that had always been missing.

The man in the B-24 was undoubtedly searching for the same thing — perhaps had been searching for it, on some level, for years. So what was it about the B-24 cockpit that allowed him to find his father there? Was it simply the age of the airplane? That it was a place his father had been? Partly. Airplanes certainly can link people from generations apart. Many times when I landed the Cessna at an airport, someone would approach, joy in their eyes, and say “I learned to fly in a plane like this. Could I just look at it for a minute?” We might have been 30 or 40 years apart in age, but we had an instant bond created by an airplane that had been a part of both of our lives.

But there’s more to it than simply a plane’s age. Airplanes touch the hearts of those who fly them and bring to life a part of their soul that’s difficult to put into words. If you want to know the secrets of pilots’ hearts, fly with them. Look in their eyes when they bank the plane around to catch the sun on its wings. Sit in the cockpit where they flew, and you will be closer to touching their heart and soul than after a lifetime of watching television side by side.

A friend of mine recalls the only time he ever saw his dad cry. It was after his father suffered a heart attack, bringing more than 30 years of flying to an end. As Jim walked into the hospital room, his father looked up. Tears began falling from his eyes as he said to his son in a choking voice, “I guess my flying days are over.”

Like many fathers and sons, these two didn’t talk much together about matters closest to their hearts. But several years later, Jim bought an airplane and brought it to an airstrip near his dad’s farm. The day was beautiful, and he offered to take his dad up for a ride. As they got to the end of the runway, Jim turned to his father, gestured towards the controls and said, “Here dad, take it. She’s all yours.”

A simple gesture, but one that said “I love you” as clearly as any words. “I’m proud of you, I ache for your pain and I want you to be happy” … all in a single, simple gesture. Jim and his father weren’t good with words. But through a piece of machinery that had touched both of their hearts, they were still able to communicate. It’s a valuable gift in a culture where fathers and sons too often seem painfully separated by canyons of silence.

Somewhere in the raising of our children, girls seem to learn more about communicating with words. The reasons are undoubtedly complex. Perhaps make-believe games provide practice in verbal skills that baseball and football competitions do not. But a woman’s best friend is still likely to be the person with whom she shares her innermost secrets, while a man’s best friend is more likely to be the person with whom he shares his most important or favorite activities.

Yet without direct heart-to-heart talks, communication between fathers and sons relies more heavily on symbolic action, shared activities and unspoken understanding. A simple game of catch, offered or refused, can become loaded with messages about how a father and son feel about each other. A seemingly surface discussion of investment options or lawn equipment may really be an effort by a son and his father to reassure each other that common ground between them still exists and the bond of love is still strong.

Unfortunately, the unspoken messages don’t always make through the translation. Beneath the surface talk of sports or business are often sons who still desperately need to know their fathers are proud of them but don’t know how to ask, and fathers who love their sons very much but don’t know how to answer. Frustrated, they circle each other from across a divide, searching painfully and too often unsuccessfully for some way to bridge the distance.

Many times over I’ve seen an airplane bridge that gap. Part of the reason may be that airplanes allow fathers and sons to share adventures and life experiences that help create common ground and strong bonds of shared understanding and affection. But other pieces of machinery could do that, as well.

What makes airplanes such powerful bridge-builders is that they do more than create adventures. They can touch the hearts and souls of those who fly them, opening a door not only to a father’s mind, but to the emotional core of who he is and what he loves.

I doubt anyone ever explained this to my friend Jim or the son of the B-24 pilot. But our hearts don’t always need words to understand. Like airplanes, they speak a gentle, silent language of their own that’s deeper and more complex than any language made of words. And with that silent understanding, these men reached out through an airplane and touched the heart of the man who gave them life.

Posted in Love, Stories That Touched Me | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Next Post

So much misery comes from settling for less than we can be in life and doing less than we can do. Thank you for the reminder, Mojo!

And thank you pathwriter for your post from which MoJo reblogged it. (I noticed that after reblogging it and wanted to give credit where credit was due, in this case to both of you!)

http://pathwriter.wordpress.com/

Russ

Posted in Potential | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Nature’s Beauty: Each Grain of Sand is a Work of Art

I love discovering new places where nature surprises me with beauty. The latest is the masterpiece that is each grain of sand!

Russ

Posted in Beauty, Nature, Observations | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

My posts are generally upbeat by design. But sometimes something touches me in sucha way that although it is sad, it may also be greatlly inspiring and an excellent reminder to not forget the truly important things in life. This post is one of those times. Thank you to Diana for suggesting slapppshotblog.com to me. What an excellent recommendation!And of course, thank you Slapppshot for sharing this post.
Russ

Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments

“The sweetest revenge of all”. This is long, but I found it worthwhile. Thank you for sharing it with us, Gina!
Russ

reallylisafrench's avatarThese Histories Travel With Me

 

This week I was invited to speak at a PREVENT training event.

I was asked to speak about my experiences and how I have been able to use those experiences in a positive way to contribute to preventing such things happening again in the future.

I have amended my speech to protect individual identities and protect confidentiality, but I thought I would share it with you and also some of my reflections following the event. It was certainly a thought provoking two days and I have lots to think about after listening to the other speakers and participants at the event.

 

The role of those impacted in preventing extremism

 

On 7th July 2005 I left the house early to take a journey that would change my life forever. My intended destination was Angel Islington. Of course I never expected it to be a life changing business…

View original post 2,118 more words

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Hawa Abdi: “Equal Parts Mother Teresa and Rambo”

I just read an amazing article about Hawa Abdi but it was so profanity laced that rather than subject you to it, I went to Wikipedia and found a much-abbreviated version of this amazing woman’s life. She has stared down militia leaders in Somalia, had her life threatened many times, has had her hospital shot up, and yet still provides free high quality medical care to many Somalians. To me, she is a Hero of Humanity.

I have heard, but haven’t verified, that she as been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Below is the brief write-up about her from Wikipedia.org:

“Hawa was born in Mogadishu in 1947. With her mother dying in childbirth when she was 12, Hawa’s father supported her to pursue her dream of becoming a doctor. At 17, she won a scholarship to study gynaecological medicine in Kiev, Ukraine, during the 1960s. After completing her studies, Dr. Abdi returned to Somalia in 1971. Dr. Abdi opened her own clinic on the outskirts of Mogadishu in 1983. She focused on the treatment of women from rural areas. Soon, the practice drew clients from all over the country, and even other Arab countries.

[edit] Awards

In 2010, Glamour magazine named Dr. Abdi and her two daughters “Women of the Year”, dubbing them the “Saints of Somalia”, “equal parts Mother Teresa and Rambo”.[”

Russ

Posted in Challenges, Choices, Compassion, Courage, Generosity, Healing, Inspiring, Making the World a Better Place, Patience & Persistence, Stories That Touched Me | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

It’s What’s On The Inside That Counts

I just saw a drawing of a very old lady stooped over with age and walking slowly with a cane. On the wall beside wher as a shadow of a slender young ballerina with arms outsretched and standing on the toes of one foot.

The caption read: “It doesn’t matter what you look like on the outside, it’s what’s on the inside that counts.”

I don’t know who created either the drawing or the caption, but I believe the creator(s) captured a wonderful truth just about perfectly.

Russ

Posted in Attittude, Challenges, LIfe Lessons, Observations | Tagged , , , , , | 9 Comments

A Different Kind of Life

“The minute you choose to do what you really want to do it’s a different kind of life.” –Buckminster Fuller from onlinewellness.com

Posted in Choices, LIfe Lessons | Tagged , , , , , | 18 Comments

Illuminated Blogger Award

A heart-felt thank you to writerwannabe763 and hometogo232 for nominating me for the Illuminated Blogger Award. One of the suggestions is to list who my first follower was. I think it was a tie betwween Theresa MacGreggor and Dave Reid.

Here is a URL or link to hometogo232:

http://hometogo232.wordpress.com/

As for listing 3 blogs, rather than playing favorites since I love about 25 of them, I will instead l frequently remind my friends, followers, and fellow readers about them.

Thank you again Diane!
Russ

Posted in Awards: Sharing The Love | Tagged , , , , | 6 Comments