By Stphen C. Schultz
As I watch the news and listen to discussions on the daily
topics of interest, I find myself disheartened by the selfish, shallow and
selective reasoning that seems to be so pervasive throughout our great country.
Selfishness creates an attitude of self-pity, which over rides any attempt at empathy for others, compassion or thoughts of service. Chronic self-concern means that the emotional "No Vacancy" sign will always be sputtering. I find myself asking; what ever happened to civility brought about by kindness,
tact and tolerance? Where is the courage to be caring, honest, faithful and
friendly with one another? If we as a people hope for unity, we must embrace patience,
peacefulness, respect, idealism, courtesy and honor.
My next thought was that these principles seem to be foreign
to whole generations. Many seem to be caught up in a “scarcity” mentality where
there are only winners and losers with no opportunity for a “win-win” situation
to be achieved. There is a general feeling of unrest and very little sense of
well being; physical as well as emotional. How do these virtues get taught to
the next generation? I don’t know. I wish I had the answer.
I recently spent some time at my parents home, in Eugene Oregon, over the 4th
of July Holiday. I was able to spend time with my brother and my Father in the
back field cutting down fallen trees and mowing the pasture. This may not seem
like fun, but I mentioned to my brother there was no place I would rather be.
As my brother Jared and I followed our Dad through the
trees, I was amazed how I had this feeling of being a kid again. Even though my
brother and I are middle aged with families of our own, there was this feeling
of comfort and security simply being with Dad! Working together in the “back
forty” again was an experience I will not soon forget.
As I watched my father on the tractor, pushing fallen limbs
around, he was at peace with his surroundings and place in life. There was a
confidence in his attitude and competence in his actions. I wondered if I would
ever get to that state of mind. I thought about the example my father had set
throughout my life and considered the life experiences that had contributed to
his personal sense of fulfillment.
Ten years ago, my parents took an early retirement. Their
life long dream of spending time together at the cabin in Florence and traveling the Oregon
Coast took a detour. They answered a different calling. They accepted a call to
serve the people in West Africa doing missionary work with those less fortunate
than us. They taught others about healthy family and community relationships
through Christian principles and personal example. They helped civil war
victims obtain prosthetics and wheel chairs. My parents instructed young
children to love one another and to sing together as opposed to warring with
one another in the jungles of Nigeria. They oversaw the building of wells and
irrigation systems for crops and fresh water.
My mother, who is a nurse by training, helped in local
hospitals to train the staff in neo-natal medicine. Medical technology and
procedures that are routine here, are literally miracles in Africa. She dispersed
clothing, schoolbooks and hygiene kits to villages and schools throughout the
continent. And they taught parents and communities in Togo the skills necessary
to be resilient and self-reliant. They did all of this with their own funds,
using monetary resources they had reserved for retirement.
They recently shared an experience with me where buses and
vans of wartime victims pulled up to the curb of a wheel chair distribution
site. Picture if you will, crowds of parents patiently holding limbless young
children, and young adults holding disabled parents. All were hopeful to
receive a wheel chair. My parents assisted in this process and were able to distribute
over 500 wheel chairs. They shared the story of children, once they were situated
in their new chairs, wheeling around the premises. These small kids were joyfully
out of control, exploring their new found mobility and freedom. For many of the
young ones, it had been years or even a lifetime with no mobility.
Happiness is not acquired. Joyfulness is not obtained. As I
look at my father and mother, their sense of fulfillment is a byproduct of how
they chose to live their lives in the service of others. Never once did they ask themselves what they
could do to be “happier” or increase their "self esteem". Simply stated, in the
process of “giving”, they actually “received”.
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