It’s difficult in our modern times to listen to the nightly
news without getting totally disgusted.
There are so many negative reports of all the crime, corruption and
destruction of our great nation, it can really weigh you down.
I received an email from an old friend, from where I grew up
in New Jersey,
last week telling me that her father passed away at the age of 78. A rush of memories had filled my head. I loved her father. He was a very giving person. He used to drive us around to church
activities, singing songs and telling stories and we all had such a great time
together. No generation gap there. My friend and I were teenagers during the
70’s too. I “googled” his name to find the obituary because he had accomplished
so much when I knew him, I wanted to see what else he had done after I went off
to college and their family moved away.
It was amazing to see. He already had a PhD in nuclear
chemistry and helped Bell Labs in New
Jersey get a satellite up in orbit. After moving
away, he then became the head of the department of physics at the State
University of New York in Albany.
He did Research in X-ray optics and then eventually did research on the effects
of metal in the human brain helping to find how to cure Alzheimer’s disease. Besides all the work he accomplished in his
career, he was very active in his church and spent a lot of time with his
family making his life very full right up until the end.
Another friend of mine wrote this week about a speech she
heard Sunday night at a church fireside of a woman who spent time in a
concentration camp as a child in Indonesia during WWII. Her name is Kitty De Ruyer Bon and she wrote
all about her experiences in a book called “As
I Have Loved You”. The amazing thing about this woman is that in the face
of the most humiliating of circumstances and inhumane physical treatment, she
kept faith, courage, strength and dignity.
With no hope of any earthly reward or return for the good she gave, she
still gave even to her captors.
The lives of these two people have touched my life and gave
me such a great example to never give up when life seems so overwhelming. At times life does get overwhelming and
discouraging and the temptation to throw it all away is sometimes very great.
Even to give up on mankind, but that would accomplish nothing. The wisdom to
give to others is much better than always thinking: What’s in it for me? Raising
children, filling a calling at church, finishing a college degree, building a
house; all have their moments when we stop and think--Is this really worth
it? A resounding: yes. This is most
definitely worth our time on earth. A
great lesson for us to learn while we are here.
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