Here I sit on Mother's Day morning, one of the rare Sundays that I'm not getting ready to drive across the mountain to Bristol to preach and preside at Faith Lutheran. Let me record some thoughts:
--I feel lucky to have a mom I love who loves me. I know that many don't have that kind of luck.
--I feel lucky that my experiences of not having children is what I wanted, and it worked out how I envisioned. I know that many don't have that kind of luck.
--I'm not preaching today because I'm in Hilton Head, SC with my mom and dad, who are in their last half of their 80's. I know we don't have many more holidays like this ahead of us, so I'm glad to be able to be here.
--The last time I was in Hilton Head was in 2022, with my lower arm in a cast. In fact, I had just had surgery to repair the broken wrist, so I was on heavy antibiotics, which messed up my GI system. Happily, I'm not facing those kinds of challenges on this trip.
--The time before that, in 2021, we had stopped to pick up my sister at the Savannah/Hilton Head airport on our way north. I remember one morning talking about whether or not we should sell our Florida house--the market was just starting to heat up. She was one of the first who said, "Sell." No equivocating, no hesitations. I had been accepted to seminary, but I still had my administration job, which was slated to end later in the year when the New York buyers of the school were going to close the Hollywood campus.
--We also came in September of 2020, where we were careful to stay very far apart from each other. We grocery shopped early in the morning. The resort amenities were very limited.
--I'm glad I was blogging during the pandemic. Otherwise, I'd have lost a lot of those memories, or I would think back and doubt that it was really as bad as I was remembering.
--It's been a week of a different kind of disease news, hantavirus on a cruise ship. I'm glad that I don't love going on a cruise ship. In light of my understanding of disease and transmission, I have no desire to have a vacation that relies on a plane or a ship.
--It is the day after graduation which went well, but meant it was a day of a lot of driving.
--I came across this statistic in a New York Times article about retirement and work: "Roughly 37 percent of Americans over 55 are in the work force." That number seems low to me. But what I really want is the percentage of working Americans who are ages 60-75.
--I feel lucky to be at a school where I can envision teaching long past the age where others might retire. I won't be the only older faculty member--a lot of us know a good thing when we see it.
--And a lot of us have been teachers our whole lives, which means we can't afford to retire like past generations could.




