A Few Lessons in Compassion and Caretaking


                  

                                    By Neal Lemery

            (Published in the Tillamook County Pioneer, 4/3/2025)

            This week, life gave me some perspectives of my role in community building and healing.  It was time for me to be in school, and to get reacquainted with taking a positive, proactive role, to quit my bellyaching and whining, and take some positive action. 

            A friend invited me to coffee, seeking some guidance and direction on their new role parenting a young relative.  They thought I had some wisdom on the subject, but I suspect they were more in search of affirmation and encouragement, with me as a cheerleader and proverbial optimist.  I can certainly play the role of cheerleader, and have the scars to prove I’ve played the role of a parent of teenagers.  

            Yet, I celebrate my role as parent, having just had a rich conversation with one of my sons this week. That unexpected phone call was filled with rich stories, laughter, and his comment that he had called “just to hear your voice”. Our talk about relationships, marriage, and our mutual desire to keep learning affirmed my thoughts that I’d done a decent job with him.  

            At coffee with my friend, I listened, commiserated, encouraged, and offered a few suggestions.  My friend thought I was a genius, as they acted on my ideas and found success and affirmation. My theory is that they instinctively knew the answers and the ideas had ripened and were well received.  They had done the hard work, and just needed to see they were headed in the right direction.  It’s not too hard to give a gentle nudge when people are already doing the right thing.

            It was a reflective week, as well.  A friend had given a talk about their passion in cleaning cemetery headstones, and helping families find their heritage, while sharing some nearly forgotten local history.  In that work, they celebrate the lives of those who have gone before us, and giving us all a sense of foundation and heritage.  

            I took that message to motivate me to visit my own family graves, and do some much needed maintenance and rehabilitation.  As I stood there in the cemetery, gently brushing off old leaves and debris and applying a cleanser to wash off decades of gunk, I took a good look at the names, and the dates of birth and death.  I ruminated over all the good times and hard times represented by the dashes between those dates, and the impact those ancestors had on me. 

            It was a time of contemplation, gratitude, and respect.  I hadn’t taken the time lately to acknowledge their contributions to my life and the importance of the ancestors’ various roles in their raising of me.  Like most of us, I get caught up in the daily busyness and worries, and ignore who I’ve become and why.  A lot of that comes from those family members whose headstones I was cleaning. A few tears came, and also a flood of good memories and gratitude.  

            These days are abundant in harsh words and comments, with people taking the opportunity to be snide, hostile, and even indifferent to another person’s crisis.  The daily news cycle overflows with crisis and uncertainty. I’m trying to limit my exposure to social media and its recent abundance of nastiness, and political discussions having a dominant theme of adversity and opposition. I want all that clamor to instead be a vehicle for addressing challenging community needs.  

            I left the cemetery, and that coffee shop after seeing my friend, with a new sense of gratitude and peace, knowing that in life, we do a lot of good things, and help a lot of people on their own walks in life.  The daily news cycle may seem important to people now, but knowing that I’ve been both the giver and the recipient of good thoughts, support, and kindness is worthy of my celebration and thanks.  That’s where I need to put my focus and my love.

4/2/2025

From Catastrophe to Opportunity


                        By Neal Lemery                                                                                    

(published in the Tillamook County Pioneer, 3/11/2025)

            Often, a disaster turns into a positive asset, and life improves, comes into focus, and good things emerge from the gray somber atmosphere of disaster.

            Such change comes unexpectedly. 

            The Chinese character for catastrophe is the same character for opportunity.  

There was a time in college that I had lost direction, adrift despite the abundance of good opportunities and challenges from my professors and fellow students.  I was adapting well, mastering my subjects and, at least outwardly, achieving great strides in my abilities and my knowledge of my favorite subjects. 

            Yet, I was adrift, often wondering what I was doing there, and what direction I needed to take. There were a lot of possibilities, but I didn’t have a good sense of what was right for me.  Everyone around me seemed content, hard at work, and feeling directed and motivated.  Maybe I needed to take a term off, get a job, and get my act together, stop spinning my wheels.  

            During one Christmas break, one of my aunts suddenly died.  We were all in shock, as she had been healthy, vigorous in her retirement, and embracing her passion for botany and nature conservation.  Her heart attack on a hiking trail doing what she loved left all of us feeling lost, shook up.

            She lived far away from me, but would visit several times a year, telling stories of her adventures and always bringing a special book for me.  When I was little, she’d read to me, animating the story with her voice, her laughter, and her passion for kids.  We’d have great conversations, she being a vocal advocate for education, reading, and bettering the community.  “Being of service” was the theme of a lot of our conversations and letters.  

            Her sudden passing brought my “lost in college” questions to the forefront.  I recalled her wise counsel, her urgings to me to make a difference, and do something in life.  Reminiscing about her life and her messages to me brought my dilemma into sharp focus, giving me impetus to regroup, to rethink my intentions of why I was in college, and what I was doing with my life.

            Mourning her death, and celebrating her life woke me up. I applied that grief into fuel to regroup, to have a serious talk with myself, and strive to make a difference in my life.  There were some hard lessons on not realizing the value of a person in your life until they are gone. Having my aunt in my life made a big difference in my own life, and I resolved to continue her presence, her message in my life, and our relationship.  

            Her funeral was on the day I went back to college, to start winter term. The eulogies, and the story telling among family recharged me, and I began the new year and the new term with a revitalized focus, looking for possibilities and opportunities.  I felt her spirit and vowed to remember her with my own zeal for making a difference. 

            Recently, a good friend passed away, and again I am shaken by this loss, this departing of a mentor, whose wisdom and talent were bright lights in my life.  We’d met for lunch a year ago, telling stories, laughing, and, true to her form, mentoring me and calling me out to refocus and regroup.  She’d plant seeds with me, giving me story ideas and action items, sometimes acting with such subtlety that I didn’t realize that her seeds were even in my garden. She was a master of “guerrilla gardening”. 

She was a writer, capturing the joys and treasures in ordinary life, always aiming at celebrating the community she loved and cared for.  She wrote about simple things, events and happenings, but always with an ear for the deeper message, the profound experiences of friendships and listening to our souls.  

            She was blunt, open, honest, and passionately cared about people.  Her stories of daily life were much more than a casual observation.  They were deep and profound, and the reader was often gently lured into her observations, not always expecting the strong message she had set out to convey.  She got her point across, with love and humor, but also with a depth and intensity you didn’t notice until you came to the end of her writing.  

            There were many gifts in her writings and in our conversations. She was a literary craftsman, with a big heart.  Kindness was her mantra. 

            My friend and my aunt would have been dear friends, soul mates, and I imagine they would find much to laugh about and comment on.  My sorrow for missing my aunt is rekindled by my friend’s passing.  I’m reminded that out of catastrophe comes opportunity.  

In my grief, there is renewal, there is new hunger for opportunity, for change, growth, betterment. My aunt and my friend are still there for me, still offering their gifts, and their love, still teaching me, still changing the world. 

3/11/2025