Monday, April 9, 2018

NOW is better than THEN

I love reenacting. I love the clothes, the manners, the slow way of life, and pretending to be someone who lived nearly two centuries ago. So much about stepping back in time is just really, really fun, and we tend to romanticize how things were back in the old days.

And then every now and then, I am reminded, slapped in the face reminded, why NOW is so much better than THEN.

Today, while doing some genealogical research, I stumbled across a compilation of causes of death for people who lived in Grayson County, KY, where my ancestors had lived since the early 1800s. I began scrolling through the years to see if I could find any of my people. I ran across a couple, but what I found was one of the main reasons I am so glad to be alive now instead of then: healthcare.

Looking at the lists, one of the first things that struck me was how very, very young most of the people who died were. Babies, children, and teenagers made up the majority of deaths in several years. Hardly any people had "old age" listed as cause of death. Instead, what was listed time after time after time were deaths from illnesses that are basically non-existent (or easily cured) in today's world...typhus...scarlet fever...croup...whooping cough...fever...worms...diphtheria...measles...so many deaths that are preventable today. So many lives gone so very young. There were families that lost two and three children to typhus or scarlet fever. One family lost 5 family members. Another lost 4 children. My own great-grandmother lost one child to typhus and the other to the flu. I saw all of those causes of death listed and thanked God for vaccines.

Many people died from "milk sickness," which is caused by drinking milk from cows who have eaten the snakeroot plant, the same thing that killed Abraham Lincoln's mother. One family lost a father and 2 children. Another lost a mother and 3 kids. Just from drinking milk.

As I sat there skimming those names and ages and causes of death, I felt blessed to live during a time when so much illness and death can be prevented, when my kids are safe from measles, mumps, and rubella, diphtheria, pertussis (whooping cough), and tetanus, from typhus and scarlet fever and worms and croup. I thought of the night Emily had a croup attack, and we gave her a breathing treatment, but her lips started turning blue anyway, and we called 911. She got to ride to the hospital in an ambulance and come home the same night. What if that was not available to us? It makes me wonder what future generations will marvel at when they look back on our causes of death.

So, while I love dressing up and pretending it is 1816, I am ever so grateful to live in 2018.

http://genealogytrails.com/ken/grayson/graysoncountydeaths.html

Thursday, March 29, 2018

Hanging Up My Hat

I'm about to lose my job.  I've had it since August of 2001.  Sometimes I've loved it, but there were many times I hated it.  It's been inconvenient, patience-testing, and the hours have sucked.  I've done this job in the rain and snow and heat and when I was sick and exhausted and had 1000 other things to do, but now that it's ending, I am grieving the loss of driving my kids around.

I began taking my kids to school when Kyle started kindergarden.  Kyle could have taken the bus, but school was close, and we saved several hundred dollars a year by me driving, so I drove.  I was pregnant with Emily at the time, and Claire was just 2 1/2.  I remember dropping Kyle off at school the first morning with Claire strapped in her carseat in the back, and she cried, "I want Kyle!" as we pulled out of the parking lot.  A couple of months later, Emily was born, and I had three kids in carseats in the back of the minivan.  I became an expert at finding the lost pacifier along the side of Emily's carseat while stopped at a red light.  Pretty soon, I realized it was a better option to put Kyle next to Emily and Claire in the way back, so he could help hold a bottle if Em got fussy before we got where we were going.

I drove them to and from school for awhile, and then their dad took them in the mornings, and I picked up each afternoon.  We carpooled with a neighbor for a few years, taking turns driving two or three days each week...Dads in the mornings; moms in the afternoons.  I sat in the afternoon parking lot for hours of my life, waiting for my kids to come out with the bell.  I could tell if it had been a good day or a bad day by the looks on those sweet faces.  Sometimes they grinned with exciting news...an A on a test, spelling bee champion, a lost tooth.  Sometimes they crumpled and tears spilled if it was a not-so-good day...a card flipped to yellow, a snub at lunch, a bad test grade.  No matter.  I hugged them when I saw them, and I knew I'd hear all about their day when we got in the car for the ride home.  I was so glad I was driving on the day of the Sandy Hook massacre because all I wanted to do was hold my kids, and I cried when I saw them coming across the parking lot.

During these years, I not only drove to school, I took the kids to guitar practice, dance class, and football, soccer, volleyball, field hockey, lacrosse, and basketball practices held at schools and churches around town. I drove to field trips and skating parties and sleepovers, and when they got older, dates and movies and Friday night football games.  One of my favorite memories is one night when the van was full of Emily's friends belting out songs from "Newsies" even though none of them except Emily had ever seen the show.  My kids knew that I was willing to drive them and their friends to wherever they needed to go, and I always had a van full of smiling faces, and they always thanked me for driving.  My parents had driven me everywhere, and I, in turn, wanted to do the same for my kids.  On many days, I'd put 50 or 60 miles on the van just driving within a 10 mile radius of my house.  I tried not to have them eat dinner in the van, but sometimes they did.  And poor Emily spent so much of her early life strapped into her carseat while I took Kyle and Claire places, it's a wonder she learned to walk at all.

When Kyle started high school, I was back to morning driving.  Kirk still took the girls to school, and we carpooled to both places, having to coordinate my high school days with my grade school days so that all the kids were covered.  My calendar was color coded to make sure I didn't forget to pick up or drop off anyone.  I actually loved driving to St. X, hearing Kyle and Evan recount the latest Coach Hines video, imitating him berating Yamanashi.  I learned that if I stayed silent, they almost forgot I was in the car and would talk about things like I wasn't there.  You can learn a lot driving kids around!  Pick up from high school football, wrestling, or rugby practice at evening rush hour was never fun.  The boys smelled bad and were tired, and the ride home was mostly silent.  Still, sometimes they talked or shared a moment from their day.  It was nice to just be in the car with Kyle for 30 uninterrupted minutes since he was gone from home most of the time.

I loved sitting in the parking lot at St. X at dismissal and watching the boys pour out of school, pulling off their ties and untucking their shirts, backpacks slung over their shoulders or books on their hips. They'd go to their cars, throw their things in the backseat and head out, windows rolled down, hollering at friends.  The difference between freshman and senior is never so obvious as in the parking lot after school.  The last day of my St. X carpool duty was a sad day for me.  I tried to take it all in, waiting for Kyle to walk out the cafeteria doors.

Kyle was driving himself to school by the time Claire started at Sacred Heart.  We had another carpool to SHA, and Kirk still drove Emily in the mornings to Holy Trinity.  The girls were always chatty, and, again, I learned that silence is the best way to get the scoop.  Sometimes I'd pull up to get Claire, and she'd be standing there with two or three friends, a smile on her face, asking if they could come home with us or if I could drop someone off on the way.  I didn't mind.  I was glad to be the mom she knew she could count on to help out.

I drove Claire to volunteer out off Poplar Level Road on Wednesdays.  Some days I had to sit in the Holy Trinity parking lot for an hour to get a spot in the first row so that I could get Emily first and then head to SHA so Claire could get to her volunteer work on time.  There was a lot of planning involved to make sure everyone got where they were supposed to be.  It was exhausting.

Claire started driving to school senior year, and she took Emily to and from on most days.  It was actually weird not to have to drive to school, and I kind of liked it.  There were days I'd have to pick up Emily from SHA, and I was still taking her to dance class and play practice, but the driving was not constant like it had been in earlier years.

This year with Claire away at college, I drive Emily to and from school every day.  We listen to "Are You Smarter Than Dingo" every morning and marvel at how dumb people really are.  Sometimes we listen to pop on the radio, sometimes country, sometimes her CDs of "Dear Evan Hanson," or "Hamilton" or "Heathers."  I pick her up in the afternoons either from school or rehearsal and hear all about her day.  This week it was how she spoke out against "juuling" and vaping.  Two weeks ago, it was about all of the issues that happened on sophomore retreat and what grades she got on her geometry test.  I drive her to voice lessons and dance class and drop her off at rehearsal for whatever play she is in at the time.  "Mom," she'll say, "do you want to hear the new song I learned today?" and of course I alway say yes, and then she will belt out the newest song in her repertoire.

After the audition for "Pippin" a couple of months ago, I saw her face when she came out of St. X and knew she'd burst into tears as soon as she got in the car.  She had forgotten the words to the audition song and had to ask to restart.  She knew it was a death sentence and thought she'd never get a part.  She cried all the way home.  Turned out not to be a big deal because she got a great role with a solo, but I was glad to be there to pick her up that day.

Emily has her permit now and will get her restricted license in a month or so.  She will be able to drive herself wherever she needs to go, and my job will be done.  Three kids, three schools, three minivans and thousands of miles later, I will hang up my chauffeur's hat and call it quits.  Breaks my heart.  I will miss the smiling faces, the stories in the car, singing Broadway tunes, and the uninterrupted minutes when it's just my kids and me.  Precious time it has been, gone way too soon.


Tuesday, December 26, 2017

The Morning After Christmas

In the quiet of the morning on the day after Christmas, remains of the holiday abound.  The tablecloth on the dining room table still holds crumbs from yesterday's dinner, the candles burned down halfway in their holders, a stray napkin and an empty glass sit waiting to be cleaned up.  The leaves remain in, stretching the table to its maximum length, filling the dining room from side to side.  Unused Christmas plates and cups, plastic forks and holiday platters collect on one end until the next trip downstairs puts them away until next year.

On the counter in the kitchen, dishes rest after air-drying overnight because we just didn't feel like drying them by  hand.  Things remain out of place, rearranged to make room for yesterday's spread.  The coffee pot is across the room on a different counter, and the fruit bowl remains upstairs and out of the way.  A carton of soft drinks, mostly empty, waits to be returned to the garage refrigerator, and the candy and cookies sit on the hutch, mostly uneaten, because we either ate too much to care for dessert or decided that peppermint ice cream was the better use of calories.

A few stray presents remain wrapped and under the tree, reminding us that not everyone we love was here yesterday.  Bits of torn paper and ribbon peak out from under a chair where they were pushed during the gift-giving frenzy.  New socks and pajamas and sweaters and books wait in piles in corners and behind the sofa, ready to be taken out of their packaging and worn or read.  The puzzle on the game table is finished, and an empty can of Diet Coke and a stray piece of party mix sit next to the puzzle box.  On the secretary, a camera waits for the holiday photos to be downloaded, to remind us of another year come and gone.

I turn the tree on again, not ready for Christmas to be over, and sit on the sofa sipping a second cup of coffee.   The kids still sleep in their rooms upstairs, and I'll stay in my pajamas as long as possible.  Clean up will be slow, if at all, because leaving things out extends the party and keeps the holiday spirit alive for another day.

Wednesday, November 8, 2017

My Cousin Donna



My cousin, Donna, died yesterday.  Colleen and I had gone to visit her in the morning, not knowing that she was so close to death.  We left thinking we'd see her again in a few days, and we were not prepared for the phone call that came last night.

When we got to Donna's room, she was sitting in a wheelchair, bent over, because she said it helped her breathe better.  She would answer our questions, but that was about it.  She was sick.  She was tired.  She said she just wanted to sleep.

A physical therapist was with her.  She had gotten Donna up and dressed and out of bed.  She said it was only the second time she'd worked with Donna, and I looked at my cousin and thought, "God, how I wish you could have known her like she was!"

This is the Donna I wanted to tell her about...the Donna that I will remember:

A cousin who took 3 little girls for sleepovers at her apartment and hid presents around the rooms for really fun scavenger hunts; who knew Crazy Foam was a favorite; who had bendy straws and made blue milk for breakfast.

A cousin who made polkadot ceramic mushrooms for those 3 little girls and Christmas ornaments for all the cousins one year.  (Mine still hangs on my tree.)

A cousin who let us use her house for our parents' 25th wedding anniversary, who probably paid for most of it, since we were young, but who never let on like we needed to pay her for anything.

A cousin who hosted bridal showers and baby showers; who handmade all of the invitations, each one different from the other, with teapots and flowers and ribbons; who gave the best, most perfect presents...a basket of pretty towels and washcloths rolled up with goodies tucked inside...diapers and baby toys and onesies made into a "cake" or a wreath...an Easter basket with a bunny book and then the bunnies to go with it...



A cousin who could always be counted on to bring not one, but six, pies to Thanksgiving dinner; who made the best potato casserole; who insisted on bringing all of those things and artichoke dip as well.

A cousin who always brought the cutest little hostess gift whenever she came to my house, even if she was bringing six pies, potato casserole, and artichoke dip.

A cousin who loved to go to lunch with cousins at the cutest places in town and then browse antique and gift shops after.




A cousin who filled 100 Easter eggs with candy and quarters and the occasional dollar bills to hide for a massive egg hunt where everybody wins.

A cousin who sent birthday cards to my kids with $5 tucked inside.

A cousin with a knack for decorating, who loved pottery and baskets and colorful chickens and little brown rabbits; who adored teapots filled with the flowers that she grew in her yard.

A cousin who was more like a sister or an aunt or a friend, who would always help if I needed anything, who loved my kids, who delighted in giving, who was always there until now.

I know this is the way of things.  That people die.  Families change.  Life goes on.  But damn, it just leaves a great big hole where they used to be. 



Monday, October 2, 2017

A Time Before Mass Shootings



I was thinking tonight that I remember a time before mass shootings. The first one I remember happened when I was in high school when someone went into a McDonald's in California and killed 22 people, but it was such an anomaly and so far away, that it didn't really register with me.


Then in 1989, a mass shooting happened in my town. The father of a friend was killed by the father of a boy I went to high school with. Seven other people were killed. That woke me up. It was hard to believe that something like this could have happened in my town to people I knew.


Two years later, I had moved to Texas and was teaching seventh grade in the Killeen Independent School District. One afternoon during a staff meeting, the secretary interrupted with the tragic news that a man had driven his truck into the neighborhood Luby's restaurant and killed 24 people. Teachers from the district were killed. Soldiers from Ft. Hood were shot. I worked for the school district. My fiancee was stationed at Ft. Hood. As I drove home, I had to pass the exit where Luby's was located. Traffic was blocked on the highway, and we had to take the access road to pass. There was a helicopter parked on the highway, which was packed with police cars and ambulances. It was a mile from my house.


Mass shootings became more frequent. Maybe it was the ability to get hands on more powerful weapons or maybe it was that cable gave us 24/7 news about them. Maybe it was both. The term "going postal" entered our vernacular. I started to feel less safe.


Then the school shootings started. Westside Middle School. Thurston High School. Columbine. Virginia Tech. Sandy Hook Elementary School. For God's sake, Sandy Hook.


Shootings at malls. Twice again near Killeen at Ft. Hood. In a temple. In a church. At a movie theater. At a Christmas party. A health clinic. A night club. An outdoor concert. The list goes on.


Places we should be safe. Places we should not be afraid. But I am afraid now. I was at an outdoor concert last week. It was crowded with thousands of people. The music was great. Everyone was chill. But my thoughts went to, "What if someone open fires? Where should I run?" When my kids go to Waterfront Wednesday or Forecastle or the Derby, I worry about general safety like drunk drivers or fights, but I really worry about someone opening fire on the crowd. I cannot relax until I know they are home.


I was at the Pegasus Parade last year when someone shot someone right across the street from where I was sitting. I heard, "Pop! Pop! Pop! Pop! Pop!" and thought it was a weird time to be shooting off firecrackers. Then I saw people fleeing the area. I froze. It was like slow motion. I remember thinking, "Wait...was that gunfire?" and just standing in one spot, packing up my folding chair and trying to wrap my head around what was happening. Then a police officer yelled, "Run!" and I came out of my fog and took off running. I hid behind a car in a used car lot. I had no idea what to do.


And just as my kids do not remember a time when we were not at war, they also do not remember a time when mass shootings were not common. We have had 1,516 mass shootings in 1,735 days. They happen so often that we only hear about the big ones now. Nine people died in a shooting in Plano, TX last month. I barely remember hearing about it. Twenty five people were shot in Little Rock, AK in July. Six people died in Orlando in June. Eight people died in May in Mississippi. Fifteen people shot and two people killed in Cincinnati in March.  These are just a few from 2017, and I don't remember hearing about any of them.

And tonight we have 59 people dead and 527 people wounded. It took one man 10-15 minutes with a gun that fired off 600 rounds a minute to cause this massacre. He had 42 guns in his hotel room and house. What regular person needs that? I go from being overwhelmed and numb to being outraged and angry. We have a huge gun problem in this country, and nobody is willing to even talk about solutions. How many more schools and churches and malls and theaters and concerts have to become killing grounds before we talk? How many more moments of silence and candlelight vigils and "thoughts and prayers" comments do we have to have before people say ENOUGH? This was not how we grew up, and it's not how our children should grow up either.  They deserve so much better than this.



Saturday, July 1, 2017

Aunt Jeri's Eulogy


My Aunt Jeri



As I sat at my computer writing Aunt Jeri’s eulogy, trying to condense everything she was into a few short paragraphs, the word HOME kept popping into my head.  Home:  A place where someone is protected, given shelter, loved, and that is what Jeri Clark was for so many people: a safe place, a refuge, home.

Her house wasn’t fancy.  She didn’t have a lot of expensive things.  What she did have was love.  She loved people, and they loved her.  I have never known a person with so many friends.  She never met a stranger.  She saw the good in everybody.  She always said, “I may not be rich, but I’m rich in friends.”  She was a people person, and she drew folks to her like a flower draws bees.

She hadn’t seen the world.  She rarely ventured farther than West Virginia.  She saw    the ocean for the first time in 1998 when she was 70 years old.  She used to say, “I’m not well-traveled, but if I’m in a rut, it’s a good rut because I’m happy where I am.”

And she was.  She loved her home.  Nothing made her happier than to be with her family and friends, and everybody wanted to go to Jeri’s house.  I can remember as a kid, when Mom would take us to visit her, 9 times out of 10, somebody else would already be there.  Aunt Mary and Uncle Jimmy, Uncle Bernard and Aunt Joyce, Uncle Charlie and Aunt Mary Ann, Kay and Mary Margaret…but she always had room for more.  

After I moved away, her house was the first place I’d visit when I came home. And after my mom died, her house became home to me.  I know Colleen, Jennifer, Angie, Kathy, and Laura would agree that after our parents died, she took us under her wing as her own and, as Colleen said, “she was the one person in the world who made me feel like I still belonged to someone, and she always, always told us how much she loved us.”

She was the most generous person I knew, and I never left her house without something to take home.  When I was a kid, she’d look in the cabinet and pull out a Little Debbie’s snack cake or a baggie of pretzels or give me a quarter if she was out of treats.  When I became an adult, she’d go look behind the door in the office where she kept her snacks and send me home with candy for my kids or the leftover pizza from lunch.  If she had it to give, it was yours, and she was glad for you to have it.

There was no better way to pass the day than to sit around Jeri’s dining room table with a cup of coffee and a Krispie Kreme donut and listen to her stories.  She was the best.  So animated and so funny.  Her stories were legendary, and she had a mind like a trap.  She could regale you with tales from her childhood during the Depression when a Mr. Goodbar cost a nickel at Money Penny’s store or life during World War 2, when shoe coupons were rationed, and you’d better not wear your cute cardboard shoes to a movie on 4th Street in the rain or you might be limping home with them flapping behind you.  Then there was the time a flying squirrel came down the chimney and was eating Hershey Kisses behind the manger on her mantle.  It climbed up the Christmas tree and then onto the drapes to finally hide in the television stand.  Mike had to come over and shoo it out with a broom and a laundry basket.  Another time she went to get new glasses with Betty Jean, and the parking lot was getting repaved.  After the appointment, they went out the back door to avoid the mess out front only to be caught in the middle of more paving.  A very large, very friendly, very sweaty construction worker with a bandana around his head and a shirt with no sleeves, swooped her up in his arms princess-style and carried her to the car.  Ah those stories!

She wrote poetry and could remember poems she had crafted 20, 30, 40 years ago.  She loved Joyce Kilmer’s poem about trees and anything by Helen Steiner Rice.  One of her favorite songs was Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah.”

She was a life-long democrat and proud of it.  In 2008, she voted for Hillary Clinton because she wanted to be able to say she voted for the first woman president.  When Hillary lost to Obama in the primaries, she didn’t think she’d get the chance to vote for a woman again, but last November, Colleen and I took her to the polls so she could once again vote for Hillary.  It was her dream to see a woman be president of the United States.

Aunt Jeri was the first person I’d call whenever I had something to share.  If it was a secret, I knew it was safe with her.  I’d say, “Don’t tell anybody this, but…” and she’d say, “You know I won’t!  I have secrets I’ll take to my grave!”  If it was good news about my kids, I knew I could brag to her, and she would rejoice with me.  If I was upset and needed comfort, she would reassure me that it would be okay.  If I needed someone to pray for me, she would in earnest.  In fact, I think she was the most faith-filled person I have ever met.  When she could no longer go to mass, she watched it on TV, sometimes twice on a Sunday.  She had her morning prayer and evening prayer that she said every day. 

She prayed all the time, but she told me, “I don’t say regular prayers; I just talk to God.  He’s my friend.”  She always prayed for God’s will, and I don’t know how she was able to do that.  I’m still asking him for specifics, but she had enough faith to know that God would take care of her needs.  And her faith got her through, especially these last 5 months.  I don’t know how many times I heard her say, “God will help me.  He’s my friend.”

She missed CJ.  They were teenage sweethearts, married for 45 years.  He passed 24 years ago, and she still wore her wedding ring.  

She loved her children.  Donna, Steve, Lisa, Kevin.  You were her world, and I know you know she would have done anything to make you happy.  Chris, Bo, Nick, and Mindy, she was so proud of you and all of your accomplishments.  She talked about you all the time.  And you great-grandkids, you were the joy of her life.  You always made her smile.

Jeri Clark was a lot of things to a lot of people.  Wife. Mother. Sister. Aunt. Cousin. Friend. Confidant. Cheerleader. Therapist. Compass.  Glue.

If you were lucky enough to be loved by Jeri, then you know what it is to be the favorite in the room.  If you were lucky enough to be loved by Jeri, then you know what it is like to always be welcomed with open arms, a smile, and a cup of coffee.  If you were lucky enough to be loved by Jeri, then you know what it is like to be loved unconditionally 

To quote Colleen again, “She always made me feel like the sun was shining, and it was shining on me.”

Sharron Hilbrecht
July 1, 2017


The Morning Prayer

Good Morning God,
You are ushering in anther day
untouched and freshly new.
So here I come to ask you, God,
if you'll renew me too.

Forgive the many errors
that I made yesterday, and
let me try again, dear God,
to walk closer in Thy way.

But, Father, I am well aware
I can't make it on my own,
so take my hand
and hold it tight
for I cannot walk alone.

Amen.


Thursday, January 26, 2017

I Believe

January 26, 2017

I believe

God made us all equal
In transparency, honesty, and truth
In generosity, kindness, and civility
In the right of women to have control over our own bodies
Torture is wrong
People should be allowed to marry the person they love
Religion and government should not mix
In science
People have the right to affordable health care
We should do everything possible to protect our environment
In clean water
In clean air
In safe food
We need to take money out of politics
That corporations are not people
We should not register people based on their religion or any other reason
In affordable higher education
We need common sense gun laws
That the arts and arts education are important
That building walls does not solve problems
In the sovereignty of the Native American people
In alternative energy
Black lives matter
Blue lives matter
All lives matter
In doing all that we can to make the world we live in a better place,
    not just for ourselves, but for the less fortunate, the marginalized,
    those without a voice
We have a lot of work to do.

That it's time to stand up for what I believe.