I love a good parade. I even like bad parades. I have seen both kinds.
Some really stick in my memory.
The 1970 Memorial Day Parade in Waddy, Kentucky (yes, that is the
town's real name) immediately springs to mind. The town folks had been talking
about the Memorial Day Parade for weeks before the event and I was getting
rather excited about it. One couldn’t spend any time in the local grocery store
without the conversation turning to the parade. Plans and preparations were
being made. It seemed that most of the people in the little town were going to
be participating.
My family and I passed up several offers so we could be sure to be
there for the "big" parade. I will admit that the offers we received
were not all that tempting. But we did make a conscious decision to be around
for the big parade. At the appointed time we took our places on the sidewalk of
the main drag. I must be fair and tell you that Waddy in 1970 was a community
of about 255 people and the main drag was the only drag. And there were not
very many feet of sidewalk to get on. Since most of the residents were in the
parade, finding a place to watch it wasn’t difficult. We didn’t have to come
down the night before and stake out our space. Showing up ten minutes before
parade time worked out fine.
We didn’t have to wait long before the action started. Here came the
parade. It was absolutely wonderful. Strung out for several feet behind the
town's antique and only fire truck were two shiny, brand spanking new pickup
trucks. The owners had obviously spent a lot of time washing and waxing their
pride and joy. One of the trucks was pulling the only float in the parade which
was carrying some of the local veterans riding on a tobacco wagon. The other
truck was hauling a young girl – perhaps she was Miss Waddy or Miss Shelby
County. The entire local Cub Scout Pack, all six of them, were the color guard.
There were bicycles and wagons and baby strollers and balloons and crept paper
and sparklers and dogs, some horses and a couple of ponies. My, it was grand.
One the finest parades I have ever seen. My heart was touched. I wouldn't have
missed it for the world.
There have been several other parades in my life. All of them were
larger and longer. Many were more exciting and colorful and entertaining. Some
were so long they became boring. A couple of them have been just plain stupid.
But none of them were grander than the Waddy parade... except one. That is the
parade that wandered through my parents’ kitchen in the fall of 1986.
My father was very busy that fall dying of cancer of the God-knows-what.
The doctors couldn't tell where the cancer had originated but it wasn't
difficult to see where it had gone. It was everywhere and Dad was so skinny by
then that much of it stuck out on various parts of his body. It was horrible to
watch a strong, robust, commanding man reduced to a skeleton struggling to live
through each day seeking to find ways to have as little pain as possible. It
was horrible, but riveting – like those slasher horror films young teens flock
to watch. It was also a wonderful time of quiet conversations and opportunities
to do for my father; a man who had always done for others, especially his
children. Though the role reversal was a bit challenging for both of us, it was
a wonderful God gift to be able to serve my father during a very difficult
time.
As cancer took more and more from him and more of him from us, we were
completely centered on his well-being. Though not unusually tall, my dad was
very strong. As a high school kid he had a job picking up milk cans from the
local dairy farmers. He could hang on the back of the truck with one hand, lean
out and grab a milk can in the other and swing it up into the back of the
truck. That is about 140 pounds per can. Whoa, strong guy. Dad played baseball
and basketball well and taught his boys how to play.
Because the degeneration of his physical body and our all-consuming
struggle to make him as comfortable as possible had so captured my attention,
the parade that had begun had been passing before my eyes long before I noticed
it.
But one those beautiful cloudless, bright blue sky, breezy autumn
afternoons it burst upon my sight. For a parade, it was difficult to spot.
There were no fire trucks or Cub Scouts or floats or marching bands or riders
on horseback. There were no pretty young beauty queens seeking our attention or
politicians seeking our votes. Most of the faces in this parade were familiar
to me, although some were strangers. But they all knew my father. He was the
"theme" that held this parade together. This was a parade of people,
passing through my parent's spacious, warm, welcoming kitchen, in front of the
reclining chair that had become Dad's chief place of residence.
They came from near and far. As close as the next door neighbor and as
far as several states away. They all came to say the same thing in many
different ways. They came to say,
"Thank you, Mr. McConnell. You have
made a difference in my life." What a wonderful thing to say! "Thanks
for living and letting me be a part of your life. Your life counted for
something in my life." “You have lived a life that was significant because
your life powerfully impacted my life.”
And what a strange mix of people it was that carried this message to my
father. There were the preachers and church leaders from all over the state
that Dad had prayed with and for and taught so much about how to be sensitive
to the needs of others and the leading of the Lord. He helped them have more
than a theoretical Christianity. There was the alcoholic who lived next door
who was snubbed by the community but was proud to be called "friend"
by "Mr. Mack". There were the young men of the community who had
looked to my father for advice and counsel on subjects ranging from family
budgeting to how to win an argument without losing a friend. There was the
single mother and her children who were helped through some hard times by a man
they hardly knew. There were the old people that came to thank the man who
brought them meals when they were too sick to cook for themselves. There were
the business associates that had worked with him for over a quarter of a
century – folks who really knew him and thus knew him to be a man of integrity,
courage, compassion, wisdom and humor. There were his law clients who received
much more than just good legal advice from their attorney. There were the
students from more than 30 years of Sunday school classes that came to thank
the man who helped make God real and understandable to them. There were the
Little League ball players who had become middle-aged men, wanting to thank him
for being a fine baseball coach and an even better example.
They came from all over. They loved and appreciated my father and came
to tell him. Dad was sick, but he was having a wonderful time. He had invested
his life well. And though it was coming to, what many of us considered, a
premature end, it had been a great, meaningful, full life. My dad had been
successful. He grew up on a little hill farm in Robertson County, Kentucky. He
had served his country in World War II. He was the first in his family to
graduate from college. He worked his way through law school and was the Vice
President and Treasurer of a very successful life insurance company. He had
provided very well for his wife and children. He was successful. But more
importantly, his life had been significant.
Fortunately, I recognized what was happening in time to join this
wonderful parade. I grasped the opportunity at hand and thanked my Dad for
being a fine father, good friend, wonderful teacher and an excellent example.
What a parade! My, it was grand. One the finest parades I have ever seen. I
wouldn't have missed it for the world.
Allow me to encourage you to choose a life of significance.
Copyright © 2012, William T. McConnell, All Rights Reserved
2 comments:
Thanks, Bill! I needed that. Learning to make living a life of significance a priority. And thank you for being one of those people who teaches the lessons you have learned giving us a hand in understanding how to make our own attempts at living significant lives. Thank you for empowering people in ministry to do the good work we are called to. And thank you for serving Christ, and serving God's people by loving us, and pushing us! I love you for that, and for many other reasons!
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