Did you wake this morning still breathing?
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Years ago when I was in the hospital in India getting a new
knee, I walked the corridors as part of my therapy. At the end of the hallway I
stood at the window and watched the construction activity across an empty lot.
A new building was going up the old fashioned way, with men’s muscles, not
machinery.
The empty lot was not really empty. The men’s families were
camped in the lot. I’m making an assumption here. Perhaps they were homeless
people, but as I watched, they seemed to be the families of the construction
workers.
Pieces of cardboard, plastic, canvas, any flat surface, were
cobbled together for shelters. In one corner a standpipe with a turn faucet
provided the water supply. The women squatted over open fires, cooking. They
washed their clothing in buckets. Children played around their mothers’ feet.
Every afternoon at 3:00 the skies above Bangalore opened.
Monsoons are not comparable to the rainy season here in Jalisco. We have rain.
They had deluge. The streets overran with water and garbage and unidentifiable
debris.
When I was in China, I had the marvelous experience of
riding a train inland. This was not an Amtrak train. In the center of the car
was an iron stove, coal or wood, on which a hostess or porter heated huge iron
kettles of water to make tea, available for a few pennies.
We passed huge factories flanked by housing for the factory
workers. The train rain through tea plantations, fields of crops I could
identify and others I could not, through cities and past city dumps crawling
with children who lived at the dumps, pawing through the trash, picking out any
item which could be sold or recycled.
I was reminded of living in Great Falls in the mid-sixties
when one day I went with my husband to the dump out by Hill 57. We could have
been in China. Today we do a much better job of hiding, of keeping invisible,
our homeless and poor.
One of the big news items of the day is the universal
scream, “What are we going to do about the upcoming Holidays with the empty
shelves, the supply chain buckled?” What indeed?
One of my most memorable Christmases was also one of my
poorest. In terms of grace and gratitude, one of my best. Newly divorced, I had
moved from Chicago back to Montana and had little other than kids and a cat.
I’d recently started a new job for which I had no wardrobe.
A woman showed up at my door with an armload of appropriate clothing. A
neighbor family brought us a turkey.
On Christmas Eve we went to Church, returned home to find a
tree on the front steps and another tree with a tree-stand on the back
porch. A knock on the door revealed
another neighbor with an armload of well-loved decorations.
A friend from California had sent a box of gifts, a full set
of clothing for each child, including shoes. When she was a child, her mother
had been in a similar situation and somebody had done the same for her family.
She asked that someday I do similar. I never forgot.
My own gifts for my children were sparse, much needed socks
and coats plus one “toy”. Santa gave Ben, at two years old, a tool chest full
of plastic tools. Dee, fourteen, got the boom box she wanted.
While I was fixing the meal, Ben crawled under the vintage table,
formica top and steel legs. With his plastic screw driver he removed every
screw from the legs. I noticed Ben was too quiet so asked his sister to check
on him.
Dee Dee found Ben pulling the last screw from the fourth
leg, crawled under the table with him and helped him replace the screws. Had
the table top fallen, Ben would be no more. That set the pattern for his
growing years. He needed to know how everything worked. Dee Dee is still saving
lives.
In town there lives a family who touched my heart. In the
first wave of the Covid 19, the whole family was ill and the father died. That
left mom with two small children and elderly parents. This family is “needs
food” poor. I know neighbors will show up with clothing and toys.
My Christmas gift will be the “turkey”, however that
translates as the day arrives. This woman doesn’t know me. The family will
never meet me. Now and then, when Leo goes shopping, I put extra pesos in his
hand for “my family”. That is my gift to me.
I’ve been poor. I’ve seen poorer. Today I am rich. I have a
refrigerator and electricity. I have a washing machine and running water. I
have food in the pantry, enough to live a week without buying more.
When I wake up still breathing, I know how rich I am.
Sondra Ashton
HDN: Looking out my back door
October 28, 2021
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