Thank you!

On June 16th, the Many Shades blog will be closed.
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Saturday, November 28, 2009

87 and so Thankful

I posted this yesterday on another blog and thought it so wonderful that I wanted to share it with all of you as well:

I was honored to spend Thanksgiving with a very energetic just turned 87 year old woman. She was so full of life and energy, so thankful it made me feel ashamed at how blase I had been feeling about the holiday. What right do I have to not be thankful for all the wonderful things I have in my life? Here is this woman who is 87-legally blind, widowed twice, child of the Holocaust, she moved to Seattle from Berlin in 1933 when she was 16 years old-she was more upbeat than me, more in tune with what this holiday is supposed to represent.

She is an amazing woman. She is tiny, maybe 95 pounds and she was bouncing around with my girls having a good time. She was nowhere near what I would expect. She is small and a bit frail looking but she doesn't present herself in a frail or inhibited manner at all. She is so capable, so much more capable than many who are years younger.

I don't know what her secret is, she certainly is in excellent health aside from her eyesight which has been bad all her life, quickly deteriorating to legally blind when she was a young adult. She is active though, and perhaps that is something that helps.

She was an actress as a young woman and now as a retired woman she performs a one woman show about her experiences growing up in Berlin and coming to the United States. She performs it in schools around Seattle as a part of Holocaust education. She doesn't rely on others to do everything for her in her day to day life either. She takes the bus, walks, shops and takes care of her apartment without the assistance of another, beyond the occasional assistance of reading fine print perhaps. She could very easily sit back with every valid excuse to not do anything other than watch television and let others do everything for her. She could get away with having others doing all the things that are, most likely, the very things that keep her living such a high quality of life.

This year she is particularly thankful, we have made her a Great-grandmother. She is the mother of my stepfather and although we have been sort of related for quite a few years now this is the first time we have actually met. She is a wonderful addition to my and my children's lives, I am thankful for her and the enlightenment she has brought to my life.

3 comments:

Unknown said...

wow. she sounds like an awesome lady! what a great addition to your family.
=)
C.

Lynn Crain said...

I love the wisdom an older person has to impart. They are very important to society.

Sounds like you had a wonderful time with her and that she's a great addition to your family.

Lynn

Lynn Crain said...

Older people had a lot of wisdom to impart and it's important for us as 'youngsters' to realize this. We need to give them as much attention and help as possible.

It sounds like you formed a wonderful attachment to an awesome woman. Enjoy!

Lynn

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