In honor of all our veterans I would like to share a very special
chapter from my soon to be released book "Southern Whispers." This
chapter is a tribute to my grandfather "Paw Paw" Rich as well as my sweet daddy and others in our family who served our country with joy and pride. Special thanks
and gratitude to ALL those men and women who give sacrificially of
themselves for country and freedom....
(Chapter 8: "Let Me Show You Something" - excerpt from the book Southern Whispers)
My son Josh just dropped by for a visit. Goodness how I love seeing
that broad grin on his handsome face! Three months ago my “baby boy”
moved into his own apartment with two of his friends. Though I do enjoy
my moments of solitude on the porch and otherwise, I do miss him! He
could’ve moved long before, but because it had been just the two of us
for the most part during his growing up years, he felt a responsibility
to be around to help me as much as possible. He grew up early on, it
seems. Yes, he was all boy and still is, but he has always had the most
level head of anyone I know - even more so than me at times! Adversity
in a young boy’s life or a young girl’s life has a way of “growing them
up” long before it is time. My Paw Paw Rich was a prime example of
this. What’s a boy to do when he loses both parents at an early age and
then is taken hundreds of miles from where he calls home and shuffled
around from relative to relative? Paw Paw learned about grown up ways
before he barely had time to enjoy being a child. He probably had few
possessions and even less hope to cling to other than a box or suitcase
containing a few trinkets and “memories.” Something tells me that he
most likely held tight to the few things he had by the way I observed
him in his elder years. There was one item in particular that he
cherished most of all.
It was just a box - a simple velvet lined box. It had been
pulled in and out of Paw Paw’s dresser drawer so many times that it was a
bit scuffed and tattered - much like him and every other person who
served along side of him. What was in that little box? It was Paw
Paw’s greatest treasure, his most vivid memory and symbol of something
larger than what the young boy those many years ago could comprehend,
and what the elderly gentlemen proudly displaying it could adequately
express. However, the look in his eyes each time he held that box in
his calloused wrinkled hand, told the story magnificently. Every time
we went to visit my grandparents, we knew that at any given moment, Paw
Paw would retreat into a world of memories, walk into the bedroom, open a
dresser drawer and come back with his treasure - Paw Paw’s Purple
Heart.
All you had to do was take a moment to sit still in his lap
or sit at his feet and before long, the stories would roll off his
tongue, then the light would begin to sparkle in his eyes as he would
say “let me show you something.” Off he would go down the
hall, and then in a flash, be back beaming from ear to ear with that
velvet lined box. Slowly, he would open the box and release the sound
of gunfire, the dampness of trenches and the excitement and fear on the
face of a mere child who found himself across a huge ocean listening to
the chatter of languages he was never even able to read. As I
mentioned, Paw Paw had quit school in the third grade due to the family
tragedy that took both his parents. He was not even able to read
anything in English nonetheless a foreign language. One line he learned
overseas seemed forever stuck in his brain - “comme ci comme ça.”
We knew each time we spent a few moments with Paw Paw, that we needed
to ask him how he was doing. This gave him that rare opportunity to
respond in a foreign language… “just so-so” he would say in French with his own delightful southern mountain man dialect.
Can you imagine what it felt like to be an orphan of sorts
shipped across the ocean and coming face to face with “death?” Like so
many young boys during this time, Paw Paw also lied about his age to
have the chance to do something significant with his life and for his
country. At the ripe old age of sixteen, Paw Paw became a “man” in
World War I. The truth be told, from that time until now, there have
been scores of boys who left home as a son, a brother, a cousin, a
neighbor, a classmate or playmate yet when it was time to return, in
their place a man walked down that country road home, or that city
sidewalk through town. Some of them never got to walk that road home.
Some of them rolled their way, while others were sent back in another
velvet lined box and carried “home” by the angels.
Today, as I think of Paw Paw’s Purple Heart, I think of the
hearts of the scores of young men and now women who give everything they
have to offer with no expectation of anything in return, simply because
of the sound of “freedom’s song” ringing in their ears. I wish I could
sit with each of them like we did Paw Paw through the years and hear
their story, see their symbol of freedom, experience the fear and
excitement and feel the sense of pride and honor that radiates from the
light in each of their eyes. Since I can’t sit with each of them, I
will do what I can to “pay forward” words of hope and encouragement,
determination and perseverance - fanning the flame of freedom. This
southern girl is so grateful to be free to enjoy a porch swing on a hot
summer afternoon, or the melody ringing from a choir loft on a Sunday
morning. I am thankful for long lines at a concert or movie, and for
collective hours waiting in lobbies for a dinner table. It means I am
free to enjoy simple pleasures and so are millions of others. We are
not as oppressed as we want to think we are. We are blessed. I am
grateful to be able to give thanks to God and to man without fear of
harm or censorship. May we never allow the song of freedom fade from
our ears or the story of liberty slip from our hearts and souls. I, for
one, do not want the sacrifices made by scores of men and women through
the years to be in vain. I refuse to bow down to tyranny or give in to
selfish oppressors who want to smother our pride and strip away our
dignity one liberty at a time. If freedom is worth fighting for, then
freedom is worth standing up for with boldness, gratitude and thanks. I
hope that by the time my grown boy has a “baby boy” of his own, he too
will have memories tucked safely away that he can bring out and share. I
hope his children and grandchildren can feel the same joy I have felt
each time he might say to them “let me show you something.”

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Thanks so much for stopping by to visit and for allowing me to extend some southern hospitality! It brings me so much joy to share the sights, sounds, beauty, stories and experiences from life in the South. I welcome your comments and feed back, and enjoy the conversation. Have a great day!