Heroes in our midst

The world is filled with ordinary people doing ordinary things extraordinarily.

Like Jeff’s mother. Jeff is one of the owners at Calgary’s most creative wine shop, and my favourite  — Vine Arts. Jeff’s mother is a foster parent. He told me about her one day while I was in Vine Arts to pick up some libation. The pride and love in his voice was inspiring. Like my beautiful friends Bev and Larry Pettigrew, Jeff’s mother gives other children a chance at not just a ‘normal’ life, but at life itself. A chance they might never have had before. Jeff Jordan, who writes at, To My Children, If They are Listening, also makes a home for foster children, and he writes beautiful and amazing stories about his experiences. These giving  individuals open their homes and hearts to children who need a place to call home.

Foster parents are heroes.

I’ve never met Angela. Didn’t even know about her and her Project True initiative until my eldest daughter, Alexis, became involved in Project True there’s only one YOU in TRUE.  Angela had an eating disorder. Six years after leaving a healing facility, she has started a not-for-profit to provide online assistance to those recovering from disorderly eating. What an amazing woman. Sharing her knowledge, inspiration and creating a safe and welcoming space for others to learn and grow is important to Angela and all those involved in the project.

Angela, Alexis and everyone else at Project True are heroes.

I ran into a former co-worker yesterday. He still works at the homeless shelter where I used to work, is working on his masters in social work and has a young child. He is busy. Another woman I know, after years of working in the not-for-profit sector has gone back to University to get her undergrad in social work and is also holding down a full-time job. Every year, the Calgary Counselling Centre where I am working as the Interim Director of Communications, provides graduate and post-graduate students the opportunity to obtain real-world learning and counselling experiences because the CEO Robbie Babins-Wagner, believes in creating a better world through creating ways for people to learn and grow and become all they are meant to be. And btw, Robbie obtained her Ph.D last year while working full-time at the Centre and teaching at the University.

Those who work and go back to University, who commit their lives to helping others, who lead not-for-profits and still find time to learn more and to share what they’ve learned by teaching others, are heroes. 

Who are your heroes? Have you celebrated anyone today?

Self-forgiveness makes a difference

I know when I drive to Police HQ to sign a contract for a course I will be teaching in the fall that I have a meeting at 4:30. I am excited. This is work I love. Work I know makes a difference.

I’ll go sign the contract, go home, let Ellie out, go to my meeting and when I get home, go to bed early. A good night’s sleep and I’ll feel better, I tell myself.

I am really tired. Driving a full day, a broken night’s sleep the night before and one the night after have taken a toll. I am tired.

I have an hour between signing the contract and my meeting to grab a quick nap. Ample time for me to restore my equilibrium and energy I tell myself.

I fall asleep.

At 7pm, I wake up.

I do not remember I had a meeting that I have missed.

I am groggy. Disoriented. I take Ellie for a walk. I do not remember my phone. Which is okay because I made a deal with myself that I only use it on walks to take photos. Walks are restorative, me time. Ellie traipses along and I semi-sleep-walk. There are lots of photos to take, but I don’t think about taking them and don’t realize my phone is at home until I get home.

When I remember my meeting it is too late. I am home again and puttering quietly around the house, organizing, unpacking, doing laundry. C.C. phones. We chat and suddenly, in the midst of our conversation, I remember. I had a meeting.

Oh no!

I missed it! We even rescheduled our regular Wednesday night meeting because I couldn’t be there. I even emailed with one of the individual’s involved earlier in the day. I closed my email with, I’ll be there. Looking forward to connecting.

That’s the thing about driving for a full day bookended by two nights of really poor sleep. My mind goes to mush. And once mushy, there’s no way to unmush it except… sleep and time.

I phone. Leave a message. My apologies…..

A friend calls. We chat for a few minutes and they mention forgiving themselves for the past. “It’s not anything specific,” they say. “It’s just, I know I hurt people…”

Self-forgiveness is a daily act of grace, I write later in my journal when I go to bed.

I sleep better.

Brain is not as mushy this morning.

Sleep and time make a difference in the mushiness in  my brain, but even time can’t undo itself. Yesterday is gone, as is the meeting I missed.

I let down three people who mean a lot to me, I owe them an apology.

And for myself, self-forgiveness makes a difference.  My intent was not to break a commitment. My intent was to be there. Mushy-mind syndrome took over and I fell short of my desired outcome.

Begin again.

Always begin again.

Today, I commit to keeping my commitments. To being conscious of what I’m doing, of what I say, of commitments I make and my need to keep them. Today, I commit to being my best and accept that yesterday, that was my best and forgive myself for those moments where my actions did not reflect what I wanted to do, be, have in the world.

And I begin again. I give myself the gift of grace. I forgive myself.

It makes a difference.

 

.

 

 

 

Sleep and time make a difference.

 

 

A good day of driving makes a difference

I drove yesterday. 11.5 hours door to door. My cousin’s daughter, Elise, read and slept and watched movies on her iPod and I listened to a book CD, John Valliant’s, “The Tiger. A true story of Vengeance and Survival.”

I was engrossed. Intrigued. Fascinated by Valliant’s account of the true events that happened in December 1997 in Russia’s Far East.  I didn’t start listening until Kamploops (about 8 hours from Calgary) and in my listening the kilometers sped by — but I’m not quite three-quarters of the way through!  I need another road trip to finish it.

In, The Tiger, I am reminded of the delicate balance of our home, planet earth. I am reminded of the relationship we all have with nature, with the animals who share our human path, and our fellow humans who walk beside us.

Elise and I stopped several times, to get coffee, a bite to eat, stretch our legs, washroom breaks. We chatted briefly in between her changing CDs for me, her sleeping, her movies. It was fun! And restful and relaxing.

The reason for the book CD is simple — it keeps me awake and makes the miles disappear and it is the Year of the Tiger! Also — because of the vastness and remoteness of segments of the drive, and because the mountains interfere, radio reception is intermittent. (cell service is spotty too.)

Which is what made this particular book/read/reading so interesting — I was travelling through similar country to Russia’s Far East — perhaps not as remote and impoverished, but in parts, definitely as densely forested — it would be easy to lose oneself, or another in the forest. Had we gone north and not due west, we would have found ourselves in almost the identical terrain — which is why Valliant’s question — why didn’t the Amur Tiger (Siberian Tiger) cross to North America, all the more interesting. Why didn’t it?

No one knows. These are giant beasts who love to swim — there are even accounts of fishermen in canoes being attacked by tigers while fishing.

More than just the tale of a tiger seeking revenge by killing a human(s) who wronged him, this book is a journey through time — Valliant shares the history of the region, from before the Czar’s to Stalin to current times where those who scrabble to survive in the region resort to poaching in order to get by. He also tells stories of tigers, and lions and leopards that are riveting and fascinating. Like Jim West who fought off a grizzly while out hiking near his home in the interior of BC — no one believed he could defend himself, and his dogs as he did. But he did.

Valiant shares stories of the great beasts of our world, and throughout, we learn how our ‘progress’ is making their survival all the more challenging.

And that is the tragedy of this story. The Amur Tiger is being stalked. By humans seeking trophies and the mystical qualities the blood and bone and fur and meat and organs of this legendary beast are said to hold.

We are killing off one of nature’s beasts and in the killing, we are shifting the natural balance of our world.

I didn’t know much about the Amur Tiger — other than to call it the Siberian Tiger and to be fascinated by a tiger that lived in an area where snow covers the forest ground in the winter.

In listening to John Valliant read his book, I am wiser, and sadder. We do horrible things to our fellow inhabitants of planet earth.

To make a difference we must create peace in our hearts. With peaceful hearts we are capable of creating peace in our world.

It was a good drive yesterday. Long. But good.

I learned a great deal, spent time with a delightful young girl and travelled through some of the most beautiful country imaginable. And in the drive, I was made different by a story of a gripping tale of man and beast and the wisdom of nature.

It was a good day.

A hug and connection makes a difference

I am heading east again this morning.  Leaving the sparkling waters and green slopes of Vancouver to return to big sky country.

I love this city.  The greenery, rich verdant hills, flowers andthe water.  Definitely the waters.

But I love Calgary too. Big sky. Wide open spaces.  The Rockies lining the horizon. The prairies rolling away into yesterday far to the east.

My roots are there. Dug into the prairie soils.  Planted deep at the edge of the Rockies.  Most of my adult life has been lived in Calgary.  My family, friends, community is there and I am grateful to be going home.

As always though when I leave this beautiful city I have mixed feelings of joy and sadness, especially now that I leave my eldest daughter here. This is her home. Her city, she says. The prairies have lost her, but I never will. She is always at home in my heart.

It has been a quick trip — but very worthwhile. Time in the sun, by the water, with people I love.

It makes a difference. Getting away, kicking back, spending time walking and talking and just being together.

Today, while at Lonsdale Quay, I bought several peace bracelets from a woman from Tibet. We talked about peace and the need for it in our world. We talked about women and our voices and our need to use them wildly and passionately in our world. And we talked about freedom.

“I have a gift for you,” she said as I paid her for the bracelets. And she disappeared into her stall, came back with a package wrapped up in paper and handed it to me

“This is for you,” she said. “So you can make peace in the world

I opened the package and inside was a beautiful carved amulet with a dove and Peace on Earth carved into it.

“May I give you a hug?” I asked.

She smiled, nodded her head. We gently wrapped our arms around eachother and we stood, two women, making peace.

It made a difference, that hug, her gift, our connection.

A Toonie and a smile makes a difference.

He is sitting on the sidewalk, back up against a wall. Older man. Grey beard. Wrinkled face. Red hoodie, jeans, a soiled cap outstretched in his hands. I drop a Tooonie into his cap. Smile, wish him a good day and move along.

My eldest daughter, Alexis, looks at me surprised. “I thought you don’t give to panhandlers anymore,” she comments.

I sigh. “He looked so sad,” I tell her.

“He did, didn’t he? Look really sad.”

Money won’t help his sadness but I didn’t really care. It was all I had to offer.

Later, my cousin’s daughter, Elise, and I are sitting on a bench in Gastown withe my sister Anne who has joined us after work. We’ve been all over. From the west end we took an Aquabus to Granville Island, wandered around, had lunch and then hopped on another Aquabus over to the bottom of Yaletown. We walked up, took Elise for a tour of Vancouver’s amazing Public Library (one of my favourite places) and then walked over to Gastown where Alexis had a meeting and Anne was meeting up with us.

We are sitting on the bench taking a break from walking all over this oh so walkable city. I see Alexis walking towards us, smile and wave and a woman, broken teeth, dirty hair, tired body stops and thinks I’m calling out to her.

“Excuse me ma’am,” she starts and rolls into her planned script of why she needs money. Need to get to Coquitlam. Hoping to spend the night there. Have stuff there. My belongings. So tired. So…. Please can you help?

Alexis has joined us by then and offers the woman a bus ticket.

The woman looks at me and says, “Can’t you just check to see if you have a Toonie please?” (A Toonie is a $2 coin)

I don’t really want to. I don’t really believe her story, in fact, I want to challenge her to tell the truth and then I’ll give her money.

But I do none of that. I find a Toonie in my wallet and give it to her. I remember a man I used to date who was once an alcoholic with a million dollar cocaine habit. “You gotta give to the junkies,” he used to say. “Not getting their fix could lead them to doing something desperate.”

I know he was right.

I give the woman the Toonie and she continues on her way and for a moment, I feel the heaviness of knowing her next step will be to get high once she gets the money. And then, I say a little prayer for her and me. “Bless her. Forgive me.” Whether giving the money was right or wrong, is not the issue. She is a fellow human being in distress. She does not need my criticism, complaints nor condemnation. Along with my courteousness and consideration, she deserves my compassion.

Handing out a Toonie can only be done with compassion.

As it suggests in the little journal I bought yesterday, “One Good Deed A Day” — Kindness is contagious.

There are   lots of panhandlers in Vancouver. If I shift my perspective from seeing them as annoying, pushy, persistent, and see them through eyes of kindness and compassion, I see the human being, the lost soul, the person struggling to make sense of a life that they never dreamed would be theiir’s — lost, addicted, wandering the streets of one of the most beautiful citiies in the world  unable to see the beauty all around.

When I shift my eyes to look through compassion and kindness, I see, they are no different than me, only the circumstances of their lives are different.  More challenging. More dangerous. Less loving and filled with beauty.  Yet, regardless of the circumstances of ourr lives,  we are  all coonnected.. We must  look out for each other..

And sometimes, all I can do to make a difference is share a Toonie and a smile. A kind word and a gentle heart.  All I  can do is be myself and let  them be who they are  in this moment in time  without  my judgments getting in the way  of our connection.

Namaste.

The 3 Cs of making a difference.

I am sitting in a comfy chair in the Starbucks at Lonsdale Quay in N. Vancouver. The sky is streaked with white wispy clouds. The sun casts a pale lemon yellow light. The air is damp from the rain that fell during the night and I am feeling at ease.

I drove out yesterday with my daughter Alexis and my cousin’s daughter, Elise, who is here visiting from France. At 15 I’m not sure Elise understood the concept of the distance of this country — an 11 hour drive did not equate to sitting in the car for 11 hours to her — like Alexis, she dozed and read and watched a movie on her ipod and oohed and aahed at the scenery.

I am a proud Canadian and this is one vast, beautiful country.

My sister has left for work, her husband has gone over to Gabriola Island to check out their house there and Elise still sleeps. Which explains why I’m aat one of my favourite places this morning. As I drove here, I stopped to let two pedeestrians cross the streets. Surprised, they waved and smiled and crossed. I waved at a driver trying to cross through the intersection to pass in front of me. He waved, smiled and zipped through.

I laughed.

I figure I’m doing my bit to support the image of Albertans as courteous  drivers!

It’s so easy, this making a difference. Be considerate, courteous and compassionate to others on the road of life.

Do not criticize, complain or condemn!

Always live the 3 Cs of making a difference — Celebrate. Create (better). Collaborate.

II am off for a day with Alexis and Elise, wandering Granville Island. The Seawall. The westend. We’ll meet up with my sisster later, walk around Gastown and Robson Street and then dinner.Spending time with people I love always makes a difference!

Hope your day is made different through celebrating, creating and collaborating with those you love, and everyone you meet on this road of life feels your difference as sweet lemony sunshine streaming down upon their face.

Namaste.

I first met Howard Parsons, today’s guest blogger, just a few short months ago when I went to my first Summer of Peace Calgary 2o12 meeting. I immediately knew I had a friend for life and, I understood why Kerry loves him so much. He is straight forward, intent on being his best, a natural teacher and caring and giving. Howie, writes Hopeful Notes from Howie J., every morning — short, to the point actionable ideas on how to live your best life yet. Howie continually strives to create better in the world.

Today, Howie shares his warm, wonderful brilliance with all of us here. Do drop over to Howie’s blog and sign-up to receive his daily notes. They’re powerful and inspiring!

 

I Have A Dream

by Howard Parsons

I have a dream to bring so much hope and inspiration to the world that the world will be a better place when I leave it.

Do you have a dream? I don’t mean the kind you have at night although they can be informative; I mean a dream for your life that is so big you need help from all sorts of resources to make it happen.

I think every child has a dream for their life. When they play, they make up stuff and play in it with so much attention that it is real to them. Then someone comes along and says “stop that daydreaming, it will get you nowhere.” The child learns to adapt to their surroundings, to follow the rules and play the game of life the way it has been taught by elders.

You can change the world. One person, that’s you, can make a difference wherever you are. You just choose it.

I know one of the challenges you might have is that you will have forgotten your dreams. You will have forgotten how to dream. The day to day shuffle of life with all its responsibilities and energy drains leaves little time to consider having a dram.

Now is the time to pick it up again. It doesn’t matter how old or young you are. You just sit down in a quiet space and ask about your dream. You remember being a fireman or an artist or a singer. These were dreams that were put aside for more practical matters.

Now you have your quiet space to bring your dream alive. It may be a whole new dream. Perhaps it is to participate in world peace or to feed the hungry or shelter those who have none.

Your dream is special. It is unique and precious and you need the time to bring it alive now. Take the time from your busy life and give it a try. Sit down quietly and ask. It may take some practice but I guarantee you the dream will come. It will be crazy and you might think, “How could I do that?” Don’t let the size, texture or complexity get in your way. Dreams are such that they don’t follow the old rules you and I have been living by for so long.

Dreams are precious and you need to nurture your dream. Let it mature as you move into it and start to see how you can make a difference in this world we call home.

As you think like a kid again, your dream becomes real and big and juicy!  It is alive in you and you start to take it out into the world and make it live for those that see for themselves their dream coming out of your dream. Now you have the multiplier effect and what a wow that is!

You are a special person with a dream inside you. I ask you to go in and get it now because the world needs more dreamers. The world needs your dream. Let it come, courageously take it into the world and see what it possible. There are no rules in the dream game. There is only the possibility of a world that will be better off because you have brought your dream to it. That, my friend, will make a difference in your world and the world of many you have not met yet.

I am Howard Parsons, The Moving On Coach working with men and women struggling with meaning and purpose. I am the author of Hopeful Notes from Howiej which is the reality of my dream to bring hope and inspiration to the world.

http://www.hopefulnotesfromhowiej.com

Heroes in our midst Light Up The Night

In Greek mythology, a hero was a being of godlike prowess and beneficence who often came to be honored as a divinity. I encountered a lot of these beings last week, especially yesterday.

We needed 14 tickets for the Grandstand at the Stampede last night. The problem was, as I discovered while standing in line talking with the man in front of me, each person was only allowed to purchase 8. I stood in line for an hour, chatting with the couple in front of me — the people behind had someone in another line and it obviously moved faster than ours because they left. When I mentioned I was stymied about the 8 limit, the couple in front offered to buy the extra ones for me. Bonus!  I stood in line for an hour chatting with a delightful couple and, I got all the tickets I needed.

Sean and Elise, you are heroes!

The show was spectacular. And I mean, SPECTACULAR! After years of my eldest being in the show as a Young Canadian, I can be somewhat critical of the extravaganza that is the Grandstand Show. I also wrote and produced the documentary of The Young Canadians for Global National TV six years ago — I’ve seen the inner workings and gyrations of it all. From acrobats spinning in hoops above the heads of the audience, to Paul Brandt singing his heart out from a disc that hung suspended above the audience as he floated out over the heads of the audience gathered on the tarmac, to world champion hoop dancer Dallas Arcand who road in on a giant, metal sculpture of an eagle that came floating in from the sky, the show was Spectacular. And The Young Canadians shone!

Paul Brandt, Dallas Arcand, The Young Canadians of the Calgary Stampede, and all the other performers, you are all heroes.

Bill Avery has executive produced the Grandstand Show for over fifteen years. He inherited the role from his father who was one of the founders of The Young Canadians. Bill’s enthusiasm for his work, his care of the kids who range in age from 8 to 21, his vision and his creative senses are stellar.

Bill Avery,  and all the production team of the Grandstand Show along with all the volunteers like Kate Thrasher, Stu Reid, Jock Osler — you are heroes!

I was a Young Canadian parent for several years. It takes a lot — driving to and from dance and singing classes, rehearsals, sellling programs during the show, doing this, doing that, to ensure your child turns up when needed, has the right stuff to do what it takes to go through the nine months of being a student in the Young Canadians school of performing arts and then, the gruelling five months leading up to the Grandstand Show. It takes and lot and the parents of these youth give a lot.

All the parents and volunteers and helper outters and sitter-byers and supporters and lifter-uppers of the Young Canadian School of Performing Arts, you are heroes.

When Liseanne, my youngest daughter, went out to collect her boyfriend Ryan and a girlfriend, Ashley who were joining us for the evening but couldn’t arrive until later, a couple approached Ryan and Ashley and gave them their tickets to get onto the grounds. “We don’t need them,” they said and handed them the entrance tickets. When I stood outside the grandstand waiting for some friends to arrive so that I could give them their tickets, a woman approached me and asked if I wanted to buy her extra ticket. I didn’t really need it — though we could only purchase standing room only tickets as everything else was sold out. I pondered the opportunity for a moment as she told me the story of her friend who had cancelled at the last minute and now she had one empty seat beside her. What the heck, I decided. It was a good seat and if any of us got tired of standing, we could share it. I paid her (she didn’t want the full amount, just half) and kept waiting. As I waited, another woman approached me and asked if I had a ticket for sale. We’re four people and only have three, she said. I pondered some more and said, “What the heck!”. I obviously bought it so that she and her friends could all have tickets. I sold her the ticket for what I’d paid.

People who give away their tickets, who sell tickets for less than the printed cost, who act ethically and with integrity in ensuring they pass along their largess are heroes!

It was a fun, awe-inspiring, breathtaking spectacle last night. All the horses made it around the track during the Chuckwagon races. Cowboys oozed their manly stuff, cowchicks flit around the grounds and smiles lit the faces of young and old.

And then, the TransAlta fireworks display lit up the night as Paul Brandt sang and The Young Canadians danced and I stood, one of  22,000 people there to witness the spectacular, my heart pounding with pride. I am Canadian. I am a Calgarian. Yahoo!

It was a night like no other at the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth!

Connecting with those we love makes a difference.

I am late posting this morning. C.C. and I went off to a barbeque/dance/stampede whoop-up that actually wasn’t…. It was last Thursday.  So, we drove the 45 minutes back into the city, went for a lovely dinner on the Mall and came home to both my daughters and some friends sitting on the deck enjoying the night. I did get to bed at a not too undecent hour but I slept in, awoke, and just made it in time for my 7:30am coffee date with a very dear friend.

Back home, take my daughter to drop off her car for servicing, come back, coffee and breakfast for those still at the house, a delightful hour on the deck chatting and spending quality family time, and now, I’m finally here.

But not for long.

C.C. and I are off to pick up Rush tickets for the Grandstand Show tonight at the Stampede. A busy day of this and that and we are on the run.

Which brings me to the importance of spending time with those you love.

Last night, at dinner, we laughed and shared and talked heart to heart. When we came home, we laughed and shared and chattered about life and living and time passing. We shared memories of ‘remember when’, ‘remember who’, ‘remember how’ and connected to what makes our lives so rich.

This morning, more of the same.

It really makes a difference.

To take the time to stop, breathe, connect.

enjoy and treasure.

Stop. Breathe. Connect.

Enjoy and treasure these moments, the people who mean so much and give such meaning to our lives.

It really makes a difference.

May your day be filled with those moments where you are connected in love with those who bring such meaning and richness to your life.

Namaste.

The difference is in our human connection

She is maneuvering her scooter wheelchair up the ramp into the Mac’s store where I am headed to buy cough drops. I call out to her that I will open the door, slip around her scooter and hold it open. She nods her head, grunts a muffled ‘thank you’ (I think) and moves away.

Inside the store, she struggles to move her scooter through the aisles to the cooler section. I watch and ask if I can help.

“I just want a Coke,” she says and I open the fridge door, grab one down and pass it to her. Again, she nods her head, mumbles and moves away.

At the checkout I step back to make room for her to get into the line. This time, she acknowledges my presence. She smiles at me, comments on the heat and how difficult it is to get around for her as she’s just got the scooter. “Cities aren’t really designed for people like me,” she says.

“It must be very challenging,” I comment and she tells me more about her difficulties.

I notice two puppies in a cloth animal carry bag at her feet and she tells me their names. “Buddy” and “Friend”. We chat about her dogs. I tell her how I like their names. “It must be nice to know you always have a buddy and a friend around,” I quip.

She laughs. “Yeah. Except, this Buddy, he can be a real little dickens. Always trying to run off. He’s so nosy. He wants to know what’s going on everywhere!”

And then it’s her turn and the sales clerk greets her and I know she comes here often because he reaches over towards the lottery machine and asks, “Quick Pick?

She laughs. “Not this time. Just the Coke.” And I wonder if, as happens to many, the month has too many days for her assistance cheque.

She holds the coke out towards the clerk but the counter is too far up for her to reach from a sitting position. She’s told me she can walk, but it’s uncomfortable in the heat and I offer to pass the Coke to the clerk and she is grateful. She hands me the bottle and her Toonie (a $2 coin) and I pass both to the clerk. He scans the coke, counts out her change. I pass both back to the woman.

“I’m the intermediary!” I say.

And we all three share a moment connected through laughter.

I pay for my cough drops. The clerk says, “Thanks for all your help.”

The woman is moving towards the exit door and a man in line races over to open it for her. He smiles, she smiles, and I smile as I walk out behind her through the open door the man is holding open for me too.

“Thank you,” I smile.

“Have a great day,” he says. “Oh, and thank you for being so happy this morning too. You brightened my day.”

“You brightened my day too.” I tell him. “I love open doors!”

And we part to go our separate ways and I know the day has been made different because of those small connections made through our human connection on a hot sunny morning in July.