by Julie Carter
Anyone
who has ever moved from one home to another, especially if the move
involved a change of zip code, has surely given thought to the courage
it took our ancestors to do the same.
They
left family, friends and homes behind knowing they would never see or
hear from them again. I've only been a little aggravated when I can't
connect to the internet in my new house because my wireless connection
is very weak. A pitiful excuse for a problem in the big scheme of
things.
The fires consuming the West this spring have brought forth a similar courage in the face of adversity and loss.
A
recent story I read spoke to that very courage as an Abilene-area
rancher stood in the ashes of his 100- year-old home and stirred up the
memories that lay at his feet.
The
ranch had been his grandfather's and before the fire, there were
several outbuildings and a barn in addition to the century old ranch
house. All that remained of all structures were the concrete floors,
foundations, rock walls and walks.
In
the concrete floor of the outhouse the letters "WPA" could still be
seen etched in the floor serving as proof that was one of the many
projects built by the Works Progress Administration during Franklin D.
Roosevelt's New Deal.
The
rancher recalled the wooden barn built by his grandfather and
remembered the inscription written on the inside of it was dated 1917.
He
watched the fire get closer and the flames change color as they burned
with a fury no man could contain. Five fire departments and countless
friends came to do all that they could to help, but nothing could stop
the wall of fire that took all in its path.
The
next day, what remained was an overwhelming outpouring of offers to
help. People were waiting at the gate when the rancher returned to
survey the carnage. Support came in a variety of forms that varied from a
pot of beans to the sincere and willing offers to clear the rubble.
The
ability that mankind has to take care of their own in times of need is
what keeps this seemingly cold and often selfish world turning.
In
moments of introspection of the monumental loss, the rancher recalled
what he felt was the greatest loss of all -- his father's Bible. A
preacher until he was 97, he'd left notes on virtually every page and
those thoughts and notations were now gone forever. Somehow that
overshadowed any void left from the loss of the other property.
However,
like so many in similar circumstances, he took no time to agonize over
his monumental losses. Recognizing it could have been much worse, could
have taken lives that it did not, he was heard to say, "It's what West
Texas has been about."
Giving
due to the hearty people who settled the land and recognizing their
courage as what set them apart from others, he went back to work to
rebuild his life.
"You always run out of daylight before you run out of jobs to do," he said.
5/8/11
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