Volunteer still going strong
- Share via
Barbara Dow, 65, is a Costa Mesa resident who is fighting cancer, yet
is still able to volunteer her time.
Where did you grow up?
In New York City and southern New Jersey. When I was 14, I moved
to South Jersey. I was born across the street from the Bronx Zoo. I
think that’s why I like animals so much. I went to high school in the
‘50s. I lived in the same town [Millville] as Bill Haley from Bill
Haley and the Comets. And he used to come to our school every year
and play for us for free. New Jersey was very rural country. We were
50 miles away from Philadelphia in New Jersey and we used to watch
“American Bandstand” every day on television. That was the biggie --
as soon as we came home from high school, turn on “American
Bandstand” and watch Dick Clark. When I lived in New York until I was
14, I used to go to movies at Radio City Music Hall, where they had
the stage show and a movie, and it was like 50 cents. So when I lived
in New York there were so many things to do -- I used to love to go
to the Museum of Natural History.
What kind of childhood did you have?
I had two sisters -- I was the middle one -- and mother and
father. Cousins living down the corner. We just did what kids do. I
had a nice, easy upbringing I think. It was a great time to grow up.
All we had to worry about was the bad kids smoking in the bathroom
and sneaking a beer. Nowadays look what the kids have to go through,
drugs and all that good stuff, so we were lucky. We grew up in a good
time. Quite a lot of freedom. We lived seven miles from town. Ride my
bike down to the lake and picked blueberries along the road. I used
to go to Radio City Music Hall.
How did you end up in Newport-Mesa?
When I was 18, I joined the Marine Corps. I didn’t want to work at
the bank or the Five and Dime. Those were the most interesting jobs
you could get right out of high school. So I joined the Marine Corps.
I was stationed in Norfolk, Va., and then El Toro. Then I went back
to New Jersey after I got out of the Marine Corps. I got a job with
the State Department and I went overseas for two years over in
Germany. And I was a cryptographer for the State Department. I
encoded and decoded messages, and then I came back to New Jersey, and
five weeks after I got my driver’s license I left for California and
drove myself out here. By the time I got to Oklahoma, I was real good
at staying centered in my lane, because that’s how you learn -- by
doing. I have been in California since 1965. I found out that the
East Coast was humid, horribly humid. I didn’t know that till I came
out to California and there was a two-year drought. It was real dry
and I went back East and I was perspiring all the time. I didn’t know
because I grew up in the humidity. I loved California and I decided
that after I came out of the state department, I wanted to come back
to California to live.
What are your greatest accomplishments in life?
Well, right now, it’s surviving cancer. I have cancer stage four,
which is the worst supposedly. A year ago this month, I had two
tumors removed and they couldn’t remove one, so it’s inoperable, so
I’ve been on chemo ever since. When I came to California, I got a job
as a mail carrier and I worked that for 14 1/2 years, and I got
injured on the job so I couldn’t do my job anymore. Then, I went to
the Crystal Cathedral and worked there for 16 years as a reader,
worked in the banking room, and then while I was there for six years,
I was a New Hope Crisis Counselor on the phone. You know, people
calling in wanting to kill themselves or they’re upset because they
had to put their mother in a home and all that kind of stuff. And you
have to try to make them feel more positive about their life. And I
think that’s why I’m handling this cancer thing so well, because I
had to be positive for them and it rubs off on you. I still have the
cancer -- I can’t change that -- but I had to change my attitude
toward it and I’m just going on with my life. Everybody at the senior
center says that I’m such an inspiration to them because even though
I have cancer I still do volunteer work over there. Like today was
our business meeting and I handed out the door prize tickets. And I
help with the Chronicle, our monthly mailer. I help get that out.
Wherever they need me to sell tickets or anything, I’m willing to do
that. So, I’m continuing on with my life.
If you could redo one moment or incident in your life, what would
it be?
I would travel a little bit more than I have. I just didn’t have
the money to do it. I haven’t seen my family in three years. That’s
what I’d like to be able to do -- go back East and see all of my
family. I have nieces and nephews that I’ve never seen and they’re 6,
7 and 9 years old. I guess I’ve had a pretty interesting life so far.
I’d like to go see America. There’s lots of places in America I’d
like to go to. I’ve read about all those places and I’d like to
actually see them.
What profession other than yours would you like to have tried?
I’d like to be a writer. I think that would be interesting because
I enjoy reading books so much and I’ve had an interesting enough life
that I wish I could write about it. I’d like to be another Nora
Roberts. She’s written over a hundred books. I would like to be an
author because you can get your feelings out and put it on paper for
other people to enjoy. Anything that is in print is kind of
permanent. It’s there -- you can always go back and redo it, reread
it or whatever, and to me, I always admire people that can write. If
I wasn’t an author, I’d be a photographer, because I can’t paint and
my camera is my canvas.
What are some differences between a typical day in your life now
versus a day in your life 20 years ago?
I highlight everything in yellow that has to do with medical stuff
and my calendar is loaded with yellow highlights every week. Twenty
years ago, I was delivering the mail. I love not working. I got up at
5:30 a.m. and got ready because at 6:30 a.m. we had to report to the
post office to deliver the mail. Came home, had dinner, watched a
little television and went to bed, and just did things on weekends.
Now, my life revolves around my cancer, and that’s OK, I don’t mind.
Also, I go to the senior center a lot and do a lot of volunteering
there. And talk to people and enjoy people. So, it’s quite a change
from what it was 20 years ago.
What is the greatest lesson you’ve learned in your life?
Go with the flow. Handle what you can handle and turn over to God
what you can’t handle because you are not alone. When you have God by
your side, you can handle just about anything, like my cancer. I’m
handling it fine. I’m not saying its 100%, you know. I have my
moments -- a little bit blue, a little bit annoyed that I have to go
to chemo and stuff like that, but knowing that I’m not totally alone.
Knowing that God is on my side is my biggest strength, I think,
that’s getting me through this. It’s having people surrounding you
that care that’s a big factor in my life.
What do you treasure most?
Friendship, because we are not put on this Earth to be completely
alone. And knowing that other people care about you and you care
about other people, it makes life bearable for whatever happens in
your life -- knowing that you can talk to somebody about it and that
there will be somebody there who will be in your corner for you when
you’re going through a hard time.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.