Putting our lives in perspective
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STEVE SMITH
Over the past couple of weeks, our kids have had to endure more than
their share of peril and personal challenges. Two weeks ago, friend
Mike Barr and his daughter, Sarah, accompanied my daughter and me on
a very strenuous 17-mile, all-day hike to the top of Half Dome in
Yosemite National Park.
The walking part is no picnic, and then it gets worse. The last
600 feet have to be conquered by pulling oneself along cables on the
side of the dome at an angle of about 55 degrees. It’s very tiring
and very scary.
A friend who made the hike last year, one who is in excellent
physical condition, told me that it was the most physically demanding
thing he’d ever done.
Once at the top, however, the view is spectacular.
Last weekend, it was all of the Smiths conquering Crystal Cave in
Sequoia National Park. Kaitlyn’s calves had only just recovered from
the tough Half Dome hike when we asked her to go caving. This was the
second caving trip for my wife, Cay, and my son, Roy, and the first
time for Kaitlyn and me.
Both times, the expeditions were led by Doug Billings, an
experienced caver who has crawled and squeezed his way in caves all
over the world. As a cave trustee, Doug is able to go where very few
are allowed. During the day, we crawled, squeezed and jumped our way
into some of the most fantastic places we’d ever seen.
Half Dome one weekend and caving the next was a lot for me and
even more for Kaitlyn. She is the studious type, not one to go out
and play when she could be inside curled up with a good book.
Over the course of the two weekends, however, Kaitlyn found
reserves she never knew she had.
As much as she does, many kids do more. There are kids who
practice untold hours each week to become very good at what they like
to do, whether it’s beach volleyball or playing the piano. Other kids
spend their free time working to help support their families.
Still others do far more than their share of community service in
order to help families in need.
And then there are kids who just hang out, whether it’s at the
convenience store or the mall.
I am reminded of all of these kids as I read the “Living on
Pennies” series by Davan Maharaj in the Los Angeles Times. Maharaj’s
words are supported by the superb photography of Francine Orr.
The series explores life in Africa in 2004. Reading it, one is
moved not only by the extreme poverty but also by the absence of
hope, starting, tragically, as early as age 2 and 3 when these
children do not have enough to eat and their distended bellies signal
their plight.
In Willowfontein, South Africa, we read of the children who could
not go to school because their parents did not have the $10 it took
to enroll. That money was needed for food.
It is impossible to read these stories and not want to go down on
your knees and be so thankful for the rich lives we lead. And it’s
hard to read these stories and wonder how so many of us can take for
granted so much of what we have here in the United States, including
so much hope.
The chances are good that if you’re reading this, your kids are in
a good school, you have more than enough food on the table, and
you’re enjoying many of the comforts and conveniences that these
African kids can’t even dream about. You have hope, possibilities,
and the ability to change your situation over time -- they do not.
At every stage of life, we seem to be getting upset or anxious
about the wrong things. As kids, we’re upset if we don’t get our way.
As teenagers, we fret about our hair or complexion. As adults, our
day is ruined if someone cuts us off on the freeway or our latte is
not hot enough.
This is life in the big city. We have to deal with these things
because it is the life we have chosen, but we don’t have to get upset
about them, for in the long run, they mean nothing.
Two days ago, my daughter wanted to go home from a place she was
visiting with her mom, but Cay was not yet ready to leave. So,
Kaitlyn walked the two miles.
Two miles may not seem like a lot to some, but to a kid who is
used to climbing in a car to get from here to there, it is a long
way. I doubt she would have walked home had her Half Dome hike not
proven to her what she was capable of.
There are kids with potential in Ethiopia, too, but most of them
will live each day wearing rags and scrounging for food.
This isn’t a call to send money, food or clothes to Africa.
Perhaps it’s just a wish that the contrast will help more of us
appreciate our rich lives and appreciate that whatever we have or
don’t have, this is America, and we’ll always have hope and
possibilities.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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