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Age-defying philosophy keeps us ready for opportunities
He was 80.
Both feet turned in until his toes met. He walked with two canes but
could out-walk most teenagers. He loved life and everybody. And
everybody loved Mr. Joe, as he was affectionately called in the small rural town of my father's first pastorate.
One day he banged on my father's office door and burst in all at
once.
"Have you got a typing book I could borrow?" he asked with a sense
of urgency.
"A what?" my father questioned.
"You know, a book you learn how to type from."
"No," Dad told him. "But, you can probably get one over at the high
school."
"Would you call over there for me and ask?" he requested.
"Yes," Dad promised, "but may I ask what you want with a typing
book?"
"I want to learn how to type."
My father sat amazed. He looked at the man closely. The 80-year-old
had fingers that reflected all 80 years. But, Dad dialed. Yes, they
would loan Mr. Joe a book.
He started to leave.
"Mr. Joe, why do you want to learn to type?" my father asked as
tactfully as possible.
"You just never know when you'll need it," Mr. Joe quipped as he
breezed out the door toward the high school.
Six months later, a small pulp-wood company opened an office in
town. They needed someone to answer the phone and do some typing.
Mr. Joe got the job. At 80.
He never stopped growing.
I
never cease to be amazed how young some old people are, especially
now that the landmark age of 50 is behind me.
I
love the golf stories about those who can shoot their age and do so
three times a week. Or smile at the holiday tale of my Rock Band
guitar-playing aunt, who is 72. Or recall my mother's dear friend,
"Uncle Charlie," who would remind her every Sunday morning that
although he was 90-something, "I still have all my own teeth!"
We love those stories of folks who have grabbed life, pushed back at
Mother Nature, and engaged Father Time.
Perhaps aging takes its toll on people in direct proportion to how
well they have prepared themselves to keep growing and learning and
living.
Mr. Joe's mindset gives credence to Sir Francis Bacon's observation
that "A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds."
We often speak of "opportunity knocking at our doors." However, it
is incumbent upon us to create many doors on which opportunity can
knock. And that process demands discovering and cultivating innate
gifts.
Mr. Joe gave my father, a twenty-something rookie pastor, that basic
philosophy on preparedness in mid-1950. Yet, it applies today.
With old industries dying and new ones being born, gearing up for
new jobs calls forth intense personal creativity to dream, to grow,
and to learn new things.
"You never know when you'll need it."
And you never do.
Opportunity comes to those who are prepared for its visit.


04/19/2009
The Herald-Dispatch
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