Thursday, April 10, 2025
5331-5332: The Widow's Mite and a Life That Matters from Lincoln County Watch
By Anna Von Reitz
In keeping with my remembrance of my Three Grandmothers today, I want to share a couple other stories.
There
is a woman I know who lives on a very meager fixed income. She sends
me five dollars a week, every week, toward restoring the American
Government. She always says, "I wish I could send more."
Five
dollars a week is $20 per month, or $240 per year for five years. This
retiree with very little income at all, has still managed to contribute
$1200 in support of the American Government. Think about that. By
commitment and diligence she has done far more than people who have
many times her income each year.
Here
is another example of someone who wasn't rich or famous, but by setting
a goal to do something he believed in, which was to help kids get a
college education he never had himself, he managed to send 33 students
through school, some even through medical school.
Think
about these humble heroes next time you are wondering, "What am I doing
with my life?" and wondering what kind of legacy you will leave
behind.
No
matter how little we have, we all have love, and we little "mice" can
move mountains. The ultimate race does not belong to the Big Boys in
life, though they can weigh in, too.
Life
belongs to each and every one of us and the quality and quantity of
life on this planet depends on each one of us, making the choices we can
make, and doing what we can do.
So
never feel that you are unimportant and that your resources can't make a
difference. They can, and if you are faithful and determined, and
consistent over time, you will say to that mountain, "Move!" --- and it
will.
Three Grandmothers
By Anna Von Reitz
My
Father's Mother died when he was a young man of eighteen, so I never
knew her; my maternal Grandmother died when I was seven. In the brief
span of those early years I spent a lot of time with her and with my
much-older Sister, Emma, so her loss was very palpable for me and I had a
lot of good memories.
I wasn't allowed to go to the funeral, but my Sister, Emma, was a loyal confidante and told all.
The
funeral was unexpectedly large as many people from the local community
came as well as relatives from out of town, but two attendees caused a
small stir. Two Winnebago women who were elders in their community came
to pay their respects and take part in the funeral dinner held after
the services.
In
those days and times it was unusual for the Winnebago to take part in
our funeral rites or for "White Men" to attend their similar ceremonies,
but these two, Agnes Clymer and her Cousin Minnie came, just the same.
They
came even though they knew that their appearance in black and purple
dresses and silver jewelry would stand out in the crowd. They didn't
come for the crowd. They came for my Grandmother and my Sister and me.
It was a Woman Thing.
I
can picture them to this day, giving each other a knowing look, as much
as to say, "Well, these children have no Grandmother now, so we will be
their Grandmothers."
And they were.
They
took it upon themselves to comfort my Sister and guide her on her path
in life, and me, they adopted and treated me as one of their own
grandchildren, subject to the same loving discipline and the same
introspective expectations.
That
first autumn we harvested the apples together as we always had, but
there was someone missing. We all felt the gap, but then, Agnes and
Minnie made the extra effort to find something funny to laugh about,
some fond remembrance of my Grandmother that made us all smile.
This
is the Native Way. You don't sit around grieving for yourself and your
loss and your sudden loneliness. You greet death with a smile and
remember the good times. If you have to go weep and scream, you do it by
yourself, away from other people.
It
is also the Native Way to teach young people about their ancestors, so
my Grandmother was never far away as I grew up. Both Agnes and Minnie
had known her from their youth and had plenty of insights and stories to
tell me about her and the many challenges she faced, how she faced
them, and how she overcame them.
There
was usually a sly joke somewhere in the mix. Something to make me grin
and shake my head. And through it all a thread of love that these two
women, old friends of my Grandmother's, kept alive for me as they added
their own threads of love to it. I came to know my Grandmother through
their eyes.
She
was not there to teach me how to weave young willow branches into a
fence or basket, so they did it. She was not there to teach me how to
harvest cottonwood sap and make it into a sweet-smelling salve, so they
taught me.
Each
season brought its skills and remembrances, sewing dresses, making
cheese, embroidery, beadwork, leather tanning, bread making, harvesting
blueberries and cranberries and wild rice.
Because
I had no brothers, it was also the Native way to teach a lone child
like me, even though I was a girl, how to hunt and fish for myself and
my family. So Agnes' husband gave me my first bow and arrows and fish
spear, and together with my Uncle Julius, we spent many summer and
autumn days fishing and hunting, cleaning and preparing meat and
preserving it for the winter.
This
was a private world we entered, all of us, away from the European
world, and any time I wanted or needed to leave the bustle of cities and
commerce behind, I had only to step inside the green fringe of trees,
breathe in the scent of the forest, and become one with it again.
Of
all the many, many gifts these adoptive Grandmothers (and
Grandfathers) gave to me as their own gifts from their own lives and
skills and cultures, this ability to lose myself in Nature has remained
and been my source of sustenance and joy.
It
is part of the reason I came to Alaska and stayed here. Alaska is a
vast and largely untrammeled land, fresh and clean as God made it,
abundant in birds and fish and animal life. I no longer hunt or fish
but I know the Great Hoop of life and know I am part of it and that is a
comfort that nobody can ever take from me.
I
forage for mushrooms and pick berries in their seasons and watch the
ever-changing pageant of the seasons as avidly as I ever have.
This
doesn't mean that I don't suffer my pangs of homesickness for the land
and soil I grew up on, a gentler piece of Earth where the Woodlands of
Wisconsin and the Sand Counties of the Mississippi meet the Great
Plains.
I
miss the long, slow springtime and the violets and Mayflowers and
Trilliums of my native land, the scent of gardens of peonies and German
Bearded Iris, hedges of lilac and roses planted by my Elders.
When
Pow-Wow Season comes around, I always sense the beat of distant drums,
and in my mind, I smell the "Indian Hot Dogs" -- smoked sausages wrapped
in Fry Bread Dough, then deep fat fried until they are golden brown.
When
cherry season comes, my mind takes the journey North to the Lake Cabin
and Egg Harbor, in Door County, the "thumb" on Wisconsin's mitten-shape,
where I am sure my Sister's spirit still roams and where we spent our
summer days together.
Then,
as the season turns, I am seated on the Old Dock, with Lake Arbutus
flat and calm as a mirror, with a full Harvest Moon rising. Autumn is
coming to my Homeland, and soon, great flocks of migratory birds, Canada
Geese, Loons, Swans, and Herons will be visiting.
All
three of my Grandmothers are long gone; I have become a
Great-Grandmother myself. The years have sped away like shadows, each
one graced in its own way, all their memories neatly placed, like
shingles on a roof that covers my soul and gives meaning to life, all,
always, gently affirming that life goes on and that I am part of it, and
will still be part of it, forever.
There
is no greater gift nor greater comfort than this knowing that every
ending is a beginning, that every scrap of love we give and all that we
receive, never dies, that the color of our skin doesn't matter --- it's
the color of our heart that separates or unifies us.
There
are Evil Men in this world; they give rise to Evil Thoughts, and their
Evil Thoughts give rise to Evil Acts. There are also cowards, who fear
living as much as they fear dying.
There
are many who have been kept so busy working and worrying and satisfying
basic needs that they have had no time and presence of mind to consider
who they are in any greater scheme of things, nor any greater goal than
having enough money.
I
count myself extremely lucky that my Grandmother formed firm
friendships with my Winnebago Grandmothers, and so, was able to pass on
the gifts of love and insight and belonging that came to me through all
of them.
I have been blessed and intend always to be a blessing in my turn.
Let
us all pause a moment in this beautiful and sacred springtime, smell
the fresh air, feel the miracle of the returning sun, hear the trickle
of water everywhere. Sense the strength and order and permanence of
life, and know that we are part of the Universe and the Universe is part
of us.
Knowing
this is the basis for being secure in who we are and knowing that we
are never alone. We are not isolated, not alienated, and not
strangers. We are not limited by our physical body and its lifespan. We
can make our own choices.
Today
and every day, I seek the solace of Nature, the beauty of Life, and the
mystery of All That Is. I bear Witness to it. I declare our freedom. I
embrace the truth. I humbly accept the role of caretaker, just as my
Winnebago Grandmothers did, when they glanced at each other and decided
to love a little girl who came from a different culture and a different
race.
If
my Grandmother had lived many more years, Agnes and Minnie would have
still been part of my life, but I would have had my own Grandmother
taking care of me and teaching me and they wouldn't have felt the
responsibility of bringing me up and preparing me for life.
Strange
as it is, I was blessed precisely because I was bereaved, and because I
was alone, without siblings close to my own age, and without a
Grandmother to teach and guide me. It was my need that called forth
their kindness and their determination to fill the empty space in my
life.
Somewhere
in time and space, there are three women, no longer burdened by age, no
longer wrinkled, no longer worried about anything. They are no doubt
laughing as I strongly recall each one of them, and send my love like a
gentle tidal wave to embrace them and say, "Thank you!".
Let
everyone reading this today pause a moment and look around in your own
life for those who have mentored and helped and sheltered and cared for
you, alive or dead, near or far. Remember them.
Let
everyone reading this today pause a moment, too, and see the young
people who are everywhere in need, looking for guidance and moral
support and truthful advice in the midst of the storm.
Let
your hearts go out to them. Let your hands be outstretched. Share a
joke or a dream or a wry comment they will remember and smile about
fifty years from now. Let the thoughts you inspire be good thoughts.
Let the lessons you teach be the foundations of a good life.
Someday
the child that you befriend will become the man or woman who looks back
and loves you and realizes the value of all that you shared and all
that you taught them.
Be
blessed and be a blessing to others, so that in all things the energy
of love flows freely, unobstructed by things like money or skin color or
social status or prejudice or politics or religion.
Get beyond all that. Set yourself free.
Be
like Agnes and Minnie, feeling the sadness and seeing the need,
silently nodding, silently accepting. In all the Universe, you are the
one(s) who are placed exactly where you are, to face your own special
challenges and opportunities -- and only you can accept these callings.
Only you can make the difference and make the decision to love.
Granna
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