Hell or High Water Aftermath

Stampede 101 is over.  The million dollar rodeo and Rangeland Chuck Wagon races declared their champions yesterday and it was somehow fitting that Jason Glass from High River won the $100,000.00 prize in the Rangeland Derby.  While the majority of people attended the fairgrounds, or watched the event on T.V., countless others were in High River helping people clean out their homes after the flood.  There is no celebrating yet in that devastated community.

We decided to drive around the city this weekend to survey the flood damaged areas.  Having lived inOLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Redwood Meadows we were of course curious to see the community and that of Bragg Creek where I taught preschool for years.  Shock is the only word to describe the aftermath of the flood.  The Elbow River cut a whole new path for itself through both communities.  My husband drove me around Calgary to point out some of the worst hit areas there.  Again, shocking to see the damage, but so encouraging to see how the City has, in a relatively short amount of time, made repairs and for all intents and purposes it’s “business as usual”.

Perhaps the thing I saw yesterday that impacted me the most was not even flood-related.  It was seeing an empty lot with a chain link fence around it on 84th St. N.W. in Bowness: a big sign reading: “Future multi-family development”.  How hard to see the yard that my husband and I had once lovingly tended, and no trace of the tiny 700 square foot house we had lived in shortly after we were married; our very first home, torn down and an empty lot the only thing left there except a multitude of memories.

Why was I saddened to see it?  We had not lived there in years.  After we moved, our emotional attachment to the house and what once was should be over, right?  I thought about how things never stay the same, time marches on, as it should, and we should either embrace or adapt to the changes created with the passing of time.

I couldn’t help compare what I was seeing there, to what so many, many people will face in the weeks and months ahead as they rebuild, replace and restore what was taken from them in the flood.  Parked there on the street where our little house once stood, I asked my husband if he thought Calgary and Bragg Creek and even High River would ever get over the flood and be the “same” again.  “Yes,” he said, “and no.”  I had tears in my eyes as we drove away from that little empty lot in Bowness.  Truer words were never spoken.

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PennyWare

I received a wonderful surprise in the mail the other day!  My very own personalized “Pennyware” bracelet!

I wrote a blog several months back entitled “No More Pennies from Heaven” about the demise of the Canadian penny and it really struck a chord with one reader.  Penny Allen, aptly named don’t you think? 🙂 emailed me and said she was saddened that the penny would no longer be in circulation and she wanted to thank me personally for writing a blog that had touched her heart in such a profound way.

A budding jeweler, Penny lives in British Columbia and has turned her passion for pennies into a little business where she creates jewelry out of the little coins.  She asked me to list a few years that are particularly meaningful to me in my lifetime, and my birthdate as well and then she fashioned my own unique and most meaningful PennyWare bracelet.

PennyWare

My own personalized PennyWare bracelet.

Along with the bracelet, Penny also sent along a letter that described the coins in great detail:

“The beads are carnelian, which is an alternate birthstone for August, (my birth month).  “Carnelian is an uplifting yet stabilizing stone, and an excellent all round healing stone.  It has high energy and is great for restoring drive and energy.  Carnelian can release stress and trauma and can be worn for confidence, courage and protection from harm’.

Re: your pennies: 1979 (the year I was married), 1984 (birth of my oldest daughter), 1992 (birth of my son), 1995 (birth of my youngest daughter), are all 98% copper, the remainder being zinc and tin.  2001 (the year of my battle with cancer), and 2011 (the year my first grandchild was born), are either steel or nickel with a copper plating of 4.5%.  1984, 1992 and 1995 are 12-sided, which the government issued from 1982 – 1996 to help the visually impaired identify the coins (why they didn’t continue that is beyond me), ” she quips.

“The 1992 coin is a commemorative edition celebrating Canada’s 125th birthday – the date reads 1867 – 1992.  I did not include a penny from your birth year because it would have made the bracelet too long, and I thought the other years were the most important ones to you.”  (She was right!)

“You can shine up pennies several ways, a paste of salt and vinegar works quite well as does one of those jewelry cleaning cloths you get for polishing silver.

Very best wishes for your happiness.”

Penny

Penny is just starting out on this new jewelry-making venture for now, but if you are interested in getting your own PennyWare jewelry, contact Penny at misspenn@shaw.ca for all the information and cost.  She makes earrings and bracelets and necklaces as seen by the photos below:

PennyWare PennyWare 2PennyWare 4

As for me, I want to thank her so much for a “penny” bracelet that I will always cherish!

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Putting “Hell or High Water” Into Perspective

It has been nearly two weeks since the worst flood in Alberta’s history happened.  The good people of High River are slowly but surely returning to their homes.  Many will have to completely rebuild, others are in the “mopping up” process.  The volunteers continue to pour into the hardest hit areas: High River, Canmore, Bragg Creek, Exshaw, Siksika and of course Calgary.  Amazingly, the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth – the Calgary Stampede is scheduled to start on Friday but as expected, some events have had to be moved or cancelled entirely because of the damage to the Saddledome and the Stampede grounds.

I am brought to tears at times by the countless stories of ordinary people who have showed up en masse to help with the cleanup.  Neighbour helping neighbour – total strangersClean Up after the flood showing up unexpectedly with work gloves and rubber boots ready to clean out flooded basements.  Restaurants setting up make-shift food stands so volunteers can get a free burger and a welcome, cool drink of water.  Children collecting bottles and setting up lemonade stands to raise money for flood relief.

In my community, many of the moms have banded together and have packed up toys, clothes, food, blankets, and anything else that may be needed in the flood-ravaged towns.  Local fundraisers have been held; everyone pitching in to help in any way they are able to.  When a girl in my church learned that the High River graduates would be postponing their grad and that most of the girls had lost their grad gowns to the flood, she donated her gown and put the call out to others girls in our church to do likewise.  My daughters had long gowns they eagerly donated to the cause.

These are heartwarming stories.

Reading yet another posting on Facebook in a Moms group I belong to, I am struck by how so many have responded so quickly and so willingly to the needs of those people who have lost so much due to the flooding.  Why is it then that I am troubled?

Is it because we only seem to see this kind of outpouring of care and concern for one another during catastrophic events?  What happens to “goodwill towards men” during the mundane, routine, everyday struggles?  Times when a friendly smile and  a helpful gesture is not global news.  We seldom hear news reports of a neighbour shoveling a walk for a shut-in senior, or a meal delivered to a new Mom because she is overwhelmed and exhausted.  Those random acts of kindness go unnoticed and unapplauded.   When a house is vacuumed for a friend going through chemotherapy treatments, or when a stranger pays for your groceries because you inadvertently left your wallet at home; these are heroic acts on a miniscule scale but are appreciated beyond words.

As Christians we are called to “do good works”.  We are NOT to do good for personal glory or benefit.  We are NOT to do good because it is expected of us, out of duty or obligation or pressure from others.  We “do good” because, “At one time we too were foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived in malice and envy, being hated and hating one another.  But when the kindness and love of God our Savior appeared,  he saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit,  whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that, having been justified by his grace, we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life.  This is a trustworthy saying. And I want you to stress these things, so that those who have trusted in God may be careful to devote themselves to doing what is good. These things are excellent and profitable for everyone.” (Titus 3:3-11)

As Christians, our motivation to “do good” is entirely motivated by our love for the One Who first loved us.  It should not be motivated by crisis, by fame, by need, or by want.  If we work because it will somehow earn our way into heaven, we have also missed the point and we are lost.

It will take months to rebuild after this flood.  After the camera crews have gone, and insurance claims are tallied, the routine and mundane struggles will once again dominate ordinary people’s lives and there will be fewer and fewer volunteers and common-day heroes step up to answer the call.  Will we, as Christians, still be ready and willing to respond to our neighbours in need?  The world needs “everyday” heroes, not just those who respond during “Hell or High Water” times.

 

 

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