ENGAGE - ENERGIZE - EMPOWER

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

NOLA OCHS - life at full throttle



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Between TRYING to get my contacts from the Positive Aging Conference in some sort of sane order before heading back down to D.C. this weekend, printing & cutting out masks for a local elementary school creativity activity that's open to the entire school, getting ready to dive into my Cupcake Lady duties on Saturday then take off FROM THE FARM MARKET for the train to 30th Street to catch the train to Union Station, making sure everything is ready to pack, debating whether to get a BIGGER student-style backpack ~AND~ wanting to get four sets of my ValuesVisionDreams activity cards d-o-n-e by Thursday at the latest, decided it was wise to cancel a coffee & catch-up scheduled tonight with a friend I haven't seen in over a month.

So glad I did.

Among the original set of fifteen cards, three especially stand out:
Albert Lexie - turns out he's the half brother of a friend of mine!
Alex Scott - everything about Alex makes me turn to a puddle of inspired goopy love.
Nola Ochs - well, Nola is going to take more than a bullet point.


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Nola, world's oldest MASTER's degree recipient!



I am using my favorite billboards for a special project. Today, I checked online to find out when Nola had passed. Much to my surprise, there was not mention of her death. But there was a link to "Nola Ochs - obit" inviting friends & loved ones to write an obituary. Turns out that she died TODAY, at 104 years old. 

How she would have laughed over the description on the wikiobits site - "Nola Ochs was an Academic who was best known for something."

Putting it mildly.

I discovered Nola because she was featured on a Values.com billboard, exemplifying LIVE LIFE.  And did she ever.


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Maybe Nola is super dear to my heart because she was born just eighteen months after my own dear Mama - on November 22, 1911.  She always loved learning & while she didn't graduate from college,she earned her teaching certificate & taught in county schools for four years, until marrying Vernon Ochs.

I am sure that Nola considered herself the quintessential Midwest success story,
living a rich, full life as a Kansas farmer's wife, raising four sons.  But always at the back of her mind was a yeaning to learn more about what was out there. 

When Vernon died in 1972, Nola - in what I now know to be the creatively rich 60s - decided to do something that would get her off of the farm. 

In 1978, a kid of 67, she started by taking a tennis class at Dodge City Community College.  She loved brushing shoulders with her younger classmates - many old enough to be her grandchildren, even great-grands - and the classes filled her up, socially emotionally intellectually.  Her sense of humor & easy charm won her friends of all ages, professors students staff.

"The students on the campus accepted me. I enjoyed myself so much, that fall I enrolled in an agribusiness marketing class,”
Nola said.

"Really, I had no thought of ever graduating. For 10 years, I just took classes that were of interest to me, something that I would enjoy doing; mostly history and composition. And then one of the professors came to me and told me if I would take college algebra, I would have enough credit hours to graduate."


And she did!  At 77, in 1988, Nola Ochs received her associate degree from the same school she took that first tennis class.


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Nola was up for another goal.   “I still wanted to go to school. It was fun to go to classes. And if I had an assignment to do in the evening, that occupied my time in a pleasant way, you know.” 

Dodge City Community College only offered associate degrees, but Fort Hays State University in Hays, Kansas...

When she applied to FHSU, she mentioned having attended back when it was called The Kansas State College.  Her advisor dug through old files & actually came up with an index card indicating her student status - in 1930!  She shot her an e-mail - - "Nola, how old are you?"

To begin with, Nola limited herself to long distance courses, but finally moved the 100 miles from farm to campus.  Taking her degree in history, Nola was a living reference point for students & professors, winning their admiration & deep affection.

Nola Ochs graduated with a 3.7 GPA - she was 95. She graduated along side her granddaughter, Alexandria, age 21.  Straight out of college, she was snapped up by the Princess Cruise Lines, who hired her as  guest lecturer on a nine-day Caribbean cruise. 

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Nola hadn't begun to hit stride.  She took time to help the family bring in the wheat crop, then started back at school in Fall 2007.  In May 2010, she became the oldest person to receive a Master's degree.  As she celebrated her 100th birthday, Nola continued pursuing master classes, had a job as a graduate teaching assistant & was deep into writing a book.

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Nola, with Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius



Nola was an inspiration to the at-risk high school kids I taught, she will be an inspiration to all the ages who use my ValuesVisionDreams cards, she will always be an inspiration - and remarkable role model - to me & to all who hear her story.

An 07/11/06 press FHSU press release quoted Nola as saying, “I've led a long, interesting life. We went through the dust storms.  We had some difficult times in our marriage, financially. But it's been the Lord's will that I've lived this long life, and I thank Him kindly for it.”


"Nola Ochs was an Academic who was best known for something."  What a hoot!  She's forever known around the globe for her full-throttle life, for living every moment, for embodying for her family, friends, fellow students, professors, staff - the world! - how to LIVE LIFE.



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Monday, September 19, 2016

"WE gave each other all that we had to offer."


My thanks to the Facebook friend who used this line, describing the tight & tender relationship she had for 32 years with her appreciated beloved cherished mother-in-law.

"WE gave each other all that we had to offer."  That sentence echoes throughout my soul.

It complements so completely an aha that hit the other day, reading Glennon Doyle Melton's description of her experience at the end of a crazed AIDS bike ride back in her younger years.  Was surprised at the waves of homecoming that swept over me reading, "And it didn't matter anymore if we were gay or straight or young or old or healthy or dying.  We'd been through something real. It had hurt like hell, but we'd finished.  Together."

It seemed slightly outrageous, that reading those lines brought SUCH a strong sense of my family, the family that was integral to my young adult-now years ~ Mom, Peter, Mike, Mim. 

How was it possible, given the MASSIVE differences between them et moi?  Given the ripped apart spirits, the disconnects, the UNness of it all?  HOW was it possible those words brought the of us, together, so vividly to mind?  That haunted my thoughts for the past two days.

Patsy nailed it - "WE gave each other all that we had to offer."  At 64, can see that we all gave what we had to offer to Mom, to the greater family.  We gave 100% of what available.  We all did our individual best at the given time, given circumstances, given sense of being.

"WE gave each other all that we had to offer."  Intriguing, how shout-outs & insights from the Divine typically come from unexpected sources.   Am feeling blessed & at peace & loving my dear family, especially the ones I was least like, yet knew best - Mom, Peter, Mike, Mim.  


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Friday, September 16, 2016

Golden friendships

Huffington Post's Senior Editor has a dandy posting on the five types of friends "worth holding onto for dear life."  Shelley Emling brings up some points I recently discussed with my prosperity coach, the great Jane Kerschner.

It's possible Jane feels I set myself up for disappointment by setting too high a bar for friendship due to my belief that the gold standard of a great friendship is how well we help each other become our version possible, which admittedly varies from day to day.

One quality Shelley highlights is being up for anything.  The ones who will go to see A Chorus Line, on Broadway, on a work night - and you live in Philadephia.  The housemate who gets out of bed at midnight so you can a) rave or b) rant about your a) fabulous or b) atrocious date.  Who sends plane tickets so you can fly 2/3 of the way across country for a weekend visit.  Who doesn't laugh at your plan to drive down to Cape Kennedy to watch a Saturn rocket take off for the moon  then turn around & come straight back. 

Another quality - those folks who make time for you, even when they're busy.  Or  were fast asleep when you called up about that a) fabulous or b) atrocious date.  Who don't slam down the phone when you call them at 3:35 a.m. asking to borrow their van because your Mom is headed for the ER after a fall & you meant to get gas first thing in the morning & are not sure there's enough in the tank to get to Holy Redeemer - who hand over the keys without question, just a big hug.  The ones who show up at your art show opening or come see your stand-up routine or applaud you in The Gondoliers, even though the shows might be hours away.  Who - out of the 40 people invited - was among the perfect six who showed up at Shanachie to celebrate my 60th birthday.

Friends who are genuinely happy for me when something good happens.  Actually, I can't imagine being anything but, even for a pleasant acquaintance, whether it is a windfall, a great job opportunity, finding true love or losing weight.  Can't imagine even a smidgen of bitterness if a friend gets a book contract before I do, if she slims down to a size 12 while I still at LargeXX, who has grounded kids & wonderful in-laws.  John & I have friends who've been dear to my heart since my college days, who are blessed with a terrific marriage & strong partnership, whose kids are delightful, interesting, accomplished in their own ways, who enjoy & nurture a 4-generation family, who are pretty outstanding in their professions & treasured in their friendships.  Just writing that, thinking about them & all they have done, all they have touched - how can it not bring a smile to my face!

Interesting thing about the fourth quality, friends who are upbeat ~ over two years, 2006-2008,  friends who seemed to draw out my own negativity, people with whom I was a Debbie Downer, jnaturally dropped out of my life. We just stopped connecting.  The friends who are in my life right now are, whatever their age & through no conscious design on my part, ones who help showcase my best side, the best side of others, of life.

I suspect that Jane & I might disagree about the last quality noted in Shelley's posting - honesty.  I got the impression that Jane thought I set that bar a trifle high, so it was reassuring to see it included.  Shelley acknowledges that the loyal & true & HONEST friend may be the hardest to find make keep.  My most treasured friend, who lives a great distance from us, called up after getting a letter from me with some casual reference to the state of the house.  She talked to me about the importance of getting a grip on my wretched house cleaning habits, offering suggestions on ways to get my act together.  I could have gotten in a huff - she has a housecleaner for her LARGE beautiful abodee, but I remember all the years she kept her far far tinier homes clean, that she has help because she & her husband are kept mega busy doing work that serves their community.  The fact is that as soon as we said out goodbyes, I burst into tears of joy & overwhelming gratitude.  No one had ever cared enough about my welfare to be reach out with such words of tough love support.  Even now, years later, I remember the whooooosh! of amazed joy that someone CARED enough to be honest & open, knowing it might not go well.  Having the courage & caring to honest - - to me, the greatest hallmark of friendship.  As Shelley put it, "If you find someone who will tell you the truth, in an honest attempt to help, never let them go."

And, I would add, let them know.  Write them a letter.  Yes, a letter - writing paper, ink, envelopes, stamp.  Your hand writing.  Include a photo of the two of you or a recent snapshot or your kids grandkids furbabies.  Let them know what's happening in your life.  Don't make getting a reply a touch stone for whether they care.  My dearest friends write three times a year - on my birthday, on John's, at Christmas. Tucked into cards are two hand-written letters from from him & from her.  If we got a letter in response to one I sent at any other time of year, it would be cause for concern! 

My friendship experience is different from a lot of folks I know.  My friendship circle started growing relatively late in life - in my upper 30s.  For whatever wonderful reason, friendships rooted back in my childhood years started resurfacing in my 50s.  My work with people interested in as expansively as possible, my Saturday mornings as The Cupcake Lady at the local farm market, my afternoons hanging with toddlers - tweens so their parents can do what they gotta do - my circle includes all ages!

Finding myself thinking about the family of an older friend & client.  I think about how her children made the conscious effort to bring the five qualities of friendship that Shelley spotlights into their 90+ year old mother's life.  They've taken care to ensure she has people with her who are up for anything, who are happy to make time for her (even when they're busy), who are happy for her when something wonderful happens,  who are upbeat & who are honest. 

Interesting, coming across this article today.  Just yesterday, for the first time in many months, maybe in a year, this dear client asked, "How's Macy doing?"  My client has serious memory challenges.  She's always up for the next moment of joy, but has no space in those moments for things like time & days of the week & facts like Macy passed several years ago.  When I explained that Macy, her best of all BFFs, was gone, she wasn't sad - instead, we talked about the qualities for friendship the two of them had shared, that still light up Anne's life with priceless memories. 

Shelley talked about heading off for a girls' only weekend with longtime friends, "the kind of girlfriends that see you through all of life’s milestones."  I am not a girls' weekend type, but - after reading her posting, after Anne's question about Macy - am looking forward to a long leisurely Sunday of writing long-over due notes, of making a few phone calls to see how Janina's doing, to check up on Debra, to ask Candy to search through her things for photos of each of her grandchildren for me to have on the fridge. 

Wrapping this up, getting ready to head out with my bestest buddy of all - JOHN - am hoping I can be as good a friend to my golden circle as they are to me.


Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Touching the stars


One of my greatest blessings has been realizing long-held dreams & having their realization feel every bit - often more - as sweet as I'd imagined.  My oldest brother calls me on a regular basis, just to shoot the breeze.  (I'd call him, but he rarely answers his phone & doesn't have voice mail!)  John & I have the delight of a wonderful circle of dear friends & a community of pleasant acquaintances.  I am seeing progress in becoming more productive, in DOing the things that fill my heart, in BEing the person who was been pinned down for eons under layers of infused inertia. 

When Peter called the other day - did I know which fairy tale included "Mirror, mirror on the wall"? - smiled as much as when John would come through the front door, exclaiming, "You have a letter from Mim!" 

Connection - it feels as good as I imagined.

Sure, I know that Peter's on the other line because Mim is no longer with us.  In their latter years, the two of them were super tight, talking to each other practically every day.  It's impossible for me to imagine the blessing that was for each of them, confined by health issues to their rooms.  Regular phone contact with a sib must have been a godsend.
 
Mim & I did right well, as long as we limited ourselves to letters notes cards.  Even just speaking on the phone, I'd invariably tick her off, so we stayed clear of Ma Bell.  I'm glad to have her wonderful cards & notes.  Over the last few years of her life, rarely an anniversary or birthday went by without one of her handcrafted cards, usually featuring cats or squirrels.  Touching that star went beyond my heart's expectation. 

Peter often calls with questions about photos he's spotted in mailings sent by our local alumni association, so I suggested a ramble out this way to see the changes to the campus, which he hasn't stepped foot on in over a decade.  John & I look forward to getting him out here next month, while the signs are still up celebrating our little boro's centenary!

Touching the star of connection with Peter is soul warming.  It can't touch what he had with Mim, with whom he had so much shared life experiences, but I think it matters to him.

As soul-satisfying as touching those long-for stars have been, getting a better sense of my own abilities, learning to move past simply imagining goals to actually achieving them, lowering my two feet onto terra firma & stepping forward with intent - that's been glorious.  

I've heard talk about folks who had a sense of let down after realizing core dreams  Not me!  

For all of my life, it seemed that how I felt, what I expected, how I lived, was off kilter.  Now, am aware of a greater sense of balance, of being more connected to my core.  

The post office relationship with Mim felt every bit as special as I'd imagined - we were connected in a way to worked for both of us.  I look at strong sister relationships - and I have many friends blessed with them - and feel not a single pang of, "But THAT's what I wanted."  I wanted what was possible, which is what I got. 

It will feel great, driving Peter around college & high school campuses.  He's looking forward to walking into the Brickman Center, to seeing the Doering Science Center.  Those will be unforgettable moments for all of us, John included. 

One of the things I most cherish about being older is knowing that what I always claimed I wanted was totally spot on.  It doesn't take a lot to make me feel ridiculously happy.  Connection.  Affection isn't a requirement; basic respect - on all sides - is. 

Am surprisingly unsentimental for such someone who seems such a sentimentalist.  I know that if Whitney moves back to the area, my relationship with Peter could change in a heart beat.  Right now, I am the only game in town.  I am not being played - we are being playful. 

I am blessed beyond imagining, touching stars that seemed for so long so far beyond my reach - to have a relationship with my sister, with my oldest brother & with myself.  Divine! 

Monday, September 12, 2016

A blessing on Be Well






Image result for be well cafeYesterday, John & I dropped by Be Well Bakery & Café, our second visit of the day.  In the morning, the joint was jumping, with the usual Sunday morning crowd looking for our Garden Bagel with slices of avocado, homemade granola parfait, maybe a breakfast dessert of zucchini cake, fueled with a coffee beverage, maybe the Lady Violet or Go Green smoothie.  In the late afternoon, there was an unexpected hush over the beautiful deep maroon room - we were the only customers, as the staff quietly & efficiently stripped out the beloved space's accoutrements, transferring them to the NEW space, a short hop over the next-door dry cleaners. 

There was Tony, counting out the drawer, the wonderful young guys helping us with our order - one last time to order the Super Salad (with gouda), two brownie sandwiches (raspberry filling for me, salted caramel for John) & what turned out to be a very generous slice of Gwyneth's wondrous Coconut Cream Cake. 

We gathered up our order, took a final look around, went out the door.  For the last time.

As we headed off to bed last night, John & I talked about the space that was formerly known as Be Well, envisioning it as a shushed place of amazed energies.  To John, it was his favorite place to head for breakfast - even more than Fred's - to me, it was...

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What was it to me?  The space - first as Santiago's, when Alex was still there, then later as Be Well - was where I came into my own.  In my 50s & 60s.  It was where I could connect with others, something I'd longed to do all my life but had felt like I fumbled.  In that space, it was easy natural magical.  No effort, just flow. 

It was where I connected with Rebecca & through her with Delaware Valley High School, got a job subbing then as a full-time science (seriously?) teacher, which I loved, then taught one year of social studies, the field in which I am actually credentialed.  Whichever the subject, I had the blessing of teaching as creatively as I pleased, had the joy of knowing that some days, on my best days & theirs, I actually got through to some of the tough-as-nails kids who seemed to pride themselves on being beyond our reach, beyond repair.  For three summers, I got to teach summer school English & Science to classes that were 1/4 remedial, with the others there from other schools to log in extra credits so they could move AHEAD of their classmates when the new school year started.   We did enrichment work, reviewing the lives of great scientists, opening their eyes to the contributions of great minds in the ancient Middle East, Asia, India.  We did a unit on satire, beginning with Thomas Swift's A Modest Proposal - which I did NOT first explain was a spoof), moving onto Franklin's Rules By Which A Great Empire May Be Reduced To A Small One, to Twain's Man's The Only Animal Who Blushes ... Or Needs To, then ending with watching Stephen Colbert's 2006 White House Correspondents Dinner, which he'd given earlier that year.  My last year, teaching social studies, was pure joy & provided miraculous closure for being booted from teaching at Bryn Athyn Elementary School many years before, a heart tear I never expected to truly heal.  I got to that wondrous point in my life because of Alex' café being a welcoming sanctuary after Mom died.

It was my office, a place I could camp out for hours, reading & writing.  In the impossible days after 9/16/01 when - within three weeks - I lost my best gad-about buddy, my surviving parent, my confidante & always-there right hand PLUS the rest of my birth family, my job, even my sense of national security, Santiago's was there to keep me grounded.

And then, 4 1/2 years ago, Be Well Bakery & Café opened, the dream of two audacious dreamers & a partner who believed in them.  Look at it now, moving into a space double the original.  Did I see this coming when they opened?  As if it had already happened.  In those early days, getting addicted to Maddie's Cheese Rolls, being pampered by the staff, marveling at Adriann & Ryan's seemingly endless energy flow, I'd look at the partially filled display case & think to myself, "Some day, every space in here will be maxed out."  I'd look around the room & think, "Some day, the line will be 10-deep waiting to place orders."


It happened, just as I'd foreseen.  And so much more.  It was where I - to my shock - mounted a summer-long photography show of shots of kids with cupcakes & other shots from Bryn Athyn Bounty Farm Market, which started at much the same time.  It's where John & I celebrated our 25th wedding anniversary by presenting a joint art show.  It's where I became friends with first Brett, then Heather & the girls, which progressed to fire pits where we became friends with a former student who introduced me to The Greatest Salesman in the World, which is changing my life in ways I know will be awesome, just as I knew the success that would come to Be Well.  It's not a matter of making it happen, but of letting what already is make itself seen.

The space that housed Santiago's & Be Well - that is sacred space to me.  Hallowed things happened there that I could never have envisioned.  I became a more fully realized version of who I'd been, thanks to the safety & support, the nurturing friendships & the loving relationships that were forged & flourished. 

May there be a forever blessing on that sacred space, hallowed by all who sat sipped supped there, who waited outside for the door to open before taking his place by the window, who gathered there to gab away a good part of the morning, who worked quietly on computers or read the morning's newspaper, who greeted friends & pleasant acquaintances as they walked to the counter, who felt at home & pampered, well served & well fed.

Surely, the Lord was in that place. And it is forever in my heart.


Now - onward & upward!


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