Sunday, May 30, 2010

Meditation For Memorial Day

An exquisite essay appeared in the Washington Post for Memorial Day. Please take time to read and meditate upon the words and sentiments below:

I stand under an aged oak, and the rows of simple white headstones extend in their heart-stopping sweep across the Virginia hills of Arlington National Cemetery. Each stone sentinel is dressed and at attention, calling to mind both the life and the death of the soldier who lies beneath. Solid, steady and unyielding, the markers stand in counterpoint to the soft green earth and capricious light that dances across their faces.

One weekend in May, each of these white uniforms is decorated with a small American flag, placed there by a living soldier's hand. These flags are brilliant in the afternoon sun, and it is my privilege to walk among these honored ranks to remember those who died in service to me.

But the men and women who sleep in these rolling hills didn't know it was for me that they fought in the forests of the Ardennes or in the deserts of Iraq and Afghanistan. They didn't know it was for me that they left behind wives, husbands and sweethearts, children and parents, friends. I, too, didn't know until life's experience began to teach me how precious my freedom is. Only by examining my life -- taking stock of all the blessings and opportunities that have been mine because of the freedoms I can count on as an American citizen -- could I begin to understand the purpose of their service and the meaning of their sacrifice.


Here, in the staggering serenity, it can be hard to feel worthy of the price they paid. I stoop to read the headstones -- this one so old the inscription is nearly gone, that one so new the sharply chiseled name and date take my breath away. Who are you, young soldier, and how did you come to be here? How far from home did Basra, Hue, Inchon, Corregidor, Verdun or Bull Run seem when you were in harm's way?

The shadows lengthen, and I am a dot among ranks of white that advance toward the horizon in all directions. Here and there a canopy above a fresh grave briefly interrupts the procession, but still the warriors continue their silent march. These are the generations who fought to preserve the freedoms that our forefathers bequeathed us, and though I do not know their names or faces, they are a part of me.

So on this day of memories, I come to tell them thank you. I come to tell them I honor their service and the heritage they have given me. Most of all, I come to tell them that they are neither alone nor forgotten. I will be here for them, in spirit and in deed, and for their fellow soldiers trying to make a safer world so the children of every mother and father can sleep securely at night.

I turn to leave as a bird alights on a headstone and chants a twilight benediction. I realize that I, too, am like this little bird -- free as well to sing my own song wherever and whenever I choose -- because someone I never knew died to ensure I could. I am grateful for the gift.

The writer's parents, Col. Lewis F. Townsend Jr. and Mary Carr Townsend, are buried at Arlington National Cemetery. She wrote this essay while visiting the cemetery grounds on Memorial Day weekend in 2009.
In my view, the above essay should have been front and center in today's Washington Post. Instead, two of the print-edition headlines on May 30, 2010, a Sunday edition widely read throughout the D.C. area, read "Gulf Coast reeling as PB 'top kill' effort fails" and "Big footnote in Sasquatch tale?" Priorities skewed.

Labels: ,


Turn the page ....

Bookmark and Share
posted by Always On Watch @ 5/30/2010 10:25:00 AM  

|

Friday, May 28, 2010

Memorial Day 2010

From Bob McCarty Writes:



[END OF THIS POSTING]

Labels: , ,


Turn the page ....

Bookmark and Share
posted by Always On Watch @ 5/28/2010 04:00:00 AM  

|

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

This Week's Dose Of Outrage

Due to out-of-town company, hauling Mr. AOW to post-stroke neuro physical therapy, and work obligations, I've been on the web very little for over a week or even had time to read the daily newspaper. But I simply must make mention of the following from the Washington Post on May 24, 2010, pointing out that BHO will not be at Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day this year to place a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier:

...On Monday, Obama will make remarks at the Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery, south of Chicago - missing the usual tradition of presidents speaking at Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day....
I'm thoroughly disgusted with BHO as commander-in-chief in the above willful act of his disrepecting our military, especially as my young cousin will shortly be shipping out, to put his life on the line.

BHO reaches out to the Islamic world, but refuses to attend Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day? What kind of American President is THAT? Especially when we are at war!

I've never said the following before about any President of the United States, but I will say it now: I will not call the present occupant of the Oval Office my President.

I don't usually cite Michael Savage, but I will this time:




Labels: , , , , , ,


Turn the page ....

Bookmark and Share
posted by Always On Watch @ 5/26/2010 04:49:00 PM  

|