Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Birthdays

My younger daughter turned 13 today. Besides officially having two teenaged daughters, I was reminded of how quickly time passes. Just last week, I was pregnant and two days ago she was taking her first steps. How did she get to be 13 so quickly? Beyond that, when did she get so beautiful and wise? She is a delight to be around, with the exception of the day before her birthday. Then she is an annoying person who reminds us that she will no longer do whatever she is doing when she is this age. Maybe though, she is on to something that the rest of us need to learn.

Many of us regret the number the declares our age. It is one year closer to the inevitable end. It is one more year that we have allowed to slip by. It is one more year gone forever. We have all sorts of ideas what an age means. Forty is the beginning of middle age. Fifty is half a century! Sixty is a time to think of retirement. To what can a person look forward? But the truth is we never know when the inevitable end will occur. We don't know what the next few hours hold, how can we know what the next few decades will bring. Nothing is certain so why do we have expectations about the future. Instead, we should be celebrating the here and now.

This is what my daughter does every year on the eve of her birthday. Uncertain of what the future might bring, she rejoices in the day. She celebrates the passing of another year by acknowledging that she will no longer be the age she is. By announcing that it is the last time she will be woken up or eat dinner or brush her teeth when she is twelve, she embraces where she is. For the a time, there is no inevitable end, no expectations, no ideas of what tomorrow might be. For her, there is the here and now and it is wonderful.

So tonight as I sing her Happy Birthday, joining my voice with those of my family, I will rejoice in the here and now and revel in celebrating a special young lady.

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Clean (?) Coal

If you have watched any amount of tv, eventually you will run a cross a commercial touting the benefits of clean coal. It is hailed as the fuel of the future and an environmentally conscious source of energy. But history paints a different picture of coal and I think it is time to wake up and smell the coal dust.

If you have ever read Dickens, the image of a grimy dirty London looms large in his stories. For decades, coal was the power for expanding industrialized cities across the world. Factories used it to power their machines, homes used it for cooking fuel and to keep warm and cities were covered with the soot from the exhaust. To this day, soot marks stain ancient buildings in London and Edinburgh, reminders of the use of coal in these cities' growth. To this day, in northeastern Pennsylvania, culm dumps, deposits of the waste created when mining coal, still dot the landscape. At least they rarely catch on fire anymore.

But this all seems like ancient history. Industry runs on cleaner burning fuels now and not many people heat their homes with coal. So why isn't it clean coal now? First, coal hasn't changed the way it burns. We don't burn as much of it as we did in the 1800's so the amount of pollution it creates is lessened. This picture from a steel plant in China tells another story. China.Steel.Benxi.jpg

The US might have stopped using as much coal to run our companies but China hasn't. Their coal use is impacting our environment.

Even though, I'm still talking ancient history and faraway lands for some people, so let me bring this closer home. In October of 2000, 250 million gallons of coal sludge broke out of a 72-acre, 2.2 billion gallon waste lagoon and into Coldwater Creek in Kentucky. Just a 2.2 billion gallon waste lagoon boggles my mind but the damage it did to the land and creek as it flooded down was immeasurable. Officials say all fish in the Coldwater Creek, neighboring Wolf Creek and Big Sandy River were killed. It left deposits up to six feet thick, suffocating frogs, salamanders and other aquatic wildlife. Eventually, the corporation responsible for the mine paid for the damages. This is just one of many hundreds of examples of coal contaminating water, polluting wells, and probably causing cancer.

This is just one way that the coal industry is contaminating our country. Another has to do with the way coal companies are run. For instance, Massey Coal was the company that had created the 2.2 billion gallon waste lagoon. They are also the company that is in charge of the Upper Big Branch Mine in West Virginia, the site of an explosion that killed 29 miners last week. On NPR this morning, they spoke with people from the area. Many applauded Massey. But keep in mind that Massey is the biggest employer in the area, affecting not just mining jobs but the retail and service industries in the region. Those who might have decried Massey were accused of stirring up trouble because Massey is a non-union company and that doesn't sit well with unionized miners. The news reports a different picture though of violation after violation in the mine. What is the truth? This is where we again can wonder how clean coal is. People are reluctant to point fingers because they know on which side their bread is buttered. Violations occur and money is paid. Is it all being reported correctly? The public, and the miners, will never know.

I'm sure knowing my ancestry that there are coal miners in my family. And I realize that as long as there is a demand for coal, men will go down in the mines and extract it from the bowls of the earth. I also know that coal is not the clean solution that it is made out to be. It has a history of polluting our environment and being run by hard-driving companies that will make a profit. Perhaps the next time a clean coal commercial comes on the tv, we should change the channel and not get sold on the bill of goods.


Sunday, April 11, 2010

What We Could Learn from the Amish

I read an article in Time Magazine last week about how certain Amish businessmen are succeeding because of their work ethic and their priorities. The gist of the article is that they work hard, they purchase what they need and no more, they are willing to do the hard labor and they put family first. I have read similar articles in the past about the Amish and their ability to ride out the financial storms. And I have decided that we can learn a lot from the Amish.

First, we can learn something about our priorities. Their sense of community and family is very strong. They realize that the connection they have with others is the lifeline they can depend on when the going gets tough. Those on the outside chuckle at the quaintness of a barn raising or a quilting bee. The Amish realize that we all succeed or sink together. Beyond that though was the young Amish man interviewed for the Time article. He has found a way to work from home because he wants to be there to help his wife and spend time with his children. Those aren't the empty words most work-from-home people utter. They were heartfelt words that put his family first.

Second, we can learn more appropriate ways of living. I'm sure that if interviewed, very few Amish would say their lives were empty, even though they have no electricity, no cars and no cell phones. I would suggest that is because of their "lack" that their lives are so full. They have more time to give to their families and to get their work done. By not living with so many "time-saving" devices, they have more time. Hence, they are able to slow down and enjoy their lives, making them rich and full. They manage their time so well, they actually have a day of rest. How many people can say that?!

Finally, their lives don't revolve around money. Their lives are centered on God and, because of this, it is a good bet that they don't have the same kind of stress in their lives that we do. The quality of their lives isn't in how much money they earn. It is in how well they honor the teachings in the Bible. I am not suggesting that we all pitch over all we have and start to blindly follow the teachings of Jesus. I am suggesting that when we focus on the things that really matter, we realize we are wealthier than we ever imagined.

So, in this time of stress, financial and otherwise, I would like to call people's attention to the Amish. By actually living the life that many of us dream of, they have found an ability to weather storms that throw the rest of us for a loop. By working hard and helping each other, they have more time to enjoy the richness of their life. By focusing on the true riches of the world, they have a wealth of which many of us only dream. Maybe it is time for us to slow down and take a lesson from the Amish.