November 25, 2014 - Rotary Club of Charlotte
Transcription
November 25, 2014 - Rotary Club of Charlotte
REPORTER November 25, 2014 Sharing Grateful Thoughts Our annual Charlotte Rotary Thanksgiving Program featuring three of our members sharing thoughts of gratitude from their own lives was introduced by Program Chairman Mike Hawley but not before Mac McCarley started off his Health, Happiness and History report by reminding us all how grateful we are this Thanksgiving for Sandy Osborne’s amazing recuperation from surgery on both knees. That welcome announcement was met with resounding applause and cheers! With a quick bio on each of our three speakers, Mike set the stage for their remarks by reminding us of the importance of the Thanksgiving holiday and how beautifully it fits with our Rotary motto and traditions. LISA MASK, a highly accredited personal and family counseling expert with twenty-seven years’ experience specializing in grief and bereavement counseling, brought her own “show-and-tell” Thanksgiving Tree. Perched in front of her on our head table, it had its own personality and we were immediately intrigued. Its creativity caught our attention as she related stories of its decades-long tradition in her family. In describing the way it works, Lisa said, “Each person writes people, places and/or things for whom/which they are grateful on a paper leaf and attaches them onto the branches of the tree. During Thanksgiving Day we read them aloud and often laugh, go “AHHHH,” or seek explanations.” She then listed many of her favorites --- some going back as far as 15 years. The sometimes poignant/sometimes funny notes-on-paper-leaves had several of us connecting with many of its messages. We could identify with “Braces - because I won’t be called ‘snaggletooth’ anymore” or her grandmother’s “indoor plumbing” (she was raised on a farm in Charlotte before indoor plumbing was in vogue). We loved the message, “Dog - because it’s ‘God’ spelled backwards.” ~ Each message Lisa quoted struck a chord with us. From “Love - when the power of love overcomes the love of power there will be peace on earth” (quoted from Jimi Hendrix) to Lisa’s son, Dylan’s pre-school Mother’s Day proclamation, “My Mommy loves SALUD” (sic) … we ‘got it’; we understood. Lisa concluded with a George Bernard Shaw quote from her family’s Thanksgiving Tree to leave us all laughing, “Never wrestle with a pig. You both get dirty and the pig likes it.” All-in-all, Lisa’s sparkling personality and refreshing wit combined with her family’s traditional give-and-take sharing made for a spectacular Thanksgiving message. Bets are on that there will be many, many new “Thanksgiving Tree” traditions begun in Charlotte Rotary Club members’ homes this holiday. ROGER SAROW, the much-heralded President and General Manager of WFAE, gave thanks for an interesting and impressive variety of people who have been major influences in his life. He began with a tribute to his 90-year-old mother ~ who continues to live independently in Wisconsin and everyday is found performing some sort of creative task (from knitting to quilting to cooking to sewing) and has proudly outlived four doctors ~ and to his father whom he described as supremely patient with a keen ability to build and renovate, hunt, fish and participate in all things related to the outdoors, and who ultimately taught Roger the importance of using a hammer and hand saw and the taste of fresh trout. In Roger’s words, “I finally ‘get’ the out-of-doors thing.” Roger is grateful to Samuel Morse, the inventor of the telegraph which allowed people all over the world to share ideas and breaking news and he’s grateful for the First Amendment which gives us freedom of speech and freedom of the press. He’s proud to claim his German heritage and his hometown of Evansville, Wisconsin where he worked with Mrs. Blanche Devine, the weekly columnist for the Evansville Review. Her knowledge of history and her adventurous spirit were especially influential on the young Roger Sarow. He paid tribute to the urban renovation of Charlotte, noting the lively atmosphere uptown we now enjoy versus the emptiness of that same area two decades ago. He shared a story about his friend, Ernest Warburton, from the BBC in London, who was visiting Roger in the early 1990s. While attending an event at an uptown hotel, Warburton made the accurate assessment of our inner-city (at the time), “What a lovely, clean city … with no one on the street … it rather reminds me of a regional capital in one of the Communist Bloc Countries.” (That comment prompted loud appreciative laughter from our members.) He thanked the Green Bay Wisconsin Rotary club which provided him a Fellowship to study in Germany and then to travel throughout Europe as a young lad, and he thanked our own club. Perhaps, he said, most importantly he appreciates, is proud of, and loves deeply his wife, Marilyn. Their 34-year marriage allows him to stand side-by-side with her throughout painful and joyous times and her support means so much to him that he finds it hard to talk of it. JULIE HAACK, teasingly referred to in our meeting yesterday as “Diamond Julie,” actually comes by that new nickname legitimately. Proving the adage that the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree, the President and CEO of Donald Haack Diamonds truly inherited the best of what Donald and Jan Haack represent(ed). When she stepped to the microphone to speak of what she is most grateful for at this Thanksgiving time, she told us the story of growing up in Granada in the Caribbean, with its heavy humidity and arid days followed by hard rains which she described as “pummeling.” We learned that her family bathed in the ocean, experienced long periods without electricity, found all sorts of living species in foods (her quote, “I know how to get rid of weevils in a bowl of cereal.”) and since water was scarce, they stored - then boiled - buckets of rain water (which was often contaminated with frogs and small insects, etc.) Severe droughts would leave them without drinking water for long periods of time. She finds herself thankful, however, for what came out of those challenging days --- the Haacks would spend hours and hours talking … in candlelight … about everything under the sun. From those experiences she developed a love for music and reading and the uncanny ability to make positive things out of demanding situations. She learned how to remake something valuable out of broken or worn items; she was taught how to jerry-rig a car and to look at machines or electronics of any sort as “always fixable.” She grew up cherishing visitors and hearing their stories, and constantly learning to adapt. When she spoke of living on an island in the Caribbean she painted the picture of both incredible beauty and unbelievable experiences --- living through two revolutions in two different countries; escaping under great turmoil, seeing innovations born under duress and - finally - gratefully experiencing the family’s return to the United States in 1969. She is so proud to be living in our country where we enjoy so many freedoms and rich bounties. She appreciates being able to practice Christianity without persecution and the right to express political views without repercussion. To Julie, clean water, foods without living “things” in them, all of the comforts of the homes we live in, and the great opportunity that is our American way, are points for which to be grateful. She told us she’s especially grateful for the lessons she learned from her parents, for the love of her husband, David, and their children, parents, families and friends, and for God who has always looked after her. For those of us who knew, respected and loved Donald Haack, we found Julie’s message especially meaningful because she truly IS her father’s daughter. Written by: Marilynn Bowler Head Table: Don Millen, Doug LaBrosse, Tony Zeiss, Mike Hawley, Lisa Mask, Roger Sarow, Julie Haack; Invocation: Hank Donaghy; Visitors & Guests: Colleen Brannan; Health, Happiness & History: Mac McCarley; Song: Angela Broome; AV: Jessica Dupree & Nikki Keith; Photos: Bert Voswinkel ATTENDANCE Visitors & Guests Club Members Total Attendance Percentage 9 141 160 48.6% MEMBERSHIP 11/04/2014 323 07/01/2014 317 Net Increase: +6 New Members: Greg Hatcher, Frank Horan Resignations: Ryan Menzel, Eric Levinson VISITORS ON 11/25/14 Martin Welton, Joy Widener, Bruce Rinehart, Colin Clark, Phoebe Brannan, Gayle Sims, Glenn Paton, Jana Heinrichs, Attila Akat UPCOMING LUNCHEONS (www.charlotterotary.org and click on the events tab) 12/2/14 – District Governor Ken Dresser 12/9/14 – Winston Kelley, NASCAR Hall of Fame 12/16/14 – Holiday Program Photos from the Luncheon Photos from our luncheons and other events can be found on Flickr Click here charlotterotary.org 704.375.6816 841 Baxter Street | Suite 118 | Charlotte, NC 28202-2720 USA © The Rotary Club of Charlotte 2014