The
older I get, the
more I enjoy
Saturday mornings.
Perhaps it's the
quiet solitude that
comes with being the
first to rise, or
maybe it's the
unbounded joy of not
having to be at
work. Either way,
the first few hours
of a Saturday
morning are most
enjoyable.
A few weeks ago, I
was shuffling toward
the garage with a
steaming cup of
coffee in one hand
and the morning
paper in the other.
What began as a
typical Saturday
morning turned into
one of those lessons
that life seems to
hand you from time
to time. Let me tell
you about it:
I turned the dial up
into the phone
portion of the band
on my ham radio in
order to listen to a
Saturday morning
swap net. Along the
way, I came across
an older sounding
chap, with a
tremendous signal
and a golden voice.
You know the kind;
he sounded like he
should be in the
broadcasting
business. He was
telling whom-ever he
was talking with
something about "a
thousand marbles." I
was intrigued and
stopped to listen to
what he had to say
"Well, Tom, it sure
sounds like you're
busy with your job.
I'm sure they pay
you well but it's a
shame you have to be
away from home and
your family so much.
Hard to believe a
young fellow should
have to work sixty
or seventy hours a
week to make ends
meet. It's too bad
you missed your
daughter's "dance
recital" he
continued. "Let me
tell you something
that has helped me
keep my own
priorities." And
that's when he began
to explain his
theory of a
"thousand marbles."
"You see, I sat down
one day and did a
little arithmetic.
The average person
lives about
seventy-five years.
I know, some live
more and some live
less, but on
average, folks live
about seventy-five
years.
"Now then, I
multiplied 75 times
52 and I came up
with 3900, which is
the number of
Saturdays that the
average person has
in their entire
lifetime. Now, stick
with me, Tom, I'm
getting to the
important part.
It took me until I
was fifty-five years
old to think about
all this in any
detail", he went on,
"and by that time I
had lived through
over twenty-eight
hundred Saturdays."
"I got to thinking
that if I lived to
be seventy-five, I
only had about a
thousand of them
left to enjoy. So I
went to a toy store
and bought every
single marble they
had. I ended up
having to visit
three toy stores to
round up 1000
marbles. I took them
home and put them
inside a large,
clear plastic
container right here
in the shack next to
my gear."
"Every Saturday
since then, I have
taken one marble out
and thrown it away.
I found that by
watching the marbles
diminish, I focused
more on the really
important things in
life.
There is nothing
like watching your
time here on this
earth run out to
help get your
priorities
straight."
"Now let me tell you
one last thing
before I sign-off
with you and take my
lovely wife out for
breakfast. This
morning, I took the
very last marble out
of the container. I
figure that if I
make it until next
Saturday then I have
been given a little
extra time. And the
one thing we can all
use is a little more
time."
"It was nice to meet
you Tom, I hope you
spend more time with
your family, and I
hope to meet you
again here on the
band. This is a 75
Year old Man, K9NZQ,
clear and going QRT,
good morning!"
You could have heard
a pin drop on the
band when this
fellow signed off. I
guess he gave us all
a lot to think
about. I had planned
to work on the
antenna that
morning, and then I
was going to meet up
with a few hams to
work on the next
club newsletter.
Instead, I went
upstairs and woke my
wife up with a kiss.
"C'mon honey, I'm
taking you and the
kids to breakfast."
"What brought this
on?" she asked with
a smile. "Oh,
nothing special,
it's just been a
long time since we
spent a Saturday
together with the
kids. And hey, can
we stop at a toy
store while we're
out? I need to buy
some marbles.
A friend sent this
to me, so I to you,
my friend.
And so, as one smart
bear once said..."If
you live to be a
hundred, I want to
live to be a hundred
minus one day, so I
never have to live
without you."
- Winnie the Pooh.
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