11-27-2005
Bookmarks and headstones remind us where in the story we
have left off. We travel through Life
going in and out of events, either as participants or as spectators. We accumulate experiences either good or bad,
hopefully growing and learning from each.
We toss out judgments and opinions as we go, that others
might see the path we are on, and we snap photographs as reminders of where we
have been, and who had joined our journey, if only for that moment.
It is a simple process to move a bookmark. Anyone wishing to backtrack a little, perhaps
to spark some reminder as to what was taking place can take a peak before
picking up and moving forward.
Headstones, however, can only direct us back to photographs. They can lead us back to memories of moments
shared, but there is no forward movement along the same path.
It is an entirely new adventure we take after having left
someone behind. Their headstone blends
into our judgments and it affects our opinions.
We can still move forward but never as the same person we were. There is now a jog sending us off in a
slightly different direction. We may not
realize it at the time, but our course has changed. All we know is that we now travel with
heavier baggage. It is a weight we
cannot put down. A weight that has
become a bookmark of its own, wedged deep into our life.
The pages of our life in Michigan are gray. I write this in a time when the city is in
decline, the economy is getting worse, and yet we stay. I’m not sure what it is about Michigan that
keeps us here. It is easy to see the
reasons for leaving, but we are Michiganders at heart. We were born here and have grown to accept
that our politicians are crooked, our roads will crumble if looked at, and that
the auto industry will never shake free of the union’s choke hold, dragging it
down to an inevitable death.
Looking beyond the failing economy is not for the squeamish,
for it is filled with the carcasses of deer strapped across bumpers, and poking
out of the bed of cheap pickups. For
despite the Visitor’s Bureau propaganda, the evolution of Michigan inhabitants
has not evolved beyond the whiskey filled, chilly eating deer hunters, who
persist in shooting unarmed vegetarians, strapping the lifeless bodies across
the hoods of their Toyotas, and proclaiming, “I only kill what I eat.”
At my age I have learned what it is to loose a best
friend. I have grown to understand that
life continues on despite all feelings to the contrary. But how do I deal with a dying state? Michigan is falling faster than the New Years
Eve Ball, and the handwriting tells me that local politicians aren’t about to
pull her out of this nosedive.
I have written this article as a bookmark, placing it at a
point where I hope someone with wisdom and insight might see it and know what
to do.
3/22/2026
Obviously I failed.