Taking time to remember and be thankful
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AVIVA GOELMAN
Like Pearl Harbor and the assassination of President Kennedy, the
horrible tragedy of Sept. 11, 2001 will be an event forever engraved
in our memories. Indeed, the events of Sept. 11 must have brought
back painful memories for many of our nation’s seniors, who lived
through and remember the day Pearl Harbor was bombed and that late
November morning in 1963 when we lost a young and vibrant president.
That Sept. 11 morning was, for me, a day that began like most;
waking and preparing for another day’s work. But on this morning, the
phone rang at 6:30. It was my son who was more than audibly excited.
“Mom!” he yelled. “Are you watching TV? Did you see what just
happened?”
On that bright and cloudless September morning in New York City,
in Washington, D.C., and in a lonely field in Pennsylvania, many
people lost beloved family members and dear friends. For them -- and
for us as a nation -- their lives were changed horribly forever. We
must never forget the many lives that were changed, and we should
shed another tear as we mark the third anniversary of this terrible
event. But we should remember, too, to never give in to fear.
I believe our nation will heal as time passes, and that as each
Sept. 11 arrives, we will not only remember those we lost, but also
use the day to ask ourselves what we can do to make life better for
ourselves and others.
Patrick Moran said it best in his poem: “A nation united we must
be strong, stronger than the weak, smarter than the rest, for we are
the United States, the world’s BEST.”
The Costa Mesa Senior Center will be closed Sept. 6 in celebration
of Labor Day, a national holiday more than a century old, when we
celebrate the labor of all workers and the lives of those workers we
lost so suddenly on the 11th day of September in 2001. We remember
them all.
This is also a time for us to be thankful. I am thankful for many
things that benefit the Costa Mesa Senior Center. We are grateful to
the City of Costa Mesa -- our steadfast partner -- for the addition
of handicap spaces in the Senior Center parking lot. All of our
members truly appreciate the city’s continued commitment to the
senior citizens of our community.
We are so grateful for the Teller family, who operates the Orange
County Marketplace at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Last weekend,
the Tellers once again opened Bob’s Old Fashioned Ice Cream Stand for
a fundraiser for the Costa Mesa Senior Center. Senior Center members
and I spent the weekend selling Bob’s Old Fashioned Ice Cream, and we
were very successful, raising $2,200 for our programs.
As for the Orange County Marketplace, you may have recently read
of a large corporation and its attempt to take over operation of the
Orange County Marketplace from the Teller family. In my opinion, I
cannot imagine a large conglomerate preserving the same small town
spirit of the Orange County Marketplace that the Tellers have been so
successful in establishing and maintaining. The Orange County
Marketplace is the Tellers’ vision, and they built it into the
success it is today, while also benefiting our community’s nonprofit
organizations in so many ways.
Finally, let me share with you some upcoming events at the Costa
Mesa Senior Center.
On Aug. 28, we will be hosting our Step Out For Seniors event.
Participation is open to older adults, their families, friends and
community members of all ages to promote a positive image of aging.
Come join the fun! Enjoy the morning, while you learn more about the
many services and activities senior centers offer to our senior
population and their families.
This promises to be a great day of activities. We will be walking
the Oso Creek Trail in Mission Viejo, enjoying a delicious breakfast,
passing out event T-shirts, playing games and awarding door prizes.
Also, we’ll be treated to some great entertainment. This great day is
just $5 for Senior Center members and $12 for nonmembers. Bus
transportation is included. Please call the Senior Center at (949)
645-2356 for further information.
Last, be sure to save the date of Oct. 23, when “Late Nite
Catechism II” will be staged for the benefit of the Senior Center. Be
prepared for an evening full of laughs.
* AVIVA GOELMAN is the executive director of the Costa Mesa Senior
Center and will write occasional columns about the center, its
members and senior issues.
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