Here’s a happy reminder that the sky isn’t falling
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STEVE SMITH
Joe Bell and a few others may have been right about the importance of
this election. I am 49 years old and have voted in eight presidential
elections and although I seem to recall the same thing being said
about other presidential contests, this one really may have been the
most important in my lifetime.
This election will be important not only for all of the issues
raised so far -- and for all the ones barely raised at all -- but
also because it will test whether we are to go on as we have been,
ignoring our declining resources, isolating ourselves more and more
from the rest of the world and allowing poor children in the world’s
richest nation to continue to go to bed hungry.
There were people in the 1960s and ‘70s who faced the same sort of
questions about whether to go on as we had been. Many of them chose
not to bring children into a world they believed was a horrible
place.
I’m very happy to report that despite the reports that the sky is
indeed falling, some of us have the courage to continue on -- maybe
not as we have been, but they are continuing nonetheless.
Kellie Hines and Patrick Pendergest met a couple of years ago
while both were working in Mammoth. Kellie was working in the
publicity department for the mountain and Patrick was working a
couple of jobs, the way a lot of young people in Mammoth do.
They dated, but after a while, Kellie realized that a life in
Mammoth meant a limited career path. She liked to ski, but there’s a
limit to that, too.
Kellie always did have a good head on her shoulders. So she left,
heading back to Orange County to find meaningful employment.
Patrick, knowing that he had met the love of his life, followed.
Before long, he was doing the honorable thing and went to Kellie’s
dad, Lewis, to ask for his daughter’s hand.
Today at 4 p.m., just up the street from where Cay and I exchanged
vows in San Juan Capistrano more than 17 years ago, Kellie and
Patrick will marry.
Upon their return from a honeymoon in Belize, Kellie and Patrick
will move into a home that Kellie bought in Orange County earlier
this year (I told you she was smart). They will continue to work
their careers and make a home for themselves. I don’t know whether
they have kids planned, but no one will be surprised if they
eventually do.
Kellie and Patrick have a lot of good reasons for getting married,
but the most important one is at once the simplest and the most
complex: They are in love.
See them together and you understand why no one can describe the
feeling and why no one can describe what love makes you do or how it
changes people. Of all the good things love does, one of the best is
that it helps people commit to someone else forever, helping us
realize, finally, that we are not the center of the universe after
all.
I’m tempted to follow a theme common in this space and offer
Kellie and Patrick some unsolicited advice, this time about marriage
and how to make it work. In fact, I think I will:
* An occasional comment in our house is: “If mom is happy, I’m
happy.” Patrick, you don’t need to have kids in the house to figure
that one out.
* Learn to love ironing. Learn to love to iron on a Sunday in
front of the TV watching football.
* Just because she wants to play bunco once a month, or he wants
to play poker once a month, doesn’t mean you are no longer loved or
cherished. This is particularly true with poker.
* Once in a while, drink champagne in bed on a Sunday morning.
Just don’t spill any on the nice sheets you got as a wedding gift.
* Do lots of traveling before you have kids. After you have kids,
travel even more. Without the kids. (Just kidding!)
* Most important, remember that you are committed to each other
for richer or for poorer, in sickness and in health. But just in
case, exercise, watch what you eat and make a lot of money.
Kellie, your Auntie Cay and I love you very much, and we are so
very happy that you and Patrick found each other. Thank you, Mr. and
Mrs. Pendergest for reminding the rest of us that some people still
look up and see not a sky that is falling but one filled with
rainbows.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and a freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(714) 966-4664.
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