Self Serving, By Lorie Sheffer, Guest Blogger

Photo: Lori Sheffer

Sometimes we must think of ourselves. It’s hard to do when our main concern is to help others. We are taught early on that putting the needs of others before our own needs is virtuous. We learn that “selfish” is a bad thing to be. And yet if we don’t care for ourselves we really can’t take care of anyone else.

Incredibly, in the last few weeks I have been through a hurricane, an earthquake, a flood and a medical emergency. In fact the flood was the same day as the medical emergency. Days were spent cleaning up our flooded basement and then driving to the hospital. Some days I forgot to eat. Last night I noticed that my hands were shaking and I felt lightheaded. I had been going on too little sleep, too much stress and very little food. I also found the order for my yearly mammogram tucked into the rungs of the stair rails. I didn’t schedule it because I didn’t want it to interfere with my father’s outpatient treatments that required me for transportation.

How stupid to allow ourselves to become rundown and tired, the result of trying to put the needs of another before our own. If we really want to care for someone else, we have to care for ourselves. We have to remember to eat even more healthily, try to get extra sleep, and keep up with our own medications and appointments. Even when stress is high and our appetite is low, foods like hard boiled eggs, cereal bars, peanut butter on whole grain bread or small cans of vegetable juice are easy to grab on the way out the door and can be eaten in the car or stashed in a purse or backpack. When sleep is hard to come by, even a 30-minute nap can be a huge help. I type these words while my eyes are heavy, but a nap awaits me. If I get sick, who is going to step in to take over? Not caring for myself would, in fact, be selfish.

Dear Son, Use Caution When Dreaming

Dreams, Like Sand Castles, Can Be Easily Washed Away

Dear Son, use caution when dreaming. There’s a time and a place for dreaming, it would seem. The challenge is discerning this. At 52, maybe I’m dreaming too big. Maybe it’s too much, too late.

Who am I to think it’s possible to change our educational, parenting and personal responsibility paradigms? For today anyway, it’s feeling quite impossible.

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You May Say I’m A Dreamer, But I’m Not The Only One

Sit Back And Enjoy Life Or Lead The Charge (why not both)

Dream wide-open. Picture young children learning mental, physical, spiritual, financial and organizational responsibility at the same time they’re learning to speak, draw, write, spell, add and subtract.

We don’t wait until our children become adults to learn how to add and subtract, yet we somehow think personal responsibility will fall from Heaven when they turn 18 or 21. Really?

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Here’s Where This Mid Life Celebration Vision Really Gets Crazy

The Ripple Effect Of A Beautiful Sunset Is Far Reaching

Okay, picture the ripple effect 1.2 million male elders can have. What if it went something like this:

  • More than just 3% male baby boomers
  • But female baby boomers too
  • And more than just the boomers, but gen-xers too
  • And then Millennials, and more…
  • All the way down to young parents teaching their kids
  • Even down to teaching personal responsibility beginning in pre-school

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Can You Imagine If 1.2 Million Male Baby Boomers Led A Charge To Do Something Great?

Helping Out Is The American Way And We Must Continue This Legacy of Our Forefathers

If just 3% of the male baby boomers did something great – from mend an important relationship, to help raise money to find a cure for an incurable disease. Or something in between. What a positive impact this would have on younger generations. On their inherited obligation to clean the place up a bit before they leave. Why should they if we don’t? Ya with me?

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