Memorial Day is not all about sales...
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Memorial Day is not all about sales and sleeping in
This is not a guilt letter. It is not meant to cause hand-wringing
or sleepless nights. Think of it as a light touch on the shoulder, a
friendly reminder, a gentle whisper. The dead cannot hear us.
Memorial Day is approaching. The most sacred of American holidays
is a few days away. I look to it with silent sadness for it reminds
me of so much lost; so many lives- so young. For me it is a day of
reflection as it asks the questions: “What have I done with this
freedom, purchased by those who passed before me? Have I served their
memories well?”
A few years back, my kids came home from school and cheered at the
prospect of a three-day weekend. Curious, I asked each of them what
they were told on the Friday preceding Memorial Day. Each one said
they were told to “enjoy the three-day weekend.” Nothing more.
I was shocked.
Needless to say, my three children spent the weekend learning
about what Memorial Day really meant. They vowed never to forget.
I think of soldiers who stepped off boats into waters thousands of
miles from home, facing horrific artillery fire, realizing they will
never come home; of soldiers jumping out of planes into the darkness,
wondering what awaited them; of Marines and infantrymen charging up
hills in countries foreign and hostile, fighting for footholds in the
land. They did these things in the face of great adversity, with
courage, and honor, and might.
It’s not about the sale at the department store. It’s about
remembrance, prayer, and reflection. War is tragic and brutal and
horrific, but there are those who gave their lives to uphold the
values of freedom and democracy for generations of Americans they
would never know. They sacrificed so that we could “enjoy our
three-day weekends.”
I try to celebrate life and all its wonder. I will work hard to
remember the sacrifice of those who allow us the gift of freedom.
It’s been paid for, dearly, by those whose memories we should honor.
CARL E. OSSIPOFF
Newport Beach
Cities cross 19th Street bridge when they come to Gisler
Why would Fountain Valley have any interest in the 19th Street
bridge? They don’t have any use for it, so coupling the bridges is
not a good idea (“Cities have little time in bridge fight,” May 15).
Newport Beach would have no interest in the Gisler bridge, so why
would they vote on it? Because both bridges should not be coupled
together, they are two different things.
If Costa Mesa officials were at all farsighted, they would have
thought about the traffic that they generate when they OK’d the
Segerstrom project, the Home Ranch project. I think they didn’t help
the city at all.
ALAN REMINGTON
Costa Mesa
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