Saturday, April 17, 2010

The Richest Poor Man


What is it to be poor? What does it look like? What does it feel, or look like to TRULY be hungry. Is it the quiet gentle soul minding his own business as he pushes his shopping cart stuffed with his worldly belongings past you on the street? Is it the person holding a sign on the corner asking for help, swallowing every ounce of pride to stand out there in total humiliation as the world drives by and rolls up their windows while passing judgment on what “that homeless guy would do should I give him money”? Is it the face of a hungry child who lives in a car in some abandoned lot looking through their bedroom window of an old beat up car? Or is poverty the masses I look out at every weekend through my bedroom window as they line up at the soup kitchen a mere 60 yards from my condo? I’d bet that my friend Jeremy knows what poverty is as he works at the homeless shelter a scant 30 yards from the soup kitchen. Poverty and pain; richness and joy, how often do we see these words used in combination with one another? Is it fair to say that most of us have associated one with the other? Have you ever done anything to help change that pain to even the briefest moment of joy for someone else? Do you find yourself switching lanes when you come up to a red light where one of those “pan handlers” is standing, frantically rolling up your window and resolutely promising not to “look over there”? Have you ever been poor? Have you ever been in need? Do you know what it feels like to wonder if you will have a place to live tomorrow, or if you’ll be able to make the truck payment next month? What about that electric bill and those groceries? The attorney(s) who call and want the money that you owe still for their heroic battle to keep your kids in your life for HALF of what it was before…have you ever felt that pain? Have you ever sat at a business lunch with a VERY important associate and not heard one word they said because all you can do is feel guilty for eating such an amazing lunch when you don’t even know what you’ll feed your kids that night? Staring at your plate and just losing all apatite and knowing the right thing to do was go get a “to go” box and bring what is left home.



The litanies of questions I ask in the preceding paragraph are ones that I have always tried to be aware of from my pre-teen years until now. I spent some time in those years “running”. Running from reality, the law, my parents, and any sense of authority. I’ve slept in abandoned cars and in a park a few times as my parents frantically looked for me. I knew then (or so I thought) what it meant to be cold and hungry…alone. I am thankful for the experiences from that time in my life as they have never left my memory and those nights trying to find a place to sleep have fueled the fire that I have inside to NEVER GIVE UP. I am far from perfect, far from being the most altruistic person I know, yet I am the first to dart across lanes of traffic, or slow down and jockey over to time the red light just right in order to reach down into my cup holder and hand that stranger who shares that common thread of “pain”…a handful of hope from my ash tray. Whether it be fifty cents or a couple of dollars, I do it to this day. I am no saint, nor am I anything but a human with a little compassion, but I write this blog at a time in my life where (as a wonderful person recently told me) “my past makes sense”. You see, on paper and to the majority of this tiny little mountain resort town, I seem to be doing pretty good. Steady job. Great pay, nice truck, beautiful kids, survived a horrid divorce…..stop right there. We’ll come back to that “survived” part. So my past makes sense because I have always been that guy who’d stop and sit with a homeless person and just talk to them. Never condescending or contrite, just as if you or I were sitting there talking. I know now that my past prepared me for my future. I feel as though I have always had a heart for those who have less than “us”. Maybe it was God preparing me for the war I’d face over the last year. Maybe He was building my armor and strengthening my defenses…who knows. I do know this – poverty to most people is the rationalization that one is “poor” because he/she “has not”. I think that is a pretty fair assessment as I believe if you pass through the differing classes among us that poverty line shifts. My kids and I say our prayers almost every single night when they are here. On our knees, by the bed, and to this very day my kids (both of them) always ask God to “be with those who are homeless and hungry or have less than us”. It brings tears to my eyes EVERYTIME I hear that. I’m drifting here so let’s get back to why I asked these questions in my very public blog…I ask you to sit and think about what it means to be poor, what it means to be hungry, and what it means to feel the pain of a society who will not help. I ask you these things because they are things that I hold near and dear to my heart. It is something that I literally see when I look out my bedroom window in this little resort town that most people envision (and rightfully so to an extent) as a place closer to heaven and more beautiful than most of us have the opportunity to live. I ask you these things because for the first time in my life I know. I know what it feels like. I live it every day, and it is by far one of the most humbling experiences of my life as well as one of the most humiliating things I have ever had to admit. To most it could come as a shock..but it is what it is.



So back to where I “survived” a divorce. I hear that so often and it always makes me angry. Of course I survived..it’s what I do..it’s how I roll. But assuring the survival of the bonds I have with my children is a battle that NO ONE is prepared for. To have your humanity and dignity stripped away over this process is something that I wish not upon my worst enemy. Stop and grasp that for a minute – humanity and dignity. A very basic human need amongst us all right? What about those standing on the street holding the sign? Those sleeping under a bridge on a cold winter night? They too have it stripped on a daily basis and I know how it feels. I made it through the divorce, and more importantly I can say to hell with the divorce…I made it through the loss of not only my humanity and dignity..but even more potent, I survived the loss of my soul mate. Now that I am two days post the one year mark, I find myself thinking daily of how my life has improved. That’s what I said – improved. I have found, once again, what I had lost slowly over the years. I have learned to appreciate every dollar that I have and to find a way to make it stretch. I have an indescribable gratitude for every breath that passes through these lungs. I have learned that the simple things are the greatest things. I have watched a darkened sky become filled with friends who have reached out and helped me find my way. My sky is brighter everyday as these stars continually come into my life. So I didn’t “survive” a divorce, I merely survive daily and grow daily; for now the reality is there of being a single father, provider, and example to two of the bravest kids I have ever met. I will never forget the feeling of signing the final divorce papers knowing that one walked “free” while the other took on insurmountable (so they think) debt. Shovel on a helping of having to still pay “the other half” when you took the bills and walked away instead of fight, as well as the fact that you still pay that one due to their lack of ambition, attorney’s fees to no end…okay I’ll stop there but you get the picture. I didn’t survive, I’m surviving, and I will continue to do so.


The months have ticked by and I become happier every day. I become more appreciative to all that I have and as bizarre as it sounds I become more appreciative of all that I “don’t have” as well. My life has become simpler than it has ever been. You see, I am not just saying I am “poor”, I am. That was me sitting across from a business associate. It was me who could barely stomach the simple act of eating when I knew not how I’d feed my kids and pay all of the bills. My past may have gotten me this far, but I assure you that nothing prepared me for this, or did it? To TRULY wonder how I would survive from day to day. Without a car I could not take my kids to school each day, and therefore someone might pounce on that opportunity to try and take them from me (again). If I have no home of my own, ditto. No electricity? Ditto. No phone? Ditto. No job…you get it. So while I may still have a roof over my head (due to the kindness of a man who’s heart is bigger than all of these problems combined –thanks Ed), I wonder daily what is around the corner. I have been working nonstop for 6 months straight, to the point of total delirium in fact, because it would be easy to just give up..but would you? Or would you look out that bedroom window and find the will to keep fighting?



I look out that window on weekends and I see the shelter and the soup kitchen. I see the faces and the little hands holding big hands as they walk in. I always look at their hands, the kids I mean, and it just always seems like they are held by bigger hands. You can see in the body language, that even without food, a home, etc; the instinct of that parent is to never give up. Even if it means walking into a soup kitchen, and into the judgmental eyes of many. I’ve stood at my window and cried knowing that I am so close to those two places, not just geographically, but financially. I thank God every day for my job, another chance, another opportunity to fight this beast, because that could very well be me standing in that line. I went for a run on the river trail the other day and soaked up the sun and just let it all go for a bit. As I continued on I couldn’t help but let the numbers run through my head..I have this much..I have to pay this..wait I have to pay that..truck, rent, child support, electric, again and again the numbers dance through my head. And then it happened. I was running back towards my house and there is a park nearby and in that park, in the greenest spring grass, amongst all the Durangoans chasing the spring sunshine, a Frisbee, or hacky sack, there lay a homeless man. One I have seen many times. I had come to my stopping place where I stretch out then walk home to cool off, but this time I stretched a bit longer. In my self pity as I ran, I had forgotten all of the lessons that I described above, but here in the grass was a man for whom mom’s were very politely whisking their kids away from. A man who humbled my heart because I was worrying about how I’d buy groceries and there lay a man who probably hadn’t eaten in days. All along…he was making angels in the grass, and laughing. That’s right, snow angels..in the grass..on a spring day..with no snow. I BS you not. Just to get it out there, no he isn’t crazy and I feel that is a fair assessment as I have talked to the man.



Suddenly I just felt like all of my worries, while pertinent, just didn’t matter right then. I just sat on the picnic table fiddling with my shoes and watching. I love to watch..to people watch, and this was a real gem. I watched a little toddler slip away from his mommy and run right over to him and plop down in the grass next to him and make his own little innocent angels. The man just laughed. Even better was to see mini angel’s mom come over and not whisk him away. Instead she sat in the grass and yup..plopped down on her back and made an angel. I’ll never forget it as long as I live. For a moment an angel came along and took it all from my mind. I had to be to work so I just hurried along and smiled the whole way home. In the heart of a homeless man I saw peace and an angel. I survive with moments like these in my heart. Maybe I am out there looking for them. Maybe they find me, but I know that I am where I am today because of the love of friends who wouldn’t let me quit. I am here today because of the love of my mom and dad, my brother and his wife, a friend who came back from long ago, and a multitude of friends who picked me up again and again.



So it is that I came to this writing about being poor. About having “less than”. I feel pity for those who pity those of us with less cluttered lives. Sure I have bills and worries still, but something fantastic happens to you when you get to a place like this. You survive, and even more so, you “know” what it is to have survived. You get through it and along the way you gain SO MUCH MORE than the material things you lost. You gain love, appreciation, humility, humbleness, and a sense that life, when taken to the bare essentials, is just that – LIFE, glorious and uncluttered. My past makes sense now and it has led me to where I am today. I look in the mirror and I can say that for the first time in 17 or so years, I like where I am and I LOVE who I am. I feel in my soul that my relationship with my kids has flourished and the opportunity for us three to grow from this is astounding. I don’t know what I’ll feed them next week when they are here, but I KNOW that I’ll not let them down and I will figure it out. I know that the brightest of stars have been placed in my sky so that I may see when things get dark. I know that nothing lasts forever, but a little kindness and humility..a little joy can last longer than all else. I wonder every single day if it will be “the” day that someone will try and take my kids again, so I spend every moment with them in total gratitude. With all of these lessons in my heart I realize that we may have to eat Ramen Noodles, but as far as life goes…we are feasting on Steak and Lobster…. I may “have not” what most people would call riches, but I assure you that because of people like my friends, my family, and a very special friend who recently came into my life, I have hope…and that makes me the richest poor man you will ever know. Within poverty one can truly find joy.


*As a “post script” I want to thank every single reader, friend, family member, church member, training partner, climbing partner, stranger, and most of all the angel in the park for giving me hope and showing me what humanity is made of. I had someone proof this posting and immediately asked what they could do to help me…YOU CAN REMEMBER – that is “what you can do”. The next time you see someone down and out, reach out your hand. Take chances on strangers..hop in your truck and drive a thousand miles to meet one, or see family just because it is those relationships that make you rich. Do that for the Meyer family and you carry on the memory of what we have learned. Take a meal to someone who is hungry, what about those old blankets in your closet? Clothes that don’t fit? That is “what you can do to help us”. If nothing else, stop tonight with you family and be thankful for what you DO have. And don’t worry about us..I never give up!
With everlasting love and hope ~ The Meyer Family


21 comments:

Anonymous said...

Jim.
I thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing this with the world and especially for those who have watched you go through this. I immediately left my study after proofing this for you and went into the kitchen and picked up Aschton and hugged him and Kim. I sent her into the study to read this and I have to tell you that it is rare that we both cry so hard together out of shear joy to know someone like you. I don't know where your path leads you, but it is an honor to know you.
John T.

SVH said...

Jim,
As a friend from long ago I am absolutely proud to call you "my friend". I'll be the second on these comments to admit that I wept when I read this. You have a way of just taking your readers right there to the place you are and I have to say that I am humbled to know what you are going through. I feel selfish for saying it, but I have enjoyed watching you go through this and it has inspired me to no end.
Steven

Anonymous said...

You know what? I sat there recently and lectured you about how you can't "hate so and so" for this. How you have to let go and move on. You had the most calm and peaceful look when you told me that "yes you could and it is how you have dealt with this". You told me you didn't hate because you had lost, and that you infact had gained much more. I see it again in this writing. What strikes me is that fact that I can now see why you have those strong feelings. To feel like there is a foot upon your head pushing you down everytime you begin to gain momentum. I love you Jim and what you are. I am sorry for not understanding soon and I am praying for you and those kids. You are just the man to get them through this. You turn "having" to eat peanut butter and jelly, or ramen, into something of an art and adventure. Those kids have a father who raises the bar for all of us.

Anonymous said...

Gulp! Wow Jimbo. I'm speachless. Thanks for the slice of humble pie. You are not alone my friend.

Jen said...

"We think sometimes that poverty is only being hungry, naked and homeless. The poverty of being unwanted, unloved and uncared for is the greatest poverty. We must start in our own homes to remedy this kind of poverty." -Mother Teresa. Jim, your kids will NEVER see this kind of poverty in your home!

Am I worried about you and the kids, Jim? I would be lying if I said no. Do I think that you will let these turbulent waters sink you? No way! You are way too strong and determined (and stubborn! Damn Taurus, ha!) to let that happen... and those of us that love you won't let that happen either! (I am so serious... if you ever need something, I will be right there!) You will find a way, just like you find those routes up looming rock faces.

And yes, I will now ALWAYS give to those souls that happen to be faced with hard times, and I will think of one of the "richest" men that I know as I do. Keep the faith, Jim, and come over for dinner sometime!
Thank you for being you, Jen

Jen said...

P.S.- You did a great job on the photos for this posting. Even the photos make me wanna cry!

Anonymous said...

Hey my friend,
I have to tell you that you smile more than I have ever seen. I know you have been through hell, and I know it seems it isn't over, but you are SUCH a different person now. So happy and so free. You continue to inspire those around you. I wouldn't trade that old you for who I know now in a million years. I wouldn't trade the world for people like you.
Lisa

Anonymous said...

BEAUTIFUL - humbling - gut wrenching - and as raw and honest as I have seen. Your best yet again.
JT

JBH said...

Jim,
You are the one person that I know who I truly think has life figured out to the point of knowing what is inside, and what's important and mostly loving who you are. You are a wonderful, kind, sweet soul Jim.
Jessica B.

Anonymous said...

I have watched you through this, and I have watched a man turned inside out and then back again. You have reached this incredibly autonomous state that most of us only dream of. Fly on my friend and let NO ONE define what is right for you. You continue to thrive and grow. I am proud of you and honored to know you.

George M. said...

Jim!

You have a soul that runs so deep and wide that no-one could ever plumb it's depth or cross it's span.
You touch so many people on so many different levels with your writings Jim.
Have you no idea of the profound awakening and awareness of the goodness in humanity you invoke in those who read your words.

Not for the first time, I salute you and what the man I met all those years ago in Texas has become.

You're a great man.

I can't wait to warmly shake your hand later this year.

Take very good care.

Geo.

durangoclimber said...

Thanks to all of you. I have emerged from the last two years (including my injury) as a person that I truly appreciate and love. I am grateful for my family and friends and wouldn’t go back for anything. Hindsight is a wonderful thing and I am happier than I have been in a long time. I still have my moments but I discover more to be thankful for everyday. I have realized so much through this process about the human spirit, kindness, perserverance, strength, and also the darker side of what people are capable of and how someone can just wreak havoc on another. I love the moments where I find clarity either through fighting or on a hard climb. It ALL goes away during those moments. My time with my kids is something that I cherish more than ANYTHING else in this world. It’s so cool to truly experience life with them and to show them what the world has to offer.
To George: I find myself smiling when I think that you met “us” about 13 years ago while climbing at such a tiny climbing area in Texas (Mineral Wells). I remember approaching you that day and we spent the rest of that day climbing together. We took you back to your hotel and you ended up coming back to our place and hanging out and cooking on the grill. You got to meet my son when he was so tiny. We stayed friends over all these years and you have proven invaluable as a friend and part of a support network that has pushed me to where I am. Oceans away and we still find a way to connect. I am truly ecstatic about climbing with you in Yosemite in September. That’s going to be a blast and it’ll be fun to actually see each other once again. It’s funny how climbing can connect people for a lifetime. It’ll be an honor to share a rope with you and get some space between our feet and the ground. Most importantly it will be an honor to share a beer with you while sitting in the valley around a campfire. Thanks to ALL OF YOU for standing by me and helping me along, as well as your faithful reading.
Jim

Anonymous said...

Jimmy,

You know what? You have talked about strength, love, being a warrior, peace, fighting, being closer to God, etc. Do you hear yourself? Do you realize that you ARE living all of this. You wondered for a year (and likely still do) why this happened. I think it happened so you could be free gain and be that person that so many of us knew and came to love. You channeled your love towards another and it slowly sapped your energy and your will. I KNOW you and we have spent hours on the phone over the last year and I can hear it in your voice, a peace and will that we only read about in fairytales and books. It is a gift. You are so far from poor! You inspire so many people. You live like your heart is free and your spirit untamed. Most of us only dream of that. I know I do, but I am oftne too afraid to act upon it. I am sorry that you were put through what you were, and even more so that you were put through it in such a brutal way by way of such narcissim. I am glad that you have found your faults and short comings and I am even happier that you have only grown stronger. Please don’t ever stop writing.
With Love,
You know who

Laura Martz Smith said...

Loved it, man. Totally rang true with me and reflected many of my own toughts and feelings about things. The riches of the soul are defintely worth more than anything that fits in a pocket or a bank account. The part about the grass angels made me cry. Hang in there. Thinking about you!
Laura Smith

Anonymous said...

Jimbo,
I am with “you know who” (who the hell is that) in the simple fact that you have shown so much strength, forgiveness, compassion, and love to all around you. Most people would just become reclusive and crawl into their shell but you have turned that frown upside down. I am just as tough as you, if not tougher, and I will never forget the night last month as we sat on your deck and you just openned up to me. I wish I would have written those words for all to see. You laughed when you looked over and I had tears running down my cheaks as you described the love for your Ex and how you try to hold onto the good memories. I choke up thinking of it now. You said she was “gone” and “the person left behind wasn’t even a remote semblence to the girl you fell in love with every second for 16 years.” I remember those words to this day. I went home and shared them with my wife. You seem like such a normal, happy guy until one gets close to you and truly begins to know you. At that point one realizes the impact this took on you and then you realize pretty quickly that all the while you are searching for ways to honor what you felt for her, learn lessons from what happened, and make yourself a person that will leave a legacy of love and kindness for your children. Man it “is” like a book or a movie. I wonder if god had you go through this so that you could even slightly touch people with your words. I always sit down to read your blog and just feel a sense of wonder at how someone can make you feel like you are right there. You touch on so many emotions that we all go through and describe the feelings and sansation with an eleqounce that is stunning. Jim you said the love of your life was gone and that you will always hold those memories and I want you to know the level of respect I have for you because of that. I know you have anger and hate, but you keep it from overwhelming you even when you face what you wrote about here. True poverty. Humiliation and disgrace as you watch the quality of life around you teeter this way and that. You work to hard man! You look like a skeleton and I worry about you. I am here for you. WE (the community of Durango) are here for you. Don’t ever stop walking this path and thank you for sharing this journey with us. You are a man with riches beyond this material world.
John C.

Anonymous said...

Just a reader who found your blog on a search engine but I have to say BRAVO. Really touching work.
Richard C. Cartwright
Chicago

durangoclimber said...

Concentrate on this Sentence 'To get something you never had, you have to do something you never did.' When God takes something from your grasp, He's not punishing you, but merely opening your hands to receive something better. Concentrate on this sentence... 'The will of God will never take you where the Grace of God will not protect you' Something good will happen to you today; something that you have been waiting to hear. Please Do not break! JUST 27 WORDS. GOD OUR FATHER, WALK THROUGH MY HOUSE AND TAKE AWAY ALL MY WORRIES AND ILLNESSES; AND PLEASE WATCH OVER AND HEAL MY FAMILY IN JESUS ' NAME.. AMEN This prayer is so powerful. A blessing is coming to you in form of a new job, a house, marriage or financially. Do not break or ask questions.This is a test. Does God come first in your life?

This is a text I received last night (04/25/10). Life has/had become increasingly stressful as I try to remain “afloat” in a sea of debt, destruction, and injustice. I have grown so INCREDIBLY close to my kids over the last year and to be quite honest, I don’t think I’d trade anything in the word for that, including the opportunity to have NOT gone through this. Not even a lifetime of financial security or riches. I am blown away by the bond that my kids and I have built over this time. While being an example, father figure, etc, is always ever present and priority, I feel they have become my “friends” in ways that I don’t think any parent ever dreams of. They have shown an amazing amount of strength and we have come to appreciate who we are as a family in ways we never had before. I admire their strength and resilience and the simplicity in their eyes. I have gained new perspectives daily. The simpliest statement from them makes me question all I know. The simplest gesture makes an insurmountable amount of pain and anguish seem so trivial and irrelevant.
I try more than anything to show my kids strength. Strength from within that allows all of us to endure what we think we cannot. It is VERY key to what I believe and what I feel they need to see from their dad at this point in life. I am always there to hold them when they cry and to help them through the tough times. That’s my job, but I do have my moments when it all builds up and I find that “ I “ am the one feeling weak and vulnerable. I typically try to hide it when they are around. I wait until they go to bed, or I go lock myself in the bathroom to gather my senses. On the rare occasion where they see the stress, I usually change gears quickly and be sure to put on a happy face. Again – there are moments where I falter a bit. Last nigth was one of those moments. I spent an INCREDIBLE weekend with my kids. We went climbing and I TRULY saw the escape in their eyes. They were free and happy. Laughing and exploring. I saw in them every ounce of reasoning behind why climbing is so important in my life. I witnessed the freedom in their eyes. When we got home I had a few things on my mind that I needed to address. I sat on the couch for a while and had my head burried in my hands as I thougtht through what I needed to do to keep us on track. My daughter came over and sat next to me and put her hand on my back and laid her head on my shoulder and said “you’re my best friend daddy”…..and away it all went. Then my phone vibrated and said I had a text. It is the text above sent from my son. He went to his room and dug out his phone and forwarded the above message. It just makes me wonder how ANYTHING could get someone down when you have such incredible inspiration around you. I thank God daily for Kai and Kealey. They inspire me and lift me up everyday.

Anonymous said...

I am richer and more humble from getting to know you Jim and following your writing.
Thanks

Anonymous said...

Hi Jim,
I was referred to your blog by a co-worker in my office and I am touched by all of your writing. It's very real and down to earth. I was told you love quotes and I have one for you to think about.
John Carter

Empty pockets never held anyone back. Only empty heads and empty hearts can do that. ~Norman Vincent Peale

Mr. Latino said...

I am so glad I found your blog. It touched my heart and was actually some therapy for me. Our stories are very similar. I also have found out so much more about myself in my current situation of having nothing than when I had it all. Thank again and I pray for you and your kids. Your teaching them the greatest attributes a person can have in life.

durangoclimber said...

Mr. Latino,
The struggles continue for me but I don't see them so much as struggles, as I do challenges to overcome and look back on to see my own strength. Keep your head up and "follow" my blog. Haven't written much at all this year, but seeing your comment, and other like it, light that fire in me. Email me sometime.
durangoclimber@yahoo.com