I moved back home in 2003, and shortly thereafter I
started having dinner with my Grandparents on Monday nights. We continued this
tradition for many years, and during these dinners, sometimes I would ask them
questions and sometimes they would tell me stories about different things.
Around the time of their 65th wedding
anniversary, I was still a newlywed, so I asked Grandpa and Grandpa for their best advice for
a successful marriage.
Grandma said, "Learn to stand up for yourself."
Grandpa said, "Learn when to keep your mouth shut."
I must admit, I was expecting advice that was more along the
lines of "be a good listener," but I got a nice chuckle out of this. Their response was so honest and so real. It
reminded me that we all need to figure out what works for us in our
relationships and they did that so well for 69 years.
During one of our Monday night dinners, my Grandpa showed me
an old black and white composition notebook, the kind with a spot to write your name. On the cover, for name, he’d written, “Life
of Ken Lehman.”
On these pages, he writes about growing up near Alma and
Cochrane, attending a one room schoolhouse he called “Little Blue Bell,” and working
on his parent’s farm until he was 21.
He talks mostly about specific events, like his first job hauling livestock to St. Paul and his first 1957 Chevy. He talks about love in only one spot. When he gets to the part about meeting Grandma, he writes,
He talks mostly about specific events, like his first job hauling livestock to St. Paul and his first 1957 Chevy. He talks about love in only one spot. When he gets to the part about meeting Grandma, he writes,
“In 1943 I met my wife Carolyn Dutter. I guess it was love at first sight! We were married July 28, 1945 at Norden Lutheran Church.”
He goes on to write about their 3 children, and that he drove
ready-mix trucks and dump trucks for American Materials for 40 years.
After Grandpa went to live at the nursing home, he made
Grandma an anniversary card, and one of the nurses used her phone to record an
audio message from Grandpa. The nurse later sent that message to me. In this
message he says to Grandma,
“If I was to do it over, I would do the same thing. Love you dear, Happy Anniversary.”
These are the best things I learned from my Grandpa -- that to be loyal, and honorable, and live in such a way that you have no regrets -- these are the things that are most important.
Kenneth R. Lehman from Fuller-Speckien-Hulke Funeral on Vimeo.
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