SUTTON’S BAY, Mich. – On Tuesday, we headed North … again to
Michigan.
It’s a natural path for us now; instinct takes over. We point the car, and roughly two days
later, without much thought, we’ve arrived.
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| The Boardman River |
We found a place to stay near Sutton’s Bay, which is just
north of Traverse City on M-22.
It’s on the west side of Traverse Bay. Much like my visit earlier this year to Pine Knot on the
west side of Lake Superior, we haven’t been privy to sunsets.
But that’s okay.
My sister Mary Ann in Green Bay reported that there was still color in
the trees at her latitude. And it was true. Upon arrival, the reds and yellows were their own brilliant sunset,
gradually dimming ahead of winter’s sleep.
But even we were surprised at the depths of the reds and
yellows, the way they shouted from the hills. Not a sleepy goodnight, but a barn dance of celebration … a
final, loud salute to the goodness of the harvest.
The fun part was that we stopped to see the Slacks on the
way up. We’re all still
remembering the antics around the Bellingham wedding. We reminisced about that, though not too much. Day-to-day events quickly overtake all
of us, and so we mainly shared the latest in our lives.
The latest for me has been both unpleasant and telling. I
won’t share much. Just know that
the vagaries of business sometimes require managers to do things against their
very nature – to accept the reality that a bigger cause requires painful and
difficult decisions.
I remember when I was in junior high school, and Mom, Dad,
Barb and I sat down to dinner in the kitchen. Looking back now, it was during the recession of 1969 – mild
compared to what we’ve all been through lately, but it had a significant effect
then. Housing starts were in
descent. Dad’s business – making thermostats for homes, among other things –
was upended. Demand was down, but
profits were still required. The
solution? Cut expenses. Cut personnel.
I remember then Dad easing into his chair, tense, and Mom
asking him what was wrong. And Dad physically shuddering a bit, his hands
shaking – I’d never seen him do that – then saying he would have to “let go” of
someone the next day … someone who had worked with him for years. That she
didn’t deserve this, he said, but corporate had its targets, and targets had to
be made or the whole enterprise could be in jeopardy.
I don’t remember when in 1969 this occurred. Spring? Fall? It was a season, though, full of "letting go."
I do know that Dad would count on Michigan to put some
emotional distance between these kinds of struggles and his hope for a life
better.
And so we find ourselves here. The timing is a coincidence, I tell myself. Then again, I believe such coincidences
happen for a reason … and so they are not coincidences at all. We needed this time away, especially
now.
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| Cindy, me, on Traverse Bay. |
We came to explore.
It’s never too early to think about “what’s next,” especially as you
approach retirement. Planning is paramount these days. It takes years to put together an
adequate strategy for that kind of “what’s next.”
It’s too soon, of course, to declare that Michigan is what’s
next. And we hardly envision us as traditional retirees. But I think we’ve made a
decision that Michigan will be our last stop in our travels. And not because we’ll be ready to sit
on our duffs and admire the reds and yellows and other incredible sights.
No, instead, it’s because Michigan has always represented
for us youth and energy and freshness and a renewed sense of purpose. I’ve been coming to Michigan for just
those reasons since I was 7. It's where dreams are made.
Since 1974, that renewal had occurred at a small red cottage
my mother had dubbed Wind Song on Glen Lake. As readers of this blog know, I and my siblings sold the
cottage for a variety of reasons to the National Park Service. The service in turn knocked down the
cottage and let Nature take hold.
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| Where the cottage once stood. |
We visited the cottage site today … the first time we’d seen
it since the bulldozer had done its duty.
The view of Glen was as beautiful as ever. The winds were crisp, the waters blue, the waves dutifully
marching down the shore, crashing their hellos.
I braced for more sadness this visit. But interestingly, it didn’t
happen. We speculated as to why …
that perhaps it was past the time for grieving. That time does heal most wounds.
It also had to do with the promise exhibited
by the wild grass and other new growth where the cottage’s foundation had been.
After all, during our last visit – when the cottage was still standing but
abandoned, dirty, disheveled – the cottage’s state seemed both sad and an
abomination … a mockery of all of the joy, laughter and love that had existed within
its walls.
Now, at least, the cottage’s spirit had been set free. And Nature’s might was busting through
where there had once been foundation and shadow.
But more than all that, I think it was our mindset about
“what’s next.” We ambled
throughout the countryside this visit, looking at other lakes, other
cottages. Imagining moving here or
there, and what that would be like.
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| Point Betsie. |
Sure, we visited the old haunts. Art’s Tavern for lunch, Esch Beach to marvel at the historic low
levels of Lake Michigan, the Point Betsie lighthouse where it still towers,
after 154 years, over a shoreline
of pesky, hard-to-find Petoskey stones.
But that wasn’t the heart of our visit. That’s the past. At some point, we’ve realized, we’ll be
hungry for the future. And coming here is natural … has been for almost four
decades.
And so we wandered like we used to before children and house
payments and other deep responsibilities. We breathed in the smells, savored the fresh-water breezes, and let our
eyes dance with the sun along the shore. And we saw a familiar land, yet one
teeming with new opportunities.
There’s a reason instinct pulls us North.
Up here, there are no coincidences.
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| Esch Beach ... Lake Michigan. |





1 comment:
Thanks for re-posting on FB. I read every word. Loved every word! What a great time you are having up there. Blessings to you both!
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