Springfield News-Sun

All I have left is the everyday faith of a geezer

- Tom Stafford

I’m a part of Generation G for geezers.

And I’m hoping today that some other member of my Generation G can toss me a bone, though preferably not one of your own.

Because I need help. I can’t come up with the date I’m trying to track down. My best guess is that it happened in the past two decades. Since I associate the change with them, it may have been about when I stopped using the words waiter and waitress and went to the word server.

The only thing I really know is that before unsaid date, I ordered iced tea from said servers and afterwards, I began ordering unsweet tea.

At first, I suffered through the usual Generation G grumpiness over any change aside from a change of anything except underwear that has begun to chafe. But eventually, I began to see it as a useful shortcut — an easy way to distinguis­h between the sweet and unsweet varieties.

I wish we had as easy a way of distinguis­hing between faith and religious faith.

Just to make it easier to talk about them.

Today, I’m going to take a crack at that.

I’ll italicize when I mean the special religious variety and leave it in plain type when I mean the plain everyday variety. All this is because something about the latter kind struck me the other day: That it’s impossible to get along without it.

I know many people of have the same sense — and that it’s a special connection because it involves connection with something eternal, something everlastin­g.

But I don’t see humanity as everlastin­g — as a species, even. So, I have trouble with the notion that much about us is everlastin­g. On the other hand, I do think there are truths about humanity — things about us and our values and connection­s with one another — that will last as long as we do; that is, during the thin slice of eternity we occupy.

There is a bright side to this: Even if cockroache­s, molds and viruses are good bets to outlast us, taxation will not. (I ask you not share that informatio­n with accountant friends so as not to endanger their mental health.)

Anyhow, within the limitation­s I’ve spelled out, I see truths about people, how we should treat each other and get along as being true for as long as we’re around — something I can have unitaliciz­ed faith in.

So, here’s my two cents, which, adjusted for inflation, will cost you three: I find much of this talk esoteric — a word highfaluti­n, but in a higher tax bracket.

Because the moment that made me think about this last week was a kind of everyday revelation. It’s a simple belief

Stafford

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