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My grandchildren Cy, Case, and Mally |
I had a conversation with my
daughter Rebekah not long ago while we were driving somewhere. I shared with
her my feelings about the purpose of my blog. I told her I felt like my writings were not something that
the younger generation seemed to care much about. My fascination with our
family’s history seemed to be something unique to me, while my children seemed
only casually interested. I wondered aloud if perhaps my efforts in researching
and writing were an exercise that would probably die with me, while the younger
generation have their minds on other things. She told me that it wasn’t that
they were not interested, it was just that they were preoccupied with other
things at this point in their lives. She said that she was a little worried
about how absorbed I seemed with the subject and if perhaps I was romanticizing
the era in which my great grandparents lived. She reminded me that the 1800’s
were a difficult time to live in and that it probably would not have been an
easy life. She wondered if perhaps
I was being obsessive with the whole thing and should be more engaged in the
present. She said she enjoyed my
stories in the blog, but for now she was more concerned about other things. We
had a conversation about the difference between the generation of the 1800’s
and 1900’s compared to the young generation of today’s modern world.
In
the past age time seemed to move much more slowly than in today’s world. Things
did not change quickly in the past age. One generation lived not too much
differently than the past generation. Technology moved at a much slower pace
and one’s every day life was not necessarily greatly impacted every day by
it. One’s world was confined
mostly to one’s little community and the every day life of making a living on
the land and making it produce for survival. One might read a newspaper or book
and expand the horizon of your world but travel was difficult and expensive and
the events of the greater world did not necessarily immediately impact ones own
daily routine. People lived in a much slower pace. People interacted with others face to face in conversation
as they saw each other on the streets, or at social occasions such as dances,
or balls, or church services, weddings, and funerals. The art of conversation
was common, and it served as a major part of one’s entertainment and source of
news. Families were close knit and
very dependent on each other.
Fathers and sons worked together in the field or in the shop as they
toiled together providing for the family.
A son knew his father from years of conversations and interaction in all
kinds of situations. Daughters
toiled with their mothers and knew them as they conversed,keeping the house or working in the fields or shops.
The families were generally close and remained so throughout their lives. The
greatest part of what a young person would learn about survival, and the
greater world came from his association with family members.

How
does this impact today’s family? Do fathers and sons know each other better
than in the past age? Do Mothers and daughters know each other more than in the
past age? The family seems to me to be under constant assault. In the past age a parent had much more
time to instill certain values and morals in their young people without the
continual bombardment of the outside world’s values competing for attention.
Our modern methods of education, government subsidized public school systems,
are taking on more and more of the roles that were traditionally unique to the
parental domain. Fathers are working long hours no longer in the fields side by
side with their sons, but instead in an urban environment, often only having a
few hours in the evening with the family for interaction. Mothers are more
likely to be working in a secular job rather than at home with the children.
Young children are often more likely to be placed with childcare agencies rather
than with family members. Much of
the interaction of family is reduced to evening hours, and that time distracted
by television, computers and other forms of entertainment that do not
necessarily promote family conversation.
Conversation
is in fact in my view becoming a lost art, reduced to short “tweets”, or
instant messages, or subjugated to conversation about what did you watch on TV,
or see on utube, or what sports team won or lost, or did you hear what
outrageous thing was said on the radio. At the pace of our modern lives a year
is a long time, changes are happening so fast to our lifestyles that we can
hardly keep up. I feel I am on
overload sometimes with the amount of information coming at me from every
electronic messenger.
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Our
young people are of necessity very much galvanized into the present. They are
struggling to find their way in the world in spite of gail force winds of
changing times. Trying to get educated, finding a job, finding a mate, and
finding their way in a world that seems to jerk the rug out from under them
every time they think they are finally on solid ground. America today seems to be a society
that has lost its way and every day we see the decline of its morals and values
played out in the headlines. Our political leaders are desperately divided, our
social institutions crumbling, and indeed the very fabric of our society seems
strained to the breaking point. Is
it surprising that a young person who lives in a changing world where ten years
ago seems like ancient history should wonder about the relevance of the past?
In a world where every day seems to bring new breakthroughs in science, new technologies,
new borders, maps, new possibilities never before imagined in the ability of
man to explore this world and space beyond, what voice has the old?
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my son and grandson Matt and little Mason |
So
I shall continue writing about our history. I do not know who will read it or if it will have the
desired affect on my children and grandchildren. I myself can see why so much history is often lost. It is simply that people are so busy
living their lives that they have little time to stop and take stock of their
lives and record it. I would give
anything to have had the opportunity to interview certain members of my
ancestry. They lived through
some of the most interesting events of history and yet they left little record
of what they thought, or how they decided what they would do in light of those
events. I must search and follow the bread trails left by others that were
close to them to understand what they lived through. What I do today by writing
and keeping this little blog I speak to my children’s children to answer the question,
who were you grandfather and what were you like? What did you think and how did
you live and why did you do what you did? I speak to them of my Love for them
and hopes that they will chose righteous paths. Know that their challenges are
not unlike the challenges of others that went before. Know that as I sit here today
I think of you my child who as of yet may not even be born. I love you, though
we may never meet. I dream that though the prison bars of father time may
separate, My spirit may somehow transcend time and speak words of wisdom and
encouragement to you with this my little labor of love.
1 comment:
Hello! My name is Amy Talley and I just came across your blog as I was researching my family tree. I believe I am a descendant of Claiborne Davenport also. I just wanted to say thank you for your research and I will continue to follow your blog!
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