Christmas Letter 2015
Christmas letter 2015
Merry Christmas friends and family!
The end of 2014 gave us a glimpse into 2015, filled with future
home remodel projects and a do-it-yourself backyard. Our Salem home emerged
from the fashions of 1977 into current trends by pure sweat and tenacity.
Cheryl prepared our backyard for the transformation in 2014 by clear cutting
decades of overgrowth, and figured our backyard project would take about an
hour to transform into the envy of the neighborhood! The cursed home remodel TV
shows do it, so we can, too! That’s how we thought 2015 would shape up, but
life held other plans... so, welcome to the 2015 addition to the Downing
Christmas letter saga, stretching back to 2003!
The future guarantees nothing, but we can usually count on
stories to share as the rivers of life continue to flow in chaotic and
beautiful currents and eddies that will certainly never be dull.
“History never looks
like history when you are living through it.”
~ John W. Gardner (1912-2002)
From Babycakes
to Sophia
Let’s flashback
to December 2012 when we were blessed with the introduction of our 10 day old,
5 lb little girl we nicknamed Babycakes. A little baby that would fall
immediately into our arms and hearts, but held by the strings of the state’s
foster care system. Since the day we met our little Babycakes, we weathered the
stormy, chaotic workings of the Department of Human Services (DHS). The
almighty “system”, as we discovered is a bi-polar, disconnected world of mini-dictatorships
within a great, untouchable empire. On one side of the coin, our foster home
certifier proved to be quite trustworthy, professional and yes, even empathetic
to our struggles with the case management side (the dark side of the same
coin).
2015 started
with the residual yuck we hadn’t yet finished with from 2014, but at least we
had some semblance of hope to adopt our Babycakes. We were told an adoption may
be early spring or possibly summer. When the documents were finally initiated,
we felt like things were finally going our way.
Among a
variety of hang ups and unforeseen delays, the final step, the feared “Black
Hole of Central Office” delayed the process even further. The Washington County
judge overseeing the case frustratingly issued an ultimatum to the state: “Get
this done quickly or Central Office will hear from me!”
As springtime
transitioned into summer, each prospective date moved further away while DHS
put the full force of their misguided agency into this bureaucratic messiness.
Then one day
we got the call. Suddenly, the clouds cleared and the sunshine fell upon a
precious date: October 22nd! A ceremony with the judge fit nicely into our
calendars and my parents joined as well. Nearly three years passed since we
first met our daughter, and she officially became Sophia Monet Downing at 8:15
AM on October 22, 2015!
Just before
the judge officially signed the documents, he invited Sophia to step behind his
tall bench and sit in his big, leather chair. She hesitated but eventually
moved to the encouraging words flowing from the adults around her. Standing on
the edge of the raised platform, she decided that sitting in the judge’s chair
fell outside of her comfort zone.
As a gift,
the judge’s assistant gave her a choice of handcrafted pens from a small
collection presented to her. Choosing a large, purple pen Sophia turned to say
“thank you” in her very polite manner she’s accustomed to. As she turned toward
the judge’s assistant, Sophia lost her footing on the landing’s edge, tumbling
in a blur to the floor below. Her twisting fall brought her head hard against
the doorframe leading to the judge’s private chambers, complete with a “THUMP”
instantly followed by the terrified screams of our little girl.
Cheryl,
filled with motherly instincts and superhuman speed, swept her up in a blur of
motion to comfort the wailing toddler. The ceremony that should have been
filled with joyous cheers and good tidings for all turned quickly into a
gathering of adults trying to attend to a traumatized little girl. The judge felt
partially responsible, and even teared up a bit until the terrified toddler
started smiling once again.
I would like
to say I had a hand in calming Sophia, but it truly was the magic of Cheryl and
my parents who win that particular prize. Baa-Pa, known to others as Grandpa
Downing held the key to her little heart and wiped the tears from her little
cheeks.
The crafty
assistant who offered Sophia the purple pen also made a wide variety of handcrafted
pillowcases, which she spread out across the bench for Sophia to choose from.
The choices covered the spectrum for both boys and girls, and when Sophia chose
the police car/ firetruck laden pillowcase, the assistant got a bit emotional.
We were a bit alarmed by the emotion, but it turns out the assistant’s daughter
had just been sworn in as a police officer and it touched her heart to see
Sophia follow the same direction.
The judge
signed the documents and we left as a forever family, although Sophia wore a
temporary bump on the side of her head. The judge’s assistant did call us later
that day to check in on Sophia’s wellbeing, which was actually very thoughtful.
Flip’n old
house
In January,
we spontaneously decided to put our house on the market. A wild thought on New
Year’s Day we decided to chase immediately. The economy shifted to a buyer's
market, at least that's the story we ran with when we put our house on the
market. After the first month, we found it advantageous to make some quick internal
and external changes to help increase the “awesome” factor for potential
buyers, but that didn’t really do much. After the 3rd month, while other homes
in the area were selling rather fast, we decided to attack the front landscape
for the curb appeal. We were finally at a point to say “if this doesn’t do it,
then nothing will!”
The unique
Jack-and-Jill bathroom upstairs proved to be a hurdle we didn’t really expect.
A Jack-and-Jill bathroom is a single full bathroom nestled between two bedrooms
with a door into each room. Many of the homes in the area had the highly
coveted master suite, and without a significant remodel effort, we just
couldn’t compete in the market. When we bought the house, we didn’t have kids
and we viewed the entire upper story as an awesome master suite! While others
apparently didn’t share our original perspective, the thought of another major
remodel made my stomach turn.
After a long
weekend of unresponsive visitors, we decided to pull it off the market that
following Monday. As it turns out, we had a bite Sunday night! A doctor from
the east coast gave us an acceptable offer, driving us into a home-searching
frenzy that following week! Within a few days, we made an offer on a house, but
after the siding proved to be a crumbling reject from the 1990’s we recoiled
from the home. Our recoil proved timely because the east coast doctor recoiled
from ours. So, within a week we were back to the terrible land of
discouragement, flowing with frustration and covered in unanswerable questions
like why? And what the heck?
We quickly
recovered from our home selling woes after a better offer landed in our hands
that very next week. The dash to find our next home carried Cheryl and Sophia
across two counties and two cities. A highlight of the tour of homes was that
Sophia found great joy in using every toilet in every house visited, and how
can you say no to a potty training toddler!?
After sorting
through the available homes, we finally found one we fell in love with in a
nice neighborhood and with a very, very small yard. In fact, to my great
pleasure there’s no backyard at all! We finally sold our Jack-and-Jill home and
scheduled our move for mid-July, but not without an added hurdle (a.k.a.
difficult personality) that delayed our move by four days. Yes, four days!
This wouldn’t
have been terrible, except that we had our moving truck loaded and almost
nothing left in the house we wanted to desperately leave! The seller of our
home-to-be decided to delay the handoff, even after everything had been signed
and processed except for the official wire transfer. Nothing would stop the
transaction, but a bad attitude delayed our move without consequence. The
grumpy seller didn’t care that the decision to delay displaced three families
during the transition as buyers and sellers were caught in a sudden loss of
momentum, costing each both time and money, along with discomfort and
frustrations.
It seemed
like an eternity, but the day finally arrived to move in. The keys finally made
it into our hands and we raced hard to unload everything and return the truck.
The truck rental place was patient for the first couple days, but grew
increasingly less patient as they were forced to contend with other customers
who already reserved the truck. They gave me no well-wishes upon return of
their truck.
Move’n up,
move’n out
The month of
July held another adventure for me; one I’d been pursuing for a while. Even during
the chaos of selling and buying houses, my professional life took a wonderful
twist. I made it to the final interview process of a Deputy Director position
with the Oregon Small Business Development Center Network.
As part of
the process, I faced a three hour interview in Eugene. I chose to be the last
of the five chosen candidates, and studied hard in preparation to compete
against those with Master’s degrees and years of industry related experience.
My Bachelor’s degree didn’t get me into the interview, but my years of
experience with Department of Transportation did. Comparatively, I felt like
David against four Goliaths wielding weapons of credentials and experience that
I just didn’t have.
I arrived to
Eugene early for the interview, and promptly found a local coffee house to
study and focus. My caffeine levels were already dangerously high, so I decided
to grab a locally made, 100% organic, vitamin and juice blend from the glass
display case next to the barista. Eugene is a hippie town, I thought, so it
must be good for you, right? Turns out that “being good for you” is a matter of
perspective in Eugene.
The first
cause for alarm came in the form of a fermented, over ripened apple odor when I
popped the cap. “Near spoiled” registered in my mind as the strange odor
assaulted my senses. The bottle had been sealed, and the little metal cap even gave
that reassuring POP sound that said it should be safe, so of course I took a
mouthful of this strange blend I just spent $3 on.
The taste hit
me hard, like a nasty blend of medicine and a spoiled fruit medley. A quick
moment passed to reveal the hidden gem inside this grotesque cacophony. A gem
that could have been a redeeming factor, if it wasn’t so nasty tasting overall.
My zealous gulp, followed by a closer sniff of the contents, and a review of
the finely printed label brought the truth into full understanding - this
morning juice blend contained 5.7% alcohol!
Did I mention
I had an interview coming up!? Yeah, an interview. I promptly disposed of the
nasty, deceptive drink and attacked the entire packet of gum in my pocket while
walking to the interview. After the three hour, multi-phase interview process,
I felt energized and very hopeful (possibly induced by the kombucha I drank
earlier) that I would float to the top of the highly qualified professionals that
interviewed before me. As I drove back to Salem, my energy subsided and I found
time for a delightfully delicious nap. I looked back on the day and said “it is
good”.
Just over a
week before finally signing for the house, the official job offer came. Salary
negotiations delayed the final acceptance, but not by much. The new job, based
in Eugene challenged the institution’s senior management at first. They finally
embraced my Salem residence as a strategic perk due to my close proximity to
the state capitol, and my willingness to build on a variety of relationships
I’ve formed over the past five years.
My new role
as Deputy State Director with the Oregon Small Business Development Center
Network is positioned to manage a large agency, providing fantastic
opportunities to help build Oregon’s businesses across the state and at all
levels: from tiny solo-entrepreneurs to multi-million dollar companies with
fingers stretching firmly across the globe. I’m in a system designed to create
jobs, wealth and success for those brave enough to own a business in a
post-recession economy. My professional world now reaches to a national level
with connections across the states and into Washington D.C., which I’m excited
about visiting in the very near future.
Two to Four
The
transition to the new job brought the commitment to wear suits and travel to
meet with those of social and political influence, so I made the tough decision
to sell my single mode of transportation: My Midnight Star Silverado, 1700
cubic centimeters of motorcycle riding mayhem. The silver studded, over-sized
touring bike just had to find someone else to love. We couldn’t even be friends
anymore! After 19 months of riding through rain, heat, hail, fog, below
freezing temperatures, and anything else nature threw my way (except for snow),
I gave up my ride. I gave up the gear. I gave up the joy of commuting on two
wheels, and found a good looking car to fuel my manly testosterone needs, just
a lot safer.
When I
stumbled upon the car, I immediately fell in love! The price and fuel economy
fell within the parameters I’d hoped for, so when I called Cheryl to talk it
over she didn’t hesitate a moment to simply ask if I liked it. My enthusiastic
“yes!” spoke volumes and she immediately said “go for it!”
I’ll keep my
motorcycle endorsement, because it’s with great confidence I say to you, I will
ride again!
Harrowing
heights
The summer
brought an opportunity to help an acquaintance paint the exterior of his house,
including trim and gutters. The physical challenge of reaching the intimidating
heights drove his estimates far beyond his budget, so of course we agreed to
help. Apparently, we didn’t have enough to do as we had our house on the market
at that time.
The house
rested on a slope that crossed his property leaving the lower side nearly 40
feet off the ground. The footing for the massive extension ladder he provided
pressed against the neighbor’s foundation in order to clear a tall fence and
lean at a relatively safe angle, although a bit bouncy while climbing. The
springing sensation of a very tall, fully extended aluminum ladder is
troubling, especially when the wind picks up.
Now, some of
you may question why this landed in my Christmas letter. What’s notable about
helping someone paint their house with excessive heights and bouncy, springy ladders?
That’s actually a good question! You see, I’m rather…. concerned…. cautious….
hesitant… mildly freaked out when it comes to heights. Heights that don’t
promise a quick death kinda freak me out a bit, whereas a guaranteed big splat
suites me just fine, strange enough.
A movie I’d
seen earlier that summer held a quote that really changed the way I worked through
the precarious heights. After Earth,
starring Will Smith held the following line I embraced:
“Fear is not real. The only place that fear
can exist is in our thoughts of the future. It is a product of our imagination,
causing us to fear things that do not at present and may not ever exist. That
is near insanity. Do not misunderstand me danger is very real but fear is a
choice.”
I held firm
to this quote as I climbed, stretched, taped, sprayed, brushed and rolled my
way to finish the project. Dizzying heights on hot summer days gave me a
fantastic farmer’s tan, and gave my acquaintance a nicely painted house. Cheryl
and I spent some time working together on the project, and it turns out she has
quite a knack at such things!
As the summer
launched, Cheryl decided that being a licensed contractor would be pretty
awesome. She studied hard and scored amazingly high on the contractor’s exam,
giving her the first step into the competitive and challenging world of being a
contractor for hire.
Her business,
Time to Paint launched into the world
of interior and exterior painting, complete with all the joys and woes of
spraying, rolling, brushing and paperwork that comes with such an endeavor.
She’s got the hootspa to excel at anything she puts her mind to, and I know
2016 will be an amazing year for her in many, many ways.
Will Wandered
West
The summer of
2014 started William on a journey to experience the pleasures that only
Southeast Michigan can provide, and a year later he returned to Oregon as a
tenant in our new home. Getting one’s feet underneath them sometimes doesn’t
come easy, and with the pressure of living as a full-fledged adult looming on
the near horizon, he’s getting an opportunity to exercise his wings before
taking flight.
Youth in
Transition
During the
spring of 2015, I volunteered to speak to K-12 classes around the Salem-Keizer
school district. What would I have to say to kids that they’d actually care
about? The schools brought me in as a working professional, but the leadership
didn’t really investigate my background or even ask what I would talk about.
Apparently, they were a bit desperate to find working adults willing to enter
the lion’s den of today’s youth, but I rarely step away from a challenge, so of
course I jumped in with both feet.
The first
class I visited filled with nearly 25 sixth graders. Their youthful faces not
quite matured yet, and their eyes still held the childlike wonder artfully captured
by painters such as Norman Rockwell. As I entered their world, the class gave me
a warm and very professional welcome. Their practiced greeting, confident and
respectful, stood in stark contrast to their small framed bodies and pudgy,
baby fat, rosy cheeks.
I had an
outline prepared for my speaking points, but quickly abandoned the list as I
felt the interest wane, particularly at my professional duties with the
Department of Transportation. Frankly, I agreed with their disinterest in the
subject, so I shifted toward the engaging subject of entrepreneurship and
making a buck while thoughtfully chasing a dream.
Having
untethered control of the class hour, I shifted the subject toward my two
books: Pickle-itis and Stench & Steed A Valiant Deed. I read the two books
to the class, wandering between smiling students with open books to display the
fantastic illustrations. The roaring laughter, by both students and teacher
made the entire time worthwhile. Immediately following the readings, small
hands politely fluttered about the room. Question after question flew at me
from every subject possible. I answered most of the questions directly,
although several were alarmingly intimate and inappropriate to answer. I don’t recall
the specific questions, but I can say when I was that age I would ask questions
simply for the shock value. Fortunately, the teacher spoke up several times to
quickly shoot down some of the questions before I could respond.
Sixth graders
were so inviting and engaging, I couldn’t not have foreseen or prepared for the
bizarre and disturbing transformational season better known as 7th grade. If
compared to a caterpillar's cocooned transition into a mature butterfly, 7th
grade is the gooey, slimy, alien form that exists inside the cocoon that, quite
frankly, nobody really wants to see.
Sleeping,
smirking, and texting, complete with an “I’m too cool for school” attitude made
the second class on my tour the most uncomfortable thing I’d done in a long
time. Part of my mind cried out to demand attention and compliance from the 7th
grade class, to raise my Darth Vader/ Drill Sergeant voice asking the question
weighing heavily upon my mind: “What the heck happened to you!? 6th
graders are awesome, and you’re a bit rude!”
The other
part of my mind, the logical and somewhat optimistic side looked upon these
strange changelings and thought it might be a singularity in the specific time
of the day. As the months moved forward, I came to realize the fallacy of this
thought, and resigned to the fact that all 7th graders are indeed butterflies
in transition. A truly odd transitional time in life, to be sure.
When the
school year finally came to an end, I’d visited nearly 20 classes. The 6th
graders never failed to be the highlight, and the 7th graders… well, they can’t
be judged while in transition, but nevertheless they fell to the bottom of the
nice and naughty list.
Forward
glimpse?
The end of
2015 appears to be shining a pretty nice light toward 2016, and I would like to
say my intuition speaks very positively of the coming year… but let’s be
honest: I have absolutely NO clue what’s coming up. I’m grateful for family and
friends; for laughs and love and life; for the tough times that made me who I
am today, and for the times of peace I enjoy. I trust 2016 will hold a blend of
all these things, and I’m excited to live the adventure just around the corner,
whatever that may be.
I believe
it’s entirely possible to remain an optimist while fully admitting complete
ignorance of the times ahead. After all, I find that the moments along the
journey make life truly fulfilling.
“No pessimist ever discovered the secret of
the stars or sailed an uncharted land, or opened a new doorway for the human
spirit.”
~Helen Keller (1880-1968)
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
John and Cheryl Downing
1 comment:
Terrific read, John. And i do mean READ, not listen. Seriously compelling. Such a whirlwind, and of course, never letting go! Those 7th graders, a tough place to hang, but alas, onto bigger and hopefully better on the 8th grade side of things.
Thank you for continuing to write your letter every year...it's truly a treat!
~Carole
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