Magic City Morning Star

Forum | Wiki | Advertising | RSS Feed | About Us 

Last Updated: Jul 2, 2009 - 4:21:13 PM 

Millinocket, East Millinocket, Medway, and all of Maine!
Staff Login
Donate towards our web hosting bill!

Front Page 
  News
  -- Local
  -- State
  -- National
  Community
  -- MCAC Notes
  -- Maine Elks
  -- Maine Grange
  Business
  -- AAM
  -- IRS News
  -- NFIB
  -- USBIC
  -- Win at Work
  Education
  -- History
  Health
  -- Psychology Now
  Tech Notes
  Entertainment
  -- Comics
  International
  -- R.P. BenDedek
  -- Steven Shamrak
  -- Kenneth Tellis
  Sports
  Outdoors
  Features
  -- D. R. Crews
  -- J. G. Fabiano
  -- James Feudo
  -- M Stevens-David
  -- Down the Road
  -- Laura on Life
  -- Words of Mind
  Christianity
  -- Ken Christian
  -- Mark Oaks
  Obituaries
  Today in History
  Maine Politics
  -- Susan Collins
  -- Michael Michaud
  -- Olympia Snowe
  Opinion
  -- Editor's Desk
  -- Guest Column
  -- Average Joe
  -- Eyes in the Woods
  -- Scheme of Things
  -- Thomas Brewton
  -- Bernard Chapin
  -- Stephen Crockett
  -- Michael Devolin
  -- Tom DeWeese
  -- Ed Feulner
  -- Syndi Holmes
  -- William Jud
  -- Jim Kouri
  -- Alyce Maragus
  -- Michael Roache
  -- Julie Smithson
  -- Nicholas Stix
  -- Paul Streitz
  -- J. Grant Swank
  -- Nathan Tabor
  -- Doug Wrenn
  -- Tony Zizza
  Letters
  Agenda 21
  Book Reviews
  -- Old Embers
  Notices
  Archive
  Discontinued


As Maine Goes
Restore The Republic - The Home of the Freedom Movement!
www.rockymountaintrail.com
Alliance for the Separation of School and State

Scheme of Things

Needing And Wanting
By Nan S. Russell
Jul 1, 2009 - 6:07:08 PM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

"I need a bar," her two-year old voice stated, referring to a breakfast bar she sometimes eats. "No," I said coaching her on word usage, "you want a bar." "No Nana! I need a bar," she loudly restated in case her grandmother (that's me) hadn't been tracking her request.

Spending time with our two-year old granddaughter is a delight. It's a learning experience too. Usually I think she's the one doing the learning, but more often than not she's teaching, reminding, or challenging me to think about something in a fresh way.

Recently that's what happened. Living a thousand miles away, visits are concentrated in multiple days every few months. This time, as the designated babysitter while her parents and grandfather painted and readied the house for her baby sister's summer arrival, we had several conversations about the words: need and want.

Despite persistent corrections, she never budged. Everything for her was essential. She needed a rock, a neighbor's cat, her favorite Tinkerbell DVD, and a diaper change. On the last one she was right. But several weeks later, these granddaughter-grandmother exchanges continued to visit my thoughts. It seems my toddler granddaughter is not the only one who gets these words confused. I do too.

I fancy I need a new car, an exotic vacation, or more money. But I won't find my real longings in any of these. More money won't insure a happy and healthy future, foreign travels can't guarantee an awakened world perspective, and a new car doesn't ignite joy.

Desiring it, craving it, or wishing for it is distinct from the must-have state of necessity. Yet I've mixed these concepts up for much of my life. Seduced by trappings I felt would make me feel successful, I thought I needed that promotion, trophy house, or best-selling book. For what? I'm not sure now; maybe someone else's esteem or approval.

But today I don't need these things. Aside from life sustaining nutrients, self-supporting finances, and the freedoms of this country, I need in my life family, friends, and meaningful work.

Yet my wants are growing. I want world peace, equality, trust, and love in the world. I want diseases cured, children educated, hunger eliminated, and an enduring planet for everyone's children and grandchildren. I want more of what could be.

In the scheme of things, my granddaughter is right. She does need a bar when she's hungry. But as she grows, I hope she finds her needs small and her wants, desires and dreams for this world even bigger than her grandmother's. May each generation bring us closer to the world we imagine.

(c) 2009 Nan S. Russell.  All Rights Reserved.

Nan S. Russell is the award-winning author of "Hitting Your Stride: Your Work, Your Way." More about Nan and her work can be found at www.nanrussell.com. Author of "Hitting Your Stride: Your Work, Your Way" (Capital Books; January 2008) Sign up to receive Nan's free monthly eColumn at: www.intheschemeofthings.com.


© Copyright 2002-2009 by Magic City Morning Star

Top of Page

Scheme of Things
Latest Headlines
Heart Stories
Celebrating Birthdays
The Camera
Casual Comments
Unexpected Pleasures

Animal Den - Gift Shop for Animal Lovers!
A Dinosaur of Education - a blog by James Fabiano.
Buy Alvina's book now with PayPal
Buy The Call of Katahdin from Amazon.com
Wysong Foods - Pets and People Too
1-800-PetMeds
Buy Weapon in Heaven from Amazon.com
Different products for unique babies!
Save on Outdoor Gear at the Outlet
Altrec Logo: Free Shipping
Caribou Coffee Company

Google
 
Web magic-city-news.com