I had a dream
last night that Tim Winfrey and I were in an apartment association meeting in
Richmond, VA. We were no longer active in the business, they didn’t expect to see
us, and on reflection I imagine that they surely didn’t expect to see Tim because
he has been in the Presence of Christ for a few years! Nevertheless they
welcomed us and the leader of the meeting asked us to come up front and say a
few words.
As Tim walked to
the front and began speaking I jotted down a few notes on some scrap paper to
guide me when my time came to speak.
When I started
in the business, management was pretty much white, white from the community
managers to upper executives, at least in the Baltimore – Washington area. I
don’t recall seeing any people of color at industry meetings of executives. That
has changed, to what degree I’m uncertain, but it has thankfully changed.
Also, when I
began my career there were few women in upper management. Women were the
community managers and many of them lived on-site, but few women managed
portfolios. That has most certainly and thankfully changed.
Some things have
probably not changed for the better, such as the institutionalization of the
business, but this is true of business in general. Metrics have their place,
but when they eliminate relationships and ethics and morality then we are well
on the road to becoming zombies – but again, this is the world we live in; if
we can call this “life.”
As I awoke from
the dream I thought of dear Tim. Vickie and I had just been talking about Tim,
about all the years we had known him. She was reminiscing about an industry
event we attended in the early 1990s and about how much fun Tim had been that
evening. Then, of course, I thought of his wife Shelly. Toward the end of my career,
Tim, Shelly, and I worked together.
Then I thought
of Letisa, and Ana, and Diane, and Debby, and Alethea, and Lucy and Tony, and Hilda,
and Jim, and Robert, and Gloria, and Earl, and Joanne…and the faces and names came
flooding into my heart, mind and soul. Well, actually, they didn’t flood into
me because they were already in me. O how I thought of the joy and kindness
Vickie and I have both experienced from these wonderful women and men over the
years.
Of course you
realize there is always a danger in naming names, for you are certain to leave someone
out…but I’m not really leaving anyone out of my heart, I can just only write so
many names at one time, names that span decades and joys and challenges and bright
days and dark days and days of “getting it right” and days of “getting it O so
wrong.” Days of providing (I hope) a good example, and then days I’d rather
forget when I was a total ass, a complete and total ass.
I should do
better at thanking people, at touching base with those still with us and thanking
them - I won’t be here forever. I want them to know that they’ve made a
difference in my life, a beautiful difference. They’ve been God’s gifts to Vickie
and me, God’s gifts…ain’t that something?
Can you ever
thank someone too much? Or tell them you love them too much?
What about you?
Who are the people in your life you are thankful for?
Have you told
them lately?