Happy Memorial Day! If you really think about it, that is just so wrong. For over 140 years, Memorial Day marked the day when Americans honored first those who died in the Civil War, then those who died in any war, then those who died. The common theme is death.
Death, while just about always somber does is not always unhappy. Many families due to distance or other circumstances only re-unite on the occasion of a death among them. Quite often what began as sorrowful turns into a true celebration of life. But “Happy Memorial Day?” It still seems wrong. Since the Americans started fighting as Americans in 1775, over 1.5 million Americans ceased being so other Americans would benefit from their sacrifice.
Sometime today the television news people will broadcast film of a cemetery lined with miniature American flags decorating simple crosses or markers. Sometime today thousands of marchers will step off on a parade that will end at a memorial site where a bugler will play taps. Sometime today you will open your Internet news or your local newspaper and see a picture of a color guard highlighting a member from each of the armed services. Sometime today almost everybody will shed or stifle a tear because each of us knows somebody who played a part in us still being at liberty to watch TV, wave at the parade, or just explore our world.
And sometime today we’ll forget why we celebrate today and just celebrate. We’ll have cook-outs, play soft ball, reunite with family and friends, and have a good time. And somewhere, 1.5 million souls will look down and smile, knowing what began as sorrowful turned into a true celebration of life.
Happy Memorial Day!
Now, that’s what we think. Really. How ‘bout you?