Sunday, August 19, 2012

Hope From the Dead


                                                   Hope From the Dead

         We quit the multilevel business shortly after we bought the house. We were simply too successful

 to continue.  We had gone to a seminar and someone was on stage. He was bestowing words of

wisdom on an eager crowd. What he said was unexpected. I had spent so long hoping that this was the

answer. But of course you cannot peddle dreams with no substance forever. And this man with the

 expensive suit and hand made Italian loafers let it slip, the truth. I am sure he did not mean what he said

 to be taken so perfectly literal. I tend towards taking people at their word. He said we had three years.

That was all. Three years to get everything we could out of our new recruits. He said by that time they

 will have either made it or they will have been tapped out financially. He was urging us to make haste.

It was a cut and run kind of thing. And I was out. Any pretense I had left of this being the answer, of

ever getting wealthy "helping other people" reach their goals faded in that moment. The realization of

 what we had done hit me hard. I became sad and melancholy. All those "dream stealers" had been

right. It was not real. I wrote the letter as soon as we got back home. We resigned our business. I did

not ask my husband, or even tell him until after it was done. Then I called my downline and lastly my

upline.  I delivered the death notice. I was so sorry, for all the encouragement I had given. For cards

sent and plans made. With people who were never going to have anything but empty bank accounts to

show for their having faith. Faith in a business designed to shake the money out of their pockets while

filling their heads with visions of success. I was very honest. I could not stop apologizing. I did what I

could for those left standing and I helped others bury their dreams. There were funerals for hopes and

for bright futures gone too soon. Most shook their heads and moved on with their lives. Shuffling past

the casket fashioned out of  a soap box. Some refused to let go. I understood that. I knew what it meant

 to them, to have hope. The need to believe was stronger than truth. I got it, and I sent them past me to

my upline and wished them well. But I did not tell them that they could do it. I did not lie. The time for

that had long gone. I did not know then what dire straights our upline was in. They were far more

successful then us and thusly, far more broke. Actually, broke would have been an upgrade. They lost

their house, the fancy cars. And then the tax man came calling. They left the area. Started up

somewhere else. I hear of them now and again, and I wonder at their tenacity. I am too black and white

 to live in so much grey.

  My counselor said I had an overdeveloped sense of right and wrong. That it had come from my child

 hood. That I held myself to higher standard. I begged to differ. I could look back and see so many

times I could have done better. I should have done more. She tried to soothe me with facts. I pushed

back with my own. It was a tug of war that I hoped she won, but that I could not throw. She was going

 to have to find a way to convince me that I was not a bad person. I mourned every missed payment.

 Every bill unpaid brought me low. They were lined up on the kitchen counter, all my personal failures.

 I did not know how I was going to fix it now. I let go of one dream and cast around for another. I

wanted to be reliable. To be trustworthy. To be good. I would build up new hope. I would figure this

out. I had to. I had been through too much, I was tough, I was strong and I would get through this.

There were worse things. People had it worse than me. I should be grateful. The dialog went around

and around in my head. Until I convinced myself. It could be done. God was with me. There was

always an answer. I just had to find it. It was fitting that it came in an obituary. I read the paper

everyday and poured over all the words. I was a reader and a news junkie to boot. I NEEDED to know

 what was going on. What was real. So, I turned the pages of the newsprint taking it all in and sending

 little prayers up for the family who had a car accident. The fire in the next town over and lastly, to

round out my missives to God, I laid out the obits. I read each one. I favored ones with pictures though.

I liked to see who this person had been. What their face said about their soul and if they had kind eyes.

 There was a man in there, smiling up at me. He had had a long life filled with a loving wife and


children. He had a multitude of blessings and I said a thankful prayer for this man and prayed peace on

his family and I ached for what he had that I did not. And I reminded myself of the lesson his life was.

It could be done.

 He had done it. If it was possible for him to have a loving family, a good marriage, a prosperous life,

then I could have it too. I read all I could on this man. He had been somebody and his life was well

known. I set him as my example and I went about changing my life again with a new found hope left

for me by that dead man.

2 comments:

  1. WOW!! What an amazing story!!! I have tears!! YOUR BLOGS ARE AMAZING!!! YOUR STORY NEEDS TO BE HEARD!!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you Lacy. It is a process. Feel free to pass them on <3

    ReplyDelete