Posts Tagged ‘Riddle’

Lyn Riddle

On paying it forward

by Lyn Riddle

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Jan
23

As the members of the Flock Sunday school class at First Presbyterian Church of Greenville left class they were given an envelope that said simply Merry Christmas.

Inside was a letter that began, “Please accept this gift from my wife and me as a dedication of love and duty to our Lord Jesus Christ.”

It went on to talk about hard times and how much they wanted others to share the blessings God had given them. The author, who did not reveal his name, hoped class members would use the gift themselves if needed, help another family, grant an impoverished child’s Christmas wish or support a missionary.

The envelope contained five $100 bills so crisp one member said they looked like they had just been printed. There were 50 envelopes, one for each couple. That amounted to $25,000 from someone who did not want to be thanked, did not want publicity. Just wanted to sit back and watch the magic unfold.

Denton Burnette, as coordinator of the gift giving, is one of the few people who knows the donor’s identity.

“They could have easily written a check for $25,000, but they wanted to get other people involved, to make it more personal,” he said.

And personal it has been. Some in the class, facing their own misery with lost jobs or other problems, paid bills or bought Christmas for their children. One woman took her child out for a Mexican dinner, the first time in a year they’d been able to eat out. And they even ordered queso sauce.

One gave money for dishes and clothes to a woman whose mobile home had burned down. Another gave the $500 to Safe Harbor, the shelter for abused women, and was able to get his company to not only match the amount but also to double it – $1,500 for a more than worthy organization.

An 11-year-old boy got a bicycle, helmet and Pittsburgh Steelers gym bag. An unemployed father was able to buy presents for his children.

Fifty times over and more. A gift. More often than not, parents said the exercise had a profound impact on their children, who played a big role in deciding where the money should go and in giving it out when the time came.

“We’re always telling children to do things,” said John Stelling. “I’m glad my children saw me doing something.”

Stelling’s wife Robin and daughter Carlisle bought $130 in groceries for a classmate’s family. Then he took $300 to Triune Mercy Center for three homeless families. He also gave up all the jackets and sweatshirts he had in his trunk from this promotional products company.

He put some money in the collection plate at church. And the last $10 he used to buy McDonald’s hamburgers for the people who live under the Pete Hollis Highway bridge. He and his daughter as well as a friend and his daughter went down there with a truckload of firewood they had cut and the bag of burgers.

There were four or five tents, a makeshift stand and a handful of people. One guy approached Stelling. They talked about their lives.

“He revealed his situation to me and that hit home,” Stelling said.

The man had been a classmate more than two decades before at Wade Hampton High School. They had algebra together.

“He was ahead of me intellectually and from an academic standpoint,” Stelling said.

On that December day, the economic divide could not have been greater. But as men, they met as equals beside that railroad bed, one reaching out to the other because someone else had reached out first.

Lyn Riddle

On the ups and downs of 2009

by Lyn Riddle

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Jan
13

Best and worst.
A columnist’s delight.
This rich panoply of stuff unfolding over a year, all ripe for a columnist to opine.
Especially in South Carolina.
We can be proud that so many of the top 10 worst lists from national news organizations have included someone from our state: our governor, a congressman. It is all so, well, tacky.
I offer three best, two worst. Worst first so we can end on a positive note.
The worst simply has to be Gov. Mark Sanford and his inability to keep his mouth shut. Bad enough he misled his staff and wife and traipsed off to Argentina to see the woman he eventually described as his soul mate. But then to come back and ramble on about this woman, with every word grinding salt into wounds he inflicted on his wife of 20 years, simply amazing.
Jenny Sanford gets street cred for not standing by her man but then does a cheeky photo shoot for Vogue and gets caught in the clutches of Barbara Walters, who should be on everyone’s worst list herself for her inability to move her face while talking and her unfortunate segue ways on her Ten Most Fascinating People show.
So Walters asks her, “Do you think you were his soul mate.”
And Mrs. Sanford says, raising her eyebrows, “Well, clearly not.”
Dumb question, Barbara.
Next, our illustrious judicial system. The public was divided over Judge James Williams’ decision to put John Ludwig on probation after he pleaded guilty to reckless homicide in the death of Bill Bardsley. Some said too lenient, others it was an accident, even though it was a Maserati flying into the Bardsley home.
Some claimed this rich businessman bought his way out of jail by hiring a superpower attorney in former federal Judge Billy Wilkins.
All points well taken. Here’s the thing that captures my attention. Former Greenville County Councilman Tony Trout is in prison because he snooped into County Administrator Joe Kernel’s work computer and when he found risqué e-mails broadcast them on the Internet. No one died.
Also, there’s a guy with bipolar disorder, a former deacon and family man who wigged out and held some folks hostage in a bank at gunpoint. I am not downplaying the seriousness of this crime in any way. He deserved a 10 year prison sentence. But again no one died.
What happened to justice?
On the good side South Carolina trumped Washington state for the new Boeing plant, where the fuselage of the Dreamliner will be assembled. This plane got rave reviews from the pilots who made the first flights recently. The fact it will be made here instead of Washington, where Boeing has two major plants, further adds to the prestige BMW brought to the state 15 years ago.
It also shows that when our leaders want to work together they can. Politics set aside for economic development: always a good thing. And even though it is to be located in North Charleston, the plant brings rewards to the Upstate in the form of suppliers, jobs and taxes (some day).
Greenville County moved ahead on the recreation front this year. The Swamp Rabbit Trail is nearing completion and will connect downtown Greenville with Travelers Rest. It will offer a great place to bike, walk or run and some views of the community not seen from any road. It snakes beside the Reedy and abuts Furman’s beautiful campus. Also, the Conestee Nature Park, a 400-acre park operated by a foundation, opened a new entrance and a $650,000 bridge over the Reedy River linking key areas.
And downtown Greenville received some very good news in the decision by Clemson University to locate its graduate business school in the space vacated by Bowater, a paper company that had its corporate headquarters there.
The loss of Bowater was a big one for Greenville, which has pegged its industrial recruitment in large measure on corporate headquarters. When Bowater left, in a snap, a lot of high-paying jobs went, too. And 100,000 square feet of empty space in a building overlooking Greenville’s famed Liberty Bridge doesn’t looks so good.
But now Clemson will occupy about 33,000 square feet for its MBA program, Small Business Center, Professional Advancement and Continuing Education operations. And it was made possible by a $1 million gift from a local company, ScanSource Inc.
The deal was announced on Nov. 13. Nothing unlucky about that Friday.