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Away from the Glacial Past

About forty-five years ago, Margaret and I drove up to Washington State to introduce Margaret to my family.  My grandfather, Jonas Jacobson, took me aside and assured me that it was all right that I was married to a woman of German descent; that it had happened once before to our ancestors in Norway.  As it turned out, Grandad my have overestimated the capacity of the family to absorb Teutons.  We eventually divorced.  I mention that because Grandad could not have imagined how gloriously we have changed, as a family. 


On the day we left Tucson to fly back to Minnesota, Mari and I drove out to see Mari's son, Michael, and Susan, again.  Michael is Asian.  Susan is Hispanic.  Elsewhere in our immediate family, we have an adopted Black daughter, and fine prospects of even more human diversity in the future.  It is glorious. 


Michael has found new office space for his business, and has reasons to believe that, short of another economic disaster, things will work back to better times.  Hard work, enterprise, and tenaciousness do make a difference. 

It might be the family foray into multiculturalism that makes the younger members of the family smarter, too.  Michael and Susan live where the roses bloom in January.


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