Author: kwundrow
The Slow Walk..or the only way to appreciate Madison
I just finished the world’s slowest walk also known as The Madison Farmer’s Market. The pace was slow in part due to the throngs of people enjoying the chance to shop for the freshest produce to be found but also to the fact that it is the pace of a beautiful Saturday morning in Madison. For anyone who has not been able to experience it, the Farmer’s Market stands as the center piece of Madison summer Saturday mornings. The eight blocks surrounding the majestic Capital building are completely filled with all sorts of produce stands. Mushrooms to Meats, cheeses and cheese curds to cauliflower and cucumbers, fresh bread to fresh cut flowers. If you can imagine it, you can find it somewhere in those eight aroma filled blocks. Goats milk anyone? Maybe some Ostrich jerky. And did I mention the Capital views and the vista’s down side boulevards to the two largest Madison lakes? Or the view down State Street with the University and Bascom Hill at its terminus.
I came to Madison in 1977 after spending the first twenty-six years of my life figuring out how to get here. That fall, I began the next leg of a teaching career that would span twenty-one years and eventually morph into a career in financial planning. In the ensuing years, I have owned two homes on the eclectic East Side, met my wife and raised two beautiful children. I am currently enjoying being a part of the raising of two grandchildren and loving the fact that they can grow up here in Madison. I have sat on the world famous Union Terrace chairs, ridden on all of her bike trails, taken in countless music venues in her parks, restaurants and saloons (sounds so much more inviting than bars), soaked in the culture of Art Fair on the Square, oohed and awed at Rhythm and Booms and cheered on the Muskies, Mad Hatters and eventually the Mallards baseball teams. I have boated on her lakes, Monona and Mendota, watched water ski shows on her bay, yes that bay, the one with the “dock of it” and rode my bike along their shores. And on gorgeous fall afternoons I ate savory brats, washed downed with local craft beers and cheered on The Badgers at venerable and historic Camp Randall.
If I sound like a tourism ad it is because one cannot help but fall in love with this city. The activities it offers are countless. The culture it supports is woven into its fabric. The vistas and changing seasons are its own personal art gallery. From its lakes and parks to its gardens and architecture, there is no shortage of scenery to satisfy any of the senses.
Forty years have passed since I moved in to my little apartment on the South Side of Madison and I have never reconsidered that move. I guess taking that slow Saturday morning walk around the Square today made me realize and appreciate this city and all it offers. The crowds just reminded me I wasn’t the only one to feel that way. Hopefully there will be countless more slow Saturday mornings and my chance to remind my children and grandchildren who have lived in no other place, to never take it for granted. Take the walk, slow down and enjoy the views. Madison welcomes you every time.
Life as a Labyrinth
It is official. I step across my line in the sand on August 17, 2017. It has been a 44 year journey to this last step. To tell you I am taking that step without fear would be a gross distortion of the truth. Of course there is fear. Ironically, I have held myself out as one who knows how to deal with fear and have prided myself in taking fear out of the equation for many people over the span of my career. I even intend to write a series of blogs about it so stay tuned if you are one of my followers. But here I am, ready to take the step, even committed to taking the step but fear still haunts my thoughts and dreams.

The fear I face is simple. Will I find the peace I have spent a lifetime looking for and in that peace will I still find fulfillment? I know that the fulfillment I seek will only come if I feel I still have purpose. I do not fear wasting away in the La-Z-boy watching hours of TV. I know I have too much restlessness for that to happen. But will I still feel that sense of purpose I have thirsted for all my life? Where will I replace what I do now, with what I continue to need going forward?
So why the title of this blog? I just returned from church where we rededicated our labyrinth. Before I go too far down this road, for those of you who don’t know what a labyrinth is or maybe think of it as a maze, it is not a maze at all and certainly not a corn maze. For a deeper understanding here is a link to a history of labyrinths and also a site to find labyrinths if you become so inclined to walk them.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labyrinth
Ours comes up at the second site if you list Madison, Wisconsin as your search criteria and then scroll down to “New Life” church.
![305878613IMG_1650[1].JPGlabyrinth1007](https://kenismsblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/305878613img_16501labyrinth1007.jpg?w=1000)
The effect of any good labyrinth is that you are walking a path that at times brings you oh so close to the center , while at other times, the path actually moves you further away. From the standpoint of Christianity, the center represents your relationship with God and the walking sometimes brings a sense of peace, while at other times at least a sense of re-centering. I prescribe to both the church aspect as well as the metaphysical aspect of the labyrinth. I will not preach here but rather just try to make my analogy work.
When I think of the labyrinth as a representation of life, I view the circular pathway as our journey through it. We are all looking for something. Monty Python said it most humorously in their film “The Meaning of Life”.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monty_Python%27s_The_Meaning_of_Life)
For most of us it is our “purpose”. At times, on our journey, we feel we are close to finding it, or maybe better stated, as perfecting it only to find ourselves moving further away and wondering if we were destined to do something else. In my life, I changed careers in part because I questioned my purpose during one of those periods when I felt I was just moving away. The amazing truth is that I changed to a different career and yet my purpose remained the same. I was just moving back toward the center again. I found out that financial planning was a career just as teaching had been. Only the audience had changed. The purpose, it turns out, was solving problems for anyone that would seek my advice and becoming a mentor to anyone who would take the time to listen. It was peace that continued and still continues to elude me. Solving problems requires a great deal of personal involvement in not only the process but the outcome as well. It can leave you in a constant state of anxiety.
So back to the labyrinth. If the path is the purpose, then the center is the realization that you have discovered your purpose and there in lies the peace that comes with the knowing. For the restless spirit, reaching that center may likely not happen until you finally take that last step of the journey, retirement. And so I prayed today as I walked our labyrinth, that I would find not only that peace in understanding my purpose but that there would be a way in retirement to be affirmed for what I had accomplished and the opportunity to still fulfill my purpose.
Do I fear it? Of course I do or I would not be who I am. Walking the labyrinth and seeing it as my journey through life has helped. I recommitted myself to never stop looking for opportunities to fulfill my purpose in any form or way that presents itself and I think I took one more step toward the peace I am looking for.
I am retiring, but I am not “gone”.
PS: Get out of your La-Z-boy and go walk a labyrinth. Even if nothing comes from it, you will at least have gotten some good exercise.
I Was Childed
I am flattered when the cashier of a grocery store asks to see my ID for the “adult refreshments” I am buying. Given my age and even my appearance, I really don’t look that young, they are either strictly following the rules or playing on my ego. One way I accept willingly, the other I suck up just as it was intended.
This weekend I will be inviting my 3 year old grandson, Jackson, to go on an outing with me to the movies. I am hoping “Cars 3” just came out or is at least still playing as I intend to end my dry streak of missing out on Disney and Pixar films. I have decided it is time to return to my inner child.
But I have this question. If they card you to be sure you are old enough to buy the adult beverages, do they have some sort of screening for going to a Disney flick? Now I am not talking about Jackson, I am referencing me. I am imagining this scenario. I go to a Disney film alone and when attempting to purchase my ticket, the usher states “Sir, I will need to see your child.” I will then reply that I don’t have a child and that I was just wanting to take in the show. Things will escalate to the manager who will explain that these movies are for children and that without the proper child escort, I am going to need to leave the establishment. And there it is, I have been successfully childed.
Hopefully you have humored me to this point and are not ready to question my sanity. I just find it an interesting premise on the other end of the scale. I am looking forward to taking Jackson to the movies with me but I know that I could attend alone. I would stand out and I am sure there would be questioning stares, but I would deal with it for the shear pleasure of enjoying the wonderful world of cartoons and especially the peppered seasoning of innuendos. But why go alone when I can take a child. Especially my grandson.
And so I will ask Jackson to come with me and when they child me, I will proudly point to Jackson and say “I think this one should do nicely.” And then Jackson and I will settle into our seats with a big tub of popcorn and enjoy the wonders that Disney will lay out. He will laugh appropriately while I will snicker at the innuendos and hope I will not be asked to explain. And for an hour or so I will be back in time, sitting with my two daughters at my side savoring the memories and drinking in the emotions they evoke.
So go ahead AMC, child me. Jackson I are ready and excited to entertain our inner child…and maybe some popcorn.
Looking Great at 241
Happy birthday USA. You are 241 years old today and you don’t look a day over 200. A little gray around the edges but that’s just because we haven’t been doing our best lately to keep you beautiful. Some would say we need to make you great again but I for one don’t think you ever weren’t great. You are the most recognized country in the world and a leader in every aspect. You are a trend setter when it comes to the definition of Democracy and an example for any emerging country that would care enough about it’s populace to protect their freedoms.

None of this came without a cost. You have had your share of conflicts to resolve and growing pains when you learned to stretch the definitions of personal freedom. Through it all, you have kept your poise. Your fifty children have followed your example and each in it’s own way adds to the beauty of your legacy. Freedom and diversity are the cornerstone of that legacy.
So what’s all this about making you great again. Don’t take it personally when someone would imply that you had lost a step. You still are and always will be the land of freedom and opportunity. As such, you have always striven to offer those opportunities to all who would rise to the challenge. And rising to the challenge has been exactly what you have done.
As your song states, from sea to shining sea you are a land of majesty and beauty. From the mountains on your east to the peaks on your west coast, you rise majestically and scenically to the skies above. Your plains roll rhythmically across your midsection seaming the country together with their softly flowing rivers. You offer a vista of awe and wonder at every corner. Your interstates keep us connected and your back roads rise up to meet us when we leave the beaten path. Your cities afford us culture and style, while your towns and villages offer us history and Americana.

Happy 241st birthday, and with calm and sane reasoning, many many more. You are great and no amount of rhetoric can hide that obvious truth. Life is good and you continue to afford us the opportunity to live, love and grow, in and because of that goodness.
Let’s think about this the next time we Pledge Allegiance or sing the National Anthem. Let’s pledge ourselves not to making you great again, but keeping you as great as you already are. Let’s celebrate your birthday with fireworks and envision them as the birthday candles lit for you today all across your night sky.

Happy 4th of July, 2017.
There was Electricity in the Air
And that was the problem. There was plenty of electricity in the air but none in our cottage. And that is how our week of vacation began. But I really should take you back an hour. As we neared the cottage and had turned down the final length of the narrow road that ended at the entrance to our cabin, we found my son-in-law’s vehicle abandoned in the road. Lying fully across the road and up the embankment on the other side, was a way too large to move birch tree. The storm had taken it down and even now as the rain began again in earnest, electricity filled the air. John had had to abandon his vehicle about an hour earlier as he was returning to the cottage with my three year old grandson, Jackson. After an ill-fated attempt to cut the tree with a hand saw, he and Jackson had braved the storm and walked back to the cottage where my daughter and our three month old granddaughter, Adela, were waiting for them. Fortunately for us, a rescue crew of cottage neighbors had arrived at the tree and were cutting it in to manageable pieces with a chain saw. After a stint rolling the logs off the road, we were on the final leg to the cottage.
We arrived at the darkened cottage to find that the wind and lightning had taken out the power. This is an all too familiar occurrence in the north woods and we already feared that we would be out of power for a while. Let me emphasize “a while”. That was soon to become a relative term. For those of you who fantasize about being off the grid, let me tell you that you might leave that as a fantasy. Without power there is no TV to watch while you are trapped inside by a raging rain storm. No big deal. There is also no electricity for the refrigerator or the oven. Slightly bigger deal as your frozen food melts and your perishables, well perish. And then every time you grab for a light switch you realize you better start conserving the batteries in your only two flashlights. You are off the grid and starting to hope this doesn’t last long. But it does.
Now comes the next item that succumbs to lack of electricity. Remember the hot water you love for your shower, sorry, that too runs on electricity as does the pump that runs the well. Forget about the shower if there isn’t any water anyway. And then it dawns on you, it might be time to ration your time in the bathroom because yes, flushing without water is just another exercise in futility which is fast becoming the title of this vacation.
Evening came and with it the darkness only being off the grid can provide. You have flicked on the light switch now for the millionth time with nothing returning but that empty click. You retire to bed early just like you ancestors did, 8:00 pm, and convince yourself normalcy will be back on in the morning. First light comes at 5:00 am and off course you are up, you’ve been sleeping for nine hours already. You check the clock, still running on battery, and fool yourself that the power is on. Reach for the switch and nothing. Day two begins, no change, no charge, no power.
The final straw lands on your shoulder when your coffee addicted spouse asks for her morning cup of Joe. You remind her that the coffee maker, like everything else, needs juice. Not the liquid type, the electric type. And she threatens divorce.
I need you to feel the emotions we were experiencing to make the moment the electricity returned have its true effect. Our last desperate call to the power company had warned us that it could be another 24 to 30 hours before they got power restored as we were one of only two hundred patrons left without power. Did they really mean that to feel like an honor to be proud of? Yes folks, you are our frontline soldiers holding the line against the evils of advancing society. We soldiered through another day off the grid, cell phones dying, arm pits smelling like pits and Jackson being taught the amazing joy of going to the bathroom in the great outdoors and well, being a male. We retired to our beds at first crack of dark dreaming of the joys of electricity. It was 2:30 AM when the call came. I kid you not, the power company called us to proudly announce that after 38 hours, they had restored our power. Thanks to you brave soldiers for your valiant fight to stay alive. And what did we do? Well we turned on every electric run item we could find, sang Kum by Yah and danced around the cottage like a bunch of medieval druids. If we had still had any un-perished perishables available, we would have likely cooked up a feast.
And so my friends, as I have had power returned to my lap top, and I have come to the reality that I am really not a pioneer, I felt compelled to write down this little piece of history. If you are still fantasizing about going off the grid, get a grip. It ain’t all it’s cracked up to be. You’re my hero Mr. Edison.
What is a Mother
A mother is that single driving force that brings life into this world and holds her family together through thick and thin. She is the shoulder to lean on when you can’t stand alone and the same shoulder you cry on when your heart is broken. She is hard as nails when you try to negotiate your “I wants” and as soft as cotton candy when you need her to forgive. A mother packs your lunch and tells you to be careful all the while she knows you will because she taught you to be independent and strong. She is there to help you plan your next adventure all the while making sure the adventure has boundaries. She picks you up when you fall and is the healing for your hurt. A mother gets up at dawn to ready the world for you each day and doesn’t go to sleep until she is sure that you are. She listens to your dreams and does everything in her power to give them a chance to become. She is your feet when yours are afraid to take that step. She is your heart the day you tell her you might be in love and your sensibility when life is too full of stress. A mother is your soul when you need the faith and courage to soldier on.
You are everything we wanted and gave us everything we needed. We owe you everything and so often return less than you deserve. Today is your day for us to promise to be our best. To be the reflection of your love and compassion, your strength and courage, you faith in the face of doubt. You are the embodiment of the noblest of all careers, motherhood.
Your mother brought you into this world and prepared you to be the mother you one day would be. I have watched your every move, your every act of compassion. I have seen you at your best and felt your pain when you couldn’t seem to take theirs away. You have produced two beautiful daughters and they are a testament to you. They are your heart and soul and their strength is the reflection of the courage you have shown them. You have prepared them to be the mother Bailey is and the one Kathryn may one day be.
Be content. Know that you are cherished and respected. Your legacy will live on through the generations that follow ours simply because you were in their lives each and every time they needed you. Never wavering, standing your ground when you had to and sacrificing everything if they needed you. Your heart and soul are imprinted on theirs and will live on long after we are gone.
Happy Mother’s Day my love. What a lonely journey it would be without you.
All my love,
Life Is A Scavenger Hunt
For Easter I created a scavenger hunt for my three year old grandson, Jackson. The clues were not difficult, though my wife was stumped by one of them, Jackson went from one clue to the next with gleeful ease. At the end of a series of clues he successfully found his Easter basket. I do not know if it was more fun for him or for the adults that paraded behind him from one hiding place to the next. The trail led Jackson to his favorite spots in and around our house.
Now where was I going? Oh yeah, life is like a scavenger hunt. We travel through life seeking the clues that will guide us to the next level. If you have been a parent, will you ever forget that moment when your child takes their first step or maybe when they suddenly realize they can read. They are small steps leading to the next level. First steps lead to mobility. Reading leads to knowledge and knowledge leads to opportunities. The key is to keep moving forward to your life’s next clue.
If we never look back. If we keep seeking and reading the next clue, think of where they can lead. In my line of work, I have met those who never miss an opportunity. Each clue leads them forward and each step leads them closer to, credits to Monty Python, the meaning of life. I have also seen those too afraid or just unwilling to look for the next clue. They remain stuck, wondering why life is unfair.
But I can’t leave that meaning of life statement just hanging there. Here is the rub. We may never know the meaning of life. I mean Monty Python tried, but even then it was more mystery than substance. I suspect that the meaning of life is meant to be a mystery. It is the final clue at the end of the scavenger hunt. For now I will continue to look for the next clue. What I do with the clue will depend on my interpretation of it.
Life is a scavenger hunt. Keep looking for the clues. Some are small and others immense. Just make sure with each clue you improve the life you live, yours and the lives you touch.
Happy hunting.
They Don’t Know What They Don’t Know
With Easter just around the corner I feel obliged to record a family story. The story dates back to my youngest daughter, Kathryn’s, Easter egg hunt. She was about three and since birth had grown up in “The House of High Cholesterol”. Trust me when I tell you it will become clear later in this story why that is significant.
We had all headed down to the community park for the annual neighborhood egg hunt. While the older children were given a much more complex set of rules and far more difficult hiding spots, the three year old group had been invited to the bowl shaped lower area of the park. There, not hidden at all, were hundreds of brightly colored eggs of the plastic kind, chock full of chocolate and sugar delights, and the actual, chickens had laid them, eggs. Even from the top of the rise it was quite easy to see them all strewn about and waiting.
On the sound of the horn, which by the way scared half of the seekers into leg clutching terror, the brave ones were off on a run down the slope. Kathryn eagerly chased down to the pit and then started wandering about among the eggs. It did not take long for us to notice that she was not picking up any of them. Shouts of encouragement and direction seemed to have no effect. Eventually she came back up to us, tears running down her cheeks. Through her gasps for air between sobs, we deciphered that she was telling us that there were no eggs down there. At this point her sister steps in and points out the eggs lying about right there in the open and asks her just what is the problem. I believe Bailey envisioned herself as the true parent here and was going to straighten her sister out.
Kathryn looks up at her and says those aren’t eggs. At this point I stepped in, eager to be the caring and wise father, and asked her just what she thought an egg was? She looks up at me with that tear streaked face and said, “you know, the little yellow boxes!” If you haven’t made the connection, lets revisit “The House of High Cholesterol.” It seems, we had never actually consumed a real egg for fear of immediate and excruciating death. Her mother and I may have read a few too many medical reports on the evil plot chickens were hatching on us, yes pun intended. The only eggs Kathryn had ever seen were in the little yellow boxes, namely, Egg Beaters.
The good news is, we were able to explain as rapidly as possible, the misconception about eggs and, thanks to those terror frozen three year old’s still clinging to their mother’s legs, there were plenty left for Kathryn to save her first Easter Egg Hunt drama. Now several years later, at a Mallard’s game, Kathryn was one of the lucky names drawn to participate in the Infield Cash Dash. Apparently we had done a bang up job in this department, for she had no issues finding cash. I maybe, however could have explained that the bigger numbers on the bills out weighed the popularity of the face on it. But I’ll save that for another story.
Just remember “They don’t know what they don’t know!”
Defending Your Life
The other day I was watching an older movie starring Albert Brooks and Meryl Streep titled “Defending Your Life”. The gist of the plot is that when we die, our lives are put on trial before a pair of judges. We are given a prosecutor and a defender tasked with convincing the judges that we should be allowed to move on into eternal bliss, or if we lose our case, sent back to earth to try it again in another life.
I found the premise enticing as food for thought. As I am fast approaching my retirement date, thankfully not death, I am looking back to see if my life is defensible. I know that I tried to accomplish a life set to the theme of being useful. Now that doesn’t seem very heroic and I must say I have entertained many a heroic fantasy, but it was a goal. I even felt redeemed when the famous Red Green would proclaim that “if you couldn’t be handsome at least be handy.” I think being useful sort of fell into that category.
So was I useful? I think as a bartender, I learned to listen to the story. As a carpenter, I learned to be creative. As a teacher, I felt I put those two practices to good use and found ways to engage my students through stories and creativity. Later, as I moved into my most recent career as a planner, I took what I learned in teaching, the art of breaking a concept down to its core element, and used that notion, alongside listening to their story, to motivate my clients to both define and reach for their goal. I apologize for that last lengthy almost legalese sentence, but all of those concepts belonged together and just couldn’t break out of their common sentence. But to the point, measured against that back drop, I think I was useful.
Will I one day have to face the afterlife jury? Will my life turnout to be defensible? All I know is that heroic or not I think I will pass the test. After all, it is not just my career on which I should be judged a success or a work needing more refinement, but on the lives I have touched or influenced in some way. I have faith that I did a better than fair job of raising two remarkable human beings in my daughters. I wish to believe that I can find an echo of my beliefs in their lives. I am currently working on two grandchildren. I have already had three years with my grandson, and I think he sees some possibilities in my ideas. His sister will be my next project. I hope she will witness my belief that a women should be respected for her beauty while honored for her strength. Pretty sure there’s a truck under the Christmas tree right along with that pretty dress.
If life is the sum of it’s many pieces, I think the accomplishments should outweigh the back steps and even the bad decisions. I am not done yet, but just moving into the next phase. My hope for you the reader, is that you will reflect on your life and answer the question, “is my life defensible?” If you aren’t sure of your answer, then adjust the future.