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2nd Edition, Issue 12 -- December 4, 2008
This is a special edition of our monthly eBurst
newsletter. Normally, eBurst is filled with news and
announcements about Bizzuka. This month, however, in light of the holiday
season, we felt something else was called for.
Bizzuka CEO, John
Munsell, has written a wonderfully heart-warming account of an encounter
he had recently that, in his own estimation, was life-altering. It is a
message very much worth your while to read and pass along. Consider it an
early Christmas gift. (FYI...We'll send the normal newsletter in a
week or two.)
Putting it all into perspective - a Thanksgiving blessing
in disguise
by John Munsell, Bizzuka CEO
One of our family rituals is that I
take each child (we have four) to lunch on his/her birthday...just the two
of us. Like any other entrepreneur, I work 16 hour days and frequently on
weekends. That means I leave the house before the kids wake up and get
home just in time for dinner. While I try to spend as much quality time as
possible with my children, the birthday lunch is their pure one-on-one
time with Dad. Not to say that we don't have any one-on-one time, but the
birthday is a guaranteed ritual that we both love.
Last week
(ironically enough, it was the day before Thanksgiving), it was my
daughter Caroline's turn. Her pick -- the hibachi grill at Shinto Japanese
Restaurant.
While we waited to be seated, I noticed the hostess
asking a lady who was already seated to move to a different table. The
hostess then motioned to us to sit at that lady's table. I thought it odd,
because the grill master was just beginning to do his cutlery acrobatics
at the lady's previous table. I'm guessing they simply wanted to have
enough people at our table to warrant firing up the grill and giving
another chef enough patrons to make it worth his while.

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| They took a Polaroid of us at the restaurant
as part of the "birthday boat" package. Didn't realize they still
made those! |
Caroline and I took our seats, and feeling rather guilty,
I said to the lady "so they bumped you, eh?" She laughed and said, "Yes, I
thought I was going to get in and out quickly, but I guess that's not
going to happen."
We began chatting and had a delightful
conversation. She told us she moved here from Michigan. Said that her
husband had retired. Said the whole Louisiana culture was far different
than what she was used to in the Midwest where she grew up.
She
looked so young, though. I was thinking she must have married a much older
man, but then she said her husband was a professional football player who
retired after a 7-year career with the Minnesota Vikings. That made a
little more sense. Those guys don't last very long in the NFL. Seven years
was more than respectable.
I told her about our family birthday
ritual and she said, "Well, you must get the birthday boat. They come to
your table with this beautiful fruit boat and sing. It's great."
I
knew nothing of the "birthday boat," but I said sure, that sounded like
fun. As the meal wrapped up, she looked at the waitress and said, "Could
we get a birthday boat? And please put it on my tab."
What an incredibly generous thing for this stranger to do.
I didn't know her from Adam's house cat, but here she was buying my
daughter a gift. "You certainly don't have to do that" I said. She
replied, "No, no! I insist."
We finally introduced ourselves. Her
name was Demetra. We chatted some more about kids and schools. I finally
asked "So, what does your husband do now that he's retired?" Of course, I
was expecting her to make the obligatory "driving me crazy" crack, but I
could never have anticipated her next words.
"Well," she said, "he
came back here to coach (he played football for the University of
Louisiana Lafayette in college) and then shortly thereafter took a job
coaching in Arizona. One day, he noticed a tingling sensation in his arm.
Then he noticed it in his legs and fingers, so took him to see a doctor."
Their diagnosis: A.L.S. -- also known as Lou Gehrig's
Disease.
My jaw must have hit the floor, which would have been a
good thing because at that moment I could feel my mouth quivering and my
eyes well up. I've seen the ravages of that disease up close through two
friends and a business partner whose wife is terminally ill with ALS's
close cousin, MS. These are some of life's most cruel diseases. There are
no cures for either and they leave no survivors. I've also witnessed the
immeasurable stress caregivers must endure when dealing with an afflicted
loved one.
Yet, Demetra spoke of the love of her life with such
admiration and respect you couldn't help but feel the warmth of their deep
affection for each other. As I pondered all of the difficulties she's
surely facing, she said something that I'll never forget. "I have been so
blessed," she said. "His spirit lifts me every day, and this disease has
been a blessing in so many ways."
Here I was stressing about the
economy...stressing about Bizzuka living up to shareholder and investor
expectations...stressing about sales...stressing about buying Christmas
presents...stressing about facing traffic getting home...stressing about
interest rates and the stock market, and believe it or not, I was
stressing about the prayer I was supposed to lead the next day at our
Thanksgiving dinner with all of my family and in-laws. And yet, in that
one moment, I became utterly embarrassed at the pettiness of my
worries.
Amazing. Thanksgiving is a time when we express thanks for
all that we've been given, and Christmas is a time when we get to enjoy
the act of giving to others. The day before Thanksgiving, God sat my
daughter and me down next to Demetra Thomas, wife of former pro football
player Orlando Thomas.
What a gift! In a 45-minute lunch that
lasted 2 hours, this dear lady took my 48 years of "stressful living" and
put it all into perspective. So many times I've looked back at difficult
times or even tragic events in my life and have been able to count the
blessings that came as a result of enduring them. And yet, when it comes
to present ordeals, I consistently fail to make that same
application.
Demetra Thomas isn't looking back at past stressful
events and finding the positive turns her life made as a result. She's
living in a constant state of stress and seeing it as a current blessing
in her life. What an amazing gift she gave to my daughter and me on the
day before Thanksgiving.
My Christmas wish for you, your family, my
family and selfishly, me, is that we all begin to recognize that life's
difficulties are truly blessings in disguise. The trick is to look for the
blessing and not dwell on the adversity. However trite that may sound, if
you had the pleasure of meeting Demetra Thomas as I did, you would realize
how your outlook on life is defined by that simple act.
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