Iโve got a friend named Richard J. Smith. Actually, โfriendโ isnโt the right word, except in that Facebook definition. โTelephone acquaintanceโ might be closer to the truth since, until today, weโd never shaken hands. Heโs an old-school liberal who loves this newspaper and loves liberal talk radioโalthough he doesnโt like the Democratic Party any better than the Republican Party. At any rate, heโd invited me to lunch, basically to talk about some projects heโs working on, some projects he wants to work on, and politics. The Senior Center at the corner of Ninth and Sutro streets was to be the location of our rendezvous.
Last Friday, when I missed our first appointment, I thought lunch at the Washoe County Senior Center would be a perfectly reasonable place to focus on spirituality because Iโm a middle-aged guy, and I kind of figuredโa stereotype on my partโthat anywhere people older than me congregated would be rife with spirituality.
The dining roomโregular readers of this feature can imagine it as the sanctuaryโis a large cafeteria. Iโd paid my $4 outside at the desk, where I met Mr. Smith. He went in search of a place we could sit undisturbed while I turned over my ticket, received my tray and flatware, and plates with coffee, cauliflower, beef pot pie, ginger cake with frosting, and cooked fruit. (So help me, Iโm not sure what the fruit was, it kind of seemed like peach pie filling, but I donโt want to say it was.) All the servers were very friendly toward me.
The room is large, and while it does have a sort of governmental, bureaucratic lunchline feel to it, there were various holiday-type decorationsโSt. Patrickโs Day is coming right upโto make the room more festive, There were also the metallic sounds of Bingo numbers being called overhead and the tinkling of a piano from the other side of a temporary wall.
Nowhere, though, was there a sign of spirituality or religion. Iโve been to churches that didnโt present such iconography, but this place didnโt even have the feel of spirituality.
Richard and I sat down, and he began showing me his calendars, which he and his son produced in 2008, which were essentially making fun of Rush Limbaugh and the Bushies, a voluminous book full of cartoons and various writings, a sheet with the titles of some songs heโd writtenโhe practices piano some afternoons at the Centerโand a book written by famous attorney Vincent Bugliosi: The Prosecution of George W. Bush for Murder.
We chatted along amiably enough. Heโs got a lot to say, and heโs looking for the right venue to say it. Heโs, I think, primarily a radio guy, but he wants to write some longer pieces on national topics of interest. He kept telling me about one project after anotherโfrom the calendar publishing to radio shows to music videosโthat heโs working on. We goofed on the quality of the food. โIโm only used to gourmet vegetarian foodโmy whole life, well, the last 30 years of it anyway,โ he said.
People kept coming up and joining our conversation. Call it friendly fellowship at the Center. One elderly gentleman came up to discuss the Bugliosi book and when it would be available again at the Centerโs library. Another man, Mike Kinikin, joined us to discuss his battles with the Veteranโs Administration, trying to get some kind of relief from Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome that he suffered in the Vietnam War. Heโs been fighting for 10 years to get some help.
With communion and fellowship taken care of, I didnโt have to look hard to find spirituality. Call it the indomitable spirit of man. As I looked around the room and listened to stories, I could see that the human spirit never ceases to fight on, never ceases to look for hope in the next project. And I didnโt even have to listen to a sermon.
Music: Mellow
Sermon: None
Fellowship: Friendly
