The Retirement Pointe Podcast – Episode Two w/Dick Kase
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From The Preston Pointe Kitchen – Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
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The Retirement Pointe Podcast – Episode Two w/Dick Kase
April 2, 2024
From The Preston Pointe Kitchen – Strawberry Rhubarb Crisp
April 8, 2024
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The Retirement Pointe Podcast – Episode One w/Larry Smith

 PodcastOn our first episode of The Retirement Pointe Podcast, Kim Docalovich speaks with resident Larry Smith about his passion for photography, his amazing LP collection, the numerous concerts he's attended, and the one album he'd LOVE to find.

 Hi, and welcome to the Retirement Point Podcast. My name is Kim Docalavich, and today I will be your host of the podcast where we talk to seniors about their lives before and after they have reached the point of retirement. 

 

Welcome to the podcast. Today we have Mr. Larry Smith. So tell us about where you're from.  

 

Okay. I'm from Cary, North Carolina. I've been living here for about a year. there 50 years before we moved into Preston Point last, in 2021.  And went to school at NC State here in Raleigh area.

 

Married my whoops, married my  wife in 1969  and she was going to school at  UNCG in Greensboro. So we met on a blind date, which was fun. 

 

Oh, wow. 

 

And so I've been here 50 years in this area and I worked for IBM for 41 years. Yeah. Before retiring.  And we have three, two children, three grandchildren. 

 

And do they all live close or have they traveled  away? 

 

Yeah. My son lives in  Holly Springs. My  daughter lives in Durham.  Granddaughter lives in Fayetteville and the other two grandkids live in Holly Springs with my son. Oh, wow. So everybody's just right here. Okay.  Yep, pretty close. And of course my wife is here with me.

 

Of course. Of course. So what did you study in school? What did your wife study? 

 

I studied electrical engineering. Wow. And she studied psychology. 

 

Do you want to tell us how y'all met on your blind date? 

 

Okay.  It was set up by a friend of both of us that he was dating a girl at the same school UNCG and set up the blind date  and it was funny because there was two guys that were dating girls there and of course I met my wife there and they never got married but I did. 

 

So weird. 

 

That was the one that was supposed to work out.  

 

That's right.  That worked out great. 

 

Nice. So we know that you are a big time fan of photography, so tell us how you got started in that. Where did your passion for photography come from? 

 

I think it came from,  I think I've always, since I've been able to  put a camera in my hand, and been taking pictures, probably started before, I'm sure it started in college.

 

And  it was just a  standard instamatic type camera or something like that. And involved in, probably in the 70s, I tried to, I got a  camera that was  more professional, if you will. So I started taking pictures of family sceneries vacations, that kind of stuff, and evolved on into years in the 2000s and in doing more photography with concerts and that kind of stuff and flowers and that's it.

 

So I've been into it forever almost, I guess you're saying.  

 

So is there a particular thing you like to photograph over anything else? 

 

Yes. Today,  probably family and flowers, whereas  starting in 2000s, I was doing a lot of  concerts and I took a lot of pictures. Once I got my first digital camera in 2003, I started taking a lot of photographs at those shows, and I have too many photo albums to prove that. 

 

I bet. Have your children Taken up your passion for photography?  

 

Actually, probably not. I think my daughter did, my son didn't. And today with the  advent of iPhones and cell phones being so good, that's what they're using for all their photographs and stuff. And so am I'm using that a lot.

 

Oh yeah. With them being local too, and you being such a guru in photography, I'm sure that. You probably feel that  photography.  

 

Yeah, I try to take pictures of the  younger kids at least as much as I can.  Awesome. 

 

So I also know that you're a big fan of music. So do you want to tell us about some of those concerts you've been to? 

 

Yeah I guess  when I was in school,  my wife and I went to several together.  That were people that you don't even remember, don't even know probably.  Like The Letterman, Dionne Warwick, The Righteous Brothers. Those type of people.  And we saw Elvis one time in Greensboro.  When he was later on in his life.

 

And that was fun, but  we had to sit in the back so we could see the back of his head. But other than that, it was fun.  And I think I've been interested in music and  Playing music, not playing musical instruments, but playing recording music probably since I was  13 or 14 years old. But as far as the concert is concerned probably the first time was when I was in college to actually go to see somebody.

 

And that's continued on for a long time. I've slowed down a little bit now, But probably in the 2000s and 2010s and 20s, I was doing 10 or more shows a year, which is quite a few. Oh my goodness.  And some of those are festivals where,  like the CMA Music Festival in Nashville, I went four times. And when you go there for that, and it's been three or four days, 50 artists perform, not just one.

 

So it's a lot of stuff, a lot of photographs, a lot of photographs taken.  

 

Oh, I can imagine.  Sounds like you've been to see many people.  

 

Yeah I'm trying to remember.  Starting in the 2000s, in 2001,  I went to Winston Salem, North Carolina to see a show.  And I really went to see Martina McBride because she was my favorite vocalist at that point to listen to. 

 

And it was a girls night out tour  with Reba, Martina, Sarah Evans, and two other country artists, all five  taking the stage.  And I hit it a conscience up front.  to win either a backstate pass or front row seat. And I won the front row seat. I was sitting there in the front row and that got me more interested in going to more stuff, if you will.

 

I've been going to  lots of stuff, and I've seen probably  12 or 15 Martina McBride concerts over the years.  And like you say, when you go to a lot of these festivals, more and more people, all the major, most of them were country music,  starting in the in the 2000s. And because they were, that's just what I did at that point. 

 

And bluegrass now also, 

 

oh, that's wonderful.  

 

Anyway, so I've slowed down a little bit now, maybe one or two a year. But in focusing more on  taking care of myself and my wife and family and that kind of stuff. Slowed down a little bit.  

 

Of course. Back in your heyday when you were going to all the concerts, what, ten, about ten a year? Was there any particular bands or musicians that you liked to see? Frequently, if they were in town?  

 

Yeah, there was, there were several on the countryside. Of course, Martina McBride, but also a little big town. Lady Antebellum, they changed her name to Lady Gaye, ,  I got to see Taylor Swift, I think two or three times before she became a big star.

 

I saw her two or three times since then, my granddaughter and I went to see her. But she opened for other acts and country acts back in. The day, and I got to see her doing that type of thing also.  

 

Oh my goodness. That was interesting.  

 

Yeah, she's certainly changed, hasn't she? She's very talented.  Yeah, she's changed quite a bit. 

 

So I've seen almost every, as far as the 2000s are concerned, 2000,  2010s and 20s, almost every major country artist in concert somewhere.  I don't know where, I saw Dolly Parton here in Raleigh in 2000 and something, 2006 I think.  And it's been fun, I've enjoyed it.  I enjoy taking pictures too, of that,  of those events.

 

And keeping track of,  trying to keep track of all my photographs.  

 

Okay I also know that you are a big time collector of vinyls, so how did you get started in that collection?  I was born in 1945 and by  1958 I was already buying records.  So when I was a teenager, early teenager, I was buying the 45  singles, if you will, 7 inch singles and then eventually migrated into  the 12 inch LPs. 

 

So I started then, I still have a lot of those 45s I bought in the 50s and 60s, but  I started, personally buying stuff all during that time through the 60s and 70s.  It may be even into the 80s, but then  in the 2000s or so, starting in the 90s maybe, I started going to  estate sales and yard sales and  flea markets and wherever, and trying to get  albums that I didn't have of a particular artist, for example,  and doing that kind of stuff. 

 

Like you say, it started really early, because I was interested in music, interested in  playing music on the vinyl,  and still into that, as a matter of fact. Still playing anyway. Not buying as much anymore, but still playing. I got some, I got enough, I don't need to worry about buying anything anymore, 

 

do you play music? Do you play an instrument yourself? 

 

No, I don't. No, I don't do anything. I took piano lessons for Maybe a week, maybe a month and that's about it.  No replay. No  replay. So you just like to, you like to listen to it.  Yeah. Yeah. That's awesome. Yeah. And during, I do some online listening too.

 

During the pandemic,  a lot of, everybody shut down. You didn't have any  festivals or any shows to go to mostly. Yeah. A lot of artists I listen to  came on, Facebook  live or Instagram or other things and started listening to them and still do some are still doing streams every week or a couple of week couple of streams a week.

 

I still listen to them some, but they're all migrating mostly back to live shows and they don't do as much. of that. And these are some of these are independent artists that don't have major levels, labels, but they're trying to get their music out by doing a lot of streaming and YouTube type stuff.

 

So  it's fun to watch them occasionally also.  

 

Do you have any favorite albums that you currently  have on rotation?

 

That's a hard choice when you got 500 of them, right?  

 

I don't know if you had a short list of tried and true. 

 

This is  a hard thing to answer.  Recently I've been, I've listened to Fleetwood Mac  and  female artists like Leaving You and John, that type of thing.  Cause I, when I was going out and collecting records, I would try to For example, Leaving You and John just looked while I go, I got like  15 of her albums, something like that.

 

So I tried to get everyone that she released, if you will, as I was going through. So I had to listen to them occasionally, at least. But I got about 20 Beatles albums and about 30 Elvis albums, and the Beatles albums probably some of those are more valuable ones than I am, but there's still none of them are really valuable.

 

 

 

The vinyls coming back, so a lot of people are buying it.  And reselling them. There's a lot of people out there buying collections and selling them.  I have some beetle alums that are probably worth something. 100 range, something like that. But that's about as high as it's going to get with my collection, I think.

 

I think the value is in all really how much you appreciate it. So if it's a good album for you,  yeah, that's true. That's true. 

 

It is. Yeah. How about any rare albums or any vinyls that you're especially proud to own?  

 

There's a couple of Beatles albums  that are fairly rare, but again, they're not that old.

 

Rare enough to be worth thousands of dollars or so, but  I'm looking for one  from the Beatles album that I can afford to buy, but  they released an album called  Yesterday and Today, I think it's called,  and they did an original version  with a not too Likeable cover, sort of an offensive color cover on it.

 

So they pulled that thing back, the manufacturer and distributor pulled them back  But of course, some got sold. So those are worth,  they call them the Beatles Butcher cover and they're worth 000 a piece. Because they just weren't that big. There's only a couple hundred that actually got out in the universe, if you will. 

 

But when they pulled them back instead of  throwing all those album covers away, they put a, got a paste thing and put it on top of them and then re, re, re sent them back out. Those with the paste on top of them,  And you can tell by this sort of stuff bleeds through. Those are worth in the thousand dollars by themselves. 

 

And then, in the final version, which I've got a couple of, they're not worth too much.  So I'm looking for that one. But I won't be able to afford to buy it. But anyway.  You never know, you might come across it.  Yeah. Never  can tell, right?  Yeah.  Alright. Now that you are retired, do you want to talk to us a little bit about that?

 

What year did you retire? What year  2008.  

 

Okay. 2008. So it's been a  little bit.  Yeah, it's been a while. Been a while. Yeah, I've been lucky.  I've been lucky in my health, too, as I've been  pretty good with that, so that's good. Oh, that's very good to hear.  Yeah, doing a lot of  things with the family during that retirement time and  that type of thing and making sure we do that.

 

That's important. So what are some things that you've been able to do with your family now that you're retired that you couldn't do before? 

 

Probably a few. I know my granddaughter, my older granddaughter she and I spent a lot of time together. She went to a lot of the country concerts with me here. She's 23 now, but she's a daughter. She's the mother of my great granddaughter. I got great granddaughters too.  And she's a mom. But now back when she was a teenager and younger.

 

She and I went to a lot of the country shows here,  and we've been on several trips by ourselves. We went to  Atlanta, for example, to, through there, went to the zoo and that kind of stuff, and went up to up to Tupelo, Mississippi, to Elvis's home, back to Memphis. It's been some time there. Went to Nashville, came back, did a trip like that. 

 

And then she had never flown at all, and I had never been to the Rocky Mountains, so we went to the Denver area for a week. That kind of stuff. Oh wow. So all this has happened, all this has happened since I retired. And we've been up in, we went to some local, just local trips to the beach and the mountains and that kind of stuff. 

 

My wife is from the mountains, so we've been there quite a bit.  So now that you're retired, do you feel like your passions in photography and your music that you've been able to explore those more?  I think I've been able to explore it some more, yes. Around this area, I've been trying to take  videos here at Preston Point occasionally if there's an event that, that deserves, most of them, all of them deserve to have pictures and videos taken.

 

But, so if I attend it, I try to take some short videos.  put on the website, the Facebook page, excuse me,  and take pictures of flowers and that kind of stuff. And more time to spend time  with the grandkids  taking, doing some photography,  that kind of thing.  And just speaking of general and photography back when I was working at IBM they had a photography club, so they would do some outings too, to just go somewhere and take  photographs and stuff.

 

Learn how to do it better, and that gave me a lot of  education back then also.  Do a little better. Today with the digital  camera type stuff and the phones,  you can take 50 pictures of one thing, so you can get one that's halfway decent.  Like when you're using film, you had to actually think a little bit more, cropping and getting the lighting exactly right, the focus so you can get one, maybe. 

 

That's good. But now you can take, you can play around a little bit and you can take those sort of graphs and modify them slightly if you need to brighten them or contrast and stuff. So it's a little more interesting in some ways  than the older,  after the fact, but in the beginning it's not quite as much planning ahead, if you will.

 

I know you share a lot on our residents and families  page, a lot of your work. That's how we discover you and all of your wonderful talents because they are very well done.  

 

Thank you. I appreciate it. So any advice for other seniors who are entering retirement or considering it or already there? 

 

I think trying to think positive is the main thing I believe and also  keep close to your family  and your friends because as you get older, things are going to change. And you'll and that's important, family and friends, I think is the main thing, is to make sure to keep that going and keep everything  in your mind about that. 

 

How about, what do you enjoy most about living at Preston Point?  Oh, okay. I thought you'd get there eventually.  No, I think I think two things. When you first get here, it's all new and you have to get adjusted and stuff. And then eventually.  As you go through, you meet a lot of new people and have new friends.

 

I think that's one of the most important things. And also here, I've found that  all the employees and the staff and stuff are extremely friendly. Very nice. Very helpful. And that makes the transition a lot better. The food is good also, and the activities are good. So I think all that together makes it a nice place to be. 

 

That's so wonderful to hear.  All right. I think that's all I have. Thank you so much for your time and joining us on this podcast. Did you have any questions, any comments?  No, and thank you very much for your time. I appreciate it. No, thank you. Thank you very much. We really appreciate it.  Okay. Have a good day.

 

You too. Thank you.  Thank you so much for joining us on The Retirement Point Podcast. If you like what you saw, please and subscribe for more. Video Transcription:

  Hello, and welcome to the retirement point podcast, where we celebrate seniors before and after the point of retirement. My name is Kathryn Harbor, and I'll be your host today.

This is Gerri Barbour, and I've heard just a little bit about you, Mrs. Barbour, that you were an educator and actually in the great state of Ohio. And I say that because that's where I was born and and I have a lot of family there. Let's start there. So tell us a little bit about about where you lived in Ohio and maybe a high level overview of your education career there.

I grew up in a small town in Southern Ohio. I have one sister, while it was a very pleasant place to live, although it was during segregation time. The education system was wonderful. The schools were desegregated. I thought it's a contrast that I could meet at a restaurant or stay in the hotel, but I could drink from a public drinking fountain and I could go to school, in my neighborhood school without any repercussions and, I got an excellent education.

So it sounds like that became a career path for you then being in education. Did I get that right? Or Did I mishear that?

No, that's correct. I decided to get an education in the field of education. Okay. Great.

What grades did you teach?

I started in elementary school. I taught the fourth grade, the first year, and then the fifth grade the next year.

And I didn't like teaching all of those different subjects. And I had majored in drama and minored in English in college. I was in living in, in the Bronx at the time, and New York has always had I shouldn't say always, because I don't know what it's like now, but it had specific requirements, high standards for teachers.

For example you couldn't get a teacher's permanent license if you were overweight at that time. Yes, talking about 1958 you also should not have an accent, maybe a slight one, but if it was difficult for students to understand you, then you wouldn't have a permanent license either.

The standards were high, maybe unfair, but high back then.

Interesting standards that would not work today, right? Yeah okay, so you were, you grew up in Ohio and then how did you

end up in New York? I went to Howard University and I met my husband there and he was from New York.

He he, during the, let's see, that was about 1955 and I think it was the last year of the draft around there. Anyway, my husband had taken uh, ROTC. And so he had to serve two, two years in the military. He got married and he was stationed in Alaska, so both of us were in Alaska, and came back, then we came to New York, and because, again, that was his his home had been there before, and we decided that New York was a good place to live during that time, so that's how I got to New York.

Sure.

And then did you stay in New York for the foreseeable future or did you move around since was he still in the military or not in the military any longer? He got out after his two years. Okay. Okay. Okay, and then did y'all stay and did you I'm sorry. I'm from the south. So well now So that's why I said y'all but did you stay in new york?

Yes, we did We decided that was the best place to live, because again There was a lot of segregation and new york offered many opportunities that the other states did not And so we decided to stay in new york. Plus he had relatives there, of course right lawrence And so we our daughter was born in we were in Alaska.

She was, and so I, was, it was a fairly new mother at the time when we first got back to New York. So I was home with her. And then to have a better financial pool we decided that I would go to work. And had to go back to college and get my degree in teaching or, get some courses in teaching that I hadn't before.

So I went to CCNY, City College of New York, and I got my master's and I, as I said, I taught two years in elementary school and then I decided I wanted, I didn't want to teach all those different subjects. So I, my master's in English and I went to teach in the high school ever after.

Oh, you did.

Okay. So did you mention something about drama too? So you taught English. Did you all, were you also involved in drama at the high

school? Yes, I was. I taught, they had a drama program. Excuse me. So I taught some drama courses and I also directed plays after I had been at the school for a few years because they already had someone doing that.

And so I kept it a secret that I really would like to direct. So I think after maybe two years, then I started directing and it was a wonderful experience. Most of the time I did musicals, that had been done on Broadway, and it was just a wonderful experience to see the young people blossom and Their moment on the stage and anybody who wanted to be in the play would be in the play because of course the chorus Frequently can have any number of people in it.

So I if someone didn't have a solo voice they could still be in because they would be in the group scenes and We had People of all ages participating. I did Oliver and the King and I, which needed a young child, younger child than the high school age. So we had the students when we did the King and I there were about 90 people in the cast because the King had a lot of children and a lot of wives.

So there were a lot of it was

have fun. Really, and truly, and so tell us, are there any, is there anybody that we would know that you taught that ended up being an actor or, on Broadway or in the movies or anything? Not that I know of, not that you know of, there might be, right?

Because gosh, so how many years then did you teach at the high school level?

I taught towards the end, I was in administration of a facilitator for remedial programs. So I wasn't in the classroom as much, but in education, I was a little over 50 years, maybe 52

years. Wow. Okay. Thank you so much.

I just appreciate teachers. And of course, remember fondly remember some of my favorites, for sure. It sounds like It probably made an impact on a lot of students. So do you, did you hear from them at all after you retired or, do you still sometimes to this day?

Yes. I, at Christmas time, I exchange cards, with some of the students and the faculty members have kept in touch with each other too.

So I have some special friends that I made when I was teaching in New York. How nice. That's wonderful.

So you mentioned New York was different from some of the other states as it relates to desegregation. Can you just maybe shed some light on that for us? For I, I do remember briefly. So in the late seventies, I lived in Columbus. My, I was probably, 11 or 12. And I remember the talk about busing and And that's all I really remember.

And of course that was, like I said, that was in the seventies. So it sounds like New York was way ahead of everybody. If they were desegregated in the, you said in the fifties. So yes, could you just pop a little bit more about that for us? Of

course, each school district was different and there were places in New York where people were uncomfortable, but in the Bronx and in Westchester County, where I taught, People just got along, the students got along as I said the schools were desegregated, and the teacher, when the teacher taught everybody who was in front of her or him got the same information there was no feeling that black students were getting a, an inferior education, because they were right in the classroom with everybody, Everybody in that got the information.

We had diversity programs in service classes in the area of diversity. I it's almost surreal with the closeness. of the faculty. When I did the plays the physical ed teacher did the choreography. The shop teacher built the sets. And of course the music teacher taught the songs and directed the orchestra.

Everybody would, and the PTA sold the tickets to the plays. So we, everybody worked together. And and we achieved and so from time to time, there might be individual obstacles, but for the, like one time I had a student who plagiarized on his term paper and his mother had to come in and talk with me and in the course of the conversation, she just tossed out that she was a friend of the superintendent.

Smile to myself. I don't know whether you are not if he cheated. He cheated. We're not going to tell you just so

are you asking me to do here?

What do you make of all of, I would think that now with AI and, all that we have going on, how easy it would be for students to. Have these new programs actually write a paper for that, just yeah. Is, what do you make of all of that?

Uh, I'm glad I'm not teaching now, I not a technological person and using, the computers and everything and AI makes it even worse because I don't know the challenge to developmentally isn't there, isn't the same based and, I I'm glad I taught when I did.

I bet. I bet. For sure. From the time you started teaching high school to the time that you stopped teaching high school or retired, what did you, were there big differences from the beginning to the end in terms of? Just students level of interest, their their brain power, their motivation.

Did you notice a big change in that 50 or so years? Definitely. I did. See, um, even before computers were in the schools there were changes. And I taught in elementary school in the Bronx, as I said, and I think it was pretty widespread in New York schools that there was an auditorium day and the students would wear like a white blouse, a white shirt and navy blue skirt, and they would have the an assembly and put them on programs and so on.

And then for some reason they stopped and dress codes were no longer in existence. And so teachers and students. Or what they wanted to. And I personally felt that started a decline in the quality of participation and an achievement with jeans, sneakers on, you have to then ask people to take their feet off the desk it.

And I couldn't teach now because as I said, I'm not technologically inclined with AI and the computer, I don't know the computer that well, and they do so much work, the machinery. And I'm just, I don't know. I wonder how much the human brain is being used and how much machines are in control.

Think it's interesting that you mentioned that you think that the start or the decline, I don't know if that's the right word, but the start of it was with the change in the uniform requirements. It's almost are you suggesting that the school, that school itself was taken less seriously because of the uniform requirements?

Of relaxing the dress code and it started with relaxing the best code. Yes. Yeah, I actually liked uniforms. I went to a Catholic school for a period of time and it was nice not to have to worry about what to wear every single day. It was just laid out for me. But that is really, that's interesting.

I, I imagine there of parents that would probably appreciate a dress code because it would be easier all around.

Yes, and then you couldn't tell the teachers from the students, from high school students because the teachers had on jeans and, shirts out and I was old fashioned.

I just thought, you should, teachers should dress like adults and on on a job and not going to the beach or somewhere, uh,

Mrs. Barbour, it's such an honor to have you on. It really is. I love hearing about, I love hearing your story and history. And, is I would I would love to know, sitting where you are now, what would, if you could go back and talk to your 30 year old self, what would you say to her today?

I would say that there are, that life is good. I have as my mantra, reach out and touch somebody's hand, make this world a better place. If you can. And I think if on a personal basis we get to know each other, that things can get better in the world and with things that are going on today, if you were to ask me, will you asked me back in the thirties, now I'm 90 and, I never thought about what it would be like to live a hundred years, and it's I've had a good life. I've met some wonderful people. I've been blessed and I look forward to. Continuing and see if I can't make it to that century mark.

It sure seems like that's a great possibility because, oh my gosh I would never have guessed you were 90, not in a million years.

So what brought you to Preston Point? A lot of curiosity.

He passed. Yes, he passed in 2022. And children live in the Raleigh area Chapel Hill. And it was a, almost a two hour drive from here to Kinston because traffic, there's so many highways and traffic is so bad. Swift.

We decided that the best thing was for me to come closer to them. They checked around. We got information about Preston Point and visited and seemed like a place that I would be happy. And I am. I

I love to hear that. And how nice that you're, you get to be close to both of your children.

That's wonderful. Yes.

And my grandchildren are here. Okay, when he's in North Carolina now,

they're your grandchildren are all in their 20s.

Yes. Yes And I have one great grandson

Oh, how lovely that's great. Yeah. Wonderful. What have you I would imagine you've met a ton of people at Preston point is it a what are some of the things that you enjoy doing there?

The exercise classes. I some, I haven't been able to go every, every week. But I'm, and it's amazing how long it takes to put things in order, getting your papers together and deciding what pictures to keep and so on. And I'm still have things in papers in boxes that I have to make to sit but at Preston Point one's time is one's own, I can do whatever I want to do when I can eat what I want to eat if I, I usually go with people that I met early on and we, we go, I don't always go to breakfast because I don't like to get up early, so we have that in a lot of cases.

And I really never like to cook and so I don't have to cook, and that's one of the highlights of staying there in here. The people are friendly. We, in our conversations we, we find we have things in common and people are from many different places. There are some New Yorkers here, people from Ohio.

The surroundings are so lovely, going outside with the beautiful landscaping of the celebrating special occasions, St. Patrick's Day and Black History Month. It's, um, it's, I was going to say it's a well designed program, see, I go back to teaching. It's everything.

To make me comfortable is here except for, of course, the people that are gone. But I'm glad my my children found this place because, oh,

good. Yeah. It sounds lovely. Yeah. Yeah. And you sound like you're happy there. So that's great. Yep. Yep.

Is there anything else that you would like to share with us? Anything else that that you would Gosh, that we can pass on and share with another generation. Any last bits of wisdom from Mrs. Gerri Barbour?

No, just that

it's good for us to be open minded and realize that. We have a lot to share and yes, we are our brother's keeper and I don't want to get political, but a lot of things are going on today that show that people aren't close together, that they don't have much love for each other.

And that's unfortunate, but. Each of us, we do what we can, in our circles, and I think we can make a difference over time. If I may add, going back to segregation, in New York State, I don't know who came up with the idea, but we had a series of Parties and people came and they talked and found out what they had in common.

And if you really enjoyed someone's company, then you arranged to go have dinner with them somewhere, go to their home, come to your home. And there were two couples that my, my first husband and I we came. to, and we used to visit each other and the friendship lasted, through the death of the people and it just showed what can be done.

We we can. Go to the air in places, the beach, places together. Yeah. Alana's based on fear and lack of contact, and being misguided. That's right. I just wanted to add something about a special student that I like to. Oh, yes. We were going to do Fiddler on the Roof. And one young man had a beautiful voice.

And he was a special ed student. And his mother said she didn't think he could learn the lines. And Tevye is on the stage almost all the time. And so she said she didn't think he could learn the lines. And he said, He could, and when he said he could, I said to myself, he can't. And so I put him in the role, he learned every line.

Oh. Sang his little heart out. And you ask if any of my students, became, Quote unquote name people. He decided that he was going to try to make a living as a singer, as a musician. And I don't know how far he was able to carry it, but it was, it just did my heart good to see him out there on that stage.

Yeah, it's important and I think that's a problem with the world today is that we don't encourage each other enough, uh, make a person feel good about himself. Need to remind each other that things can be. All right, don't give up, don't get angry, but work with other people and make this world a better place.

Cheers.

Yeah.

That's something I really appreciate and notice in people when they're encouragers. That's such a gift when people are really wonderful encouragers. So that's, I love that. So it sounds like yes,

people encouraged me. People encouraged me. My, I remember my sixth grade teacher, we had a little not address books keepsake books, that you had.

And my sixth grade teacher wrote, you have great possibilities, so don't waste them. And to me that meant, she wanted me to be all I could be. And so I'm going to try everywhere. She believed in you.

Yeah, yes

she did

And it sounds like you believed in a lot of your students. So I'm sure you made an impact.

 

Yeah. It's been a pleasure hearing from you and meeting you. And thank you to all of our listeners today who are, who joined us at the retirement point podcast. All right. You have a good rest of your day, Mrs. Barbour. Thank you for joining us today at the Retirement Pointe podcast. Be sure to like, and subscribe so you can hear more about what it's like before and after the point of retirement.