hpshooter
Gold $$ Contributor
I have seen a few threads similar to this in the past and I will do my best to keep this short and concise.
Tomorrow I turn 69 and should have a good number of years of shooting left but today one of my best shooting partners who is 76 is in a care facility and completely unaware of who his family is or who any of his long time associates are. Only the Lord knows what he is aware of that he cannot communicate to any one and what anguish that must generate in his mind if it still functions.
His condition has gone steadily downhill for the past 6 years and took a dive off the cliff in February of this year. He was an accomplished engineer and we shot together since the early 80's in most rim fire and center fire disciplines. We traveled to matches together, RO'd in USPSA matches, shot high power, PPC and bulls eye together.
The point is this, never take the people who count in your life for granted. There is no guarantee of how long any of us will be functional. Savor the moment and let them know they count. He knew how important he was to our family but I am seeing the level of disappointment others who worked and shot with him and kept putting off checking on him or visiting him are having for not letting him know that he was important to them also.
The people I have meet and known in 60 years of being a mediocre to average shooter are what make me keep shooting and constantly working to improve. Apply the thoughts as you see fit.
Tomorrow I turn 69 and should have a good number of years of shooting left but today one of my best shooting partners who is 76 is in a care facility and completely unaware of who his family is or who any of his long time associates are. Only the Lord knows what he is aware of that he cannot communicate to any one and what anguish that must generate in his mind if it still functions.
His condition has gone steadily downhill for the past 6 years and took a dive off the cliff in February of this year. He was an accomplished engineer and we shot together since the early 80's in most rim fire and center fire disciplines. We traveled to matches together, RO'd in USPSA matches, shot high power, PPC and bulls eye together.
The point is this, never take the people who count in your life for granted. There is no guarantee of how long any of us will be functional. Savor the moment and let them know they count. He knew how important he was to our family but I am seeing the level of disappointment others who worked and shot with him and kept putting off checking on him or visiting him are having for not letting him know that he was important to them also.
The people I have meet and known in 60 years of being a mediocre to average shooter are what make me keep shooting and constantly working to improve. Apply the thoughts as you see fit.