Photography And Half-Thoughts By Mitchell Hegman

...because some of it is pretty and some of it is not.

Wednesday, January 10, 2018

The Man Sitting Beside Me

Spring of this year will mark the 41st year I have been involved in the electrical industry here in Montana.  I must say, I have enjoyed my entire career.  I sincerely mean that.  I have worked with some of the most generous and intelligent people inhabiting this blue planet.   My union membership provided me with a safe work environment, decent pay, health insurance, excellent training, opportunity, and now—best of all—retirement benefits I will reap within a few months.
I have a story about those benefits.
In May of the long ago year in which I started my electrician’s apprenticeship, I attended my first union meeting.  As luck would have it (bad luck, I assumed at the time), contract negotiations were underway.
The meeting turned somewhat heated.
Well, it all sounded like nonsense to me.   A bunch of young guys stood up and bellowed about putting an upcoming raise “on the check.”  Most insisted they would take care of their own retirement and do better.   A bunch of old guys stood up and urged applying some of the raise to retirement programs—the only certain way to guarantee money will be waiting for you in the end.
I must have looked bored, maybe a bit shell-shocked.  The man sitting beside me (a man somewhere near the age I am now) nudged me.  “You should pay attention to this,” he suggested.  “When you get to be my age, you’ll wish more of every raise went to retirement benefits.”
I didn’t respond to the man, but I never forgot what he said.  Actually, today, what he said very near haunts me.  The closer I near reaping my benefits, the more I think of him and what he told me—the absolute truth of it.  Not more than two days ago, I told this story to a young man before urging him to consider his own retirement plans.  I often urge younger people to think about their retirements.  I am so thankful for all the old timers who caused me to consider mine and who insisted on applying money to retirement programs.  I didn’t even know the man sitting next to me at that meeting, but he was my brother.

-- Mitchell Hegman 

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