Hello All,
The following is a somewhat unconventional
approach to a Memorial for Julie, in which you may choose your level of
involvement. Know that after a retrospective, a monograph, a lifetime
achievement award, tributes, and testimonials she found the idea of a memorial
gathering a bit excessive and embarrassing. In her last months she was
interested in the notion of kindness and the power of being kind in a
thoughtful and intelligent manner. There are no real ‘rules’ here, just
suggestions of how this idea may physically exist. Most importantly your
approach to this project needs to originate in your own heart.
There will be no public event; the idea is
for the spirit of Julie to travel outward into the world rather than to stay cramped
up as a memory inside of us. You are being asked to divert the resources you
would have put into traveling and attending a memorial into this project. This
will be a relatively simple, four-step process:
Julie’s
Kindness Project
Identify: Come up
with a deserving person/people unknown to Julie who is/are in need of a kind,
outward gesture. This could be your neighbor, your grandma, the people at the hospice
facility on the other side of town, or, on a larger scale a service
organization.
Calculate: Really
think about the time and resources you could have invested in attending a
memorial gathering such as: Putting gas in your car, traveling, sitting and
listening to memories of Julie, chatting and nibbling on snacks. Maybe you
would have ordered flowers, contributed to a legacy fund, sent johnie
something, or even bought yourself a new black leopard sequined jacket in honor
of the occasion.
Activate: Don’t
just consume; this isn’t about purchasing gifts. Use your resources along with
your time to perform a kind gesture. Prepare a special meal for someone you
wouldn’t have otherwise. Put a new battery in the financially challenged
person’s car you recently jump-started. Help your friend’s kids build a safe,
sturdy tree house. The possibilities are endless, and can be simple or
elaborate, as long as you push the boundaries of your kindness threshold.
Share: Put
something about the experience on our Facebook page (Shimon
Lindemann). Tell the whole story, give a short description, write a
poem, take a video, or be obscure with an uncaptioned snapshot. Invite others
to participate by tagging them in comments. See how this idea can grow. You may
use the hashtag #juliememorial. During this exercise, don’t reminisce about Julie.
Instead, remember the kindness that Julie inspired and wanted to see in the
world. This starts with Julie, but leads to something new.