The sun came up this morning with a pink so loud it practically needed its own soundtrack. I’m not exaggerating … we get skies up here in the Adirondacks that look like somebody spilled a watercolor set across the whole sky and then apologized by making it even prettier.
Myth or Truth
There’s an old story about the Hudson River School painters getting raked over the coals by critics who said their Adirondack skies were too vivid to be real … that no sky on earth looked like that. The painters swore up and down they were just painting what they saw. Sitting on this porch with my coffee this morning, I’m inclined to take their side. Something about a million protected acres, no smokestacks, and enough altitude to get you a little lightheaded apparently makes for a sky that looks like it’s showing off. I don’t know the science. I just know I believe the painters now — and I never believed anybody who said their fish was “this big.”
Close Neighbors
Speaking of the porch … it’s a good one. Screened in, looking out over the lake, and this morning the houses that were dead quiet a week ago are suddenly full of racket. Good racket. Laughter carrying clean across the water like the people are sitting in the chair next to you instead of a quarter mile away. Somebody’s having breakfast. Somebody’s easing a canoe out before the water skiers show up and turn the lake into a washing machine. It’s the sound of a holiday waking up.
Three Generations
My own Fourth of July memories start on Lake Wahbasee in Indiana, where we were third-generation lake people before “lake people” became a personality trait you see on T-shirts. My father and his grandfather used to sit for hours in an old metal rowboat, fishing and presumably solving none of the world’s problems but enjoying the attempt. My grandparents eventually parked their Airstream on a lot across from the lake, and years later traded it in for a little cottage. My folks followed suit and bought our first family place when I was 16.
Family Gathering
Everybody came for the Fourth. Both sets of grandparents, cousins by the carload, my brothers, friends who just showed up because word got around. We ate hot dogs, baked beans, and my grandmother’s secret potato salad … a recipe nobody has ever successfully duplicated, though I will go to my grave insisting it had a full cup of sugar in it and she just never admitted it.
Scattered Family
I cherish that memory every single Fourth of July, and I have never once managed to recreate it, because everybody’s scattered now and getting a crowd like that together has gotten a lot harder. Yesterday we had just one of our three kids here, who pulled off a small miracle escaping work for a couple of days. The other two couldn’t make it. That’s just how it goes now.
Freedom Recognized
Here’s the thing about freedom … I never really appreciated it. It was just there. Teachers talked about it in school. It got mentioned in speeches. TV pundits always talked about it. But when something is always there, it stops registering as remarkable..
A Fresh Viewpoint
Turns out, freedom is remarkable … I just needed to see its absence to recognize it.
That started for me on a trip to Czechoslovakia, visiting my wife’s family during the height of communism. It was an eye-opener in the worst way. Life was hard, everyone struggling, everyone afraid. Neighbors curried favor with the government by turning in neighbors. People simply vanished for the crime of pushing back on a local official. No trial. Gone forever. Our family there couldn’t trust anyone, because saying the wrong thing to the wrong person could cost you everything.
A later trip to Russia reinforced it. Even after communism officially fell, the fear hadn’t fully left the culture. Nothing like the Soviet era, but the residue was still there. And Cuba was worse than all the others combined.
A Bad Example
One artist I met told me about his father, also a painter, who refused to paint the propaganda version of Russian life he was ordered to paint. Instead he painted the truth of what he saw. After one especially pointed piece, he was arrested and executed. His crime was having an opinion the government didn’t approve of. That was the biggest eye-opener for me, meeting a contemporary who was impacted while I was alive. Not past history, but very real and in my face.
I’ve been fortunate enough to travel to a lot of corners of the world, and more than a few people who’ve lived through the loss of their freedoms have quietly told me the same thing: America is showing some of the same early warning signs they saw before things went sideways where they lived. Protect it at all costs, they warn.
Experts once predicted a republic like ours couldn’t survive a hundred years. We’re 250 years in. Good job, everyone.
Alarming Trends
It’s sobering to watch places like the United Kingdom criminalize opinions and statements of fact on social media, relabeled as “hate speech” by whoever’s holding the microphone that year. Seeing “regular people” go to prison for sharing an opinion is something I never thought I’d see, especially there. Some countries have made it illegal to quote certain Bible scriptures out loud, with imprisonment to follow.
Where That Leaves Us
America has plenty of flaws. Our leaders have always been human and flawed. But the fact that we’re allowed to say so … loudly, publicly, without a knock on the door at 2 a.m. … is not a small thing. Freedom is not normal in most of human history, and it’s still not normal in most of the world today.
Sadly, political differences are breaking up friendships and families, because it’s become the norm to ghost anyone you disagree with rather than just disagree with them. I applaud anyone standing for what they believe … but it’s a slippery slope when we stop allowing discussion or discourse altogether. Families have disagreed over politics since the founding of this great land, for 250 years running. Losing that ability would be a tragedy.
And honestly, that’s kind of what a family reunion like July 4th is all about. Every year we seem to argue about something … politics, or that potato salad recipe. Half the family swears it’s a cup of sugar, the other half insists Grandma would never slip sugar in, and nobody has ever once produced the actual recipe card to settle it. We’ve been loudly, cheerfully wrong about that potato salad for decades, and not one person has ever been arrested for their opinion on it.
In a Nutshell
That’s the whole deal, right there. A free country is just a big, messy family reunion where everybody’s allowed to be loudly wrong about something … family recipes, politics, the neighbor’s fireworks starting too early, the color to paint the house, or the way our kids are being taught. Nobody gets hauled off for it. Nobody disappears for saying the sky looked pink and someone else insisting it looked orange.
We got 250 years out of an experiment nobody thought would last a hundred. That’s not an accident, but it’s not a guarantee. We all hold responsibility for the maintenance job, and every one of us is on the crew. So argue about everything. Just don’t let anybody convince you that arguing is the problem. Silencing other opinions is the problem. Use the freedom while you’ve got it, and don’t let it go quiet on your watch.
Eric Rhoads
P.S. Yesterday I put out a call to the artists of America: paint the feeling of America this summer. Your neighbors. Your neighborhoods. Your local haunts. The porch, the potato salad, the lake at 6 a.m. … the stuff that actually looks and feels like home. And since talk is cheap but paint isn’t, I’m putting my money where my mouth is: To celebrate the artists already doing this (and teaching the rest of us how), pick any three art instruction video courses for just $250 … one dollar for every year of the republic, and a genuinely absurd discount. Today’s the last day, so don’t email me tomorrow asking if it’s too late. It will be. PaintTube.tv
P.P.S. We’ve all heard the stories about free speech being squeezed in China. I was there a year ago this week … spent the Fourth of July on the other side of the planet, which is either deeply patriotic or deeply ironic, I still haven’t decided. I didn’t personally run into any trouble, but I’m not naive enough to think it isn’t real there, same as what I saw in Russia and Czechoslovakia. It’s a place worth seeing once in your lifetime, before you decide what you think of it. Join me and Kevin Macpherson this fall for a painting-and-touring trip to China … just six seats left, and I’m not making more. pleinairtrip.com/china
P.P.P.S. For those who’d rather stay on this continent and let someone else do the cooking for a change: a lot of you have asked about my artist retreats … a full week of being thoroughly spoiled, all meals and lodging included, with painting mixed in so you can tell your spouse it was “for work.” Fall Color Week happens in Acadia National Park, Maine … our most popular location yet, for very good reason. Come for the foliage, stay because someone else is doing the dishes. Join the party. FallColorWeek.com
Well said, we need to pay attention and protect our freedoms. However, ICEraids seem to be that “knock on the door” and hasn’t Trump and his minions punished some, one way or another, if one disagrees with his opinions and ideas? Our elected representatives need to get their heads on straight and pay attention to what is going on, and deal with it.
And now I’m going to go practice what I learned from OPB.
Thank you Eric, for showing all of us that family, memories and especially respect and consideration for others are valuable human traits.
Your leadership and exploration of other countries brings to artists the very special understanding of how other cultures see the world; and from that we can clearly see how lucky we are to be living in this great country! 🇺🇸
Thank you for speaking the truth, Eric. Yes, troubling signs have been showing up here for a while now. And if we all don’t want to lose our freedom of speech, we MUST all keep speaking up and speaking out and voting against those who would be flashing broad smiles, on one hand, and planning oppression, on the other.
I have long been a proponent of speaking up for truth as I feel it is a duty and mandate for me as a Christian. I also strive to avoid being abrasive. You know – ‘No drama’😇
Thank you for being clear about the important things Eric!
Amen.
Erik,
Thank you for your comments regarding freedoms and this delicate representational democracy we have. I know how difficult it is in your position to not offend but you do have a voice and a significant audience, and it would be a bigger crime to stay silent.
I appreciate your candor.
Sincerely,
Scott
Agree, agree.
I loved every word of this Sunday Coffee. Knowing the early steps of your journey refreshes me on this 4rh! Your words always inspire me. At 86, as I try to live out my years as an LCSW, volunteering, I truly hope to return my first Profession, 25 yrs ago, as an art teacher in Woodstock, NY.
If I don’t move on the journey, it would have to begin with my hesitation for next step because of ALL YOUR ENCOURAGEMENT. I just couldn’t let another month pass without acknowledging your weekly messages and their welcome presence for me.
I was viewing the gorgeous film on NETFLEX of LOVING VAN GOGH, with hundreds of artists providing the visuals!! Just shocking that they studied this genius so well that they could tell his intimate story.
Simply, thank you for sharing your gifts, your love of artists and inspiration, Eric
Hi Eric,
I’m editor of a local newspaper and, with your permission and using your name, I would like to print some of what you wrote for today. It really is appropriate for these times. More of these things need to be said. We all need to be reminded about what this country is supposed to stand for.
Thank you.
When I was short of radishes for potato salad I added a crisp chopped Granny Smith apple and now that’s a must.
When my daughter lived in the states we would visit and celebrate Canadian July 1s with Maple sugar pie and then July 4th as well with Americans. Great gatherings !
Enjoyed the American music last night and no complaining about different politicians. or parties.Remember “United we stand, dvided we fall.”
Thanks for Sunday Coffee.
The bi partisan bill advancing in congress to criminalize any speech critical of Israel and its murder of anyone it chooses is very disturbing especially since it reveals yet again that the Bronze Age death cult is our government and has been.
I enjoyed your word picture of the morning light and the general difference between the color of sunlight there and elsewhere. I grew up in New York State, buffalo . I’m now living at the beach in Jacksonville where the light always has a distinct violet hue, even on the shortest day. The distinctive coolness of the northern light even on the longest day at sunset at 9:00, is amazing. At your elevation it’s more pronounced.
Thank you SO much for your eloquent, elegant, and clearly honest and heartfelt essay on freedom and America. My own heart and mind ache so very much these days about the current path of my country.
I couldn’t agree more Eric! Your words are so appropriate for the times we are living in. The divide is great and the media and social media fuels the fire. We are in a spiritual war for the soul of our country. But no matter what, we know who wins in the end! May God Bless our wonderful and blessed beyond measure USA!
Thank you for posting
Thank you for your words, too, Jody!! Yes and Yes!!
Very good reading here… thank you for your thoughts. I come from a very large family … my Mom’s and we had wonderful family gatherings many times during the year. I am so sorry our younger generations aren’t getting the experience the things you talked about in your family gatherings, and I had in mine. Good post about our beautiful and wonderful United States of America!