Tuesday, November 5, 2013

Heart of Bucks


In the heart of Bucks County, the leaves are falling, abandoning the trees they so recently adorned during a surprisingly colorful autumn. So pretty, while it lasts. So bare and raw when gone, until the snow cover brings the pretty back.

The heart of Bucks County. Where is it? What is it? When M. Knight Shyamalan came to Doylestown in 2002 to film the movie “Signs,” he presented an anachronistic version complete with a rural sheriff (sheriff!?), who knows everyone’s first name, and a pastor whose defection from the ministry throws the entire town into a faith crisis. Goofy, but still pretty.

A while back, I attended a high school boys’ basketball game between my children’s school, CB East and CB West. At a propitious moment, the West fans, a lot of them, got up and waved dollar bills across the floor at us, the opponents. We stood accused of being rich and spoiled, I think. Not so pretty.

My friend Vince, a devoted, now retired, teacher from the Evil Empire (Philadelphia), once screamed banshee-like as our car passed the CB East High School and Holicong Middle School complexes. “Look at the size; look at the fields; look at the gym,” he babbled. I was sort of glad he couldn’t see the pool and the auditorium. Since that day the schools have only added to the glitz and glamour.

Vince worked in one of those rundown urban schools infested with math texts written before Descartes, where the closest thing to a pool is the toilet in the boys’ room that just overflowed. Since those days, Philadelphia schools have only sunk lower.

Do I live in the heart of a quaint and neighborly county, or a rich and privileged region with no heart at all? Well, I’ve resided in Doylestown over 30 years, and the answer is not simple.

Yes, there are lots of big houses and big lawns. Parents revere their schools as pre-collegiate institutions with really good interscholastic sports. College is not a must for our kids: familial dispossession is a viable alternative. Neighbors do not know one another as well as they should, and there is a slightly immodest tendency for us to believe that all our privileges are a simple result of our own hard work.

Here in Central Bucks we are not diverse. Among our youth, drugs are a problem because this is America. Nonetheless, the typical Bucks County teen is polite, articulate, hardworking, moral. No kidding. Just check out the kid waiting your table at a nearby restaurant.

A heart beats quietly beneath the gusting leaves and drifting snow. I saw it in the dozens of volunteers that operate our myriad youth programs, in the service groups give time and talent to causes of every stripe, in the neighborly way we stop our carts in the supermarket and catch up with old acquaintances.

Then there are the hearts of gold. I’ve discovered our county is filled with quiet heroes, like the store owner who, at his own expense, provides athletic opportunities for underprivileged youth.

As a former Board member of the Family Service Association of Bucks County, I saw the golden hearts day in and day out. They run the Teen Centers, havens for lost youth. They counsel troubled, broken persons. They organize fundraisers and social events for the benefit of families in stress.

One February I represented the Board at a dinner hosted by an upscale restaurant. The 40 or so guests included men and women served by FSA. They were among the least fortunate of people contending with a variety of challenges.

At my table were folks from AA and other drug treatment programs. Beside me was a pastor and his wife, who were kept busy with a flock of poor and down-on-their-luck people, including immigrants with no one else to give a hand.

Along with the restaurant management, workers and chef, a local bank helped fund the dinner. Two bank managers waited tables. We all posed for a group picture and then made our way into the anonymous night.

They selected February for the dinner because everybody gives to the needy at Christmas and Hanukkah. A couple of months later, in the bleak of winter, they are forgotten. A really nice dinner at a really nice restaurant is a welcome respite when no one else is noticing.

That’s my Bucks County. Full of silent givers and stealth carers. They come out when all the leaves have fallen crispy brown upon a hard, forbidding earth. What they contribute to the dreary winter scene is a bit of warmth, a bit of light, a bit of hope. What they get in return is a place with more to offer than pretty leaves that never last.

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