Keeping Promises
Thomas Beck's Blog
Friday, July 17, 2026
Keeping Promises
Wednesday, July 15, 2026
Peculiarities
Peculiarities
All of us have peculiarities in our personalities. It’s what creates our character, traits, and individualities. It’s the reason we are who we are. Just like our DNA determines our physical appearance, our oddities are what make us distinct and separates us one from another.
The peculiar person I am writing about today is my wife Cindy Morrison Beck’s grandmother Pearl Elizabeth Morrison. By the time I was introduced to Pearl’s husband, Benjamin Vincent Morrison was deceased and she was renting an old converted, clapboard-sided school on the Bear Run Conservancy in Mill Run, Pennsylvania. Her closest neighbor was Falling Water, the famous Kaufman home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright.
Pearl was a solidly built woman who had a tenacious mind and just as tenacious hold on life. She held her own views on life, even telling Cindy that I should “keep my shoes under my own table.” Pearl kept her home just so, hating to see anything out of place and if it didn’t fit what her imagination saw, she would cut, reshape, or repaint it to fit her liking. The value of things in her small home was sometimes reduced or destroyed by her alterations. She sawed the middle portion of an antique hutch and fastened it to its base before shellacking the entire thing in oak varnish. She cut flannel sheets in half to fit the cot where she slept at the side of her dining room while her bedrooms remained pristine.
Another example of her tenacity was holding onto an idea that she hadn’t fully worked out of her system with her kid’s birth. She named one of her girls Elma Jean, but she wasn’t quite through with that combination because she named my father-in-law Elmer Eugene Morrison. He hated that name and chose to go by his nickname Bud. I can see why. Who’d want to carry a name so similar to his older sister? That’s almost as bad as a boy named Sue.
Pearl had a stroke which limited her mobility. When Cindy and I visited her in the hospital, she was proud to show us how the stroke had limited the ability to raise her right arm. I said to her, “I’m going to go to get the nurses.” When she asked why, I said, “I want to see if they can find a paint brush. I’ll bet you could lift it higher with a paint brush in it.” She knew that I had branded her with her tendency to paint things and she quickly caught the meaning. We had a good laugh.
Peculiarities? We all have them. Take a look at your own and have a good laugh.
Monday, July 13, 2026
One Hundred Plus years and Still Counting
One Hundred Plus Years and Still Counting
Due to the Covid scare and kerfuffle six years ago our annual Rugg reunion had to be canceled and rescheduled. The delay caused several of our ill and elderly not to have survived to see the one hundredth Rugg reunion. Each reunion has been held in honor of the oldest Rugg member. Several years ago was my grandmother Rebecca Rugg Miner's turn. This year it was in honor of Curtis Rugg.
One of those who passed away since then was Danny, our family historian. He was the keeper of the keys, the keeper of the lineage, the person who did the research on the beginnings and marked the trail of our family's arrival into the United States and their exploits.
I've written stories before about memories that I have of past reunions and tales of aunts, uncles, and grandparents. I'm not sure if they will make an impression on future generations, but I have written those remembrances for anyone who cares to read about them. I wish I would have listened more closely to my mom, dad, and others shared memories while I was a child. In the past no one took the time to write the stories down and now some are lost. Unless someone says something that sparks a tale and drags it to my memory, they will remain lost. That makes me sad and upset with myself that I hadn't listened more closely.
One hundred years is a long time to carry on a tradition. This recently past reunion should be 106. Some things have fallen to the wayside to be replaced by others. Gone is the huge crock of lemonade that sat on the end of saw horse tables. There is still the tradition of the potluck meal, now supplemented by “store bought” fried chicken. There are still a wide variety of foods and desserts that wait to be eaten.
The Rugg men have aged and can no longer play a game of baseball, but there is still a stream in which to wade. One thing hasn't changed, that is the joy of seeing the familiar faces of the family. They've aged, but they are now bringing their kids and grandchildren to share memories with them. It's wonderful to see the future generations that will hopefully carry on the tradition of reunions far into the future.
Friday, July 10, 2026
Seeing Clouds from Bothe Sides Now
Seeing Clouds from Both Sides Now
Recently I have been paying much more attention to the clouds that daily srurround my mountain home. In all types of weather and all times of the day, they lure my vision upward. As a kid I think I was more concerned with the physical things around me, the tangible things, the here and now things. The trees and the grass, flowers, and butterflies, bugs, and other creatures drew my attention.
When I grew into adulthood I began noticing clouds more. I watched as they darkened denoting a coming storm and causing me to be sure the car windows were closed up and the windows at home were closed down. Growing even older, I began to fly on planes. My first was the year I flew to Great Lakes for boot camp. I was so nervous that I don’t recall much of that flight, because my stomach was still recalling the speedy elevator rides in the Federal building in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. While I was in the United States Navy I flew from Great Lakes to and from Pennsylvania, to and from Orlando, Florida, to and from Iceland and back to Pennsylvania.
When I was much older, I flew from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to Sacramento, California with a friend. By this time, I can remember the clouds being interspaced with clear spaces where I could see the earth below as the miles rolled by.
Over the past several years I have noticed the wide variety of clouds looking up at them. I’ve seen clouds that look like ostrich feathers and ones that look like solid walls of velvety white to thick angry grays. Clouds may scurry by looking like stringy, dirty threads or tumble along like snow-white fluffy sheep. The shapes are fluid sometimes oozing slowly into fantastic mythical beasts and other times shifting quickly into castles or bizarre dreamlike shapes.
These thought about clouds barely touches the imaginative nature of clouds, but when I stir in the wide color palette of the sunrise or sunset, my thoughts explode. Grays may lighten into brilliant reds, glowing oranges, or richest golds. Black glowering clouds may be lit by intense lightning strikes or they may evolve into a thrilling rainbow arch. Each time I think I’ve seen the extent of what clouds can do, God proves me wrong and will show me something new.
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
Dual Citizenship
Dual Citizenship
We are reading of people who hold
dual citizenship where they live in one country, but have papers that allows
them to have the benefits of another country, like Canada and the United States
or Great Britain and Scotland. It’s not at all that uncommon no matter what
country a person lives in to obtain dual citizenship. It’s worldwide. If a
person accepts Jesus Christ as their Savior, they can live on earth, but have
the assurance of a home in heaven. Christians have a dual citizenship. We are
sojourners here on earth. The only way to obtain that duality is to accept
Jesus as Savior. He’s the door. He’s the only way to enter into that heavenly
land. He’s paid redemption’s price, freeing us from the debt of sin. He’s taken
all our sins and carried them to Calvary.
The gift of dual citizenship is
freely offered to all people on earth. It’s a gift of true love. Those who
choose to accept this gift will gain a promised home in an eternal country that
waits beyond the stars. The Bible gives us a glimpse of what awaits beyond the
veil of death. It describes a peek into the glorious estates beyond huge pearly
gates. The gift of eternally living there depends on whether or not the gift is
accepted. Christ has paid the price for each man, woman, and child, but each
person must accept that gift. The price has already been paid.
The only other option is the
flipside of that dual heavenly citizenship is an unimaginable life. That
refusal to accept the choice is to decide to suffer an eternal life of
punishment and torture for sins we’ve committed in our past. It’s a place of
torment, of fire, and darkness. It’s a place where bodies feel an unending
amount of pain. There’s no relief, no rest, and no end of the fire. Hell was
created for Lucifer and the angels who tried to usurp the power and authority
of a holy God and Creator. But those who refuse to accept the gift of redemption
choose to follow Satan into the pits of Hell.
There is a dual choice for a dual
citizenship. Each person must make that choice. If you have already gained that
eternal home in heaven, it’s an obligation to share the options with others who
haven’t yet made that choice. If you haven’t yet decided and are reading this without
making that choice, it’s not too late. Time is of the essence. Death or the
second coming of Christ may happen at any second. Make the choice right now. Ask
Jesus to come into your heart as Lord and Savior.
Tuesday, July 7, 2026
Deluge
Deluge
The rain has been falling down in
sheets. The constant roar of the drops on my roof seems to drown out any
thoughts to write about other than the drumming of the water pouring from the
heavens. It is a definite challenge to make any thoughts rise above the sound
of the deluge. As I look back at stories that were told to me by my family, I
can remember a powerful deluge and a flood in the area. The flood occurred in
Melcroft, Pennsylvania in the year 1943. I was just talking with a u=one hundred-nine
year old about it. I couldn’t remember what year the flood occurred, but he
did. This older gentleman is a member of the Chestnut Ridge Historical Society.
This remarkable man has all of his mental facilities and has a wonderful sense
of recollection.
The reason I recall the story of
the flood is because my Aunt Estella Beck Strawderman and her Daughter Shirley
were caught up by the flood that occurred in Melcroft, Pennsylvania. They were
washed away by the high water and tossed into a tree. Estella and Shirley
managed to cling to the branches until they were seen and rescued.
After the flood, my Grandfather
Edson Thomas Beck tore down the family farmhouse and built two smaller homes on
the banks of Indian Creek in the town of Indian Head, Pennsylvania. The homes
were constructed from reclaimed lumber taken from the old farmhouse.
Behind my parents Carl and Sybil
Miner Beck’s house there was a small stream, runoff water from our natural
spring. In the springtime melting snow caused it to overflow its banks and
flood the lower part of the yard. Debris and trash from Route 711 would wash
down and fill the stream. My dad would shovel the gravel, broken bottles, and
other pieces of trash to reopen the channel. As kids we played in the stream,
but we had to be careful of broken glass or sharp pieces of metal.
Several years ago, another
torrential rain event caused flooding in the Mount Pleasant and Connellsville
areas of Pennsylvania. Many streams rose rapidly, doing much damage locally.
Lately there has been localized flooding, but more of the damages are being
done by lightning and the wind.
Because Pittsburgh is a
confluence of three rivers, the snow and ice that melt or intense rain storms
in the southwestern Pennsylvania mountainside will cause flooding at the Point
where the Monongehela and Allegheny Rivers join to form the Ohio Rivers.
Monday, July 6, 2026
Looking For Fireworks
Looking For Fireworks
My
mom and dad’s house was situated halfway between the two small towns of
Normalville and Indian Head, Pennsylvania. Both towns have volunteer fire
departments because they are in different townships. Often they give each other
back up for fires, accidents, or rescues. Both have street fairs where they sell
food and have games to earn money for day to day operations of the departments,
to buy new equipment, and for the upkeep of equipment and the buildings.
Each
fire company held their street fairs on different weeks so they would not
compete for customers. Every night there was some type of entertainment provided
as well as offerings of food, beverages, and games of chance where players
could win prizes or money. All of it was designed to entice people to come and
to spend their money.
The
foods offered were pizza, French fries, hot dogs, hamburgers, and funnel cakes.
All sorts of sodas and strong coffee werethe drinks sold. A small carnival
company would set up to offer rides for the children. Miniature cars and trucks
that ran in a circle, a Ferris wheel, and a swing ride were the usual offerings.
They also had booths that sold caramel apples, popcorn, and cotton candy and
booths of ball toss, ring toss, and darts.
We
had gone earlier in the week and my dad Carl said that we weren’t going the
last night of the fair. The last night was the night the fire department set
off the fireworks display.
When
we heard the first few dull booms from the explosions from the rockets, being a
fireworks lover, Dad couldn’t resist and went upstairs to the bedrooms to look.
He was hoping he might glimpse some of the displays over the tops of the trees.
The fireworks were only two miles away, he could hear the explosions. He surely
should be able to see something.
It
wasn’t very long until we heard a “Thump. Thump. Thump.”
Sybil
Miner Beck, my mom said, “Kids, your dad is stomping on the floor. He must want
us to go upstairs to see the fireworks. Let’s go before he gets upset with us.”
We
left the family room and went into the living room. There at the bottom of the
wooden stairs, Dad lay in a crumpled heap on his back and his butt. Dad had
slipped and fallen.
What
caused Dad to fall happened earlier in the day. My mom told my sister, Kathy to
dust the steps and the living room furniture. Instead of doing the steps first with
a clean dry cloth, she dusted the furniture with Pledge, and then wiped down
the stairs. Pledge coated the steps with wax and had made the stairs treads slippery.
When
Dad went upstairs, he was wearing socks on his feet. When he came down, the
socks lost traction and his feet flew out from under him. He skidded to a stop
at the bottom of the stairs. Only his pride was hurt.
Once we knew he was okay, we hurried out of the room to laugh. If he would have seen us even snicker the real fireworks would have started and we would have been in so much trouble.