Friday, July 3, 2026

Postcards From the Lake -- Reflections On the Fourth

Recently I was cleaning out paperwork at home and came across an essay I'd written in 1976, shortly after the 200 year anniversary of the United States of America was celebrated -- the Bicentennial. I put it in a safe place so I could bring it out to share this year. And you all know how that goes. Safe places are only safe from burglars, but good luck finding what you hid!

 

But what I remember is that it was a document filled with great joy and hope. I recounted the things of that happened that day. Not just the fireworks; that happens every year (and frankly, I'd rather they didn't. So does Lizzie.)

 

No, I wrote about how everyone rang bells at a certain hour for 200 times. My neighbor had one of those magnificent tall dinner bells and you could hear it for quite a distance. We rang the bell that used to be outside our door, a bit of a mini-dinner bell that we used for a doorbell. 

I'm sure there was a parade downtown, but I gave that one a miss. Why be in the hot downtown when you could be at the sunny lake? (Many years later, after I met Rick, he would ride to a town called Central Lake, about 50 miles away and we'd watch their charming small town parade, then enjoy a picnic.)

 

You know the kind -- farmers decorate their tractors, clowns pass out candy, people walk with their dogs, and Miss Every-Town-In-The-North sits on floats lovingly created by enthusiastic volunteers. It was no Rose Parade, but it had heart. 

 

Back at the cottage, there was a boat parade with powerboats and pontoons decked out in red, white and blue. It was the first of what has become a tradition. My cousins and I would be on the beach, cheering as they passed. That was followed by dinner -- in our case, a grilled out dinner, not unlike so many we enjoy throughout the summer. 

 

Dad probably did hamburgers and hot dogs; mom would make her own potato salad and we'd have pie for dessert. (Probably cherry, with memories of George Washington and his legendary cherry tree chopping.) If the cousins were there -- and they usually were -- we'd all eat together, a wonderful pot luck. There were always deviled eggs!

 

And after dinner we would pull our chairs onto the beach or stay within the screened porch to avoid the bugs.

 

It was time for the aforementioned fireworks, shot off right across the lake from us. It was a gala end to a gala celebration with ringside seats.

 

Most of all, there was a grand feeling of hope, enthusiasm, patriotism. joy to be part of this country.  

 

Fast Forward Fifty Years  

I have a very ambivalent relationship with July 4 these days, for a variety of reasons. It's quite like being forced to attend a special event when you're not that fond of the guest of honor and would rather be home with a good book. It has never been my favorite holiday. So many people carelessly set off their own fireworks, which freaks me out, with good reason. (A few years ago, someone's firework went into the roof of the next door neighbor and I joined others in watching the fire engines crammed onto our tiny road.) When it comes to July 4 I've become a bit of a curmudgeon.

But the main reason I'm struggling with "America 250" in particular is that I am ashamed of what our country has become. It feels like only Ken Burns (and a few others) are recalling the history that went into the making of this country. Instead, we cannot escape the damage that has been done in the past two years. And let's be honest -- that damage will take decades to repair -- if it can be repaired at all. I'm not sure all the delicious holiday food on the prettily decorated holiday table and the festive merriment can override that underlying feeling.

 

So many of you read this blog are from other countries and you may or may not realize how deeply the damage list goes. But you should know -- and you should also know that many Americans (a significant majority, according to multiple polls) recognize this and don't like it either. I feel as if we should apologize to the world.

How do we celebrate when good people who are trying to become Americans are being arrested and deported, many -- perhaps most -- of whom have been "following the rules" as they wait for their immigration hearings, visa renewals or citizenship? We are a country built on the backs of immigrants, yet now that seems to be forgotten. (For a fascinating look at how Americans identify based on geographical region, check out this map from New York Times based on census data and the corresponding article. It digs deep, right down to specific city neighborhoods nationwide). 

 

First amendment rights are being violated and the poor, disabled, LGBTQ and many others have become marginalized in our government's eyes. Our elections are in terrible peril of being overtaken by a government afraid of the outcome. 

 

We started a needless war that has left us -- and the world -- in a far worse position than before and have insulted and bailed on our allies and those struggling for democracy in countries like Ukraine while cozying up to dictators. What would those who died in World War II fighting fascism say about the country they fought for now?

 

While people are struggling to deal with heavily increased prices in food, energy, housing and gasoline, gaudy monuments are being built with our tax dollars. We have a president who surrounds himself with both manipulators and sycophants who are so afraid of him, so afraid of losing their positions in the Congress, that they go along with his every request.

 

Then There Is the Flag

Which brings us to July 4, this celebration and its greatest symbol, the flag. It's a lovely, symbolic piece of work with its stars representing each state and stripes representing the original 13 colonies. (Frankly, I find it a little busy from a design point but I appreciate the symbolism). There are even proper rules as to when and how to fly and fold it (though most people don't bother). Still, that ceremony can be quietly impressive. 

I fly mine on this holiday with reservation. I feel it has been co-opted by others who believe so differently than I about the purpose of our country. "Give me your tired, your poor. Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free," wrote Emma Lazarus. We were once a safe place for immigrants leaving their homelands in fear or in search of a better life. Today's immigrants and asylum seekers are being "detained," in centers with deplorable conditions. Did we learn nothing from the "relocation" centers -- call them concentration camps, because that's how historians refer to them -- that we created during World War II to imprison Japanese-Americans? And then these men, women and children are deported, often to countries where their return is a death sentence. Is this what we have become? Is this the country we celebrate?

 

We were the "land of the free, the home of the brave." Now many are constrained in what they can say or do, human rights have been violated, and most members of Congress are anything but brave.

 

I want our flag back. I would like to fly it with joy and pride, not obligation. This is not what our forefathers planned on when they penned the Declaration of Independence. We broke away from a monarchy and palaces of gold and built a People's House for our president, not our king. 

 

And so this year, I'm on the fence with this celebration. I long for the feelings of that 24 year-old woman I used to be who was filled with joy and hope at this holiday but I have very little. I have some. We must have some. But it is waning. 

 

And so . . . 

I will put our my little flag and stars in the flower pots and on the beach and probably put the big flag they gave me when Dad died on the clothesline. (You never want to pound nails into asbestos shingles.) 

We'll watch the lake fireworks on July 3 and on the fourth will cook out. I'll set a cute table. It will be festive. 

And it should be, because we really do have something to celebrate.  

We've made it through countless struggles in our troublesome past. Slavery. A Civil War. World wars. Civil rights. A depression. Pandemics. Pioneers crossed this vast ad beautiful country to build cities and people with roots from all over the world helped to create a country that one day we will again be proud of.

 

We can celebrate our resilience, our ability to stand up for what we believe and those who have the power to bring about change -- with our help. We can celebrate the men and women of the press who continue to correct the falsehoods and reveal the secrets of our administration, the things that our leaders don't want the people to hear. We can remember the strength, commitment and determination of the Minneapolis community as ICE agents ruthlessly took their citizens away and yes, even killed them. We can celebrate those in this country who fight greed with generosity and hate with kindness. 

We must not be like the fireworks that burst loudly, glow briefly and then fade into cinders as they fall quietly to the ground. We must stay vigilant and bright and loud not forget that we have a voice only as long as we use it.

 

Because I do believe in America. I just don't believe in what we have become. And I have to believe that it can be reclaimed. 

 

Meanwhile, I wish you all a happy Fourth of July holiday if you are in the United States. Eat hearty, party well. And remember  -- 

 

We must all be the change.

44 comments:

Pamela said...

I wish I could express myself as eloquently as you. What you’ve said in this post are my feelings exactly.
I was in high school when this country celebrated the 200th and I hope to be able to celebrate the 250th. Not only am I not celebrating, I hate to even tell people I’m from the US. At this time in American History, I’m happy to be a resident of Japan.
Thank you, Jeanie for this wonderful post.

Leslie Piper said...

Amen to every word of that. For the past year I have felt cheated out of this celebration, primarily because I can remember the bicentennial (my junior year in high school). It was a joyous celebration, coming as it did at the end of a time of important upheaval in our country. A still-divided country was invited to come together to remember a shared history and to imagine an even better future. Like the US passports, this upcoming celebration seemed to have been usurped, and I was angry and sad over that. Then I watched the inspiring and life-affirming celebration of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago and found that it represented our country far better than anything we will see on Saturday. I claim it as my celebration and that will have to do. Haven't decided anything about the flag yet, but i still have time to make that decision. Thank you for your good words! Have a great beach time and stay away from those fireworks!

Anonymous said...

Thank you for expressing what I could not. Let us hope the midterm elections bring strong politicians who can stand up to the tyrant.

Anca said...

Interesting reflections. There are discussions now between American friends of how [or if] 4th July should be celebrated considering the present situation. It's sad it has come to this.
Sending hugs xx

LIttle Penguin Quilts said...

I saw your comment on Carole's post (From My Carolina Home) and had to come visit your blog. Thank you for your eloquent words that express how so many of us are feeling. I am with you, and hate what is happening in our country right now. And I don't feel much like celebrating right now,either - except that there are millions of courageous people who are resisting in every way we know how.

Rajani Rehana said...

Beautiful blog

Anonymous said...

So much to respond to here...I agree with all of it...but I'm old and I can't remember the topic at the top by the time I get to the bottom of a piece. The biggest thing I thought as I read is "YES! FLY YOUR FLAG!" We can't let our flag become the sole property of MAGA. We are patriots too. It's not just their side that gets to wave the flag. Never give up hope. This country has survived terrible things before and we're still here. We won't ever be exactly the same, but we will grow from this. Unfortunately it will be generations to fix what he has town apart in 2 years. (or 4) and there will be followers of him that will continue down the road he paved in tacky gold. We have to keep talking, keep waving the flag for the right reasons, keep pointing out what is good and clean about our country and continue, always, to fight for it.

I won't be fixed in my lifetime but that doesn't mean I can't fight for it while I'm still here.

Tom said...

...Jeanie, you summed up the situation for this 4th of July perfectly. It's too hot to be out side, you know who is an idiot and our grandson is in the middle east. His base gets bombed on a regular basis and he gets one hot meal a day. So much for taking care of the Troops. I'm not in a jolly mood today!!!

eileeninmd said...

Hello Jeanie,
I am feeling much the same as you have expressed on this post.
I am not in the mood to celebrate our country's birthday, things just do not feel right. We do all have beautiful memories of past 4th of July. They were the good times! Take care, enjoy your day and happy weekend.

Bill said...

Well said, Jeanie. This too will fade but will take a very long time to recuperate from the mess he created.

Tracy said...

Very well expressed. I feel a lot of sympathy for all those Americans who feel that a time which should be a huge national celebration now has an ugly shadow cast over it.
If ever there was a time to 'nail your colours to the mast' and fight to defend them, now is that time.

Modrina Neba - Blue Sky said...

So beautiful, good evening Andreja!

Pat @ Mille Fiori Favoriti said...

I read an interesting historical book for our book club recently by Timothy Egan called "Immortal Irishman," about Thomas Francis Meagher. It described a political party at the time called the "Know Nothings" that hated the Irish immigrants who were coming to America during the 1840s famine in Ireland. It also told the story of the Irish Brigade that fought bravely during the Civil War and all the horrors of that war. What that book also revealed to me was that our country has suffered under extreme hate and discord before, and thankfully, it survived. As Martin Luther King once said: "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice." As a country, we will survive and hopefully learn from these recent years and grow and improve.
PS: Timothy Egan also wrote "A Fever in the Heartland"--about a Ku Klux Klan Grand Leader in the 1920s in the Midwest who rose to such power that he almost became President! Most of Colorado's fireworks shows have been cancelled due to extreme risk for wildfires this season. We usually watch the NYC show on TV anyway--brings back memories!

Linda's Relaxing Lair said...

Very well said, dear Jeanie! Your photos are beautiful, my good friend. Thank you so much for sharing, and for being there!

thecuecard said...

What a strong and powerful post Jeanie. Hear Hear. I concur with your thoughts & sentiments. Not sure we can ever get the country back in good standing (in our lifetime). It's been alarming & very sad. I have lived in Canada since 2010 ... and have watched pretty much in horror with the election(s) etc. I can only hope we all work for change - away from what has happened.

Boud said...

That's a great post, thank you. I put the flag on my blog regularly, vowing to get it back out of the mud, cleaned up and flying again. We'll get through this. We must keep up our spirits and courage.

Fundy Blue said...

Oh, Jeanie! Such a thoughtful post you have written. I am American by choice. I believe in America. I hope and pray that we will get through this difficult time. I filled my yard with American flags for tomorrow. We're planning to spend the day at home. I have all kinds of "bad" July 4th treats. We''ll watch the fireworks with great joy from our deck. And yet, I admit, I'm leery of joining large groups of people. Who knows what might happen. I think it's karmic that our climate-change-denying president is having his celebration of him thwarted. All I can do is move forward with hope that the good that America stands for will persist. Love and happy 4th to you and Rick.

Anvilcloud said...

You are such a good thinker and fine writer. This might be the best blog post ever.

Lisa's Yarns said...

I wholeheartedly agree with what you have so eloquently written. This holiday is so complicated and it should not be this way. I have been heartened by the World Cup and all the positive interactions between citizens of many nations. When we encounter others person to person without the complication of terrible leaders, we are more alike than we are different. It’s the people (really the person) at the top that ruin things and have a dictatorial style of leadership. I hope and pray and tide will turn during the midterms.

We don’t fly the flag as it does feel co-opted by MAGA. I would like to fly out newly designed Minnesota flag which is passionately hated by conservatives in our state. It’s a way of showing that you stand with the brave Minnesotans that stood up to the administration this winter.

Denise said...

I'm on the other side of the world, in Australia.
While there are a few who would like to introduce Trumpian ideas here, the overwhelming majority look on in horror and disbelief.
We no longer regard you as a trusted ally, as the administration blows with the wind and changes it's mind (and pronouncements) so frequently.
We have a free trade agreement with the US, meaning we have no tariffs on imports from the US. Why, then, are tariffs imposed on our exports to your country?
We have the AUKUS agreement, whereby you are supposed to be building submarines for us. We know that we are just throwing billions of dollars away and that we will never get those subs.
We have no skin in the game in your war with Iran, but it's having a massive impact on our economy.
Your President wants to destroy our Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which gives us affordable medicines. We have universal health care, by the way. No medical bankruptcies here.
The world feels very unstable and unsafe with him in charge.

Priscilla King said...

YES. Something to celebrate is the system of checks and balances that means our Presidents can and will always be replaced.

(I'm online long past my usual shut-down time, having written a Top Twenty list of things to do on the Fourth of July that do not leave room for political squabbling, because a hater at another blog sounded close to the edge. Y'know I've had mixed feelings about every President we've had in my lifetime, but the one we lost was far too many.)

Sue in Suffolk said...

What a good post.

This too shall pass - sooner than later we all hope!

Shari Burke said...

As someone who saw all this coming a long time ago, I guess I come at this from a slightly different perspective. I never had the belief in the US that so many have and I would respectfully disagree about how welcome immigrants have been. The Irish and Italians, for instance were treated much the same as Black people were. Some immigrants were welcome. Many were not. The Chinese Exclusion Act also comes to mind here. Certain aspects of this regime are new or more extreme manifestations of things that have gone before, but much of it is simply a modern version of what has been. You hint at this when you mention the concentration camps in WWII, slavery, etc. The pioneers who went west were part of an attempted genocide. I've known people in Alaska who were still traumatized several decades later by what was done to them by white 'settlers' trying to 'civilize' them. To Native Americans and people of color, this is all very familiar because they've lived it. Many of them love their country anyway. Hitler was inspired by the race laws in the country. The ideals written on the founding documents are good and aspirational and are worth celebrating. The reality hasn't caught up and probably never will, but that doesn't mean people shouldn't try to get there anyway. All progress towards those goals and ideals is good. I can celebrate the ideals and whatever progress there is. I do recognize that I was lucky to be born white in the US (or a country like it) because of the life and choices I had there (and for the past dozen years, here in Ireland), which people born in another kind of country don't get to have. I'm well aware that my life and theirs and the ways in which we live are profoundly interconnected. I guess all that is to say that my feelings about this day and the country itself have always been ambivalent. Whatever your celebration looks like, I hope that you have a lovely day today, another tomorrow, and more in the days that follow.

David M. Gascoigne, said...

There is much I could say, Jeanie, but let me simply wish you sincere good wishes on this 250th anniversary.

Iris Flavia said...

It is all sadly true. We have losers as chancellors, since ages. Corruption, working for their own best mainly, but your "president".... a shame. I´ve never seen so many bad memes on a politician than over him. So many bad and dumb decisions and he still has "followers".
I feel sorry for the true American people. And by no means would I want to visit your country under these circumstances.
But I like your parting words! It will be over eventually and you can rebuild your country and your reputation.
And I think most people differ between the "real" people and MAGA. To a soon-to-a-real-America again. A free one, a fair one. One for the people.

MELODY JACOB said...

Your memories of the 1976 Bicentennial with the ringing dinner bells and lake parades paint such a beautiful picture, which makes that contrast with how complicated the holiday feels today hit even harder. It takes a lot of honesty to speak so openly about the tension between loving the core ideals of the country and feeling deeply troubled by the current political reality and how people are being treated. That reminder at the end about resilience and not letting our voices fade out like fireworks is a powerful takeaway. I hope setting your festive table and being by the water brings you some peace and a bit of that old hope back this weekend.

My name is Erika. said...

We definitely have to believe that things can only get better. I know there have been other tough times in history when things weren't very good, and we survived. I like how you used the word resilience. It's an important word right now because we need so much of it. I hope you have a super celebration today for the US, not for Trump's view of America, and I love how you wrote about the US in 1976 and shared that with us too. Happy JUly 4th. hugs-Erika

La Table De Nana said...

You are so eloquent.:)I have a grandson born on this day 18 yrs ago.How times have changed.

Deb Nance at Readerbuzz said...

Well said, Jeanie! All the madness of the last years here should make us all stop and pause today and think about what we want America to be and how we can get there.

Prims By The Water said...

I sure hope you fly your flag, but you also need to read about the Democratic Socialist of America who really want to change our country. Even the old Democrats are worried now. Hope you have a nice July 4th however you choose to celebrate. We are all Americans. Other countries are not so free. Janice

Jenn Jilks said...

This is a very comforting, reflexive piece. I am shocked by all that is going on. The lack of morals in your leaders just makes me shake my head.
We've a lot of American cottagers around here. I hope they don't do fireworks tonight, as they tend to do. I've animals on my trailcam videos jumping in fear in the night. Awful stuff.
I do separate my American friends from your government. I am so happy to know you. All the best.

Susan said...

You are a beautiful writer. Expressing so eloquently what many of us are thinking and feeling. I only hope that this current dibocal is a wakeup call to us all. America has survived the last 250 and we will continue to do so.

Sandi Magle said...

As, you know by now, we are 'sisters of another mother' my thoughts exactly. I grew up in a town that was the capital of USA Marching Bands, our parade was long and drummy...if I can say it that way. For weeks before the 4th, we could hear the various bands practicing in all directions, if the winds were right. The flag bearers were most regal with our Flags flying proudly. Today there are few marching bands anywhere that aren't Universities, but a few of our old recruits still get together and pound away. Happy Fourth, not really, no r/w/b here, I won't be flying a flag until he is gone...then I will fly all of them...we have.a BUNCH! HUGS, and have fun at the lake! Sandi

La Table De Nana said...

Eloquent.I must have pictured you SAYING all this:)

Missy said...

Well said… Very reflective wishing you a happy fourth and a happy 250tj

Anonymous said...

I am SO with you on every single one of your sentiments about the U.S.A. ~ Big hugs coming your way!!
bobbie

Misadventures of Widowhood said...

Wow, this is by far the best post I've read in a long time. Those who are calling it "eloquent' nailed it. It also mirrors my feelings regarding the our 200th birthday and this one. Thanks for all the time and effort you put into pulling this post together. It's so nice to hear a like-thinker express what I myself wish I could have done on this day.

Carol said...

I loved reading your post this morning. Your words were so well written and spoken directly to the hearts of many of us. Many of us can look back and see how the 4th was once celebrated, but unfortunately it’s no longer the same way. FYI we have our large flag hanging on our garage and surprisingly many do not.

Distortus said...

I'm going to be honest here. As a European leftist, I see the United States of America as a country grown out of incredible violence towards the Indigenous people whose lives have been destroyed, whose culture was turned to ash, and also a country that was built on the blood of the enslaved. I don't think it has anything remotely democratic in its roots. There never is and never was anything decent about colonialism, and America was a colony.

I understand wanting the US flag back. But maybe all this shouldn't be about wanting it back. It shouldn't be about wanting some form of past patriotism back. Maybe, it's time for the Americans to go through the kind of reflection that Brits went through in the 50's, in the 60's and onward - when they started being ashamed of their country's colonial practices, and when they realized how ridiculous a white Englishman frenzily hunting tigers in an Indian jungle, shooting at absolutely everything, looked to the rest of the world. America is a fairly young country, and it didn't have a chance to reflect on these sorts of things yet. Perhaps Trump and his administration's incredible lack of respect towards the poor, towards LGBTQ+ people, towards immigrant, women and many other groups, or to a regular straight white Joe who nonetheless cannot afford groceries, are a chance for the masses to realize that this is not right. That something in the US stank from the beginning. That something was wrong with it to begin with, and that the whole American identity was built on a lie.

America needs to realize what it is. It needs to realize why somebody like Hitler was inspired by its treatment of African Americans. It needs to realize what it has given to the world, how it contributed to wars and violence, through its military interventions and its corporations snatching businesses in other countries. It's a country that needs to be culturally, socially and economically rebuilt on something far most just, far more democratic than what it ever was. Can't say I have a vision for it, but it certainly doesn't in any way resemble our European social system yet.

Jenny Woolf said...

Keep hope alive Jeanie!

Jenny Woolf said...

Some encouraging stuff here : do you know The Other 98? https://m.facebook.com/TheOther98/

Kitty said...

Bravo Jeanie. You said it so well. I wish it could be published in our largest newspapers. I loved the video of taps. I remember that day. Did not know you had a video of it! Memories. No one can take them from us! Love to you and Rick. Kitty

Kitty said...

I wrote a longish comment but I don't see it. Suffice it to say I love and appreciate all that you have said. I remember the taps at Torch Lake. I did not know you had a video of it! Love to you and Rick. Happy 4th of July. Kitty

Lowcarb team member said...

Wow! What a post!

I send my good wishes across the miles.

All the best Jan

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