Moving Meetings

See? 4-H. Totally important. I was raised on a ranch near the small town of Milk River, Alberta.
On the Alberta/Montana border.Farming and ranching country.We were, quite literally, children of the prairies. Big brother, George. And calf.And the highlight of our young lives - the very pinnacle we could aspire to – was 4-H Calf Club.Our world was small, I admit it.Yep. When we turned the age of twelve, we could – at last! – join the calf club.We learned many things there.Of course, the main (and most obvious) were the care and feeding of your calf.In my case, handled almost exclusively by my big brother, George.Because he’s amazing. (Are you reading this, George?) Big brother, Jerry, ditto.But there was also the record keeping. (Which George completely refused to do for me. Sigh.)And the monthly meetings.Wherein (Oooh! Good word!) we were supposed to learn the proper, accepted, efficient way to run a gathering of that type.I emphasize the words ‘supposed to’.Because we didn’t.Always.In fact, at some point during many of our meetings, our current club president would throw up his hands and exclaim, in loud and carrying tones, “I don’t know why I do this! I’m getting outta here!”Something he never did.Returning to the idea of running a proper meeting . . . Me. With glasses. And calf.We had been taught that, if we had something to offer, we should do it in the form of a ‘motion’. As in: ‘I would like to make a motion.’ And then followed by ‘I move . . .’We were getting it. We were.One evening, the meeting had been going well.Everyone had been unusually attentive.And our leader hadn’t, even once, cried out in despair.Then one shy young man stuck up his hand.He was recognized by the ‘Chair’.And he proceeded. “I-I-I w-would like to m-make a movement!”There was silence. Then some sniggers.Umm . . . first door down the hall? Says ‘boys’ on the door?One of the leaders whispered into his ear, “Motion.”“Motion!” he corrected himself, turning bright red. “I-I w-would like to make a motion!”Things carried on.But the mood had definitely been lightened.Who says meetings have to be boring?4-H. Don't you wish you were here? The grand finale.
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Published on March 10, 2020 10:18
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On the Border

Diane Stringam Tolley
Stories from the Stringam Family ranches from the 1800's through to today. ...more
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