Distinguished Visitors
By David H. Albert
Columnist for Home Education Magazine
© 2000, New Society Publishers
http://www.skylarksings.com
I learned almost a year in advance that we would be having very distinguished
visitors coming to stay with us. No one seemed to know for how long, except
to say that we should prepare for a long visit, as they were being sent to learn
absolutely everything they could about their host community and country, and
they came with very little preparation.
People who recently had similar visitors said we should treat them as if they
were truly honored guests, even though no one seems to know exactly from whence
they come. Everyone agrees they dont speak the same language and know
almost nothing about our culture, but they are very malleable and flexible,
often, but not always, easy to get along with (in fact, they can be very demanding,
I was also told), and, above all, very fast learners. So quick wed probably
have to struggle to keep up. Luckily, they werent all expected to arrive
at the same time.
And so we prepared our house for the arrival of our visitors as best we knew
how. We wanted them to feel comfortable, safe, and secure, as if this were their
own home. And once we readied the space, we began to think about what we would
want their sojourn to be like.
Well want them to have the opportunity to explore. Well try to
introduce them to the best that we have to offer the wonders of our natural
environment and a community that will welcome them with open arms. We will share
with them what we think to be important our religion, our culture, our
music, our creative arts but well make sure to introduce them to
the religions, arts, and culture of our neighbors, too. We might even get to
take them to all those places in our community and maybe even in the whole country
that wed always wanted to visit ourselves, but have put off in the crush
of our day-to-day lives.
Well help them with languages speaking, our forms of reading and
writing, our sometimes strange ways of doing mathematics, our language of music
so they can open doors to our houses of wisdom themselves. Well
make a special effort to introduce them to people different from ourselves,
so they can experience the rich kaleidoscope that makes where we are a great
place to live.
Well feed them nourishing food. Not fancy every night thats
not the way we eat -- but simple, nutritious fare, though wed make sure
theyd get to experience our festive foods as well. We expect theyll
like some of it, and probably some items theyll move to the edge of the
plate, at least for a time until they get used to them. And maybe, for some
of our foods, they may never develop a taste. Palates differ, and well
respect that. People say the often come without any previous experience with
a knife and fork. I guess well have to remedy that as we go.
Well respect their needs for privacy, for time alone and in nature, and
give them enough space to express and pursue their own interests and desires.
These may differ from our own, and indeed it would be surprising if they didnt,
given that they come from another place and another time. They may even develop
their own tastes in clothing and hairstyles, weve been informed, and their
own musical subculture, blending what we have to offer with their own native
sense of style. Well try to learn to relax around them. I expect this
will be difficult for awhile, but well learn, too Im sure
well have as much to learn from them as they do from us.
Well try to alert them to dangers they may encounter. I do not know if
they are aware of our traffic habits, or the swift-moving tide in the inlet,
or even how our gas stove works. Theyll get comfortable soon enough but,
as the maxim reads, "Safety First."
They might want to spend time with other visitors in our community, maybe just
to compare notes and share common thoughts and feelings. Well try to make
sure they have opportunities to do so, though well be sure to check in
with the other hosts first. Weve also been told that our visitors may
like to try out our sports with each other and, if we choose, they might even
allow us to join in.
Of course, theyll have to learn something about our communitys
rules. Weve developed them over time, and they have stood us in pretty
good stead, though sometimes even we forget why we have them. Having to keep
our visitors informed will be a good reminder. And since they will be living
under the same rules as we do, as soon as they are fully familiar with our rules
and traditions, well invite them to join us in improving upon them.
Well expect that our visitors will change over time. Whenever Ive
spent time in a foreign land, even for short periods, Ive come back a
changed person. How much more would I have been transformed if my stay had been
a prolonged one!
I guess Im not too concerned about how many facts or concepts they take
away with them. I really dont care much if they remember the state capital
of Missouri, or who the vice president was when they first arrived. If these
enrich their visit and help them in the future, so much the better. But what
I really hope theyll take with them is our recognition that our community
and our nation, and with them our individual and collective happiness, are built
upon the responsible exercise of freedom. This is really our greatest secret.
Its a freedom we and they were born with, and I hope they will be able
to take it along with them, unfettered by prejudice, their own or that of others,
unhampered to the highest degree possible by others expectations, or their
own fears and self-doubts, uninhibited by dependencies they do not choose freely
for themselves.
I know that I will grow to love my visitors, and expect that they will grow
to love me. We will have shared so much together! Someday, of course, and I
hope not too soon, theyll leave and continue on their respective journeys.
I hope theyll drop us a card now and then, and call occasionally, and
maybe well even be able to get together from time to time, and that we
will be good friends. I hope theyll someday look back at our time together
and, when faced with the prospect of distinguished visitors themselves, be able
to say, "Thats where I learned how to treat an honored guest."
 
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