We Still Show Up

Cedar Valley News
Friday, March 27, 2026
We Still Show Up
By Dan Larson

Ruth Edmonds called me last Saturday morning. She is eighty-one. A branch had been blown down by the wind and was leaning against her garage.

I made four phone calls. By ten o’clock, three men were in her driveway with a chainsaw and a truck. The branch was cut, loaded, and hauled away before lunch.

Ruth brought out a plate of cookies when they finished. She had baked them the night before. She did not know who was coming. She just knew somebody would.

She knew because she has spent sixty years being the one who came. I have watched her bring meals to families after a funeral. Organize the clothing drive two Novembers in a row. Sit with a neighbor through a long night in the hospital waiting room. Ruth has been on the other end of those phone calls her whole life.

Now she is eighty-one, and the branch is too heavy. So, she bakes.

When Tommy Huang broke his ankle last fall, three families rotated meals to his house for two weeks. There was no schedule. Nobody assigned a night. People checked with each other and showed up.

When the Marsh family’s furnace failed in January, Dale Rusk organized a collection the same day he heard. Lars donated the parts at cost. The furnace was running before the weekend.

In our congregation we have a program called Helping Hands. When there is a need—a move, a cleanup, a roof repair—the bishop puts out the call. People come because they know the person. Not because they were assigned. Assignments get done. Knowing someone gets done early, and well, and without being asked twice.

I do not think the people who stopped showing up in other places stopped caring. Life has gotten harder in ways Cedar Valley is not immune to. We have our own families stretched thin, our own calendars crowded.

But I keep thinking about those cookies. Ruth did not bake them, hoping someone might come. She baked them certain. That certainty is not given. It is built, year by year, out of a thousand moments no one keeps count of. Out of being the one who showed up when the branch was someone else’s.

If the branch is still leaning against the garage in your neighborhood, maybe the place to start is not a program or a sign-up sheet. Maybe it is the knock. One person crossing the street and saying: I noticed. Can I help?

Let’s find a way.

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town are fictional, the national events they reflect on are real.

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