Thursday, May 30, 2019

Small Town Proud

At last, the time has come. Summer is right around the corner. The time to go swimming in the lake, driving 30 minutes to go to Walmart only to walk around, and driving around your small town looking for something to do. The late night talk sessions while driving around with the windows down are where we will spend most of our nights. We all have that one thing we look forward to each summer. Personally, mine is the time spent with my FFA chapter that has my towns name on the back of their jackets.

Although I love to go swimming with my friends, going to Walmart just for something to do, driving around Nashua, going down the same street over and over for hours, I look forward to getting together with my chapter and decorating our float for the annual Water Over the Dam Days parade. The meetings, the grill outs, the kickball tournaments, each summer, we have a lot to look forward to. However, sometimes things don’t go as planned. Sometimes our activities will get rained out, or being in Iowa, they could get snowed out. With our chapter being in a small town, activities can sometimes get doubled up. If our FFA monthly meeting is at 6:30 in the Ag room, you better bet there is probably a football meeting in the library at the same time!

Being from a small town, everybody knows everybody. When I go into the local Casey’s or Kwik Star, I am greeted with a “good afternoon Mr. Bucknell, how are you doing today” or a “How is FFA treating you.” The advantages of being from a small town is that everyone sees your accomplishments or failures. It is up to you to decide what you want to be known as. Everyone knows the athletes, drama stars, band/choir kids, art kids, Ag kids, they know everything you do.

Being from a small town, doesn’t mean that no one can/will be successful. It means that those that are, face harder challenges. If you fail, everyone will see you as the person that failed but not the person who refuses to give up, but if you do succeed, everyone knows your accomplishment, it is in the town’s newspaper, all over your social media timelines, and in many other places. The community rallies behind your success(s) and looks at you as a role model and for advice. I can personally say that I am proud to be from our small town where my friends have turned into family.



Create your Legacy,

Lukas Bucknell

North Central State Vice President

No comments:

Post a Comment