Namaste by Jim Klobuchar
- Date
- Dec 4th, 2008 11:39am
- Author
- Eric Schubert
- Category

Last week we announced that legendary journalist
Jim Klobuchar would be joining Ecumen’s Changing Aging blog and posting monthly. Jim is an incredible story teller with incisive insights and vast life experiences. He’s epitomizes successful aging and living to the fullest. Welcome to Jim’s first post.
A Boy in the Mountains
He was a boy on a mountain trail, a poor kid with large brown eyes and floppy hair, staring at me where I sat on a great flat-topped boulder high in the Himalayas. He seemed bewildered. But now I remember him as a child who altered a part of my life.
I may have been the first westerner he’d seen--an alien creature on a rock, clad in the trekker’s garments of wool cap, expensive down jacket and multipocketed Patagonia pants. In three days my friends and I had hiked down from the base camp of Mt. Everest. We’d camped beside the roiling Dudh Khosi River and, with supper still a half hour away. So I walked up the trail and scrambled to the boulder top to admire the vast Himalayan panorama. and dozed beneath the streamers of sun radiating off the glaciers. I woke to sounds on the trail. A young Sherpa couple was returning from the potato patch they farmed. Neither noticed me. The boy fell behind and for a few moments stood motionless, regarding me. Then slowly he raised his arm and waved.
I waved in appreciation. He smiled. I smiled. He scrambled to catch up with his parents, turned at the head of the bridge, and waved. I waved. By now we were friends. His parents, oblivious, crossed the bridge. The boy followed and waved. Because the trail through the rhododendron forest was steep and rose 500 feet to their village home, it switched back five or six times. At each switchback the boy stopped and waved. Some times he had to duck beneath branches. Our mutual arm thrashings became very aggressive and more or less fun. At the top of the slope the mother saw me, noticed her son’s excitement and then said something to him. The boy turned, slowly put his hands and fingerips together beneath his lips and said something. I couldn’t hear, of course. But I knew what he was saying:
"Namaste." In the Himalayas Namaste (Nah-mah-Stay') means in its most lyric sense,
"I praise the God who lives within you." It’s the most beautiful word I know. It’s the greeting you exchange there. Consider. The God within you. Within me. Something divine dwells there. And if we allow it, if we release our resentments and fears, it can bring us closer together; to better understand each other, to forgive when we are wronged, to cleanse us when we need.
I put my fingertips to my lips, turned to the boy a half mile away and said "Namaste." And at that moment, the poor boy and I were together, perhaps for the rest of our lives.
Jim
1 Comments
Mr. Klobuchar, This PM I had an email fom Paula, Resident Services at RidgePointe in Minnetonka where I am now living, having moved from Fergus Falls in June of 2007. The email brought me in touch with seeing you some years ago in Fergus Falls, probably in connection with First Lutheran Church. I also told you I had been a member of AA since 1983. A love in my life has been books and I had the following books authored by you: Eight Miles Without A Pothole As Close to Heaven As I'm Going To Get - you wrote inside "For Lois--whose life, I'm sure has been practically free of all potholes"--you underlined all. The Cross Under The Acacia Tree - inside you wrote "To Lois Remembering A Sunny Day in Fergus Falls." First Lutheran Church sponsored David & Eunice Simonson's mission wok in Africa. Heroes Among Us- inside is written "For Lois you are now one of my heroines." Pursued by Grace was your personal story - inside was written "In God's Peace." Wild Places and Gentle Breezes. While I still lived in Fergus I gave many of my books to churches, colleges, libraries, bookstores--I had to downsize and wanted to find good homes for them. I had a list of where I placed them but lost it in my moves. I think I gave your books to First Luheran Church because of the Simonsons' connection. You surely can write--I choked up reading the above post. Thank you.
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