Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Thoughts on a Pandemic Day

Before I was a financial advisor, before I was a teacher, I was a historian who studied the Middle Ages and Ancient World. Those times in history were marked by increase travel and trade, which resulted in the spread of viruses and diseases that frequently halted the daily life which our ancestors were accustomed.

We are also now living in such a time, and as a historian, I see this as a moment of great change for how our lives are lead. Societal shifts, as we are undergoing right now, are often hard, confusing, and can be painful, but once the change has occurred the opportunity for a new creative society is born (imagine the shift from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance).

What we are experiencing with Covid-19 is new for us, but it is not a new experience for the human race. Once all is settled again, which will take time, we will find ourselves in a new age, with new opportunities. So even though you may be suffering or grieving today, realize you are living during a unique, historical moment, and you will get the honor  of being one of the first humans to experience the birth of a new age.

Friday, March 20, 2020

My Other Job

For years I have kept this blog exclusively focused on my writing, random thoughts, fun things, and areas of concern in the world. Very little have I written about my various careers. Right now, given the Covid-19 Virus and our changing world, I feel perhaps my other skill areas are important to share.
Heather H. Lewis, Financial Advisor

Currently I am employed as a financial advisor with Castro Monroy Group in Salem, Oregon. So if you are currently concerned about your financial situation, you aren't alone. My colleagues and I are here, and are more than willing to do our best to help you at this volatile time. We are working remotely, and conducting meetings via phone or video. So if you feel the need, please reach out. There is no cost to meet and consult with us. We offer personalized service, and many products that are stable in this current environment and with solid companies that survived even the 1929 market crash. We carry very strong and competitive life insurance products, if that is a current concern you have.

Also, you should know I am a former teacher, and am passionate about educating people, as well as have a strong desire to see a vibrant and successful middle class, so I'm willing to work with any client, with which I can legally work (that means Oregon residents right now), no matter their income level.

So if I can help you in anyway, please e-mail me at my work at HL@castromonroygroup.com

Tuesday, March 17, 2020

Life on March 17, 2020

Here we are on St. Patrick's Day, in the middle of the season of Lent, living during a pandemic. Now that I have done all I can do in preparation for what might come, many thoughts bounce around my head. They are random in many ways, but also connect to the current times and spread of Covid-19. As a historian by training, and novelist, I have felt for weeks this virus would turn into a pandemic and spread. Unfortunately, what I believed would happen has (though I have been surrounded by those who don't think the virus is much of an issue).

One thought that reached my mind was of the Titantic. When it hit the iceberg, and a few feared it may go down, they prepared life boats. Not many people were willing to listen and get in at that time. After a bit more time passed, a few more saw the wisdom of getting in a life boat. By the time most people realized the ship was truly sinking, it was too late and they drowned. I'm in the first life boat. That's just who I am.

Secondly, I've been pondering how one of the priests at my church talked on Ash Wednesday about Lent being a time to grow closer to God, to remove from your life what is keeping you away from God. Now that I have chosen to eliminate all extra out of the house activities, and the world has slowed, I wonder if one of the positives to look for in this time of forced stillness is a space to be closer to the Creator.

Last night I pulled a book off my shelf I had read in college and kept. Now seems to the right time to read it again. The first chapter, in several ways, connected to and helped explain the spread of diseases and how pandemics occur, and have done so throughout history. The book is The Black Death: Natural and Human Disaster in Medieval Europe by Robert S. Gottfried. For years I have referenced ideas from it in conversations I have had, as many of the facts written among its pages awoken and expanded the thoughts of my young mind.

Take care of yourself. Use some of this stillness to reflect on what is important to you.