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    by Thomas P.M. Barnett, Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett
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    by Thomas P.M. Barnett, Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett
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    The Emily Updates (Vol. 5): One Year in the Life of the Girl Who Lived (The Emily Updates (Vols. 1-5))
    by Vonne M. Meussling-Barnett, Thomas P.M. Barnett, Emily V. Barnett
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Entries from April 1, 2004 - April 30, 2004

10:54AM

A Eulogy for John E. Barnett

Delivered by Thomas P.M. Barnett

1 April 2004


On behalf of my family, I want to thank you all for joining us here today to celebrate John Barnettís long and amazingly fruitful lifeóa life of love extended, commitments kept, and faith observed.


John Barnett was born in Boscobel, and lived the vast majority of his life in this town. This church is the only church where this ceremony could have been held, and you, his family and friends, are all that he would have asked for today.


John Barnett was a responsible, loving son to his parents, and played a large and loving role in the lives of his Aunt Catherine, his sister Mary and her family, and his sister-in-law Patricia and her family.


Lt. John Barnett, U.S. Navy, served his country overseas in time of war, acting as executive officer of an amphibious ship in the Pacific Campaign of World War II, and in time of peace, helping fellow sailors transition to civilian life during his tour of duty in the Pentagonís Navy Annex following that conflict. As a veteran of foreign wars, he belonged to and actively participated in the American Legion throughout the rest of his days. And he was immensely proud of his three grandsons, one of whom couldnít be here today, who likewise chose to serve this nation through military service.


John Barnett was married to Colleen Clifford for well over half a century. This loving union yielded nine children, two of which did not survive early childhood. These losses were great blows to this young couple, but in acts of deep faith and supreme optimism, they went on to have six more children, raising seven in all to successful adult lives. Those seven, in turn, are responsible for 12 grandchildrenóand at least one granddaughter to be named later.


John Barnett was a lawyer, an attorney-at-law, for well over four decades. He saw his profession as way to help people, as his father had before him.


Our fatherís strength was a quiet one, defined primarily by his unfailing ability to rise above his limitations in a never-ending effort to serve those around him.


Our father suffered from a multitude of small but trying physical ailments, yet somehow always managed to be at the office every dayódecade after decadeóserving for years on end as the sole provider for a family of nine.


Our father was an intensely private man, who nonetheless spent a lifetime actively seeking out and playing roles in this community that forced from him great levels of personal interaction with others: the Kiwanis, the Knights of Columbus, delegate to conventions of the Democratic Party, City Attorney, City Alderman, member of library board, cemetery board, Grant County Bar Association, Empty Stocking Club, fund drives for the hospital and this churchóa man you count on showing up, every time, on time.


Quite shy by nature, John Barnett always made a point of engaging everyone he came across with the best sort of small talkóthe kind that leaves people feeling better about themselves afterwards.


Not an outdoorsman, he nonetheless accompanied his sons on Boy Scout camping trips, and his daughters on canoe expeditions down the Wisconsin River.


Not much of an athlete, he nonetheless taught his children sports, and this son how to catch a football. John Barnett played golf for decades, and imparted his love of that sport to both children and grandchildren.


Not a particularly good driver (frankly, it was always an adventure every time that man put it in reverse), he nonetheless taught his children and my wife how to drive a car.


A man of modest talents, he did not seek to overcome them by pushing his children into activities they did not wish to pursue, and yet he was always there for such events, never missing a chance to see his kids, or his grandchildren, play in the game, appear in the play, be awarded some degree or promotion, orómost important to himóreceive a holy sacrament.


Although not given to public displays of affection, he slowly and with great sincerity became a hugger in later life, welcoming new additions to his extended family over the years: a son-in-law, several daughters-in-law, all those grandchildren, nieces and nephews, and yesóall those dogs.


A child of the Great Depression, John Barnett was a frugal man, but really only with himself. With his wife, his children, and their children, he was unfailingly generous, subsidizing education after education to the point where all of his childrenóand his wifeóhold advanced degrees that owe much to his financial support. Like with many of his most significant gifts to this community, he went out of his way to keep this role as anonymous as possible.


John Barnett lived a life of quiet inspiration. He loved sports, books, music, and theater. He shared these loves with us all, but even more importantly, by setting the example of these great passions, he generated a legacy of talented athletes, gifted scholars, skilled musicians, and insatiable performers.


Look around you, this manís life raised few waves, yet somehow generated an enormous wake.


His was a life worth emulating: a life of great faith and generosity, a life of service to others, a life of simple joys. Our father couldnít walk down a street without whistling, couldnít pass a stranger without saying hello, couldnít see a need without reaching into his pocket.


My Dad will always remain to me the man I hope someday to become.


My wife tells a story about hiding Easter eggs with Dad at some community event many years ago. He followed her around, constantly fussing over every single placement, carefully laying quarters in each. Then, as their task neared completion, he stuffed a host of extra eggs in the pockets of his sweater, telling her that these were for the kids who wouldnít be able to find any on their own.


Thatís the world John Barnett saw.


This was his life.

10:28AM

Exactly the Boost I Needed

Dateline: Boscobel WI, 2 April


The day after we say good-bye to my Dad in a funeral that was tough for us all, I got this bit of happy news from Amazon.com. After hovering at 80,000 "feet" in terms of sales ranking, today I jumped up to 8,062.


Not bad for starting out at just over 2 million about 8 weeks ago. Of course, I might jump right back up to 80,000 tomorrow, but for now, I feel a whole lot better about 27 April, the day the book comes out.


Someone also sent me email today telling me the Washington Times made mention of the book today. Haven't found it yet myself, but here's the nice part: her international committee on future of AV-8B, the tilt-rotor Marine aircraft, is meeting in Newport at the end of the month. Several members are retiring, and this officer wants to give each a signed copy of my book as a going-away present!


On a sunny day when I feel so dead inside, these little gifts make me feel just a little less lonely sitting in this house, where my Dad no longer roams.


The sad thing is: he's the person I'd most want to tell right now.


Postscript

Book shelf



Thomas P.M. Barnett, a nationally recognized professor at the U.S. Naval War College in Newport, R.I., will soon share his strategic vision with the rest of the country.


Putnam later this month is releasing Mr. Barnett's new book, "The Pentagon's New Map: War and Peace in the Twenty-First Century."


"Like Alvin Toffler's groundbreaking work 'Future Shock,' Barnett's book is about the way the world is changing and the effect of those changes," says a Putnam preview. "His bold new visual depiction of the world's potential trouble spots ó backed up by insightful political, economic and historical analysis ó has, in fact, become the Pentagon's new map for strategic planning and operations. He examines and explains how future threats to national and international security will arise and presents a new national security strategy for meeting those threats ó economically, politically and operationally."


Mr. Barnett was in a good position to see his ideas adopted. Until June last year, he was assistant for strategic futures in the Pentagon's office of force transformation.

~ Washington Times, Inside the Ring, April 2, 2004

http://www.washtimes.com/national/inring.htm

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