" When you leave the doors of the church
you have to be Christ for others, and how do
you do that if you don't feed your soul ."
-- Diane Adam
By
Robert R. Schwarz
After an hour of soulful conversation with Tom and Diane Adam , the
unspoken question was: Is this couple—both
aged 66—best defined by an exemplary marriage or their equally laudable history of service to their church ? When Diane, for example, tells you that she
and Tom have been "like best of
friends " during their 40-year marriage and then Tom's smile reflects
total agreement, some facts are called for.
[note: on April 29, 2024, Diane Adam informed
the author that she and Tom were still married ! ]
Tom and Diane with grandchildren |
" Well, we have much in
common," began Diane. Like what ?
" Well, we're both Catholic
( they hardly ever miss a Sunday mass at St. James Church in Arlington Heights ) , we love to take the train to Chicago and
see things like the Art Institute—Tom is a great tour guide—we both are the
oldest siblings in our families, and we love sports."
There's more.
Her last example is significant, considering they were brought together by a basketball game . It was a blind date set up by Diane's best friend a year after Tom and Diane had graduated from Loyola University in Chicago. The friend had been a math classmate of Tom's. Before the game, Diane overheard Tom ask her friend, " Do I have to pay for her?" . Recalling those words today, Diane quips, " And he's been paying for it ever since."
Cupid's dart had previously landed a season pass in Diane's hand, and so she and Tom together attended all the home games from November through March. A 2 ½ -year courtship followed , climaxing with Tom's proposal one night hours after the two had seen the movie ," Love Story." The movie "sort of inspired me , " said Tom, who had already asked Diane's father for his daughter's hand .
In a log cabin owned by Tom's aunt, the couple
honeymooned for a week on an island north of Ontario, which they had reached after a ten-minute motorboat ride
captained by Tom. "One bad thing, though, " Diane remembered , "
my grandpa died while we were there and we couldn't be reached. "
This interview with the Adams took place in their modest one-floor home on Arlington Heights' east side.
With its plethora of family photos and Yule decorations—and a live
Christmas tree which Tom would later be carrying in—the home in which the Adams
have lived for 38 years cast a spirit of cheerfulness and solidarity. Diane , a brunette with just a front touch
of gray —" but not a touch of dye," she asserted—did most of the
talking . Tom, weighing in at 260 pounds
and standing six-foot-five , has
retained an athlete's physique . He has
a full head of white hair, short and flattened, and brown eyes with a bit of a
twinkle in them. He doesn't easily conjure up
the image of the high school math teacher he was for 36 years.
Marital spats? " We have squabbles, " Diane said, " but we don't hold them in and get over them. After we both
retired, our good-natured friends would jokingly ask, 'how can you two stand each other's company all the
time?' I would reply, 'we're not always
together. We do have separate interests.
' "
When I asked for their advice for
other married couples or newlyweds, Tom thought for a long moment, then simply said,
" Be thoughtful and respectful of your spouse , and that carries over into all kinds of
things. " Then it was Diana's turn: " If someone angers
you, talk things out , and maybe there's a simple solution. That's what I tell my daughters . You are
sinning against yourself if you're holding in all that anger. "
She also attributed their successful marriage to the love both their parents displayed to each other and to other people. " And like Fr. Bill ( the St. James pastor ) said , surround yourself with people whose marriages are strong. We have eight couples from St. James who are our friends and we do things to help each other. "
She also attributed their successful marriage to the love both their parents displayed to each other and to other people. " And like Fr. Bill ( the St. James pastor ) said , surround yourself with people whose marriages are strong. We have eight couples from St. James who are our friends and we do things to help each other. "
How they share recreation also keeps their marriage strong, the
Adams indicated. Together they have been attending shows at the Metropolis
Center in downtown Arlington Heights since
it opened in 2000 . They are
contributing founders of it. Besides their trips to the Art Institute of
Chicago, the Adams have fun at the Botanic Gardens, the Morton Arboretum, and
the nearby Forest Preserves , where they
love to hike with their grandchildren.
They frolicked at a neighborhood
progressive dinner party this Christmas and with friends on New Year's Eve. Their party agenda includes Valentine's Day later this year. Both delighted in seeing the movie "Lincoln. " Tom is reading the book The Fitzgeralds and the Kennedys.
'
God Will Never Give You More than You Can Handle'
The
seemingly endless list of church
volunteer efforts which the Adams have made over the past 25 years was perhaps
best summed up by Cardinal George and his bishops last November 4 when
Diane and Tom were bestowed with the Christifideles Award at Holy Name Cathedral in Chicago. The annual award is for Catholic laity who
have , by participating in parish life, demonstrated the personal and
ministerial renewal called for by the papal exhortation, Christifideles Laici, Faithful to Christ in Service. "Both [ the Adams ] have devoted themselves to making sure that
Sunday Mass continues to be a first class celebration ," it was stated at the
ceremony. For more than 20 years, Tom
and Diane have been in charge of the training and formation of the 240 St. James students and adults who make up the church's Eucharistic Minister
team. On Oktoberfest and bingo, to
PADS and small group Bible study, the
Adams have left their mark.
What motivates this couple? " I really think it's been the Holy
Spirit, " Diane said. She believes that her church volunteering went into
high gear when one of Tom's sisters had
a baby out of wedlock and Diane began caring for mother and child. At the
same time and unaware of her sister's
situation, St. James asked Diane if she would help with its new ministry of supporting unplanned
pregnancies. "That was the Holy
Spirit working," Diane said.
For Tom, the spirit of helping
others began when he was an altar boy. "I think I got in the habit of
helping and offering to do things," he said .
Both maintain that neither of them
has ever been overwhelmed by all their volunteering . "It's
Christ's example of how He cared for people… and the apostle ]Paul
said God will never give you more than
you can handle, " Tom replied.
Fortunately, both Adams have enjoyed good health throughout their marriage. When asked what in their lives has seriously challenged
them, Tom and Diane singled out the
time when Diane's parents were
hospitalized before their deaths. Her
father had had a stroke, and the Adams then
had two young daughters. "Diane was
being pulled in all directions, " Tom said. "She was real good about
taking care of all of us , like driving into Chicago to see her hospitalized
parents and then coming home for her family
responsibilities . I was always
amazed at how well she handled all this. "
Tom also praised the value of good friends: " What helped us through this was that
our best friends were from St. James.
" During this stressful time, Diane
also credited their fortitude to her
woman's support group and to friends she
and Tom had made during their weekend retreat with CRHP ( Christ Renews His
Parish ).
" We do have a lot of
responsibilities with our siblings, " mentioned Diane, who is the oldest
of seven living brothers and sisters. "I have a brother who is 20 years younger than I am. We've raised him
more as a son than a brother. " Tom is the oldest of eight siblings. His
mother is 90. The Adams daughters are Karrie,
39, who is employed by the Arlington
Heights Park District, and Julie, 36, an administrative employee of High School
District 214. Both are St. James members.
The birth of their daughters and
grandchildren Tom considers as the major milestones in his life. "
When Tom he retired, " Diane said, " he said he was retiring to take care
of his little granddaughter, and he's been taking care of her and the others
ever since. " Then she mentioned her husband's pride in his 36-year teaching
career during which he often coached his
math students at night.
Our conversation turned to more of
the Adams' spiritual values. " Sunday mass has always been the focal point
of our lives, " Diane said. She has been
coordinating a series of Sunday church bulletin articles entitled—"What
the Eucharist Means to Me"—written by parish members . She and Tom currently study the Bible with a small group
led by Sr. Joanne Grib. " When you leave the doors of the church you have to be Christ for others,
and how do you do that if you don't feed your soul," she exclaimed.
Tom's faith, he said, is fed by
"the reinforcement on a regular basis
of Christ's message that you hear
at mass and when you work with others. "
He added: "This leads the way ."
The night of our interview , Diane
attended a special St. James meeting with about 150 members to advise their bishop and other archdiocese clergy of the
attributes they wanted in the pastor who was to replace Fr. Bill when he retired in July. Diane wants the new
pastor to be a good administrator like Fr. Bill, "someone who challenges us and says great homilies." She also hopes
the new priest would not be a meek person and that he be a "people
person."
But what Tom and Diane want most for St. James,
however, is to see many more people in the pews on Sunday. Many stopped going
to church a few years ago, she recalled when the major fund raising campaign was aimed at constructing a new grade school. To
encourage more "lapsed"
Catholics to return to St. James, the Adams are conducting periodic
one-hour tours of the church . "Maybe
[ after the tour ] they will realize the
importance of their church if they understand it better," Diane said.
And what might Diane and Tom want people to say about them after the Lord calls
home this married couple ? "That
she was a loving woman," Diane said
. And Tom? "He was a loving husband, father, and
grandfather, he said. "
###
Next Sunday read another soul-stirring Trekker story.
comments always welcome
rrschwarz777@gmail.com
© 2012, 2013 , 2024 Robert R. Schwarz
exodustrekkers.blogspot.com
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