A Popper Full

by DanWolgemuth on May 23, 2025

On May 24th, 2015—her 90th birthday—Eunice Cargo made a bold move from Brighton, Michigan, to Aurora, Colorado. It was a courageous step, and one that ultimately impacted Mary, me, and our entire family just as deeply as it impacted Eunice herself.

It’s true.

My own story of impact has, at its core, a simple yet essential element: popcorn. What I didn’t realize when Mary and I got married in 1978 was that I was marrying into a popcorn family. Yes, a deep and abiding legacy wrapped in the love of popped kernels. Every last one.

Sunday nights, it’s a given in our household. And really, the bar is low for what counts as a popcorn-worthy occasion.

After Eunice moved into an assisted living community just four miles from our home, I began delivering popcorn to her on Sunday evenings. Since her apartment didn’t have a stove—and because microwave popcorn is, well, microwave popcorn—I took it upon myself to ensure she got the real thing: stove-cooked, fresh, and familiar.

Sunday night became our time.

I’d sit across from her, angled just so, in a chair that matched hers. She rarely ate the popcorn while I was there—possibly because she didn’t want to share it. But more likely because the delivery marked the beginning of something more: rich, revealing, and unhurried conversation. Our chairs became an oasis of reflection.

Eunice’s memory ran deep and wide. Most Sundays, my questions would take her back to Calumet, Michigan—her childhood home. The daughter of immigrants. The seventh of eight children. Her father, Benjamin, worked deep in the copper mines of the Upper Peninsula. He never owned a car, consequently, he walked to and from the mine every workday. While the mine provided a living, it eventually poisoned his lungs and led to his early death. Eunice was still a young woman.

And somehow, it took a bowl of popcorn and the comfort of Sunday evenings to unlock the personal, poignant stories of those early days—days rooted in faith, resilience, and family.
One Sunday, as the popcorn rested on the kitchen table and we settled into our usual configuration, she spoke of growing up in a loving but austere home. The mines were run by British businessmen—wealthy by local standards—and Eunice grew up feeling marginalized. An outsider.

As the stories unfolded, I felt the weight of trust. I marveled at the tenderness, the depth, the quiet strength. After more than 40 years of knowing my mother-in-law, I was hearing these stories for the first time. Popcorn was the excuse my curiosity needed—and once given permission, the stories flowed. Richly. Deeply. Wisely.

Eunice would have turned 100 on May 24th, 2025. Her last birthday with us was her 95th.

Even now, I find myself wishing I could make one more Sunday night popcorn run to Peakview. To ask a few more questions. To sit once more in the comfort of curiosity and wonder. To share in the humbling delight of simply listening.

Sunday night. Popcorn. The quiet beauty of lingering—and the perfect excuse to make it happen.

Stories untold are a treasure undiscovered. Get curious. Make time. Pop popcorn.

I miss you, Mom.

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The Rocks Beat Me To It

by DanWolgemuth on May 16, 2025

It was Michelangelo who brilliantly said, “The sculpture is already complete within the marble block, before I start my work. It is already there, I just have to chisel away the superfluous material.”

Perhaps he was echoing the perspective of Jesus during the Pharisaical uproar over the praise being lavished on Him just a week before His crucifixion. In Luke 19, when the Pharisees demanded that Jesus rebuke His disciples, He replied:

“I tell you, if these were silent, the very stones would cry out.”

Rocks in worship.

Mary and I experienced something like that this week—not in Jerusalem, but in Custer State Park, South Dakota. One of our many hikes led us to Cathedral Spires, a two-mile out-and-back trail with about 500 feet of elevation gain. By the end, even our muscles seemed to applaud the decision to take this unplanned detour. These weren’t just rocks—they had personality. They paid tribute to the Artist.

Rocks that refuse to be silent.

Aptly named, the spires rise to the heavens as if with a story to tell and a Creator to glorify. From every angle, they honor the Artist. A masterpiece “already there,” waiting to be noticed, inviting curious observation, deserving awe.

For the Artist.

Jesus wasn’t assigning worship to granite and marble; He was reminding skeptics that true worship is often an involuntary response to majesty, beauty, and truth. Awe doesn’t arise from argument—it comes from encountering the unimaginable.

From encountering Jesus.

The Psalmist gives us a glimpse into this kind of adoration:

Let the rivers clap their hands;
let the hills sing for joy together.
(Psalm 98:8, ESV)

And yes—let the breathtaking Cathedral Spires in southwest South Dakota join that choir, shouting unending praise to God. In doing so, they inspired two hikers from Aurora, Colorado to stop and marvel.

Without a word.

Without an explanation.

Without constraint.

“The very rocks cried out.”

I heard them. And they invited my reply—my worship, my adoration.

For the Artist who knows so well what is “already there.”

He came. He loved. He served.
He died. He conquered.

Not for the rocks, but for us.

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Don’t Swerve

May 9, 2025

Not long after Mary and I moved to Franklin, Tennessee in 1987, we gathered our three kids and two Nashville nieces and set out on a Christmas tree hunt. We’d heard about a local tree farm with an outstanding selection, so we borrowed my brother’s larger vehicle and headed out for what we hoped would […]

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In a tear…

May 2, 2025

In a tear. Through a tear. With a tear… Jesus shows the way. In the quiet moments of the morning on May 5, 2010, Donald William Cargo showed us the way, too. His four children, his beloved wife, and a few others were gathered at his bedside. His body, no longer able to fight the […]

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Even at 70

April 25, 2025

Somewhere, tucked inside the fog of distant childhood memories, is an unforgettable interaction with a man who himself stayed in the shadows. Graybill Wolgemuth was my father’s father—a man with persistently whining hearing aids, an unwelcoming beard, a posture of seriousness, and a famine of words. He walked with God. Quietly. Stoically. Obediently. Joylessly. There […]

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A Call to Remember. A Promise to Steward.

April 11, 2025

On April 16, 1978, in St. Louis, Bob Forsch pitched the first no-hitter of his major league career as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals—a 5-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. I know about this milestone because I was there. Or more precisely, Mary and I were there, bundled together in the bleak, drizzly […]

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Solspeil

April 4, 2025

It’s dark. Division, dissension, bitterness, hatred, prejudice, war, natural disasters, and loneliness all seem to be having their day. It’s hard to watch. Job put it this way—and he put it well:“Why do the wicked have it so good,live to a ripe old age and get rich?They get to see their children succeed,get to watch […]

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Kansas

March 28, 2025

Madness. That’s what they call it. 68 teams, all with lofty ambitions, and millions of people pouring time and energy—emotion, too—into making bracket predictions and forecasting outcomes. Our family is no exception. After the first weekend of play, when the pool of potential national champions shrank to just 16, I had a conversation with Abe, […]

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“How are you checking in today?”

March 21, 2025

It’s a question that comes up regularly in a nonprofit coaching group I’m a part of. Kimberly, our leader and guide, asks it, then listens intently as each coach shares their response. So, in 2025, what would be the most common answer? How would you reply? A catalog of familiar words comes to mind… Busy. […]

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Leading From Behind

March 14, 2025

It was our last day at Copper Mountain for the 2025 season, and what a perfect March day it was. The sky was clear and blue, the temperatures mild, the lines short, and best of all, we had grandkids with us on the slopes. Our daughter, Alli, had brought her four kids along for a […]

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