The women stood at the large cookās table in the kitchen of the Universalist Unitarian Church in Waterville, slathering cranberry sauce on slices of nine-grain bread and topping it with turkey, lettuce and mayonnaise.
āItās the nice turkey that looks like Thanksgiving turkey,ā Sue Morrill said.
A retired teacher, Morrill was volunteering with eight others Wednesday to make 93 thank-you bag lunches for teachers, staff and bus drivers at Waterville Senior High School.
She and her sister, Sally Harwood, have been heading up the special effort as a way to show appreciation for those working on the front line of the coronavirus pandemic.
The group of retired women, some of whom are church members and others friends of the church, have gotten together the past few weeks to make the lunches and deliver them to schools. After they do it for Educare Central Maine staff next week, working with Pleasant Street United Methodist Church members, they will have devised and delivered 350 lunches.
āAfter two years of the pandemic, everybodyās weary,ā Harwood said. āThe surge this winter was just heartbreaking.ā
Harwood had invited me to the lunch-making effort, not to showcase it, but to nudge others to reach out in similar fashion.
āIād love to see others show appreciation for frontline workers,ā she said. āJust because the surge is over doesnāt mean people arenāt exhausted, weary, wondering if theyāre seen. Buy a daffodil for everybody or just send a note of appreciation. It matters. It matters to be seen, when weāre all behind masks.ā
The Unitarian Churchās board of trustees donated money to the effort, as did some church members. Hannaford supermarket also pitched in, Harwood said.
It was quiet outside on Silver Street on Wednesday where snow had fallen overnight, but the basement kitchen just off the sidewalk was abuzz with activity. Kathy McKay and Stephanie Kierstead were helping to assemble sandwiches and enjoying the chance to socialize after a long, isolating pandemic.
āIt feels so good to be in this kitchen again,ā McKay said.
Out in the dining area, Rachel Marsh-Sachs and Linda Seekins were placing three kinds of sandwiches as well as apples, candies and homemade cookies, brownies and bars into dozens of little paper bags that bore the words, āWith appreciation for all you do for students.ā
Edie Keller and Barbara Covey were packing the bags in boxes to be delivered to the high school. They placed colorful round cards on each bag displaying a sun and a rainbow and words such as āMerci beaucoup!ā and āTeachers Rock!ā
Keller knows what it means to school staff to receive such a treat. A retired, 30-plus year librarian at George J. Mitchell School, she helped deliver lunches there recently and got to see some of her old friends who were touched by the offering.
āItās a real gift,ā Keller said. āItās not just the food ā itās somebody wants to lighten our load, you know? Thatās basically what it is.ā
Harwood said she hopes people will recognize health care workers, first responders and others who continue to forge on, despite the challenges.
āA nice thank you goes a long way,ā she said.
Amy Calder has been a Morning Sentinel reporter 33 years. Her columns appear here Saturdays. She may be reached at acalder@centralmaine.com. For previous Reporting Aside columns, go to centralmaine.com.
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