But it wasn’t necessarily his experiences that made it epic—it was his attitude.
Glenn lived his life like the old western heroes he enjoyed so much. There was purpose and excitement around every corner. So Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, where he grew up, became his own personal frontier for fun and adventure. He told me countless stories of his young life. And whether or not they were all true, what I gathered most were not facts about his life, but how his outlook made every experience larger-than-life.
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Picture by Harald Finster. Used with permission. |
But Glenn did far more than just work a blast furnace. He owned a small television repair business, he had rental properties for a while, he shook things up while serving on the local school board and he and his wife raised a family of four kids together.
As Glenn galloped across the screen of his ordinary life, he chose to become his own hero. He lived larger-than-life, ennobling the simple, everyday things and found worth and adventure in doing them. I cannot help but appreciate my own life more from having known him.
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