Amish Way of Life Still Relevant

While Most People Cannot Convert to the Amish Way of Life, They Can Learn a Lot from It

Every month or two, my wife and I travel out to what we call Amish country. On Hickory Hill Road, Stone Arabia Road, and Route 5 near Palatine Bridge in Montgomery County, New York, there are Amish farmhouses where women rise early to bake bread, sticky buns, cookies and pies to sell to
 the public. For someone like me, who finds the Amish to be one of the most intriguing groups in America, talking to these people is as sweet as the baked goods they sell.

I have been interested in the Amish since I was a child, even though none lived near my hometown of Bangor, Maine. My mother, however, grew up in Pennsylvania and used to tell me stories about the Amish. When I was 18, I spent more than a day's wages on a book called "The Gentle People: A Portrait of the Amish" by James Warner and Donald Delinger.Because of my mother's stories and the photographs in the book, I wanted to make my pilgrimage to Lancaster, Pennsylvania but was never able to. The few times we drove through Pennsylvania, my father was in too much of a hurry to stop. As it turned out, however, I didn't have to go to Lancaster, because the Amish began moving into Montgomery County shortly after I moved here in 1978.

Originally my interest in the Amish was that of the average tourist. Visiting them was like going to a zoo and a museum at the same time. The Amish were an exotic species of the human animal, surrounded by the grandfather clocks, plows, kerosene lamps and buggies from another century.

As I matured, my outlook on the Amish matured also. I now see their lifestyle as a viable alternative to the life that most of us accept without questioning. The Amish do not live in the past, as so many of us believe. Indeed, they have been forced to make compromises with modern life and sometimes seem to have a better understanding of the complexities of modern society than we do.

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