
WHEN CONSIDERING GRATITUDE, as we do this week, we usually look inward. But I want to look outward and share six reasons why I feel grateful to live in Faribault.

PEOPLE make a community. I knew no one when I moved here as a newlywed in 1982. But I was welcomed and have since formed deep friendships in Faribault. I can walk into a business, attend an event, or simply be out and about and run into someone who knows me. Conversation often follows.
Recently I attended a 75th anniversary open house at Burkhartzmeyer Shoes, a third-generation family owned shoe store in downtown Faribault. After purchasing athletic shoes, I headed to a back room for complimentary refreshments. A small group of us sat there talking and laughing, simply enjoying each other’s company. I felt like I was inside a small town cafe drinking coffee and conversing. It felt that down-home comfortable.
But I can feel just as comfortable with strangers, including Adolfo, whom I met in October while walking in Central Park. Adolfo moved to America from Venezuela, a country he fled because of Communism and violence. On this morning, he was pushing his one-year-old grandson in a stroller. It’s part of their daily routine. Darling Milan drew me to his grandpa, where I connected with Adolfo on a personal level and heard his story. I feel grateful for every opportunity I have to meet Faribault’s newest immigrants and hear their stories, stories often laced with hardship and hope. To live in a city as diverse as Faribault is truly a gift.

Faribault overflows with CARING INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANIZATIONS striving to help others: the Community Action Center, Rice County Habitat for Humanity, St. Vincent de Paul, HOPE Center, Ruth’s House, IRIS (Infants Remembered in Silence), the Salvation Army, Operation: 23 to 0… I’ve received support while dealing with some especially challenging life events. When you experience that community love and care first-hand, you understand the true meaning of community.
Once again this Thanksgiving, volunteers will serve a free CommUnity Thanksgiving Dinner as they have for the past 30 some years. I’ve previously helped deliver those holiday meals. Every Tuesday, a free meal is also available at the Community Cafe. With Christmas approaching, I’m part of a bible study group coordinating the annual Angel Tree (gift giving) at my church. I could go on and on with an endless list of how people are helping people in my community. Hearts are loving, spirits giving.

I am especially grateful to live in a community which values THE ARTS. The Paradise Center for the Arts in downtown Faribault centers our arts scene. Every time I tour a gallery exhibit, attend a play or otherwise engage in the arts, I feel grateful to live here. I’ve even contributed to the local arts scene by publicly reading my poetry. I love attending summer concerts in the park and concerts inside the historic Cathedral of Our Merciful Saviour. I appreciate the history-based murals that color our downtown. I grew up in rural southwestern Minnesota with minimal access to the arts, meaning my gratitude for the arts in Faribault runs deep.

My thankfulness for BUCKHAM MEMORIAL LIBRARY also runs deep, for the very same reason. I grew up in a small farming town without a library. And I love to read. That we now also have a volunteer run used bookstore, Books on Central (benefitting the Rice County Area United Way), notches my gratitude level even higher.

The bookshop is located in the heart of our HISTORIC DOWNTOWN, another reason I feel grateful to live in Faribault. My community cares about preserving historic buildings. I love old architecture. There’s nothing quite like walking among vintage vehicles along Central Avenue during Car Cruise Night as the sun sets at the end of a summer day. Beautiful.

Faribault also offers incredible NATURAL BEAUTY in a diverse landscape of woods and prairie, hills and valleys, ravines and bluffs. It’s so different than my native prairie. Admittedly, it took me a while to “get used to” all the trees when I moved here 42 years ago. I still mostly have no sense of direction on roads and streets that don’t run prairie grid straight. But I love to walk through city parks, along city trails, at River Bend Nature Center, on the campus of the Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf… And within a short drive of my home, I am immersed in the countryside.

This list of a half dozen reasons to feel thankful for the place I call home just touches the surface of why I am grateful to live in Faribault. It’s not utopia, certainly. Nowhere is. But today I want to pause, consider and acknowledge specific reasons for feeling thankful that Faribault is my home. I hope you’ll do the same, wherever you live.
© Copyright 2024 Audrey Kletscher Helbling

Thankful for your reminders in your writings of “down home ” feelings. whether countryside or city we find community all around us and are thankful for our blessings. Have a blessed Thanksgiving. 🦃 KathyG
A blessed Thanksgiving to you also, Kathy, as we focus on the blessings in our lives and gratitude for them.
what a wonderful and welcoming place to live, Audrey, you have so much to be grateful for. I absolutely love that first photo, with the diverse group of children at the festival, it says so much about your community. the community cafe is a godsend.
It truly is the people who make Faribault a community. Yes, the cafe blesses many. As for that photo, I won first prize in a local photo contest during Faribault Heritage Days many years ago. I love how it shows a diverse group of children simply having fun together. They are simply being kids without any notice of ethnicity, skin color…
Yes, that’s so beautiful
It is. Kids can teach us adults a lot by simply being themselves.
Thanks Audrey for the reminders and uplift!
You are welcome, Dave. I appreciate all you’ve done for Faribault and continue to do. You are part of what makes Faribault a wonderful place to live.
What generous and thoughtfully crafted words for this Thanksgiving week. I hope your chamber picks up on this blog posting nd/or your local newspaper for the edtorial section. Your sincerity and love of your town shines. I wish you a wonderful Thanksgiving with your family and a note a gratitude for your frienndship.
Thank you, Sue, for your generous words. I appreciate your friendship also, how we connected many years ago via blogging and then met (many times) and grew our friendship. You bless me in so many ways. Thank you for being YOU. Happy Thanksgiving to you and Charley!
Your posts bring me back to the love and charm of my youth. Although I live in Connecticut these days I grew up on a farm about midway between Northfield and Faribault, and I truly miss the community and wonderful people I knew there. Thank you for continuing to post, and for bringing so many happy memories back to me!
You are welcome, Sharyn. I’m happy to take you back to your home area. My son lives on the East coast also, in greater Boston. Oh, how I miss him. But I’ll see him in a few weeks for Christmas. I hope you occasionally return to your Midwest roots for a visit. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving!
Adored this post! It truly brings out the heart of gratitude. ❤️ Especially loved the first photo, the happiness of children.
Thank you, Rose. I never tire of looking at that photo.
A wonderful reminder to be thankful for where we live, no matter where it is! A great post.