tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-90955200866461493072024-03-13T09:44:29.498-04:00SignifyOneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.comBlogger278125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-13713629327679840782018-06-08T18:58:00.002-04:002018-06-08T18:58:55.260-04:00Parts Unknown<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
June 8, 2018. Anthony Bourdain, the food guy, committed suicide. It was last night or this morning. His body was found this morning by a friend. What a thing to do to a friend. When I heard the news on the radio I wept. I called my wife to tell her what he had done and I had a hard time telling her. It messed me up. I’ve known good people to do this. To take their life into their own hands. And it is always a mistake. Always.<br />
<br />
I started watching Bourdain’s “Parts Unknown” show on Netflix a while back. There was something intensely likeable about this guy. He was the guy next door. He was the troubled friend who did a lot of stupid stuff but you wanted to be his friend anyway. He was the persistent pessimist who was as curious as three people put together. And we find out now that he was doomed by his world view. I was hoping he would start to figure things out. Things that would have helped him to deal with his pain. But he didn’t.<br />
<br />
His daughter now has to pay the price for that.<br />
<br />
I couldn’t tell if he was humble or arrogant. I’m sure he was both, but maybe you know what I mean. At any given moment. He himself was "parts unknown." I couldn’t tell if he was happy or sad. It all seemed to be at war within him, and the simple joys of food and culture were becoming less and less of a reason to stay alive. Which is tough because if his daughter wasn’t going to be reason enough, the food and the culture was all he had left to him. Or so it seems. And in the end that’s not much to hold on to. I can’t say I know, really, what it was he was holding on to, but it wasn’t anything eternal as far as I can tell.<br />
<br />
I have to admit that I can’t always tell the difference between humility and insecurity, or outright fear. I was mixed up with what I was seeing in Bourdain on his show, and I get mixed up myself. What I mean is that I can’t always tell within myself, in my own heart and mind. I’m not talking about trying to judge others. I’m talking about making sense of myself. But I could be talking about judging myself in an unreasonable way as well. I don’t know. At least sometimes I don’t know.<br />
<br />
It can be debilitating.<br />
<br />
I want to walk in humility every moment of every day. There is no situation or condition that humility doesn’t fit. True humility is always appropriate in every situation. And I believe it leads us to a place of hope.<br />
<br />
But I’m laced with all kinds of insecurities and fears as well. Things I can’t talk about much because I can’t really “remember” the sources. They’re rooted in neglect and mistakes and sorrows and abuses, many of which I can’t even remember anymore intellectually, but my emotions remember just fine. My emotions remember things that my mind has long ago let go of. And the emotional sores still pull away from touch like any sore that is tender. Cuts that just won’t heal. And you wonder when the tenderness will go away. When will you be able to handle touch again? And what will you lose in the process?<br />
<br />
What if my artistry is rooted in my pain?<br />
<br />
It’s hard to think of anything that fills people with empathy more than pain does. And empathy connects us with other human beings. I think I connected with Anthony’s pain. Not that he expressed it much in words. It was in his eyes. It was always fighting with his curiosity. And his humility. That’s what I think, anyway. Pain can make us very arrogant in quiet, rebellious ways that can be incredibly destructive.<br />
<br />
In the Bible, in Hebrews 4:15, Jesus is described as having empathy with us, with our humanity, and we’re meant to take hope from the fact. And I do. But there’s a part of me that wonders how it’s possible. What is human/divine empathy? What does it really mean from his perspective? What does it bring about in the world? What does it lead to? I have only scratched the surface.<br />
<br />
There is a misty realm of metaphor in my head that drives a lot of what I do and don’t do. It’s like a mud puddle. To be more artsy fartsy about it: it’s a kind of Tolkienesque realm of true myth, where the real things of the past, things now shrouded in darkness, loom and shape the present, and it becomes something you have to fight against sometimes because it is controlling and oppressive, leaving you wondering why you’re doing what you’re doing. It’s all real, and yet if feels like a long, mythic history of what it means to be human, to be making choices and feel like you’re in control, but finding out the hard way that control is a very illusory thing. Realizing that we are not as strong as we think we are. And we are certainly not, in the ultimate sense, in control of much of anything. So we cling to what we think we can hold on to and shape what we think we can shape. And we try to get that ring into the fires of Mount Doom without destroying ourselves.<br />
<br />
Perhaps we should trust someone else to take care of that ring for us? Is that cowardly? Perhaps it's just realistic.<br />
<br />
When it comes to living here. On earth. How much of Leonardo is in David? Know what I mean? How much of McCartney is actually in his songs? And I mean all of them. Sum total. How much Paul is there? How much of himself will he be leaving behind and will anyone be able to tell what’s what? How much of Anthony was in his food and in his show? And who really cares?<br />
<br />
What if, in the end, it's not about you? And it never was?<br />
<br />
Why couldn’t Anthony figure out why another day was worth the effort? If not for himself, then for others? For his daughter? At this point blame is pointless and worthless. It won’t change a thing. But what was going on in that mind of his? I guess the big question is: how could he have drifted so far away from what’s really important? Isn’t that a question worth thinking about?<br />
<br />
I don’t look down on him for it. I’m not angry with him. But I am sad. And I'm really going to miss him.<br />
<br />
To some degree, dust is a ruler in this place. Dust and rust. And decay. And they don’t care what we think. Do you really believe you can fight them on your own?<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Peace to you.<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2018OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-83821531343414462832018-05-15T14:17:00.000-04:002018-05-15T15:20:59.915-04:00Connecting<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
<br />
One might wonder whats wrong with a person who willingly writes things down and sends them off into the world with no concern over whether or not anyone is interested in reading those things. Many bloggers, like myself, simply don't reach very many people, if any, with their random thoughts. So what's the point of it? Why not just think about it and let it be?<br />
<br />
I'll tell you why.<br />
<br />
Because the brain, or at least MY brain, is an echo chamber that rings and rings with the sounds of so many virtual realities that there's a genuine sense of non reality created by everything that goes on in there. Ultimately, for me, what's IN the brain doesn't add up to very much, if anything. It's what I get OUT of my brain, in one way or another, that manages to do anything of any worth. My brain does nothing more than mix the paint. All the things I do to get things out of my brain and into the world, those things are the act of painting. I don't actually paint. This is a metaphor. But I enjoy looking at the paintings (or the songs or the words on a page or whatever). They make life feel more real for me. They make me feel connected to the universe I happen to be planted in. They help my feet to feel like they're touching the ground. And who knows, the Creator might want to do something with this stuff. You never know.<br />
<br />
Sometimes I do create things that seem to matter to people in different ways. And I really like that. I feel like I have, hopefully, made life a little less dark for people sometimes. But if I was the only person left in the world, I would still create. I'm created to create.<br />
<br />
So this is just me again, taking one small step onto terra firma. The ground feels good.<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2018OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-7253875494258682402015-11-21T11:19:00.000-05:002015-11-21T11:19:23.578-05:00Troblems and Prubles<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
<br />
Troblems and Prubles<br />
Come waddling westward<br />
Biting at heels<br />
With hatreds and zeals<br />
With monkeyshine monies<br />
And sugars and honeys<br />
With dripping loose lips<br />
That have sunk many ships<br />
<br />
Troblems and Prubles<br />
Rustle on rooftops<br />
Hiding in walls<br />
With muffled catcalls<br />
With something to say about<br />
Any and everything<br />
There is no sin<br />
That they will not swim in<br />
<br />
Troblems and Prubles<br />
Have answers for everything<br />
Sing out of key<br />
But they sing with such glee!<br />
With choruses chiming<br />
And words out of rhyming<br />
And now they are saying<br />
Goodbye with a grin<br />
Because we all know<br />
They will be back again<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2015OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-67320652514570776132015-11-11T13:24:00.000-05:002015-11-11T13:24:32.631-05:00Eyeballs<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
<br />
My eyeballs are letting me down.<br />
<br />
The fact is, they've never been much to write home about. They've never been functioning at maximum capacity. For me, it's a way of life.<br />
<br />
When I was a little kid, I tried to take piano lessons. I was SO excited about learning the piano. But the teacher told my parents I just didn't have musical talent. (This was said with certainty about an individual who grew up to sing, play drums, guitar, some keys and a little banjo to boot, not to mention playing in several bands and writing hundreds of songs.)<br />
<br />
Turns out, the real issue was my eyeballs. They couldn't see like they should if the music was too far from my face, which it was, and no one knew about it until after I was expelled from the world of the Piano-Forte. What did I know? I thought that's what the world looked like. And my physical limitation had me branded as a "no talent."<br />
<br />
I have lived with this eye thing my whole life and I am not really sore about it. At this point, it would be like being sore because you have brown hair or green eyes. It's just the way it is.<br />
<br />
And now my eyeballs have started a new journey of instability and insufficiency. They call it "Vitreous Detachment." The inside of my eyes are sort of falling apart. People don't seem to realize, in general, how gooey and gross the inside of an eye is. But when it starts coming apart in there and blocking your vision, well, it's hard to ignore. It's like looking through a veil of snot floating in salt water. And it's stubborn. It won't move out of the way <br />
<br />
I'm told I will probably not go blind. Probably. And I have to admit that I like seeing things. But I will still have to adjust to the pseudosnot inside my eyes, clouding the sunniest of days. I also have to watch diligently for other signs of trouble.<br />
<br />
Your body, it seems to me, is supposed to be your friend. It carries around your taste buds, which makes eating enjoyable. I'm thankful for that. It carries around your brain, which is certainly helpful. But as time goes by, this good friend starts letting you down a little bit at a time. You start losing your trust in this old buddy ol'pal. But what can you do?<br />
<br />
In this case, it's the only friend you've got.<br />
<br />
<br /><br />
<br />
Peace to you.<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2015OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-50292306642969858552015-10-29T17:01:00.000-04:002015-10-29T17:01:00.570-04:00Icebergs<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
<br />
Lettuce, or large chunks of ice floating in the ocean, it adds up the same. There are parts you can see and parts you can't. There are things that don't show. How come we don't use artichokes as a symbol for the human condition? Or rocks?<br />
<br />
If we were able to unwrap one another, if we we're able to dive below and see what's underneath, I think we would have a very hard time living with each other. Sure, there would be some good stuff living in there that we didn't know about, but we tend, I think, to show the good. Of course we do. It's the other stuff that sits and waits for some tragic moment of opportunity to strike out at the world we fear.<br />
<br />
Perhaps our ignorance is a kind of grace.<br />
<br />
But what if you knew it all? What if you knew every tendency toward the darkness in the people around you? What if you knew every single dehumanizing thought that came to mind in the people in your life? Where would love be then?<br />
<br />
For us, I think, it would melt like ice on a hot stove. Wilt like lettuce in the sun.<br />
<br />
But the Creator sees it all and somehow still finds a way to love. It is astounding to me. And all I really have to go on is myself. I can only guess at the darkness in others. But I am fairly well aware of the darkness in myself. And even that is a guarded self awareness. After all, we have to live with ourselves, don't we? Don't we?<br />
<br />
The truth is that I don't deserve any of the love I have in my life. But it's there anyway. And I'm thankful for it. And it teaches me to love in spite of the darkness; in spite of the things that are not seen.<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2015OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-14527868718517891712014-10-22T17:30:00.000-04:002014-10-23T16:37:38.327-04:00Unbalanced<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
<br />
There it is. A painting of Isaac Newton. He looks like he could have been a member of Kiss. He would have been chased out of the Bible Belt in the sixties, right? <br />
<br />
According to Mr. Newton, for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.<br />
<br />
What this has to do with figs, I have no idea.<br />
<br />
But I find that this truth is remarkably untrue when it comes to emotional energy and the realities of everyday life. In particular, it doesn't apply to the arts. Using religious ideas to express it, it seems to me that Karma is not only not true, it is practically a joke. No offense intended to those who embrace the idea, but almost every aspect of life among humans demonstrates that there is no balance to the force. Everything is about as out of balance as you can get, and there aren't enough Darth Vaders in the universe to bring it into balance, no matter what anyone thinks about it.<br />
<br />
And then there's God. The real One. Who doesn't seem all that interested in our sense of what is balanced and what isn't. He's got his own scale and we aren't allowed to touch it. So sad, too bad. But, the truth is, we'd only mess it up anyway because we simply don't know the true value of things. <br />
<br />
Anyway.<br />
<br />
How have you been?<br />
<br />
I've been enveloped in the process of change. I'm changing in subtle but distinct ways, and it's making me a little nervous because I'm not really sure where it's all headed. I wonder if I'm going to end up being someone I don't care too much for, or will I be someone I could hope to be? I'm starting to feel the inevitable pull of "aging." And I'm not really what you could call old yet. Or at least I hope you don't.<br />
<br />
Thing is, you'd think that if you put in a lot of effort, you could count on the results to some degree. You'd think you'd end up with some control over what comes next. But, alas, that's just not the way it goes. At least not always. Then again, who knows?<br />
<br />
Certainly not me. <br />
<br />
And by the way...<br />
<br />
I've been writing a lot of new songs after quite a long dry spell.<br />
<br />
Why?<br />
<br />
I have no idea.<br />
<br />
I like it but it can be a bit unnerving how things come and go. And they do. Come and go, that is.<br />
<br />
Turns out that some beasts require a lot of fodder to produce a few little morsels of meaningful something or other. And feeding those beasts can get very tiring.<br />
<br />
If you don't believe me, just ask all of those artists with unfinished works.<br />
<br />
<br />
Peace to you.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
© LW Publishing 2014OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com2United States37.09024 -95.712891000000013-36.4181565 99.052733999999987 90 69.521483999999987tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-1243406271226566482014-02-28T10:44:00.000-05:002014-02-28T10:44:11.592-05:00Call Me Cheap<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Here’s what I think I think:<br /><br />I have discovered that the best way to get “into” a prolific author is AFTER that author has already been established and gotten a good number of books published. If you can manage to get “into” them a decade after they hit the scene, then you’re really going to be able to have an inexpensive, enjoyable, relaxed time reading their books. If you read them a decade later and they stink, then they were probably stinky to begin with. You just aren’t all caught up in the hype. Which is a good thing in my book.<br /><br />Example:<br /><br />Last fall I started reading the John Grisham books. In case you live under a rock and don’t know, John Grisham is a best selling writer of “legal thrillers” who almost single handedly turned the genre into a huge industry. His first big book was his second book, “The Firm,” which they made a movie out of. In fact, they made movies out of most of the books he wrote over the first ten years of output. The movies were pretty much in the category of “just okay” because they could communicate the plot lines and story ideas of Grisham (which is not his greatest strength), but they can not communicate the flair, simplicity, smoothness and readability of his writing (which are his real strengths). Movie makers have the same problem with writers like Ray Bradbury and Stephen King. John Grisham could write about pretty much anything, I think, and make it readable. In fact, I wish he’d try some other things more often. I’d love to see him team up with a horror writer and see what happens. Or just write a novel about monsters and see what happens. But that’s just me.<br /><br />The point here, though, is that I didn’t start reading his books until this past fall. I started with his first (and one of his best) books, called “A Time To Kill.” This book was published in 1989, 24 years before I started reading Grisham’s books. I finally just decided to see what all the hub bub was about.<br /><br />I didn’t give thought to this at first, but I really liked the book and have been progressively reading through his canon, like you would do with any author you really like. But, because I’m behind the times, I have been getting these books very cheap, on discount racks, at the library, or loaned to me by people who’ve had them sitting on the shelves for years, collecting dust since they read them years ago. As a result of this, when his new book came out last fall, called “Sycamore Row,” which happens to be a sequel to the first novel, “A Time To Kill,” I was not at all tempted to jump into the “gotta have it now” fray. I’m still way back at “The Broker” (2005). I’ve got plenty of time to kill (ha ha) before I get to the new one. And I’m happy to work my way to it, watching the price drop and drop as time goes by. Why? Because I am not a rich man and I think it is stupid of me to get something NOW for reasons that don’t make any sense.<br /><br />I have stopped buying books when they first come out. That, I have determined, is for rich people.<br /><br />So, you do what you want. I won’t interfere. I won’t judge you. But I’m going to go ahead and let those other people out there, hustling through the hurley burley, worry about reading the latest and greatest book by their author of choice. Let them pay top dollar to read it the day it comes out. There are plenty of those people and their obsessive nature will always provide retailers with big income and all the rest in our gotta have it now world. And when those readers finally give decide to clean house and donate that book to a book sale, where it will probably sell for a quarter, I’ll be there to pick up the pieces.<br /><br />And I’ll enjoy it just as much.<br /><br />Maybe more.<br /><br /><br /><br />Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2014OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-62435113672897996632013-10-20T22:37:00.000-04:002013-10-20T22:37:14.855-04:00Book of Life<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
I can't believe it's been, like, 5 months since I've posted on this blog. That seems crazy to me. I won't say that I've been too busy. I've just been focused on other things - and there are times when I just don't seem to have that much to say.<br />
<br />
I have been taking a lot of things in over the past year; trying to listen and learn and assess things. A big part of that has been a kind of reading frenzy. I don't even know why, but I have read more books over the past several months than I have in a long time. I've read them very fast, like I used to back in the day, including a lot of novels, which I thought I was done with. Prior to this, I went over a year without reading a single novel. It was all biography and history and technical reading and such.<br />
<br />
Why?<br />
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I don't know.<br />
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I've also been rereading a few things that I read over twenty years ago. Things I read and really liked. I liked them so much I kept them on shelves. I'm not sure if I ever intended to read them again, or if I was saving them for someone. When you read a great book, it becomes a part of you and it's hard to let it go. But I've been rereading some of those and putting them in the box to give to the library. I won't be reading them again. I'm saying goodbye. Moving on.<br />
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To what?<br />
<br />
I don't know.<br />
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I wonder some times about the afterlife. I wonder if we'll write and read novels and do other artistic things for all of eternity. I like to think so. I like to imagine that all of the art we produce in this life will be like the crayon drawings of two years olds compared to what we'll produce with the wisdom of eternity. Even Mozart and Bach will be like kids stuff, which is hard to imagine. What they did seems so sublime and perfect. And yet, I can't help thinking that, as a race, we've only scratched the surface, and scratching is all we get to do until the blinders are taken off.<br />
<br />
I like to think I have a book in me. I'm not sure. A novel, maybe. Or some kind of historical thing. I have lots and lots of ideas. The ideas I'm brave enough to even start writing are the ones that are the least interesting. I know, call me "chicken." I guess the idea is that swimming in the kiddie pool is safer than jumping into the deep end. At least to start. The other problem is that the patience required may not be in my bag of tricks.<br />
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We'll see. <br />
<br />
For now I'll just have to continue to feast on the hearts and minds of others.<br />
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Yeah, I know that sounds kind of zombie. But it really is a feast. <br />
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Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2013OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-65775754210248646772013-05-28T00:24:00.003-04:002013-05-28T00:24:49.130-04:0050<br />
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Just turned 50. People act like it's a big deal. It's not.<br />
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Went with the Better Half to see a play in Indiana. Amish country. We weren't there for the play. It just happened to fall into the agenda. It was kind of surreal. A sort of rockish musical-dramady about a quilting class led by an older Amish widow with six stereo-type quilters: a biker type a goth chick a pastor's wife a bickering couple and a soldier. They all had emotional problems.. It was ridiculous, really, contrived. But it was still quite funny at times. The actors did well with what they had. One of the characters had about 80 percent of the funny lines. I thought, if I was in that play I'd want to be him. I'd want to be the guy who gets the laughs.<br />
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I can't act. <br />
<br />
Found a book written by Eddie Cantor in a used book store. This was a world class, extraordinarily famous comedian from the same era as Jack Benny and George Burns. Vaudeville. Radio days. Eddie is now almost entirely forgotten. He didn't make the jump to films or TV like some of the others. At least not well. I'm sure a lot of people don't know who Jack Benny is anymore. Or even George Burns.<br />
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It's tragic.<br />
<br />
This Cantor book was released the year I was born. It cost me $3.99. When originally published it was $3.95. Fifty years and it's only worth 4 cents more. Doesn't seem right. But I didn't offer more for it. I'd have paid less if I could.<br />
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They say a thing is only really worth what someone is willing to pay for it.<br />
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Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2013OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-12233983080754299902013-01-18T13:41:00.000-05:002013-01-18T13:42:45.055-05:00Non Resolutionary Living<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
Yes, my taxes are finished. Sent. Done. And yes, you should be jealous.<br />
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Not really. But they <i>are</i> finished. I know it sounds like I'm bragging, but that's because I'm bragging.<br />
<br />
Notice: I'm not telling you how I'm going to get them done early this year. I'm telling you they're done.<br />
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I have also cleared the file cabinet of the old papers. Yes, I have. At least the biggest chunk of them. There are a few things still to go, but it's down to a few hours of work.<br />
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And I have been getting through some serious reviews of things at work and at home. Working to get plans in place for work and home. Serious, careful plans to get real things done.<br />
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All of this, I have done, without having made a single New Year's resolution. Which is not bragging. It's simply a fact.<br />
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I've just never been big on resolutions, if by "resolutions" you mean those brief little wish statements people make at the end of the year. "This next year I'm going to do this or that!" No real plan. No real commitment to change. No serious self examination and thinking about how to follow through.<br />
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I don't like empty talk. It makes me nervous to talk about what I'd simply kind of "like" to do because I know how easy it is to talk, and yet how hard it is to actually do things that are challenging to do. I prefer the simple act of doing something and letting the doing of it be the evidence of my intent.<br />
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<span style="font-size: x-small;">Matthew 5: 37 Simply let your `Yes' be `Yes,' and your`No,' `No'; anything beyond this comes from the evil one.</span><br />
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© LW Publishing 2013OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-66311668753732130082012-11-01T10:42:00.000-04:002012-11-01T10:42:24.696-04:00Meeting Margaret<br />
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<br />
Did I happen to mention the time I met former Prime Minister of England Margaret Thatcher? No?<br /><br />I am remiss.<br /><br />So here’s how it went down. And, yes, this is a completely true story that really happened.<br />
<br />One day I was driving a delivery truck and had a little time to kill while waiting to be called back. With this particular job, I would deliver a package and, if it was fairly far away, they would have me wait to see if a pickup came in before heading back. It saved a lot of time and money, except when no pick up came in.<br /><br />But I digress...<br /><br />One day I had a little time to kill, so I stopped at a Border’s Bookstore. I liked this store. It was one of the early ones. It had the aroma of coffee and new books about it. One of the finer scents the human race has managed to manufacture over the centuries. And, as I was browsing around, I became aware of some Men in Black.<br /><br />Seriously.<br /><br />First I saw one, and then I saw another and another. Men in black suits, sun glasses and ties and white shirts with shiny black shoes. Just like Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones. But before that movie came out. My curiosity was immediately piqued, of course, so I looked around and noticed a line of people. I made the natural assumption that the Men in Black had something to do with it, so I joined the cue.<br /><br />Just call me “Mr. Adventurous.”<br /><br />Everyone was being really quiet. The place was in a real hush. It was a little odd, but I went with the flow and waiting silently with no idea of what we were waiting for. I figured I’d just get out of line if it turned out to be something stupid.<br /><br />The line was long, winding around book shelves, so you couldn’t see where it ended. But then I could tell I was getting close because there were large stacks of books on the floor, hundreds of the same book. And just on the other side of the stacks, where you couldn’t quite see, was an author of some kind, signing books. I could see the signing table. I could see people at the table, but not the person signing. So I picked up one of the books on the big stack. It was Margaret Thatcher’s autobiography, the second part. Apparently the first part was a huge success, and now she was touring the States, signing copies of the second part. Here I was, about to meet Margaret Thatcher.<br /><br />Why not...<br /><br />Now, what brings this to mind is that I watched the movie called, “Iron Lady,” a few days ago, about Margaret Thatcher. Which is very good in it’s way, though it presents her in extremes in the sense that she is either old and suffering from dementia/Alzheimer's, or young and over zealous/naive, or middle aged and working too hard to be too tough for too much of the time. You would get the impression from the film that her entire 11 year stint in office was spent huddling away from either screaming, angry mobs trying to kill her, or screaming ecstatic mobs who were getting rich during the eighties, all of whom had nothing better to do but to bang on her car windows and scream every time she left the house.<br /><br />Aside from these overdone tones, the exceedingly liberal Meryl Streep, of all people, does a superb job of playing the very conservative Margaret Thatcher. Meryl is a marvel to watch, let me tell you. That woman can act. She absolutely becomes Margaret Thatcher.<br /><br />How do I know? Because I met Margaret Thatcher. Yes I did.<br /><br />I walked up to the signing desk with my book in hand. I had nothing much to say because I knew very little about her at the time. But she was very quiet and nice and asked me how I was doing today. I said very well, thanks. And she signed the book and handed it back to me. I said, "thank you," and she said, very distinctively:<br /><br />“Thenk Yewww.”<br /><br />That was one seriously British woman, let me tell you. And Meryl Streep was the mirror image of her. It was uncanny.<br /><br />I would be willing to show you the book to prove my story, but I gave it away, a long time ago, to a good friend who I thought would appreciate it.<br /><br />So you’ll just have to trust me.<br /><br /><br />Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2012OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-57658122780244373182012-08-16T11:26:00.000-04:002012-08-16T11:26:49.647-04:00Who Can Understand It?<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />
What’s going on? Why do people do the things they do? Why do I do the things I do? Why do I respond this way or that?<br /><br />It seems to me, like it or not, that everyone has pieces of themselves they either can’t or won’t share with another human being. Even if you want to, when you’re willing to, there will be things you can’t share, because you don’t even know what’s going on yourself. Some things are unknowable. And these “unknowables” are what often lead us to the water, or the poison, we can choose to drink or leave behind.<br /><br />Some people want to be “transparent” about their lives. They feel it’s false or fake in some way to hold anything back. But even if you managed, somehow, to totally reveal what you believe to be the “truth” of who you are, you would still be a mystery because you can’t even know yourself completely. How is anyone else going to know you that fully?<br /><br />Don’t get me wrong. It’s worth trying, at least with some people. But it is futile in many ways and I think we need to admit that up front. We’re all just the tips of icebergs. There is a lot going on below the surface, and even a person who is amazingly dedicated to the art of self awareness and self revelation can be, I should say, “will be,” blind to their own motives and at least some of the realities that cause them to feel and eventually do what they do.<br /><br />We feel things and then think things, and finally do things, because we have been convinced by some event in the past to respond that way. Sometimes, even long after the event itself is forgotten, the reaction lives on. We have been trained by experiences to respond, and our responses can tell us a lot about what’s going on underneath. But it’s like putting together a puzzle with missing and messed up pieces.<br /><br />I guess you could say I believe in at least some aspects of behavioral psychology. But doesn’t it just make sense? In fact, I think it’s biblical.<br /><br />Jeremiah 17:9 The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?<br /><br />To change this reality, to “understand” your heart, you would have to remember everything you ever did, every thing that ever happened to you, and also be able to measure and calculate a proper emotional response to all that information on the fly as you move through the day.<br /><br />Let me know how that works out.<br /><br />You can’t always “choose” your emotional responses to things, but you can “choose” what to do with it. Where do you let it take you? What do you do as a result? A lot of people want to believe they have no control, or responsibility, for what they choose to do, because they don’t always have control over the emotional responses that lead them to that action. But you can always choose. You are not a cyborg, an automaton, a robot, or a thoughtless animal. You are not. You are a human being.<br /><br />What you, and I, actually do each day, each moment, is the product of your decisions. And decisions have consequences.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-77579376528465421862012-08-09T11:44:00.000-04:002012-08-09T11:44:32.063-04:00AMAZING THINGS A LOT PEOPLE DON’T SEEM TO REALIZE ARE AMAZING<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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There are many amazing things depending on you to realize they are amazing. In other words, if your eyes aren’t open to how amazing things are then nothing will seem amazing to you, which reveals, unfortunately, unfortunate things about your desire to learn and grow. It can reveal how much we take for granted. It can reveal arrogance and closed mindedness. I personally find a mind that can’t be amazed any more to be a little scary.<br /><br />Consider: What does it take to amaze you? Do things have to explode? Does the world have to be a brand new circus everyday, putting on a show just for you in order to get some kind of response? Perhaps you aren’t seeing things that are right in front of you.<br /><br />I certainly hope this is not the case. For anyone.<br /><br />If you don’t know what I mean, I hope you figure it out. And to help people along, here are just a few examples of some amazing things a lot of people don’t seem to realize are amazing. Feel free to share some of yours if you are so inclined...<br /><br /><i><b>1. Bass players who sing lead vocals and play bass at the same time.</b></i><br /><br />Guys like Sting and Geddy Lee. Paul McCartney. I seem to remember the guy from Thin Lizzy doing this as well. But it is fairly rare to see someone sing and play bass at the same time. Even more rare is the lead singer/bass player. You know why? Because it’s, like, stinkin’ impossible, that’s why. I have tried it. I can’t really play bass, but I definitely can’t sing lead vocals and play bass at the same time. Some players get away with it by basically playing root notes, plunk plunk plunk. Like Gene Simmons of Kiss. Not the same thing. I’m talking about guys who actually, really, genuinely play complex bass parts, peddling through the chords, while singing at the same time. I don’t know why it’s so impossible, but it is. More impossible than playing drums and singing, or playing accordion and singing, which is also very difficult, or so I’m told. But I’m telling you, if you see someone playing bass and singing lead vocals at the same time, be amazed. It is amazing. Probably the only thing more amazing would be a person playing a wind instrument and singing at the same time. I’ve honestly never seen that. I assume it's impossible, but what do I know? Still, if you see this kind of thing, bass guitars or otherwise, whether you realize it or not, you are witnessing something amazing.<br /><br /><i><b>2. Everyone’s kids.</b></i><br /><br />Everyone thinks their own kids are amazing. And yet, to other people, they are just normal kids. Therefore, the inclination is to believe that the people with kids are biased and their kids are not actually amazing. But, in fact, the kids are amazing. All of them. Every single one. And if you don’t think so, it’s because you don’t get it. But that’s okay. You’re still amazing too.<br /><br /><i><b>3. Empty space.</b></i><br />
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Sure, seems boring, because it’s nothing. But if it’s nothing, then how is it still “there” in any way that makes sense? And if it wasn’t “there” what would be the difference between here and the “there” beyond the "there" of empty space? Some physicists argue, like Einstein did, that there is really no such thing as “empty” space because fields, such as gravity, fill all so-called “space,” including a vacuum, which is the ultimate empty space, I suppose. And I get what they are saying.<br /><br />Kind of.<br /><br />But that “space” is still there, isn’t it? In other words, the space is not, itself, the gravitational field that is “in” the space, right? Even if that empty space couldn’t exist without the forces acting on it and within it, what exactly is that thing that the gravitational field is occupying? Maybe it’s not technically empty, but it’s practically empty. And it’s space.<br />
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Perhaps we should call it empty space/time?<br /><br />Okay. I seriously have no idea what I’m talking about anymore.<br /><br />But I still think it’s amazing.<br /><br /><br />Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2012OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-71389285747263112922012-08-01T09:44:00.000-04:002012-08-01T09:44:23.786-04:00The Date<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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She: So you don’t want children at all?<br /><br />He: No.<br /><br />Awkward pause.<br /><br />She: (Looking down at her feet under the edge of the table.) And why not?<br /><br />He: Do I need a reason?<br /><br />Awkward pause.<br /><br />He: (Slightly agitated.) Why would you bring a child into this world? Where we put children in striped shirts and bake them in ovens, like some sick reality TV version of a fairy tale? Why would you bring a child into this world when there’s nothing to live for anymore but a bigger, more impressive something or other?<br /><br />She: (Looks him in the eyes.) So, why are you here?<br /><br />He: That’s a good question.<br /><br />Awkward pause.<br /><br />She: What you’re saying doesn’t add up.<br /><br />He: Yes, it does.<br /><br />She: No. It doesn’t. You neglect the beautiful for the ugly. You see the dark without recognizing the light.<br /><br />He: But the dark makes the light pointless.<br /><br />Awkward pause.<br /><br />She: You don’t really believe that?<br />
<br />He: Why not?<br /><br />She: Because it’s the other way around. The light makes the dark pointless.<br /><br />Awkward pause.<br /><br />They finish the meal. They do not date again. Occasionally, over the years, they cross paths at the grocery store. They smile wanly and wave, but they have nothing to say. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-38481322435494763182012-07-05T13:10:00.001-04:002012-07-05T13:10:47.741-04:00Gastrointestinally Yours<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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And now, a word (or two) about farts.<br /><br />Why farts? If you really need some meaningful rationale, then you should probably just move on and come back another day. MY reason is that I came across some things about farts that I thought were fascinating and, by nature, I like to share these things. Ya know.<br /><br />For instance, I recently came across a flatulence based good news/bad news scenario involving mice. It was a string of articles written by different scientists about how human farts lower blood pressure in mice. It has something to do with the hydrogen sulfide in farts, which is the chemical that makes them especially stinky. The only thing is, if mice, or other creatures, breathe too many farts, it can begin to disfigure and mutate their sinus cavities.<br /><br />Of course, this makes me wonder, automatically, how they gathered this data, and also how the carefully regulated use of farts might be beneficial to human beings suffering with high blood pressure. Also, what might occur due to an accidental overdose. I’m sure it has you wondering as well...<br /><br />Go ahead. Let your mind wander. I’ll wait.<br /><br />Dum de dum de dum dum dum.<br /><br />I also discovered (though I didn’t take time to verify it) that the average human being farts around 14 times a day. But these articles didn’t say how much of that expulsion was during sleep. They also did NOT chronicle the average length of said farts, nor did they present the sonic pitch of the farts, which has a tremendous impact, I’m sure you know, on the actual volume of release per second of any given period of flatulence.<br /><br />So, there’s my daily bit of info presented for the general good of humankind. <br /><br />Better out than in I always say.<br /><br /><br />Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-5049926711144919412012-06-21T10:29:00.000-04:002012-06-21T10:29:40.134-04:00Suppose a Symposium<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I came across some different Symposiums that you could choose to attend if you have the right credentials and were so inclined. You can look them up online if you’re interested. They’re easy to find. Here’s what’s happening: While the rest of us are going through the motions of everyday life, a select few are involved in these symposiums, hidden inside large, air conditioned buildings, snacking on bagels and small bottles of juice, while we drive by on our way to the grocery and such.<br /><br />I like the word “symposium.” It just sounds fun. A symphony of discussion. People sitting around, talking about important subjects. And what do they talk about? You too could plan on attending the following symposiums:<br /><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><b style="color: #f3f3f3;">The 4th International Animal By-Products Symposium</b><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><br />This one has such stimulating topics as, “Safety of composting euthanized animals as a means of disposal,” and “Research and public policy on carcass disposal and the direction of future research and resources.” It literally rings with excitement, don’t you think?<br /><br />And then there’s...<br /><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><b style="color: #f3f3f3;">The 26th Annual Symposium of the Protein Society.</b><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><br />And what do you get to talk about there? Um. Protein. According to the blurb, you will discuss a “balance between the high-value protein science topics you’ve come to expect at a Protein Society Symposium . . . as well as focusing on the trending areas of research and current developments in protein science.”<br /><br />Leaves one literally aglow with anticipation, don’t you think? And you must be sure that you don’t miss out on...<br /><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><b style="color: #f3f3f3;">The Symposium for Professional Wine Writers at Meadowood Napa Valley.</b><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><br />Sorry, but that’s the actual name. I suppose they had to differentiate themselves from all of the other wine writer symposiums going on in the vicinity But it’s a little hard to figure out what they’ll be talking about from their website. It is clear that they’ll be drinking a lot of wine, so I’m sure they’ll think it’s genius, whatever they talk about.<br /><br />I’m thinking the comic book conventions need to wise up and get with the program. Something like...<br /><br style="color: #f3f3f3;" /><b style="color: #f3f3f3;">The Symposium of International Comic and Pop Culture Aficionados for the Prevention of Name Calling and Presuppositional Cruel Clique Categorizing by Uninformed Others.</b> <br />
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Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-55463283961625695852012-06-12T09:51:00.000-04:002012-06-12T09:51:35.666-04:00Simple<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I want everything to be simple, but almost nothing is. Perhaps nothing is. It’s hard to say.<br /><br />I have doubts about simplicity. Complexity rules, to the point of being confused with chaos, which is, I believe, an illusion. The concept of chaos is just a clever way of saying, “I can’t figure this out. I don’t know how this works. This is too complicated. I can’t keep track of the variables.” To which I say, “Big surprise there.”<br /><br />But I get why we’re attracted to the concept of chaos. It kind of gets us off the hook. It’s a rationale for being comfortable with our limitations.<br /><br />But life certainly feels like chaos a lot of the time.<br /><br />People say, “I’m a simple person.” But they aren’t. They like to think they are, especially when they don’t want to deal with the complications. We want to be simple so we won’t have to expend the energy. We get too tired or too lazy or too disinterested to keep track of the calculations. Or they’re just beyond us. So we over simplify, you know, pretty much everything.<br /><br />It’s a survival thing.<br /><br />But complexity finds us: when morality won’t let us go, when problems rise up that we can’t solve with trite platitudes, when the doctors says, “I need you to come back in for some more tests.” When the simple answers don’t offer any solace.<br /><br />Let me tell you: there’s nothing simple about life. And certainly not death or dying. Or human beings. God help us, the things we can do if we aren’t held back by something better than ourselves. The complexities of evil and the human heart are uncountable, unknowable. At least by us. Our hearts can be very dark. Caves. Black holes. Deny it all you want.<br /><br />But it’s not all darkness, is it? What about love? Love is an amazing thing. But it’s not simple either. It’s very, very complicated. Too bright and pure to keep our eyes on for too long. Too complex to appreciate like we should. But, you give and take what you can and try to make it through the day. See a smile and smile back. Try to keep your cool when things get ugly around you. Look up at the stars and wonder. In awe. There is love in that sky.<br /><br />We are fearfully and wonderfully made, planted on this little, green circle of soil and stone and water. A world so stunningly complex it leaves us without enough adjectives to adequately describe it. On top of that, we are conscious. We think, because we are. We are alive, floating in an immense, unfathomable universe. Space and time and matter, bound together to form all that is, yet like a grain of sand in the hand of God.<br /><br />But there is a mark on the map of the universe. You are here. Breathe. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-32570462867966592132012-06-07T11:20:00.000-04:002012-06-07T11:20:03.135-04:00Summer Sets: Ray Bradbury<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I just found out that author Ray Bradbury died yesterday. 91 years old! It makes me very sad. Like many people, I was brought more deeply into the world of reading by the work of Ray Bradbury. He was accessible, and yet artistic and deep in his way. He was creative and distinctive, and his writing made you feel a little more alive. Powerful stuff.<br /><br />Ray seemed so young. Always. That was his beauty, I think. And it was the beauty he put into his writing, most of the time. Even the scary stuff.<br /><br />It’s interesting how much attention his so called “sci-fi” writing brought him, when I don’t think he would have considered himself a sci-fi writer at all. He used science fantasy imagery to tell moral and psychological tales, but that’s pretty much the extent of the “science” in his fiction. He wrote for the sci-fi pulps and was attracted to the imagery, but he was always very different than the other writers of that genre. Not that there’s anything wrong with science fiction.. I think it’s great stuff. I guess my point is only that it isn’t very accurate to call Ray Bradbury a “sci-fi” writer. He was not in any way limited to a single genre.<br /><br />I’ve read a lot of Bradbury’s work. I have a whole shelf of novels and short story collections downstairs. Maybe a little more than a shelf. I don’t know. I’ve given some of it away. He started producing more novels in the latter part of his life, and they were pretty good. But they weren’t as read as his early works, even though they are just as good and maybe even better in some ways. There are even a few children’s books based on some of his stories. One of them glows in the dark. You can actually read it in the dark. Cool stuff.<br /><br />Call me “trite,” but my favorite Ray Bradbury novel was Dandelion Wine, which I believe is a masterpiece. It’s not the Great American Novel, I think that title goes to The Grapes of Wrath, but it’s one of the great American novels, methinks. It’s a celebration of summer, a gathering of vignettes in the life of a young boy that are all held together by nostalgia and the notion that the (somewhat) innocent wonder of childhood can keep our eyes open to the profound nature of everyday life.<br /><br />My favorite Bradbury short story is actually one that had none of the “rocket” or “sci-fi” trappings in it. It’s about the tragedy of racism. In fact, he wrote several stories, in the 1940s and 1950s, that dealt with racism in very interesting ways. But this one I like is called “The Great Black and White game.” He wrote it very early in his career, and it was later put in his short story anthology called “The Golden Apples of the Sun,” which is where I came across it. I read this in my late teens/early twenties, and it had a big impact on my idea of what makes a great story – all of the things it said without saying it. Powerful stuff.<br /><br />I found an online publication of the story in an old magazine that has been scanned. It’s here if you want to read it:<br /><br /><a href="http://www.unz.org/Pub/AmMercury-1945aug-00227">THE GREAT BLACK AND WHITE GAME</a><br />
<br />It has the character “Douglas,” who is the main character in Dandelion Wine. In case you didn’t know, Ray’s middle name was Douglas. This seems to have been his way of putting himself, at least in part, into his writings. No one knows for sure how autobiographical a lot of things are, but when you're writing about feelings instead of facts, then it doesn't matter a lot anyway.<br />
<br />I wonder how many things he’s written that they will publish now that he’s gone. “Posthumous works,” they call them. Sounds creepy. And it’s a mixed bag. Sometimes it’s good, and sometimes it’s not. There are reasons that some things aren’t published. They simply weren’t good enough. They belong in a file somewhere. Michael Crichton’s Pirate Latitudes is a prime example of one that should have been kept quiet. But money talks.<br /><br />Anyhow. Ray is gone and it makes me sad.<br /><br />Summer will never be the same.<br /><br /><br />Peace to you.<br />
© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-42881924430292361652012-05-31T15:53:00.000-04:002012-05-31T15:53:59.106-04:00Drink Coffee and Live<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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A friend of mine sent me an article about the latest scientific research that shows how people who drink six or more cups of coffee a day have a definitive 10 percent increase in their ability to stay alive while others are not staying alive. That’s right. A clear decrease in overall mortality due to a constant consumption of the divinely provided beverage, el Cafe.<br /><br />Um. But if you smoke. No deal. You throw it all away.<br /><br />Of course, they didn’t say what kind of coffee these people were drinking. And it’s scary to think that people are living longer if they are drinking one of the major coffee brands, sold in large, coffin like cans, stale and tasteless. That stuff could kill a vulture. I wouldn’t want to live longer if it was only to drink that stuff.<br /><br />If you could see my face right now you’d see a clear look of disdain as I contemplate drinking such offensive coffees for long periods of time. I mean, I can have a cup at someone’s house, I’m not a snob, but I try to avoid it whenever possible, not because I’m too good, but because it is too bad.<br /><br />I ran out of good coffee a few weeks ago. I was too lazy to go to the store. My wife had a can of the “good” to the last drippy stuff. Seriously. It was stunning in its awfulness. I had forgotten how bad it is. Soooooo bad. It’s almost like they’re doing it on purpose.<br /><br />Maybe someday I’ll post about how we’ve lost our taste for decent coffee. It is a historical fact, a tragedy really. A by-product of war and forgetfulness. But, for now, I leave you with this encouragement:<br /><br />Don’t just drink coffee and live. DRINK GOOD COFFEE AND LIVE!<br /><br /><br />Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-30155081905976791672012-05-15T12:37:00.000-04:002012-05-15T12:37:16.848-04:00Antsy<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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The dictionary defines “antsy” as: Restless. Fidgety.<br /><br />Etc.<br /><br />This word, antsy, is how I feel a lot of the time. I feel antsy right now as I am typing this. I have a tendency toward antsiness. (And, yes, “antsiness” is a real word. Though I'm certainly not above making up words.)<br /><br />I started wondering if the word means what it sounds like. What it feels like. It kind of feels like ants crawling on you. And, according to some online stuff, it does. It’s rooted in the phrase, “Ants in the pants.” Which people used to say about kids who couldn’t sit still.<br /><br />I think there’s a game called Ants in the Pants. I remember playing it. I think our kids had it for a while years back.<br /><br />Why do I feel so antsy all the time? I don’t know. Maybe I drink too much coffee. But, in fact, I feel more antsy when I have less coffee. Coffee settles me down. So maybe it’s caffeine withdrawal? I don’t think so. But you never know. And I don’t really care.<br /><br />I actually get a lot done when I’m antsy. It makes me feel like I need to get things done. So I do.<br /><br />Antsy = productive.<br /><br />But I think it would be nice to be, you know, totally relaxed and calm. At least now and then. But I don’t feel that way very often. Hardly ever, to be honest.<br /><br />I’m at peace. But I’m not relaxed. I’m antsy.<br /><br /><br />Peace to you.<br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-14714557129594953622012-05-03T11:38:00.000-04:002012-05-03T11:38:54.843-04:00Chanified<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Why, oh why, do I like Jackie Chan movies so much?<br /><br />I don’t know.<br /><br />I just do.<br /><br />They aren’t, technically speaking, good movies. I know that. I know a good movie when I see one. Jackie Chan movies don’t particularly qualify.<br /><br />But I don’t care. I like them. Mostly because Jackie Chan is in them. And that’s all that seems to matter. The movie itself doesn’t have to be all that “good.”<br /><br />Besides. I like lots of things that aren’t what you might call “good.” Which doesn’t exclude liking things that are good. I think it’s important to know the difference, but why be a snob about it? What good is that?<br /><br />I like good coffee. I know good coffee. I drink good coffee. Most of the time. And I don’t understand why people drink bad coffee all the time and think that it’s good. That is a mystery to me. But, occasionally, I specifically, on purpose, have a mug of crappy, instant coffee. I couldn’t drink it all the time. It’s not really even coffee. I don’t know what it is. But, sometimes, I drink it for what it is. I make it really strong, and I like it.<br /><br />Same kind of thing: I like good movies. I know a good movie from a bad one. Just like there are good novels and bad ones, there are good movies and bad ones. And everything in between. The point is, I know what makes Citizen Kane “good.” Lawrence of Arabia is my ultimate, all time favorite movie. Very few modern films come even close to the artistry of such films. They are, in every sense of the word, "art." They are masterpieces. The word “art” genuinely does apply to some movies and a lot of other things, and we can miss out, big time, if we don’t learn to appreciate the art of things.<br /><br />But, occasionally, I’ll watch a Jackie Chan movie. And enjoy it.<br /><br />Why?<br /><br />Just. Because.<br /><br /><br /><br />Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-17980991528333987572012-04-26T13:42:00.000-04:002012-04-26T13:42:29.138-04:00Time Toilets<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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I know, I know. I haven’t been posting all that often. I realize it and I’ve been thinking about it. It’s not that I don’t care. It’s not on purpose, these lapses in proclivity. It’s simply because I have been much involved in other things.<br /><br />I’ve been taking the time to figure out how to be a good dad to three beautiful daughters who aren’t so little anymore. I’ve been teaching Bible teachers about teaching the Bible. I’ve been doing little things (sometimes very little) to try and be a better friend and brother. I’ve been exercising (go figure). I’ve been driving a campaign to raise funds to help my church get into a building. I’ve been helping out at my kid’s school. I’ve been doing some technical reading for work. All of this besides the normal, everyday doings.<br /><br />I like to be productive. I have a kind of farmer mentality when it comes to that. So I’ve been shifting my priorities a bit to try and be more productive while, at the same time, trying to reduce the insanity in my life. This is very hard to do. You think?<br /><br />It’s odd what becomes important to us so quickly. Things that didn’t even exist a few decades ago, and yet we think we can’t live without them. Time toilets.<br />
<br />The newest thing is “apps.” Everyone is talking about “apps.” To me, “apps” are this abstract thing that, in general, exist to steal your life away. Why do I think that? Because I see it happening to people all around me. Time is burned, very fast, very hot. Facebook has already done this. Computers have certainly done this for a long time now. All of these “time saving” devices are killing our time. And once it’s dead, it’s gone. Long gone. Shwoooosh.<br />
<br />Have you been pulled too far into the big empty of Angry Birds or Words with Friends or Youtube or Facebook? Not to mention video games and, of course, blogging? You've gotta watch out for that blogging.<br /><br />The word “addicted” is being used more and more commonly to describe our use of this stuff. Do you remember when the idea of an addiction was always considered a negative thing? Now people say it and laugh. “I’m so addicted to World of Warcraft! Ha ha hardy har har. That’s, like, funny, right?” But the laugh has a nervous twitter in it that says: “Out of control here,” and the eyes suggest that there is doubt about something.<br /><br />My kids doctor told me about how he’d just seen his first case of carpal tunnel syndrome in a pre teen. 11 years old, I think it was. All from texting and such. She will probably need surgery.<br />
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11.<br /><br /><br /><br />Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-54771235942049710222012-04-20T10:12:00.000-04:002012-04-20T10:57:27.793-04:00What You See On the Side of the Road<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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So, last week, I was in the foothills of the North Carolina side of the Smoky Mountains. We were driving, following my brother in law on a road that basically takes you along the edge of the mountains, and we were a little confused about where we were, so we stopped for a minute on the side of the road to get our bearings. Maps were consulted, GPSes were explored, but they seemed more confused than we were. <br />
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(Side note: we found this funny thing with our new GPS on this trip. When it gets confused it starts mispronouncing road names, sort of blurring them, as if to avoid making any commitments that might get it into trouble. It sounds like Bill Murray in Caddyshack.)<br />
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So, anyway, we were sitting there and, just outside my window on the driver's side, I noticed that a spider had somehow gotten up onto the mirror. Not sure how it got there, but it was furiously making a web. And I do mean furiously. I’ve never seen a spider move so fast. It spun a web out from the rear view mirror to the corner of the window, then in another direction, then it cut back across, really fast. As I watched, I was wondering what I was going to do about this spider, if anything. But it didn’t care about me. It made a kind of triangle and filled it in very fast. It was amazing.<br />
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And then, I am not kidding you, or joshing you, or making any of this up: it carefully cut the web loose from the car and rode it like a kite on the wind away from the car toward some trees on the other side of the road. It was so small and almost transparent that I lost sight of it after a few yards, but it was headed in the right direction.<br />
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It was a flying spider.<br />
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Now. I don’t know about you but, to me, that is one of the most amazing things I’ve ever seen. It was no accident. It happened fast and it happened on purpose. This spider knew EXACTLY what it was doing. I found a description online from an entomologist. They call this behavior “ballooning.” But they don’t seem amazed by it at all. As if spiders creating flying vehicles is just, you know, something akin to taking a pee or something.<br />
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To me, flying spiders are amazing. Pure and simple.<br />
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I think this is God’s way of laughing at our unbelief.<br />
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Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-36109181525449743622012-04-17T13:08:00.000-04:002012-04-17T13:16:22.885-04:00John Carter and the Politics of Yesterday’s News<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Yeah. It’s April. March is long gone.<br />
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Something I noticed: One of the big stories in the month of March was how the John Carter movie was somehow predetermined to be the biggest box office flop in history. Even Disney, the company that released it, made a prediction that it was going to dig a financial hole of about 200 million dollars. Why did they say that during the first week of release? Why predict your own disaster? What can be gained from that? It’s like they were trying to wreck their own film!<br />
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Of course, that was all in March. Which might as well be a thousand years ago. You will notice that no one is really talking about John Carter anymore. It’s yesterday’s news. But here’s what they aren’t saying in April: John Carter is nowhere near the biggest box office flop of all time. In fact, it did amazingly well overseas and has more than earned back it’s production budget. And by the time the DVD and Blu-ray releases are rolled out, it will probably not be a loss at all. It won’t make piles of money for the company, but it’s not going to sink the company either. And yet, people were saying, way back in March, as if it were a done deal, that this movie was absolutely sure to be the biggest flop in history.<br />
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There was clearly something malicious going on in the media. I don’t know why. I don’t know what encouraged the behavior, but it was weird. Was it an anti Disney thing? It was almost like what happens during elections, where people are told what to think, and then they simply submit to it. No one likes negative advertising, right? So why is there so much negative advertising during elections? Because it works. And, strangely, it worked to crush John Carter in a very similar way. Some media whoevers seem to have purposefully misled people about the film with what amounts to a lie. And no one is talking about it. Like no one talks about all the lies the politicians say during a campaign. They can say anything, but once the campaign is over, no one goes back to assess what they said and hold them accountable. Nobody cares.<br />
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Making John Carter was always going to be a bit of a risk because the source material has pretty much gone out of the popular culture. But Star Wars and all of the movies that have resulted from the Star Wars phenomenon over the years – every one of those films owes a lot to the John Carter novels. John Carter was there first. In the end, it was a risk that didn’t pay out like they wanted. But what’s life, or art, without some risk?<br />
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I asked a few people if they had seen the movie. They said, “No.” And then they would add something to the “no” along the lines of: “I heard that movie was horrible. It’s lost so much money!” I found this response strange. Since when does the average person decide how good a movie is by rumors of the first week’s box office? What is going on? All kinds of great movies didn’t make a lot at the box office! In every case where someone told me they heard it was “horrible” they had not heard it from someone who had actually seen the movie. It was just rumor, based on the contagious news reports, based on articles, which were driven by assumptions. And, oddly enough, reinforced by Disney itself. Very, very strange.<br />
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I am one of those people who ignored the negative hype and went to see the movie. What I discovered is what I expected to see. John Carter is a fun, entertaining movie that captures the sense of the original novels (which most of the critics seemed to be completely ignorant of), without succumbing to the archaic things that make those novels hard to read today. Some people aren’t going to like it, especially if they aren’t partial to sci fi or fantasy, but most people will. It is an adventure story, which is what it is supposed to be. The effects are good and some are even groundbreaking. The acting is loose and fun. The characters could have been a bit more sympathetic, but you still care about them. The humor is broad, on purpose. Except for one scene near the beginning with some crude dialogue, it is a relatively clean film with general appeal. The opening sequence seems kind of tacked on, probably because they felt like it took too long to get to Mars. I see why they did it, but I would have preferred the movie to start after the opening. Whatever. It’s not a big thing. It does a good job of combining a simple love story with an action scenario. It’s old school enough to be fun, but new school enough to be interesting.<br />
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And there is a battle scene at the center of the film that simultaneously reveals John Carter’s motivations that is crafted by the director into a truly moving sequence. That short section of the film was worth the price of admission for me. Most of the men I’ve talked to who have seen it agree that it stirs an odd set of emotions. The juxtaposition of violence and rage, blended with tragedy and sadness, all to make a point about what moves men, in particular, to risk their lives and care for others – it shows why the director, Andrew Stanton, is such a great artist.<br />
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I know. I know. It’s mostly gone from theaters. Who cares. If you want to just see a movie for fun and you don’t hate sci fi or fantasy films, then you are likely to enjoy it. Go see it in a theater if you can because it is a big screen movie for sure. If you think it stinks, fine, but make that decision by seeing the film, not by listening to negative hype, and certainly not by reviewing box office returns and rumors.<br />
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Peace to you. <br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9095520086646149307.post-60016895714945786662012-04-07T11:40:00.000-04:002012-04-07T11:40:43.044-04:00Alive<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Happy Easter.<br />
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How about a thoughtful Easter?<br /><br />Consider:<br /><br />Jesus is alive.<br /><br />Jesus.<br /><br />Is.<br /><br />Alive.<br /><br />He’s alive.<br /><br />Right now.<br /><br />He died. Then he rose from the dead.<br /><br />He came back to life.<br /><br />And...<br /><br />He’s still alive.<br /><br />Wherever “Heaven” is, he’s there, getting it ready for new arrivals.<br />
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He is physically, really, genuinely alive.<br />
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Waiting with open arms.<br /><br />Acts 2:24 But God raised him from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him.<br /><br />
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© LW Publishing 2011OneBigHappyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07993848597406708478noreply@blogger.com2