December 31, 2010

Let's Call it a Year

Despite the fact that I am sure tonight's New Year's Eve festivities will be filled with fun, family and games until sometime after midnight, I cannot help but resonate with today's Family Circus:



After 2010, that pretty much sums up how I feel: tired. At least 2010 ended on a good note, including a wonderful Christmas snowfall (3 inches) that stayed on the ground for 4 days before fading at last, as if it never was. Nevertheless, it is time to look forward to 2011. I'm not much into making annual resolutions, but here's a list of things that either will happen, or need to happen in the coming year (in no particular order).

1. I turn 40. Whoopee.

2. I need to lose 20-25 pounds. This is quickly becoming a "have to" now.

3. The completion of my bonus room over the garage. I made a good deal of progress the past couple of weeks, hanging ceiling fans and doing a lot of painting. Just need to follow through, finish, reappraise, and get the PMI out of my monthly house bill.

4. Weathering another dramatic change in church leadership. This time, it's more than a new pastor. Now we're being absorbed by another church altogether, becoming a satellite congregation. It'll be interesting to witness, to be sure.

5. My children continuing to grow up before my eyes.

6. A long overdue getaway with my wife, celebrating anniversaries 15, 16 and 17.

7. A family vacation of some sort - one that doesn't involve a certain Orlando attraction.

8. Carving out time for, dare I say it … golf?

9. Charting out a course for this blog. I always write better when writing with a purpose.

10. Finally, despite #9, spending more time unplugged from the computer, from the phone, and from the TV. There are books to be read, games to be played, household projects to complete, and even exercising to do (see #2). Most of us could stand to spend some more time unplugged. I know I could.

Happy New Year to you and yours, and God bless!

December 25, 2010

For Unto Us

Adapted from a devotion published in 1997.

I was up late one night this past week admiring our Christmas tree. No doubt, it is the best one we've had since we've been married. An artificial Douglas Fir, the tree is adorned with wonderful decorations. There is the angel on top, lightly glowing; there are a number of glitter-speckled balls; an iridescent garland wrapping around the tree; and a number of specialty ornaments of both the unique and cute variety. With Christmas music playing softly in the background, I watched the colorful lights light up the room, some flashing slowly, others staying brightly lit. It was a peaceful moment, and as late as it was, it wasn't long before I allowed my imagination out to play.

I was very close to the tree, looking deep inside its branches, past the garland, past the ceramic angels, past the glittery balls and lights. Suddenly I was passing through a galaxy of lights and decorations, speeding ever faster toward the heart of the tree. All came to a stop, where before me was a simple, nondescript ornament hanging in space. It wasn't flashy or shiny, cute or iridescent. It lay there silently, almost hidden from sight. But once past all the distractions, the worries, and the substitutes, I could see it. A lowly manger, with a Child and his earthly parents. Yes, in that moment, the true meaning of Christmas filled my senses.

What about you? Has Christmas become too routine, filled only with the annual rush and the shiny, flashy façade? I pray that you will find a quiet moment to look down, deep into the heart of Christmas, and rediscover the true meaning and hope of this special time, meant for you and all the world. For unto us, a Child is born, and a Son is given.


The heart of Christmas is the hope and promise of one man, one Lord, and one Savior, Jesus Christ.
"The angel reassured them, 'Don't be afraid!' he said. 'I bring you good news of great joy for everyone! The Savior -- yes, the Messiah, the Lord -- has been born tonight in Bethlehem, the city of David! And this is how you will recognize him: You will find a baby lying in a manger, wrapped snugly in strips of cloth!' Suddenly, the angel was joined by a vast host of others -- the armies of heaven -- praising God: 'Glory to God in the highest heaven, and peace on earth to all whom God favors'" (Luke 2:10-14, NLT)
May you each have a blessed Christmas!

Originally published 24 December, 1997. Encounters! Ministry, Copyright © James A. Chase

Christmas Snow

What a beautiful sight. As late as midnight last night, the forecasters were calling for a light dusting at best, if anything at all. Looks like they missed this one. I awoke around 6 a.m. to check on my son (now apparently fever-free), and walked into the living room to a glow emanating through the windows. I opened the shears to see a sea of white, with the snow still coming down. Three deer were picking their way across the yard, only visible in the still dark hours because of the deepening blanket. I watched them for almost 15 minutes, just enjoying the moment.

Four hours later, the snow continues to fall, with the "forecast" now updated, calling for 2-4 inches before the day is out. According to the ruler, I figure we've had 2.5 inches so far. It really is a pretty sight, and a wonderful Christmas surprise.



December 24, 2010

Christmas Eve Forecast - 101 degrees

Sadly, that is the morning temperature of my younger son, making for a not so happy Christmas Eve. Hopefully, it will pass soon, but it means that he and I will have to miss the Christmas Eve service tonight. I'll send my older son and my wife on to worship. Needless to say, my young one is pretty bummed right now. But I'm sure he'll perk up soon. A little temperature is not going to rob him of his Christmas joy.

On an unrelated note, I got a good laugh out of this picture I saw posted online today.


I wonder what my neighbors would think if I did that. Hmmm ....

December 23, 2010

Far Superior to a Cocker Spaniel

For most of my adult life, I've wanted to be a tenor. Look around: most male solo artists are tenors. Unfortunately, while I surmise that I have an above average voice talent by some measures, I am most assuredly an ensemble baritone. In other words, I have a mid-level range that is best reserved for group or otherwise blended arrangements. I just don't have the right timbre for anything else. And I'm okay with that, really (in a pig's eye).

Bing Crosby had a wonderful baritone voice that rivaled Sinatra and Martin on the A-list of crooners. "White Christmas," initially performed by Crosby in the 1942 classic Holiday Inn, remains today as one of the standard tracks of the Christmas music genre. Twelve years after its initial release, Paramount made a movie named after the song. High on the list of my holiday favorites, White Christmas tells a story about a song and dance act (Wallace & Davis, played by Bing Crosby and Danny Kaye) who find themselves at a hotel in Vermont run by their former WWII Army commander, M.G. Thomas Waverly. In an effort to boost the business for the hotel, which is suffering due to lack of snow (and thus patronage), Wallace and Davis concoct a plan to bring their entire act to the hotel, as well as all the former Army buddies they can gather together to honor General Waverly. It really is a great movie, although it is probably one Vera Ellen dance scene too long (shortly before the movie's climax).

This used to be a dry-eyed movie for me, but as I've grown older, I find that my eyes tend to leak toward the end of the movie - the look on the face of the General at the sight of his men, and at the falling of the snow in the final minutes.


Of course, I would be remiss if I did not also post the title track from the movie. The video below is long (it includes portions of both the opening and ending of the movie), but it seems to be the best quality of what I've been able to find on YouTube. Of course, if you prefer, there are any number of videos with Bing singing the song on his Christmas specials. The song picks up at around the 6:55 mark. Enjoy.


May we all remember those who cannot make it home for Christmas this year, in particular the men and women serving our Nation around the globe. God bless.

December 22, 2010

Fingers Crossed

Last winter, we had an unusual number of snow events here in North Alabama. So far this year, we've had a couple of dustings already, but nothing substantial. It is too soon to know how this will play out, of course, but I like the timing of this statement from the weather service:
300 PM CST WED DEC 22 2010

...WINTRY PRECIPITATION POSSIBLE LATE FRIDAY NIGHT INTO CHRISTMAS
DAY...

A STORM SYSTEM MOVING FROM THE SOUTHERN ROCKIES TOWARD THE GULF
COAST WILL BRING THE THREAT OF WINTRY PRECIPITATION TO THE TENNESSEE
VALLEY LATE FRIDAY NIGHT INTO CHRISTMAS DAY.

CONFIDENCE IS INCREASING THAT PORTIONS OF NORTH ALABAMA AND SOUTHERN
MIDDLE TENNESSEE WILL SEE A MIXTURE OF LIGHT RAIN...SLEET AND SNOW
DEVELOPING AFTER MIDNIGHT FRIDAY NIGHT. AS COLDER AIR INVADES THE
AREA AND THE STORM SYSTEM BECOMES BETTER ORGANIZED...PRECIPITATION
IS EXPECTED TO CHANGE OVER TO ALL SNOW ON CHRISTMAS DAY. AT THIS
TIME...ANY SNOW AMOUNTS ARE EXPECTED TO REMAIN LESS THAN AN INCH.
Wouldn't it be lov-e-ly?

December 21, 2010

It Really is a Wonderful Life

Yes, you read that title correctly (I'm not always a grump). We sat down to watch the 1946 Frank Capra classic Sunday night, to relive the tale of a man who consistently made choices that involved the sacrifice of his wants and dreams so that others might achieve theirs. Not that he didn't carry some resentment and bitterness, of course. So many of us trudge through life carrying the weight of real or perceived responsibilities that affect our countenance and perspective in a negative fashion. Indeed, apparently I have acquired a minor reputation as one who infrequently smiles in candid moments, at least as far as Facebook is concerned. (As I'm not on Facebook to defend myself, I'll let that one go as probably earned). George Bailey, of course, is the recipient of a new outlook on his life after his experience in an alternate universe - a world in which he had never been born.

While the bulk of the movie takes on a moderately serious and dramatic tone, I caught myself laughing out loud at the "Mary in the shrubbery" scene sans robe, which had fallen off (thanks to George) on the way home from the graduation party. I couldn't find the scene on YouTube, but imagine Jimmy Stewart demonstratively playing up this dialogue:
George (with a smile spreading over his face): This is a very interesting situation!

Mary: Throw me my robe!

George: A man doesn't find himself in a situation like this every day ...

Mary: Shame on you! I'll tell your mother!

George (thoughtfully): My mother's way up on the corner there ...

Mary: I'll call the police!

George (still thoughtfully): They're way downtown ... anyway, they'd be on my side.
Yeah, it would be better with a video clip. At any rate, as many times as I've seen it, it didn't really sink in until this viewing that the only reason George ever found himself contemplating a jump off the bridge was based on a misguided notion that he was "worth" more dead than alive. In his conscious mind, he was thinking that the life insurance policy would take care of the lost bank payment, although subconsciously he was surely seeking an escape from a life he viewed as cruel and harsh (a product of his bitterness). Of course, when he learns that his absence in fact seemed to hurt those he loved the most, he realized that his life, with all its ups and downs, was indeed a wonderful blessing. And that the people he had touched over the years, without even realizing it, were demonstrating a principle found in the Scriptures: simply, that we are called to "bear fruit." Like some strange metaphysical uncertainty principle, we rarely know or see the impact we have on the people around us. Sometimes, there is testimony from those whose lives are affected, but often, the connection passes unnoticed.

As for me, I genuinely am not one to spend a great deal of time regretting past choices, or wishing I had made different choices. Seriously. For despite the fact that I have certainly made poor decisions, I view it as a waste of energy to pine for something that isn't, or can no longer be. Quite the contrary, if I am consumed with anything, it is dealing with the "next choice" I have to make - weighing the options, pros and cons, and fighting the temptation to slip into analysis paralysis. To be sure, I can be pretty decisive, but rarely am I impulsive. It's just the way I tick, I suppose. For those major life choices, I am overwhelmingly satisfied with the decisions I've made: for Christ and my wife. All the rest are outflows. The closest I've ever come to "regret" for a major life course involved the decision to forego military service, and the pursuit of engineering as a vocation rather than teaching (a realization I didn't experience until the degree was almost in hand). Still, I don't dwell on those decisions, for if I had chosen otherwise, I simply would not be where I am right now - in my walk with Christ, married to my soul mate, and father to my boys. In the grand scheme of things, we all have the opportunity to make a difference in this wonderful life - no matter our circumstances. We make a difference because we choose to do so. We may not be able to see the ripple effects, but to be sure, they are there. Best that we make the effects positive, though, rather than negative. So may we choose well, and that joyfully.

Coming in a couple of days: It's time for some Irving Berlin. Snow, snow, snow, snow, SNOW!

December 19, 2010

Holly Jolly Holly Jolly

True to my commitment to immerse myself in some Christmas cheer, the family and I carved out a little bit of time this week to watch a couple of Christmas movies. This past Wednesday, we watched a version of A Christmas Carol I had never seen before: the 2009 Disney rendition featuring Jim Carrey. I was skeptical at first, knowing that it was Disney and being somewhat put off by computer generated animation that was more reminiscent of The Polar Express than anything you'd find from Pixar. Of course, A Christmas Carol wasn't a Pixar production.

However, I was surprised at how close the movie followed the Dickens narrative. In fact, there were a couple of spots (such as the entrance of Marley's ghost) that would have undoubtedly been frightening for young kids. Whatever else it was, this version was not your typical happy Disney fare. Still, you have to have some signature magic, which the makers accomplished through a somewhat weird extended scene of Scrooge trying to run away from the Ghost of Christmas Future. Even Jim Carrey, supplying the voices of several characters, seem to treat the Dickens classic with a respect that falls outside the usual larger than life caricatures he usually brings to his subjects (think the Grinch). In fact, the voice work was quite well done. At one point, I was convinced I was hearing the voice of Bill Nighy, the actor who played Davy Jones in the Pirates of the Caribbean movies. But it was Carrey all the time. All in all, I enjoyed it, but I'm definitely partial to the black-and-white versions in the queue for later in the week.

Then Friday night, at my younger son's request, we put in Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. There is something strangely nostalgic and comforting about the folksy crooning of Burl Ives. Somewhere in the basement, I actually have a Burl Ives vinyl record. Ives, of course, is the snowman narrator of Rudolph. Watching this classic has only one small side effect, an affliction that plaques me for a couple hours after each watching. That song. That "Holly Jolly Christmas" song. It just keeps playing over and over and over in the back of my mind. It's not a bad song, mind you, it's just that it sticks to the walls of my mind. So, in the spirit of Christmas, and in the hopes that such cheer sticks to you like the price sticker on puzzle box, here is the great Burl Ives with "Holly Jolly Christmas":


Next up on the playlist: It's a Wonderful Life.

December 18, 2010

The Forgotten Amendment

Today's Washington Post has an article on the post-election activities of the 111th Congress, engaged in what is commonly referred to as a "lame-duck" session. Once you get around the partisan tit-for-tat quotes and agendas, the writer points out some rather fascinating history about a nearly forgotten amendment to the Constitution: the 20th Amendment. Ratified in 1933, the first part of the amendment set the dates for the beginning and endings of Presidential and Congressional terms:
Section 1. The terms of the President and Vice President shall end at noon on the 20th day of January, and the terms of Senators and Representatives at noon on the 3d day of January, of the years in which such terms would have ended if this article had not been ratified; and the terms of their successors shall then begin.
(As an aside, the 20th Amendment also deals with unique cases of Presidential transition of power if the President-elect dies before being sworn in. In this case, the VP-elect becomes President). But back to the issue at hand.

Prior to the passage of the 20th Amendment, Congressional terms began on the 4th day of March. Imagine a Congress with a 3-month lame-duck session! Of course, transportation advanced considerably over the centuries, so what may have made sense in the 18-19th centuries was less of a limiting factor in the 20th century. On its face, if you were to simply read the amendment, it would not be obvious that the intent of the amendment was to limit or eliminate the so-called lame duck session. (The lame duck controversy has quite a colorful history that dates back almost to the beginning of our Nation, the most famous of which were the "midnight appointments" of outgoing President John Adams, leading to the famous Supreme Court case of Marbury vs. Madison). Still, it is worth a moment to take a look at just a couple of the annotations from the Senate Committee on the Judiciary regarding the amendment (emphasis mine):
"[W]hen our Constitution was adopted there was some reason for such a long intervention of time between the election and the actual commencement of work by the new Congress.... Under present conditions [of communication and transportation] the result of elections is known all over the country within a few hours after the polls close, and the Capital City is within a few days' travel of the remotest portions of the country....

"Another effect of the amendment would be to abolish the so-called short session of Congress.... Every other year, under our Constitution, the terms of Members of the House and one-third of the Members of the Senate expire on the 4th day of March.... Experience has shown that this brings about a very undesirable legislative condition. It is a physical impossibility during such a short session for Congress to give attention to much general legislation for the reason that it requires practically all of the time to dispose of the regular appropriation bills.... The result is a congested condition that brings about either no legislation or illy considered legislation....
The Committee understood that the primary business of Congress was to dispose of the regular appropriation bills, and were concerned in part that starting in March left little time for other general legislation. At least back then it seems they understood what the priorities were. Modern Congresses now push appropriation bills to the last minute, at the end of their largely partisan agenda. But the last bolded statement above still applies as a truism, even if their objective was a longer legislative session. The fact is, we have a Congress determined to legislate on their way out of office.

Imagine if our elected Representatives and Senators actually abided at least by the spirit of the 20th Amendment, perhaps reserving any post-election legislative session agendas only to transition activities or national emergency items. In my dream world theory, Congress would then be forced to do their primary legislative work - including the annual budget appropriations - by October at the latest. Carrying my fantasy further, the result would be fiscal budgets and appropriations at the beginning of the fiscal year (October) rather than a series of ongoing continuing resolutions to keep the government running, which really is just a series of political posturing, threats and point scoring that wreaks havoc among the agencies that, oh by the way, are required by law to have their budgets in one to two years ahead of time.

I for one think that as far as major business in an election year, Congress should be forced to finish their primary job by October, go home to campaign, and by and large, take the rest of the year off. It simply doesn't seem right that a lame-duck session, run by politicians who have been voted out of power, should still have control of spending. If they had done their jobs in the first place, we wouldn't face the specter of government shutdowns and irresponsible legislation - and frankly, we'd have a lot less end-of-year political drama. Now, I want to be clear that this Congress, because of what I view as poor prioritization, has important business to wrap up - extension of tax cuts, appropriations bills, unemployment benefits (I have mixed feelings on the last one) - but I submit this work should have been done months ago. Nevertheless, allow me to restate that for all intents and purposes, modern Congresses are effectively ignoring the spirit of the 20th Amendment. And sadly, that's a reality that is not going to change, because to be sure, the Constitution does nowhere explicitly prohibit the lame-duck session.

It would be nice if Congresses could take a cue from the Executive at the time of transition. Lame-duck presidents, to my limited recollection, have often shied away from major decisions and actions apart from at least some discussions or consultations with the President-elect. Yes, there is only one President at a time, and he makes the decisions. But Presidents by and large have offered the courtesy of consultation to their successors during that transition period. (This would be interesting to research sometime). Somehow, I just don't see Congress showing such comity.

December 17, 2010

Best Job I've Ever Had

When I got into defense contracting for the U.S. Army several years ago, I really didn't know what kind of business I was getting into. Coming from private industry, I joined a company working on a solid, sustainable support contract that provided me steady employment for over 4 years. After that contract came to an end, I found myself on another contract for a little longer than two years. Since then, however, it has been a stressful series of tasks one after another, few lasting more than 3-4 months. I'm still employed, and by and large okay with the company that employs me, but I confess to being worn down with the constant uncertainty of my next assignment. I'm blessed, to be sure, but sometimes it is really difficult to enjoy that blessing.

Not that my experience in private industry was much better. After starting my career with Motorola just as it was beginning a major contraction at the dawn of the broadband internet age, I went to another telecommunications company that struggled to survive in an increasingly competitive technology environment. It was all good experience, but when it ended, most of my technical engineering skills went with it. Now I live in the world of concept and requirements development.

Nearly 17 years into my professional career, I still think that the best job I ever had was working at a rundown movie theater in Prattville, Alabama. From 1987 to 1989, I had the pleasure of working for Carmike Theaters. With my driver's license came the need for cash, and cash was to be had (in small quantities) by getting a job. During the 80's in Alabama, certain industries were exempt from the minimum wage law, meaning that instead of making $3.35 an hour, I only made $2.85 an hour. Working on average 18-22 hours a week, that of course doesn't amount to much. On the other hand, I was paying less than $1 a gallon for a tank of leaded gasoline for my 1971, 8-cylindar, 400cc Chevy Impala with the green interior (did 0 to 60 mph in about a quarter of a tank). Yes, I digress (but I do miss that car).

Working in that movie theater was almost perfect for a high school student. In a small town twin, we would usually get second run movies (movies that had been out for weeks in the premier theaters, which moved to lower tier theaters about 3-4 weeks after first release). I was the projectionist, but also ran concessions and the ticket window as needed. On any given night, we usually only had two employees on hand, besides the manager. Now that I think about it, if memory serves, I was the only male employee for most of my tenure there. The only title I coveted I never received (that of assistant manager), but one of my best friends in high school eventually did not long after I left the summer before college. Memories: fighting with the popcorn machine and the butter oil (trust me, movie theater butter is anything but butter), working behind a counter without a cash register (just a drawer and calculator), navigating close quarters while trying to get fountain drinks with people standing in line waiting for service, not to mention running upstairs to fix films that had a terrible habit of breaking in the middle of the movie. It is amazing now that so many theaters are using digital technology, you hardly ever have a movie break down. But back then, running worn down and brittle film through those old Simplex machines required almost constant vigilance (and more than a few refunds).

The booth was a wonderfully cozy little cave that was simply heaven to me. Staying late on Thursday nights waiting for the final showing to complete so that we could break down departing movies and assemble Friday night's new offerings, I was happy. I don't know how it is now, but back then, films arrived in two canisters, 3 reels each. Most movies would total 5 or 6 reels, depending on the runtime. Splicing the reels together all depended on how well the previous projectionist had packed it. And the splicer, of course, was so often dulled that it became an art form to get a clean cut after aligning the frames. To this day, over 20 years since I last threaded a movie through the projector, I am absolutely convinced that I could properly thread the film through the Simplex, with every loop and sprocket clear as day in my mind's eye. Cleaning the panels, keeping the bulbs spotless and the lens fingerprint free, I remember it all. One of the perks, of course, was the need to preview each movie to ensure that everything was ready to go. I can't tell you how many times I grabbed some popcorn and watched movies from the booth. Somewhere, I have a number of old movie posters from some of the features that passed through.

Once the movies were started, and the concessions trickled down, we had time to squeeze in a little homework, do some inventory, and the sometimes adventurous hourly bathroom check. We also had to police the theaters, knocking people's feet off seats, checking the emergency exits, and largely making sure that mischief was kept at a minimum. Oh, and then there was the weekly sign change. We had these huge clear plastic letter boards that went up on the lighted sign on the theater façade that had to be changed every time we got a new movie or changed our prices. Changing the letters involved a long telescopic pole, with a suction cup on the end. With a gentle slap, you brought the cup down on the letter, picked it up carefully, and inserted the letter into the slotted rows on the sign. One letter at a time, battling the wind, you placed the letters desperately hoping it wouldn't fall to the ground - because it was going to shatter if it did. To release the suction, you pulled on a slender rope cord attached to the cup, which would break the seal. And of course, with kids and teenagers loitering about, you almost always had an audience to watch your every move.

As much as I loved that job, I think what made it so special to me was my manager, Mrs. Peden. Mrs. Peden was a grandmotherly figure, always kind but stern when she had to be. It was a wonderful feeling to know that you had her trust. Our relationship to her was remarkable in many ways, a handful of teenagers talking about life with someone who, although somewhat older than our parents, seemed to enjoy our company. About once or twice a week, she would have one of us run across the street to the TCBY, in a bartered exchange of freshly popped popcorn for frozen yogurt. At Christmas, she always brought in a tree and decorations, and we exchanged gifts. I still have a couple of the gifts she gave me. After I left for college, I didn't have the opportunity to come around too much, but when I did come to town, I would always try to stop by and visit her. I even was able to introduce her to my fiancée (now my wife of almost 16+ years). Mrs. Peden passed away a number of years ago, a thought that still makes me sad. I loved that lady.

Now that I've opened the floodgates of memories, I am stunned by just how much I remember. So many details, down to the tickets, the candy case, the upstairs office, and the video games - I can see it all. You think this post is long now - trust me, I could go on and on. And it seems that memories will be all that remain; if Google's street view is correct, the building that housed the theater is no longer there. I wasn't expecting that, although I suppose I shouldn't be surprised. But it is depressing. It would be fair to say that a good part of my high school identity was wrapped up in that place - I can hardly think of those days without thinking about the theater. Whatever angst I may have had during those years, that old theater was a refuge. And to this day, if only by the measure of joy, it remains the best job I've ever had.

December 10, 2010

Christmas Defibrillation

Last week, feeling not unlike Punxsutawney Phil, I poked my head out of the hole of busy-ness that consumes so much of my time and life. I found myself quite startled, not at my shadow, but at the fact that once again the rush of the Christmas season had set upon us like the Arctic gale that blew us all indoors this week. Okay, perhaps there's too much hyperbole in that simile. Moving on.

So last Saturday, knowing that I was to spend a good part of the week in Maryland again, I resolved to get the Christmas tree up for the family to enjoy before I left town. While the effort was largely uneventful, upon reflection I realized that my mindset was far from where it should have been. The boys and I tackled the tree like a chore: once I put it up and strung the lights, they swarmed around that tree so fast that I honestly think they broke the speed limit, not to mention an ornament or two. Still, just one more item off the to-do list.

Furthermore, at my meeting this week, my colleagues talked a great deal about holiday plans, family, and battle stories about stringing outside Christmas lights on their homes. I could sense a warmness from several of them, a genuine excitement about the special time only weeks away. As for me, I just couldn't bridge the gap. I'm still finding it difficult to get my Christmas heart pumping.

So clearly, I need some Christmas defibrillation. My first zap was last night. I left Maryland a day early (by design) so that I could arrive just in time to attend my oldest son's Christmas choir concert, which I thoroughly enjoyed. However, I fear that will not be enough to jumpstart my Christmas spirit, so I need to turn to other aids: traditional Christmas music, some enforced quiet time, and of course: movies!

Below, in no particular order, are what I consider my favorite Christmas movies. Have you ever noticed that many of the most cherished Christmas movies are, well, old? I wonder why that is. Over the next couple of weeks, maybe I'll find some time to write about of these.

Christmas in Connecticut. By far my favorite Christmas movie. 1945 flick starring Barbara Stanwyck and Dennis Morgan. But the great S.Z. "Cuddles" Sakall as Uncle Felix absolutely steals the show.

Holiday Inn. 1942 classic, with Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire. Launched the timeless Bing classic, "White Christmas."

White Christmas. With the song such a monster hit, in 1954 Paramount put a movie around it. While at times it feels like a re-imagining of Holiday Inn, the plot line stands on its own. To this day, I cannot get through the reunion scene of Major General Waverly and his men near the end of the movie. Bing Crosby, this time with Danny Kaye, Rosemary Clooney and Vera Ellen.

It's a Wonderful Life. George Bailey helps a woe-begotten angel get his wings. You know the movie. Jimmy Stewart is always worth watching in this 1946 Frank Capra classic.

A Christmas Carol. Okay, with a story that has been made and remade so many times, it is kind of hard to keep them all straight. As far as the older classic retellings, some absolutely swear by the Alastair Sim version (1951), while others go with the Reginald Owen and Gene Lockhart version (1938). Don't get me wrong, we try to watch them both each year. I have a soft spot for the performance of Gene Lockhart as Cratchit, but prefer Sim in the title role of Scrooge.

Miracle on 34th Street. 1947 classic, with Gene Lockhart as the judge. The movie was remade in 1994 with Richard Attenborough, and while some have tried to make the case that it is the better version, all I have to say to that is simply: "O-ver-ruled!"

A Charlie Brown Christmas. Show me another Christmas special or movie that comes on TV every year that deliberately contains dialog straight from the Gospel, like Linus' retelling of the true meaning of Christmas. I never get tired of this one.

There are other popular Christmas-time movies that get a lot of airplay, such as The Santa Clause movies, the Home Alone movies and of course, A Christmas Story. However, these don't do much to put me into the Christmas spirit. I would be remiss however if I failed to give honorable mention to Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer and Frosty the Snowman.

As for now, I'm off to the movies for family night, a treat for the boys since I've been gone all week. Something called Tangled. But I'll be making time for a Christmas movie this weekend, to be sure. I only wish James Cagney had made a Christmas classic.

December 03, 2010

RIP Ronnie

I was not prepared to see this news this morning, as I opened up a browser with my first cup of coffee. It hit me like a punch to the chest. All-time Chicago Cub great Ron Santo passed away at the age of 70. While I am too young to have ever had the chance to see him play, I am well familiar with Santo's play-by-play for the Cubs radio team over the last two decades, not to mention his long and ultimately futile effort to gain entry into the Hall of Fame. In my estimation, he's a Hall-of-Famer anyway.

Rest in peace, Ron.



November 27, 2010

Auburn 28 - Alabama 27

In the 23 years I've cared about this game, I've never seen anything quite like what I saw yesterday. Down 24-0, Auburn roared to life in the second half to cap a perfect 12-0 regular season, with the SEC Championship game left to play next Saturday. With so much "unfinished business" though, I'm still having some trouble enjoying the ride. Nevertheless, on the field, Auburn once again found a way. While there are obvious standout heroes on this Auburn team, without a doubt in my mind, the most unheralded but surehanded player is the tight end: Philip Lutzenkirchen. When the ball comes his way near the end zone, he never seems to drop it. And those touchdowns always seem to come when the game is on the line. Mr. Clutch. His catch for the go-ahead touchdown in this year's Iron Bowl is no exception.


Photo by: Auburn University photographer Todd Van Emst

War Eagle, Mr. Lut-Zen-Kir(k)-en!

November 25, 2010

Is it live, or is it Memorex?

Well, okay, the title isn't exact, although I date myself by referring to a marketing pitch from a technology now outdated. But check out the video below:


According to this New Scientist article, the entire commercial is computer generated using off-the-shelf software. It's really amazing stuff. Eventually, we may not be able to believe anything we see on TV.

(h/t: HotAir)

November 24, 2010

Another Thanksgiving

I spent some time on YouTube today, seeking inspiration for this year's Thanksgiving post. While there was plenty to choose from - of all shapes and sizes, in poor taste and good - I settled on "Thanksgiving" by American pianist George Winston. I invite you for a moment to close your eyes, and simply drink it in:


There is a dimension of Thanksgiving that goes higher than its history, deeper than the Detroit Lions, and further than the fowl that may grace our family table. It is more than just a day to take stock and count our blessings, although such an exercise has value.

I've not lived as much life as some, and I've lived more life than many. The music plays, and with each turn of the page I see images of a lifetime, memories of happy times and sad, faces familiar and others that were almost forgotten. Memories, and the emotions they evoke, are treasures to cherish be they bright or bittersweet. Our life is what it is; every moment, every soul, every experience has made us what we are. To discover within ourselves the capacity to be thankful for our lifetime, when so much argues against us to undermine that discovery, takes an almost spiritual act of will: a courageous choice to be thankful for all that we are, and what has brought us to be, wherever and whatever we are to become. For some, this may be easy while for others it is almost unbearably heartbreaking.

Yet as I close my eyes, and the notes dance upon my mind, I come to the conclusion that Thanksgiving about all those who have shaped our lives, guided our steps, and filled those spaces in our hearts. It is for joy, in the midst of all things, that we are here. It for the love of family and friends in our presence, and a remembrance of precious loved ones no longer present, but with us just the same. And it is about those we've yet to meet, and embrace.

Therein lies the heart of this Thanksgiving message: Being thankful for a lifetime that was, a life that is, and an eternity that is to come.

May it be so for you and yours.

November 18, 2010

Foot Shadows

Sitting here late this afternoon with my stocking feet propped upon a desk, looking out of my hotel room window at rows of square little houses in the fading sunlight, I found myself marveling at the shadows cast by my feet upon the wall. Not because there is any profound truth to be revealed by such introspection, to be sure. Rather, it was a momentary distraction, a random thought I elected to put into words with the typing of these very letters. Has Jim lost his mind, you might wonder? I do not believe so, but of course who am I to say?

The nature of my job requires to me to write. And write. And write. I've made a career of finding ways to better articulate policy, process, concepts, requirements, guidance and a myriad of other documentation - all from a technical, professional slant. The negative, of course, is that it frequently leaves the well dry by the time I am able to carve out some moments for myself to write creatively. Like today: I finally have a few moments to post something to the blog, and the well is dry. In the past, one of the techniques I've used to break the logjam that is the so-called "writer's block" is to put to words exactly what I'm thinking or doing in a given moment. Hence, the fascination with foot shadows!

I don’t feel like commenting on politics, or sports, or space exploration, or even that errant gray hair that I thought I'd taken care of a couple days ago that still taunts me from my temple. Nor have I had time to surf online for that strange but true (ok, maybe true) story to share with anyone who may read this site. I'm not really in the mood to dwell on the deeply complicated issues of life, either.

So why, you may ask, am I dedicating so many words to a largely meaningless post without so much as a main point? Well, that is precisely the point! I find that on occasion, poking random holes in the walls of a dry well sometimes triggers a flow that restores my source.

Feel free to roll your eyes; I'm okay with that. Because in the end, I have accomplished my goal.

November 10, 2010

Repost: A Matter of Respect


Tomorrow is Veterans Day, and in honor of this, I'm reposting an experience I had several years ago. I first published it on this blog back in 2008. I've heard rumors that this recollection has made rounds via email, but I can most certainly vouch for the fact that this is my story. But really, it is not just my story, but that of the many men and women who have sacrificed their all for the cause of our Nation and its precious freedom. Please read, and remember those valiant men and women who to this day continue to serve and defend the United States of America.

I've done a lot of traveling over the last couple of years, perhaps not as much as some, but definitely more than others. But there was something special about today's flight from Baltimore to Atlanta.

It began conventionally enough. Full flight, crammed in the window seat on a beautiful January afternoon. The last man to board the plane was a soldier, Army, in dress uniform. Having flown on several flights with soldiers going to and from their deployment assignments, seeing a soldier on board wasn't so unusual. It didn't register right away that this was the first time I'd seen one in full dress on my flight.

I dozed off for a while, little thoughts dancing in mind about being home, burning leaves, seeing my family. Two straight weeks being away from home is still two weeks too long. Nevertheless, I'm proud of what I do, and sometimes I'm even good at it. But all of this was magnified even more as the pilot made his mid-flight announcement.

I stirred from my pseudo-nap to hear that we were flying at 22,000 feet into a 190mph headwind, that Atlanta was a lovely 50 degrees with a light south wind at 8mph, and that our arrival should be slightly ahead of schedule. I remember those details as clear as a bell, but to my great shame I would not remember the names mentioned when the pilot announced:

"We are honored today to be carrying home the remains of a soldier who served with honor and recently fell in Iraq. We ask that when we arrive in Atlanta that you remain seated, to allow the military escort on board to disembark first. We thank you for your cooperation."

Suddenly, I was wide awake. I can't tell you all of the thoughts that went through my mind, though I did experience that tingling feeling you get sometimes when you know that you are sharing a scene that sears itself on your very soul. The soldier on board was at the far back, and I debated with myself on how I could respond. Should I say thank you, should I start a round of applause as the escort worked his way up the aisle, or should I sit in quiet reverence? All of those options were quickly taken away, because the flight crew (smartly) escorted the soldier to the front as we were taxiing to the gate; he was past me before I could say anything at all.

Before I knew it, he was off the plane. I soon saw him standing quietly but attentively just below my window. I turned away to walk up the aisle, still wrestling with my thoughts, and in a sudden surge I spoke to the captain, "Thank you sir, for your show of respect." He acknowledged me, and I exited the plane.

Still dealing with the guilt of my inaction, I slowly but deliberately walked to a nearby window. I stood by that window in a loose posture of parade rest from my marching band days, and simply stood still. The soldier was standing below the plane, giving instructions to the luggage personnel who would be handling the coffin. His back was to me, but the hairs on the back of my neck stood up as the soldier suddenly came to attention and then to a salute. Moments later, a large white box with the words "HANDLE WITH EXTREME CARE" emblazoned on the side came down the treadmill. The soldier examined the box, then immediately turned to the handlers, who in turn carefully turned the box 180 degrees. I don't know all the protocol, but clearly the box was positioned incorrectly. Soon, the handlers carefully loaded the box onto a luggage carrier. No sooner had they closed the plastic rain shield on the carrier than another white box, identical to the first, came down the treadmill. I took a quick breath, as I had only expected to see one, not two.

After the second box was loaded onto a carrier identical to the first, the military escort continued to discuss matters with members of Delta's handlers. Then he and a member of Delta's honor guard (complete with a vest emblazoned with the U.S. flag) walked away. I took a deep breath, and allowed myself to move a little, glancing at another fellow from my flight who was apparently doing the same thing I was. We nodded at each other, and looked back out the window. I stayed there at the window until the coffins were driven away.

I walked away, feeling strangely satisfied that I had done all that I could do. The soldier never saw me; I never saw a family member. Save for the other passenger standing at the window, no one else knew what I was doing. It is a matter of respect. Respect for those who serve, and have served; respect for those who paid the ultimate sacrifice; respect for the families of those who have fallen for the cause of freedom. And, just as importantly, I believe it is about respect for self. I give honor to Jesus, who paid the ultimate price that I might be eternally free. Likewise, I give honor to those who have enable me to worship, to live, to love, and to excel in a land that claims freedom as its ultimate ideal. It is not about politics. You and I don't have to share an ideology. But for me, a simple show of respect to honor those fallen soldiers has allowed me the inner satisfaction of self-respect. I know who I am, and where I come from. I know to Whom I belong.

Respect for self and respect for others go hand in hand. You cannot have one without the other.

To the families of those who have paid the price, my thanks, my prayers and my hopes for peace. Likewise to you, my friends and my family.

God bless,
Jim

November 09, 2010

Strike Up the Band

This past Saturday morning, for the first time in a number of years, I ventured down to the loveliest village on the plains for Auburn's Homecoming game against UT-Chattanooga. I was coming right off a week-long business trip to Maryland, and as such my family had gone down ahead of me. With kickoff at noon, I managed to get a few hours sleep Friday night before waking up at 0-dark thirty for the 4 hour drive down to Auburn.

In past years, my wife and I would play with the alumni band during Homecoming, but this year because of the uncertainty of my travel schedule, we opted for the cheap seats in the upper deck. The Auburn band was very much a focal point of my Auburn experience, not the least of which is due to the influence of my best friend who would become my beloved wife of nearly 17 years now. My Auburn marching career was limited to 1991-1993, as I had elected to put aside the music for my freshman year. Late in my sophomore year, I began playing in Auburn's concert and symphonic bands before getting talked into marching in the fall of 1991. Without a doubt, my time in the Auburn University Marching Band remains one of the most treasured periods of my life. It is mostly about the music, but like so many before me and after me, words fail to describe the full experience of being on the field surrounded by 87,000 football fans.

So it should be unsurprising that the gameday experience this past weekend tugged on some emotional strings for me. This video below is the new "intro" that gets played on the stadium jumbotron before the band enters the field for its pregame show:


Pretty cool stuff, but I do have mixed feelings about it. Back in my day (oh, boy, now I'm talking like an old guy), Jordan-Hare didn't have a jumbotron. When the Auburn Band entered the field - you knew we were there. We didn't need some flashy videotronics to announce the fact. However, what I do appreciate about the video is the respect shown from the University, and from the fans. This link here is video of the above, taken by a fan in the stands. I offer it simply as a window into the crowd response.

Watching the band perform on Saturday (even if it was just a static Homecoming show) was a moving experience for me, bringing back a flood of memories. Maybe over the holidays, I'll take some time and convert some of our old VHS tapes of marching band performances and post some excerpts on YouTube (properly cited, of course).

Watching a younger generation on the field, I was amazed at the strong affinity I have for what they do to prepare for each and every show. And I was reminded, that no matter what happens with Auburn's football team, and with their star quarterback, I am and remain an Auburn man.

Because, true to the creed, "I believe in Auburn and love it."

November 01, 2010

Flying Through Color

As the Embraer streaked across the early morning sky, the rising sun turned my eyes to the west and the dissolving night. I've been awake for hours, yet the gears of my mind have yet to fully engage. Unwilling to prod it so, I simply allow my eyes to take in what I see, as if looking out the window of my own self.

It is a watercolor moment, with broad brush lines that splay through the sky like beams among the wispy cirrus that strings across the heavens. Contrails from recent passers-by serve as guardrails, as if pointing the way to where we are going. And suddenly, they are gone, just as the dawn breaks forth in full glory, setting the condensing air on fire with rays and shadows bursting with brilliance; I am flying through color!

The upper sky turns from deep navy to dawn's typical blue as we cross 33 thousand feet. Such heights and such lows! A field of clouds comes into view, hanging in the air like a colony of jellyfish: peaceful, quiet, angelic. Looking up again, between the blue and the gray, each swath highlighted by streaks of orange, cuts a dark gray line - a shadow bleeding like an ink stain across the sky. And then it is gone, as if it never was. The faded patchwork below begins to glow with the arrival of morning.

Where are my thoughts this morning, here at the beginning of a week destined to last forever? Of where I am? Of where I want to be? Of what I seem to have? Of what I seem to lack? The sun is shining brightly now through the window across the aisle. It stings a little, but not too much.

But, oh, to fly through color! That I could but capture just a taste, just a shade, to keep with me. Then perhaps I could better articulate the wonder - and the agony - for which I simply have no words.

October 29, 2010

Hannan on America

Being a bit of a news and political junkie, not to mention my fascination with American history and civics, in recent months I have taken to listening to assorted podcasts, history lectures, Constitutional symposiums - anything that I can get to play on my phone's podcast software. (In full disclosure, I balance such with NPR's This American Lifepodcast, as well as a number of sermons).

One of the podcasts I listen to is one presented by the Hoover Institution. Hosted by the delightful Peter Robinson (who also moonlights at Ricochet), Uncommon Knowledge is a series of one-on-one interviews with a number of interesting and smart people. Recently, Peter Robinson conducted an interview with Daniel Hannan, a British politician and member of the European Parliament. He talks about the sociopolitical state of Europe, and his belief that the world needs a strong, vibrant non-Europeanized America that avoids the mistakes of Europe's socialism and massive entitlement culture.

If you have about 35 minutes to spare, I commend to you this fascinating (and yes, conservative) perspective from across the pond. You can watch the video here at Powerline, or you can get the mp3 audio from Feedburner here.

Hogwarts Comes Calling?

In Harry Potter lore, that wonderful literary universe created by J.K. Rowling, Hogwarts is a school of magic that comes calling on prospective students upon the occasion of their 11th birthday. Granted, they appear only if said prospective student has displayed some evidentiary level of possessing the gift of magic. For such introductions, sometimes the school dispatches an eccentrically dressed wizard or witch to offer the invitation. More commonly, however, the school will send forth an owl, carrying a formal letter of invitation and a list of supplies needed for the upcoming term.

Yesterday was my oldest son's 11th birthday, but alas, no owl arrived on our doorstep, through our window, or down our chimney. Yet this morning, as we were backing out of the garage to head off to our regular old private Christian Muggle school, a large owl swooped down from the roof of the house into the poplar right at the edge of the driveway. The zoom-challenged camera on my phone was unable to capture the wary looks exchanged between us and our visitor (which the boys thought was tremendously cool), but perhaps you can see our friend on the branch below to the left of the tree's trunk:


Aside from the excitement of a rare sighting of an owl in our yard during the daylight hours, sadly, no letter of invitation to the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry was delivered to our residence.

At which we could only say: "Diagon-it!"

October 25, 2010

End of an Era

The news broke today, announcing the end of an era most of us thought ended years ago: Sony has discontinued the Walkman portable cassette player. Apparently, even in our advanced digital age, Sony was able to exploit the rapidly diminishing market of cassette tape users. But according to Fox News, no more:
After more than 30 years, Sony has pulled the plug on its iconic Walkman, the original portable cassette-tape player, the New York Post reported Sunday.

The electronics company made its last shipment of the tape players to the Japanese market earlier this year, and once those are sold off, there will not be any more to come, according to Japanese media reports. …

Launched in 1979, the Walkman became a global hit and a symbol of tech cool, with Sony selling roughly 220 million of the boxy devices.
I still have my Walkman, packed away in a box somewhere. How well do I remember that beloved player, which more than once came to my aid as I pedaled my way 5 miles into a fierce 40mph Dakota headwind between the bowling alley on base and the sleepy town I called home, about which I've written previously. It was the Rocky IV soundtrack, as I recall, plus a number of other tapes I still have shoved in a closet. That Walkman also help pass the time on some long family trips. I used it up until my first year or two in college.

Ah well. The Walkman was my generation's iPod, I suppose. Am I now officially "old"?

October 22, 2010

Remembered Verse

Posted without comment, except to point out that the former Marine in the video is actually referring to the fourth verse, although he's calls it the second verse.


(h/t): Ricochet

October 21, 2010

My Conundrum

After yesterday's post, I began to reflect on an area of concern that has preoccupied me for years, one that still animates my thinking but nevertheless remains unresolved. My conundrum involves the at times awkward juxtaposition of my faith and my love of country. For an innumerable many, there is no conflict between these; indeed, they align well for many. For an innumerable number of others, the two are at the core diametrically opposed, that to choose one must mean denying the other. I'm not sure I fall cleanly in either camp, and the result is a tension that while not a monumental distraction, does however frequently leave me with some disquiet.

I love my country. It was founded on what I believe to be Godly principles, coinciding with an era of wonderful spiritual awakening that inspired many to seek and establish a refuge that allowed for the cultivation of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness - to include the freedom to worship the Lord God as each individual was so moved. And while we are certainly far from perfect, given our natural state as fallen beings, there is little argument that our Nation through the years has been blessed, and has been a light to others throughout the world yearning to be free. I say this not to boast, but to acknowledge the largely positive force for good America has been to the world. Again, we are fallen, and we have our national sins throughout our history. Our modern culture, for each progressive step forward, appears to be in moral retreat. Our fervor is muted, and our aspirations limited. The war of ideas of what America is and should be is being waged all around us, and I wonder if there will come a time when as a society we will cast off the virtues that brought us into being. But because I love my country, and because I cherish the blessings we have received from the Giver of gifts, I confess I spend considerable emotional and intellectual energies on the hope and desire that this Nation will survive, return to an understanding of core values and founding principles, if only because we have been given so much that it is incumbent upon us to continue to shine that light of liberty that even today gives hope to the world.

And yet, there is another truth that is plain to see. And that is this: the spiritual awakening that helped usher us in as a Nation in the 18th century, and the waves that followed, seems to have subsided. Statistics show that the Church is in decline in America, even as the Gospel flourishes in Africa and Asia. Here, in the most free and prosperous society in the world, the spiritual dynamic pales in comparison to those places in the world where there is less freedom, more tyranny and oppression, and want. And while I am absolutely certain that a people can be both prosperous and spiritually vibrant, it is hard to dismiss the correlation that is evidenced by the movement of God among the nations. God is no respecter of persons; He blesses whomever He chooses to bless. I am sure that I'm not alone in wrestling with this tension between our relative prosperity and the condition of our faith - indeed, I wonder if that in part is what undergirds much of our generous and charitable nature as a society in the face of disasters both natural and man-made.

Whenever I ponder matters such as these, I always arrive back at the same point: This world, and this Nation, is but a temporary phenomenon in the scope of time. As a Christ-follower, I am convinced that there is an end to history as it plays out here on earth. I long for my eternal home, and yet I also long for renewal and restoration of America's soul, if you will. Would that we would, as a society, recognize the wisdom of the Apostle Paul when he spoke of freedom, in understanding that while much may be permissible, not everything is beneficial. That if we could but seek to preserve and protect a societal environment that enables both individual freedom and the wisdom to exercise restraint, these are worthwhile things. But then I despair, for as a human being, how deeply am I aware of my own impulse to deny my own fallen nature, and choose my own course of action apart from wisdom! Apart from the movement of God, it is not clear to me that there are many examples - if any at all - of established societies doing anything but following the cycle of decay. And so as I ponder the future of our beloved Nation, I struggle to see how a genuine restoration of society can occur of the order required to perpetuate this American experiment. For even if we do, someone will always seek to build the next Tower of Babel, or will choose to forget the lessons of the past in favor of the pride of now. To preserve what is ultimately temporary seems a great, if not impossible, challenge.

Perhaps I am unusual for wondering such things. I realize that all I can do is to humble myself and pray, and to do the best I can to walk faithfully, knowing that for the time I am here on earth, I will have to give an account for the wonderful gifts I have received. And I can be salt and light, seeking to illuminate the Truth while I can, and season the world by quietly influencing those around me. I don't see it as wrong to desire a better America that can be preserved for my children and grandchildren. But that desire must be placed in the context of the true reality of its temporal nature. For inasmuch as I would love to see and experience an awakening and reclamation of first principles and, to put It crudely, the "growing-up" of culture - I would far rather see this fed and fired as before by a new spiritual awakening that sweeps the land. One can hope, I suppose. And pray.

October 20, 2010

Will it last?

November is coming ever closer, and with it, Election Day 2010. I've shied away recently from writing too much about politics. Primarily, this is because of my overpopulated calendar, but it is also because I feel that there is enough news and noise out there right now that any contribution I would make to the conversation would have little value. I've already voted, marking the first time in my adult life that I've filed an absentee ballot (I'll be on business travel out of state on Election Day). So at this point, I peruse headlines, but otherwise find myself largely in spectator mode, waiting to see what happens next. I'm particularly interested to see what happens to the so-called "tea party movement" after the election.

I haven't written about the tea party movement, although I am holding in reserve dozens of links to articles and essays that attempt to define, illuminate or otherwise expound on its nature. Without a doubt, I am sympathetic to many of its aims. But before I give full-throated support for it, I want to see how it handles success (which they will likely experience in a couple of weeks). I also want to see whether it has staying power. If the tea party movement truly represents a generational awakening of the American citizenry, complete with a renewal and rediscovery of our Nation's founding principles and a desire to roll back the theft of liberty perpetrated in the name of "fairness" at the hands of a government who thinks it is more qualified to make your choices than you are, then yes, I will celebrate such a renewal of American civic life. But I do have suspicions about whether the tea party awakening can maintain its appeal once the economy improves. We shall see. I have a million other thoughts on this, and about where America stands at this point of its existence. I will save those, however, for another day.

In the meantime, allow me to summarize like this. Our elected political class likes to talk in terms of "mandates." This is ridiculous on its face, because many claim a mandate of all the people by winning 50.1 percent of the vote. If there is to be a mandate, the mandate is upon us, as the citizen class. Too often we go to the polls in November, and then go back to the sidelines and disengage until the next election cycle. If the tea party movement truly is to effect a generational shift in the direction and future survival of our Nation, our mandate should be: 1) To elect principled legislators at all levels committed to doing the hard work of preserving this Union for future generations; 2) To stay vigilant, involved, and knowledgeable about the existential issues we face; 3) To commit to serve as watchdogs over the votes our Representatives/Senators take - and to be willing to throw out anyone who kowtows to the influences of the political class at the expense of the citizen class.

But above all, we should remember that there is more to life than politics, that civil and respectful discourse remains an important virtue, and that all of this is temporary anyway.

October 14, 2010

Finally Fall?

In my house, we call it PDD. That is, Post-Disney Depression. PDD is the inevitable letdown that occurs following a joyful Disney trip, brought on by the realization that as fun as the magic can be, fairy dust in the real world is simply hard to come by. The last couple of days have found me in a typical PDD funk. It will pass, to be sure, but it just goes to show how desperately I still need a respite of peace and solitude. I'm still running on empty, it seems.

The one thing I cannot complain about is the weather. The sky is a brilliant blue, the air is actually cool with a steady fall breeze. I stepped outside my office a few moments ago to try to clear the fog from my head, and took the photo below with my phone. The picture does not do justice to the real thing, of course. But hopefully the colors will shine through. Soon, the trees in my yard will be in full display. But even they may not be as lovely as this tree.


I just wish I could keep my mind and heart as clear as this absolutely beautiful day.
I THINK that I shall never see
A poem lovely as a tree.

A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
Against the sweet earth's flowing breast;

A tree that looks at God all day,
And lifts her leafy arms to pray;

A tree that may in summer wear
A nest of robins in her hair;

Upon whose bosom snow has lain;
Who intimately lives with rain.

Poems are made by fools like me,
But only God can make a tree.

- Joyce Kilmer

October 12, 2010

Welcome to the Real World

Welcome back to the real world, welcome back to life. After 10 days of unplugged, unconnected detachment from the world of work and routines, from news and other online distractions, a return to reality was inevitable. A Disney family vacation can certainly be enjoyable (and it was), but one thing it is not is restful. But a good time was indeed had by all. And it was good to get away from the normal stresses of life. But now it is back to the grind. Back to incessant email traffic, and demands upon my time and schedule. Back to the early morning get-ready-for-school rush, followed by the clean-the-bucket-adventure-because-the-kid-who-rode-all-sorts-of-crazy-rides-at-Disney-without-trouble-gets-car-sick-on-the-way-to-school-his-first-day-back, and the fill-in-for-your-boss-in-a-meeting-after-being-out-of-the-loop-for-10-days demand. I've been back at work for 4 hours and I already want to go back home and take a nap/read a book.

So, yes, reality can be icky. But I'll do what I can to make the best of it, and reorient my attitude regarding the mundane. It may take a little bit to get back into a regular writing habit, but once I catch up on some work, hopefully I'll be able to post more regularly.

September 27, 2010

un-OO-sa

Did you know that the United Nations has an office dedicated to space affairs? Indeed, the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) promotes international cooperation in the peaceful use of outer space. For the most part, they deal with benign issues - which of course is about all they can deal with, since they have no true authority over the matter. Or so you might think.

For now comes news that the United Nations has appointed a key individual - that virtually no one has ever heard of - to be the world's representative (I don't recall getting a vote) to any extraterrestrial first contact. Forget Captains Kirk and Picard, or even Zefram Cochrane. We have Mazlan Othman (emphasis mine):
Mazlan Othman, the head of the UN's little-known Office for Outer Space Affairs (Unoosa), is to describe her potential new role next week at a scientific conference at the Royal Society’s Kavli conference centre in Buckinghamshire.

She is scheduled to tell delegates that the recent discovery of hundreds of planets around other stars has made the detection of extraterrestrial life more likely than ever before - and that means the UN must be ready to coordinate humanity’s response to any “first contact”.

...

Professor Richard Crowther, an expert in space law and governance at the UK Space Agency and who leads British delegations to the UN on such matters, said: “Othman is absolutely the nearest thing we have to a ‘take me to your leader’ person.”
We should all feel tremendously safe knowing that 1) the UN has appointed itself the responsibility to coordinate with ET on the behalf of all humanity; 2) and that Ms. Othman - again, shout if you've ever heard of her - is the nearest thing to a "take me to your leader" person.

I hope she has Bruce Willis on speed dial.

September 23, 2010

A Charter to Cherish

I'm not sure where or why it came up, but the other day I heard or read chatter about whether the ideas represented in the founding documents of our nation - in particular the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution - are fundamentally outdated, given that we have seen two centuries of modernity, ideas and progress sweep over our civilization. Obviously, I have my own views on the matter, some of which I address indirectly here. The topic got me thinking about a passage I read recently in Matthew Spalding's interesting work We Still Hold These Truths. On page 220 of the hardback edition, Spalding raises the issue of Europe's slow decline from its heritage as the birthplace and home of Western Civilization, and suggests that the statist and socialist nature of today's Europe represents the antithesis of progress and freedom. (As an aside, I mean, seriously: there is a proposal in the UK that suggests that all payroll - private and public - should be administered by the government for the sake of "efficiency." In such a model, it's hard not to see how the private sector could utterly disappear. But I digress). Spalding goes on to relate a portion of a speech given by President Calvin Coolidge in 1926, on the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. You can read the speech in its entirety here, but below is the excerpt Spalding includes in his book. I'll leave it there for you to ponder, without further elaboration or embellishment.
About the Declaration there is a finality that is exceedingly restful. It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences which have given us a great advance over the people of that day, and that we may therefore very well discard their conclusions for something more modern. But that reasoning can not be applied to this great charter. If all men are created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable rights, that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond these propositions. If anyone wishes to deny their truth or soundness, the only direction in which he can proceed historically is not forward, but backward toward the time when there was no equality, no rights of the individual, no rule of the people. Those who wish to proceed in that direction can not lay claim to progress. They are reactionary. Their ideas are not more modern, but more ancient, than those of the Revolutionary fathers.

September 18, 2010

Getting Outdoors

For the past several weeks, I've been dealing with more than my usual share of physical and mental fatigue. Which in a way is ludicrous, because I work a desk job. I suppose it is stress, and I really don't like making excuses, but the constant neck and back pain is starting to wear on me (not to mention the resulting migraines). And to be sure, the fact that I spend my days sitting at a desk on the computer is probably the primary cause of my trouble. I'm simply not active enough.

Today - Saturday - offered a slight change of pace. I was up before 6am, woke my youngest son, and by 7:30 we were on our way to a nearby state park to join his Cub Scout pack on a 3.5 mile hike. Fall is not quite here yet, but as we walked the trail you could almost hear the trees pining for their leaves to start changing. But although the morning quickly reached the mid 80's, the sky was beautifully crystal clear and blue. In a few more weeks, that same trail will be alive with color. With each passing moment, I could feel the knots starting to loosen, if only a bit.


The blue expanse continued to beckon all afternoon. Even as I was filling my sinuses with flying dust and grass clippings, I found myself constantly drawn to the striking contrast between the earth and sky.


So while I'm in a desperate need for a genuine break, I'll have to be satisfied with these brief moments. No doubt, the outdoor air and activity did me some good (despite my protesting sinuses). I need more of it.

Evening has arrived, and still, I'm taken aback at the endless blue above. What a wonderful, beautiful day.

September 11, 2010

Patriot Day 2010

Today, I don't feel inclined to craft any major retrospective of the events surrounding 9/11. This may be in part because next year, 2011, will mark ten years from that fateful day. My reticence may also be in part because of the current controversies over the proposed mosque near Ground Zero, and the shameful grandstanding of a seriously misguided Florida pastor (and others around the country) and the media's exploitation of his seriously aberrant methods.

As of this morning, the burning has apparently been called off. About this issue, I will only say this. Whatever else he thinks he's doing, this "witness" of his is as far from the Gospel as you can get. Burning the Koran, like burning Harry Potter books or rock-n-roll albums and so forth, do absolutely nothing to further the message of Jesus Christ. And I dare someone to prove it to me otherwise. Beware the wolf in sheep's clothing, because the message he is preaching through this act - if he had gone through with it - looks nothing like the manner in which Christians are called to live. Frankly, I'm disgusted by the focus on this guy, not only because it does damage to true Christian witness, but because I feel it takes away from the proper moment of reflection and remembrance that Patriot Day should represent.

Burning the Koran, and planting a mosque in the shadow of Ground Zero, are deeply provocative acts. Under our system of laws, both are legally protected (the latter is somewhat more murky, depending on the source of the funding). I personally approve of neither, but I will resist getting emotionally drawn into either one. I do worry somewhat, though. For instead of a "coming together" on this Patriot Day, we are witnessing an increasing unrest that I can only pray doesn't get out of hand. Future Patriot Day ceremonies may well include large scale protests and counter protests, and heaven forbid, riots.

So today, I may look back over the links in last year's post, and I will post the colors outside my front door. I'll enjoy my family, do some work around the house, and be thankful for the blessings of God and of nation that we have received. And I will remember the fallen and the heroes.

September 10, 2010

Lights Out

Does anybody remember this golden oldie of a commercial:


A few years ago, in response to the environmentalist concern that standard incandescent light bulbs were destroying the world, the government passed legislation that makes it illegal to sell your basic light bulbs. Instead, starting in 2014, the only legal bulbs will be the toxic mercury-filled compact fluorescents (CFLs). The astounding thing about this decision, made back in 2007, is that the only reason to ban the incandescent was that it did not meet arbitrary standards of energy efficiency. Heralded as a progressive breakthrough toward "smarter energy," everyone assumed that manufacturing giants such as GE would simply convert their U.S. factories to making the new bulbs. Precisely the opposite has happened, as reported by the Washington Post:

The last major GE factory making ordinary incandescent light bulbs in the United States is closing this month, marking a small, sad exit for a product and company that can trace their roots to Thomas Alva Edison's innovations in the 1870s. …

During the recession, political and business leaders have held out the promise that American advances, particularly in green technology, might stem the decades-long decline in U.S. manufacturing jobs. But as the lighting industry shows, even when the government pushes companies toward environmental innovations and Americans come up with them, the manufacture of the next generation technology can still end up overseas. …

What made the plant here vulnerable is, in part, a 2007 energy conservation measure passed by Congress that set standards essentially banning ordinary incandescents by 2014. The law will force millions of American households to switch to more efficient bulbs.

The resulting savings in energy and greenhouse-gas emissions are expected to be immense. But the move also had unintended consequences.

Rather than setting off a boom in the U.S. manufacture of replacement lights, the leading replacement lights are compact fluorescents, or CFLs, which are made almost entirely overseas, mostly in China.

The "unintended consequences" quote above is laughable, because the government was warned. CFLs take a lot of hand labor to produce, and as a result is cheaper to produce in countries that, frankly, don't require union wages in their factories. So, by banning a bulb, the government has helped to close the book on a manufacturing heritage that's as old as … er … the light bulb.

Of course, I admit to a bias against CFLs. I just don't like them much. I prefer the good old soft white incandescent. I figure I've got about 2 years at best to stock up on them, before they simply won't be available anymore. The ban is simply one measure of "progress" that I could do without. Still, I'm certain that banning the bulb will extend the life of our planet by a least a month or two.

On a lighter note, this trip through YouTube looking at commercials from the '80s is kind of fun. Here's another nostalgic GE commercial I remember well. And one more.

September 08, 2010

Something's "fishy" ...

From the Chicago Breaking News Center, we have a proactive response to a serious, emerging threat. First, a quote from Sen. Dick Durbin (D) of Illinois:
"This is a serious challenge, a serious threat," Durbin said. "When it comes to the ... threat, we are not in denial. We are not in a go-slow mode. We are in a full attack, full-speed ahead mode. We want to stop this ... from advancing."
What is this threat? To build the suspense, I inserted ellipses in Sen. Durbin's comments above. The federal government has launched a "multi-pronged," $80 million counter-offensive to head off the threat of ... a fish called the Asian carp.

Now, all joking aside, it does appear that the fish is a threat to the existing fishing industry around the Great Lakes. The fish consumes a vast quantity of food daily, which negatively impacts the food supply available to fish native to those waters. Not only that, but these buggers can range from 40 to 100 pounds in some cases. That's a big fish by inland water standards.

Still, instead of assigning someone within the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to the task of overseeing the $80 million effort, the White House has appointed a "czar." In other words, an individual who may very well be unaccountable to Congress, whose oversight authority extends only to those working for the various federal agencies and bureaucracies (such as the Fish and Wildlife Service) except where proscribed by law.

Honestly, I don't think I have too much heartburn over the initiative. But I do wonder why it takes a "carp czar" to do the job. This just doesn't pass the ... smell test for me.