Sunday, August 29, 2010

August 29th, 2010


Video of the week

Thinking of my Dad a lot- September will bring a year since he died…
I still can’t say goodbye, by Chet Atkins

Dear Dad
I was thinking while driving home in the car I bought from you the other week and I realized I have done some strange things lately. Well, your granddaughter noticed first. We were riding along and I waved at someone in the neighborhood, and she said I waved at them just like you do! I was not aware of it but I guess I did.
Then Pam and I were out celebrating our nineteenth wedding anniversary, and we were doing some shopping. I bought a touring cap, like the ones I have worn for several years. Like the ones you wear. Nothing weird there. Until I caught a glimpse of myself in a window and, for the briefest of instances, there you were looking back at me in the reflection from the window.
But the weirdest thing of all was, on the same shopping trip, I found a collection of Glenn Miller’s greatest hits and bought it. I do like big band music, mostly because you and Mom like it and played it so much when I was growing up. But something made me want to hear that music in the Oldsmobile. A strange compulsion.
Now, twenty five or thirty years ago, if someone suggested that I was like my old man, well sir, they would have had a fight on their hands. No way was I ever going to be like that old codger. But since I am now the age you were then, I have a different perspective. And being Dad-like is looking better and better lately.
Because I can see now. I can see how you got to where you were when you and mom had me. I can see the abandonment in your life that made you so strong and independent. I can see the war experiences that took away most of your tolerance for foolishness and left only a fierce devotion to protecting your family and country.
And I see you now as the embodiment of the American Dream. The dream that  if a man works hard and tries to be honest in all things,  is true to his wedding vows and his commitment to his children, treats others as he would want to be treated, then he gets to drive big cars around and wear touring caps and listen to Glenn Miller songs.
And I am learning now that good behavior in all weathers is not the price we pay for the Dream. It is the Dream. Through your day to day conduct you gave me the knowledge of how to be a Good Man. And I am giving it to Rob (though he would never admit it.) and he will give it to his son and on and on. That will be your legacy, Dad. And that is what I mean when I say to you:
I love you, Dad
Dave Seward
November 1998
He who dies with the most toys, missed the point altogether.

Quotes of the week

Nationalism is an infantile disease. It is the measles of mankind.
~Albert Einstein~
Those who recite many scriptures but fail to practice their teachings are like a cowherd counting another's cows.
The Dhammapada
It's good to have money and the things that money can buy, but it's good, too, to check up once in a while and make sure you haven't lost the things that money can't buy.
George Horace Lorimer
A man does what he must- in spite of personal consequences, in spite of obstacles and dangers and pressures- and that is the basis of all human morality.
Winston Churchill
To counsel others, and to disregard one's own safety, is folly.
~Periander of Corinth, his motto, inscribed on Temple of Apollo at Delphi,~

Meditation of the week

When a person drowns himself in negative thinking he is committing an unspeakable crime against himself.
-- Maxwell Maltz

Negative thoughts can rule our lives as compulsively as an addiction. The feelings of power we get from holding a dismal and gloomy outlook deprive us of the positive and pleasant parts of life. Some of us have said, "If I expect the worst, I won't be disappointed. If I think the worst about myself, no one else can cut me down." It is like taking a driving trip and looking only for trash and garbage in the ditches, ignoring the beauty beyond. Indeed, what we see may be real, but it is a very limited piece of the picture.

When we have relied on negative thinking, it feels risky to give it up. We cannot do it in one day. We can begin by imagining ourselves with a more open attitude toward ourselves and the world. Then we can try it out as an experiment in little ways, with no commitment. Finally we reach the point where we can take a risk and entrust our Higher Power with the outcome.

Today, I will experiment with hopeful and positive thoughts about what happens.

Poem of the Week

I Ride Greyhound by Ellie Shoenfeld

because it's like being
in a John Steinbeck novel.
Next best thing is the laundromat.
That's where all people
who would be on the bus if they had the money
hang out. This is my crowd.
Tonight there are cleaning people appalled
at the stupidity of anyone
who would put powder detergent
in the clearly marked LIQUID ONLY slot.
The couple by the vending machine
are fondling each other.
You'd think the orange walls
and florescent lights
would dampen that energy
but it doesn't seem to.
It's a singles scene here on Saturday nights.
I confide to the fellow next to me
that I suspect I'm being taken
in by the triple loader,
maybe it doesn't hold any more
than the regular machines
but I'm paying an extra fifty cents.
I tell him this meaningfully
holding handfuls of underwear.
He claims the triple loader
gives a better wash.
I don't ask why,
just cruise over to the pop machine,
aware that my selection
may provide a subtle clue.
I shoes Wild Berry,
head back to my clothes.

Author of the week

It's the birthday of Howard Zinn, (books by this author) born in Brooklyn, New York (1922). He's the author of A People's History of the United States (1980). It has sold more than a million copies and continues to sell about 100,000 copies each year.
Zinn wrote more than 20 books, including the memoir You Can't Be Neutral on a Moving Train (1994). Last year, he said: "I think it's very important to bring back the idea of socialism into the national discussion to where it was at the turn of the [last] century before the Soviet Union gave it a bad name. Socialism had a good name in this country. Socialism had Eugene Debs. It had Clarence Darrow. It had Mother Jones. It had Emma Goldman. It had several million people reading socialist newspapers around the country. Socialism basically said, hey, let's have a kinder, gentler society. Let's share things. Let's have an economic system that produces things not because they're profitable for some corporation, but produces things that people need. People should not be retreating from the word socialism because you have to go beyond capitalism."

You can’t make up such a thing as that, I dare you to even try

This was just four years before my parents were born!
It was on August 26 in 1920 that the 19th Amendment was formally incorporated into the U.S. Constitution. It said: "The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex." It ended more than 70 years of struggle by the suffragist movement.
Secretary of State Bainbridge Colby signed the proclamation that morning at 8 a.m. at his home. There was no ceremony of any kind, and no photographers were there to capture the moment. And none of the leaders of the woman suffrage movement were present to see him do it. Colby just finished his cup of coffee and signed the document with a regular, steel pen. Then he said, "I turn to the women of America and say: 'You may now fire when you are ready. You have been enfranchised.'"

Websites of the week

And finally, the culmination of millennia of scientific endeavor

Sunday, August 22, 2010

August 22, 2010


Quotes of the week

A wise man and a fool together, know more than a wise man alone.
~Proverb, (Italian)~
The man who simply drifts into success in any field of human activity is almost as rare as the ship that drifts aimlessly into a safe harbor.

John Milton Gregory
It was on this day in 1888 that William Seward Burroughs received a patent for an adding machine.
Some version of a calculator had been in existence for hundreds of years, but Burroughs designed a machine that was actually accurate. It was 11 by 15 inches and nine inches high, had 81 keys, arranged in nine rows of nine keys each.

Meditation of the week

In every conflict, ask, "Would I rather be peaceful or right?"

The choice to be peaceful rather than right doesn't actually mean our opinions are unimportant. In fact, our particular opinions may make more sense in the larger scheme of things. Letting go of the battle is certainly far more sensible than the folly of expecting to change another person's mind. I credit Al-Anon with strengthening this resolve in me. The power of detachment, the willingness to choose to be peaceful rather than make every conversation a battleground, is freedom at its very best. There is no mystery in how this is done. It's a decision any one of us can make as often as the opportunity to disagree comes up.

We don't really even have to hope for a more peaceful life. It's ours just as quickly as we make the choice to want something different in our daily interactions. Remember, those who come forth provide us with opportunities for practicing peace.

Best of Craig’s List of the week

It was on this day in 1888 that William Seward Burroughs received a patent for an adding machine.
Some version of a calculator had been in existence for hundreds of years, but Burroughs designed a machine that was actually accurate. It was 11 by 15 inches and nine inches high, had 81 keys, arranged in nine rows of nine keys each.

Video of the week

Websites of the week

And finally, the culmination of millennia of scientific endeavor

Sunday, August 15, 2010

August 15th, 2010


Eyes focused on the Distance
The bicycle has been taking me places I didn’t know existed before this summer. During my transition to a much lighter work schedule, I found a lot more time just lying around waiting to be picked up and spent. So I borrowed my son’s bike and rode around my world, looking here, and spinning over there, sweating up this hill and flying down the beyond.
Early one weekday morning, I rode out to watch the commuters screaming to work on the busy four lane near my house. Pulling up to the intersection I stood and watched the traffic light change a few times. On one cycle, a cop sat waiting in his cruiser, and another car approached as the light turned red. The car went right on through and I looked over to see if the cop was going to do anything about it. He looked back at me. Then he floored it and went on his way, ignoring the car.
Normally, I would be streaming along on my way too, radio murmuring in the background, in my sealed car space. But today I was still and stopped, Just standing on the top of this hill. The silence enveloped me for a while. The birds sang and the sunlight streamed through the summer leaves, the breeze blew across my sweaty face, cool and welcome and free. And in a little while, the world of work rushed on past, faceless people driving and driving, stopping for the light then roaring on down the hill.
 It was as if I was frozen for a moment in time watching the rest of the world, still unfrozen, stream on around me, over me, past me. I longed to join them, feared missing whatever it is that we chase all our lives. And I felt relieved too, above it somehow, free from the drive, the pursuit, the Game. Free.
I read somewhere that if we only focus our eyes on close objects, we tire and grow weary, that it is a good idea to occasionally look up and focus your eyes on the distance.  I guess we evolved gazing into the distance, looking for dinner or predators or whatever. So I turned the bike around and glided back into my peaceful little neighborhood, waving at the morning walkers, headed home and keeping my eyes focused on the distance.
Dave Seward
August 15, 2010

Quotes of the week

Meditation of the week

All experience is an arch to build on.
  -- Henry Brooks Adams

We can learn something from any experience, even one that is painful. In fact, we often learn more from painful experiences than from pleasant ones. When we say or do something foolish or hurtful that causes us embarrassment or guilt, pain gives us a reason to learn and behave differently next time. It may hurt to be arrested for drunk driving, but the pain of that experience may be the beginning of recovery for someone who is addicted.

We can't change the experiences we have, but we can learn from them. Our life is a gift that comes wrapped in what we experience each moment. When we accept this gift and open it willingly, no matter what the wrapping looks like, we put ourselves in a position to discover unexpected treasures. We live life to the fullest, and we learn who we are as we grow. In that way, all experience is positive in building our new lives.

Today let me learn something that will help me grow in wisdom and maturity.

Poem of the Week

Do the thing that is next, saith the proverb
And a nobler shall yet succeed:
'Tis the motive exalts the action;
'Tis the doing, not the deed.

Margaret Junkin Preston

History I lived through- I was 21 years old

On August 9th,  in 1974, Richard Nixon officially resigned from the presidency. At 11:35 a.m., his resignation letter was delivered to Secretary of State Henry Kissinger. Gerald Ford took the oath of office. Then, at 12:05 p.m., exactly half an hour after Kissinger accepted Nixon's resignation letter, Gerald Ford gave his first speech as president of the United States. He was the only president in U.S. history who was never elected president or vice president.
In his inaugural address on this day 36 years ago, Gerald Ford said: "My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works; our great republic is a government of laws and not of men."
Gerald Ford died in 2006 at the age of 93 and a half, having lived longer than any other American president.

Video of the week

FDA approves depressant drug for the annoyingly cheerful

You can’t make up such a thing as that, I dare you to even try


Websites of the week

Honey can you build this?  Essay by Samantha Bee (thanks Brother Rob)

And finally, the culmination of millennia of scientific endeavor

Short Psych test

Sunday, August 8, 2010

August 8, 2010


Quotes of the week

“May you live all the days of your life.”
Jonathan Swift was a writer that lived a couple of centuries ago (1667-1745).
He is perhaps most known for classics like “Gulliver’s Travels” and “A Modest Propsal”. The latter being the ironic and shocking essay where he suggested that impoverished Irish people should sell their babies as food to rich people. Such works has earned Swift a reputation as one of the finest satirists of all time.
 “A man should never be ashamed to own that he has been in the wrong, which is but saying… that he is wiser today than yesterday.”
 “A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart.”
 “Although men are accused of not knowing their own weakness, yet perhaps few know their own strength. It is in men as in soils, where sometimes there is a vein of gold which the owner knows not of.”
 “I’ve always believed no matter how many shots I miss, I’m going to make the next one.”
 “The latter part of a wise person’s life is occupied with curing the follies, prejudices and false opinions they contracted earlier.”
 “The best doctors in the world are Doctor Diet, Doctor Quiet, and Doctor Merryman.”
 “No man was ever so completely skilled in the conduct of life, as not to receive new information from age and experience.”

Meditation of the week

“Fall seven times; stand up eight.” – Japanese proverb
“You must give up the life you planned in order to have the life that is waiting for you.” – Joseph Campbell
“The best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The second best time is now.” – Chinese Proverb
“You must be the change you want to see in the world.” – Gandhi
“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” – Theodore Roosevelt
“I can’t change the direction of the wind, but I can adjust my sails to always reach my destination.” – Jimmy Dean
“All is flux, nothing stays still.” – Heraclitus
“For everything you have missed, you have gained something else, and for everything you gain, you lose something else.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Every man must decide whether he will walk in the light of creative altruism or in the darkness of destructive selfishness.” – Martin Luther King, Jr.
“I am tomorrow, or some future day, what I establish today. I am today what I established yesterday or some previous day.” – James Joyce
“I don’t need a friend who changes when I change and who nods when I nod; my shadow does that much better.” – Plutarch
“Do not spoil what you have by desiring what you have not; remember that what you now have was once among the things you only hoped for.” – Epicurus
“Be a first rate version of yourself, not a second rate version of someone else” – Judy Garland
“How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.” – Anne Frank
“The mind can make a heaven out of hell or a hell out of heaven” – John Milton
“Try not to become a man of success but a man of value.” – Albert Einstein
“The foolish man seeks happiness in the distance; the wise grows it under his feet.” – James Oppenheim

Poem of the Week

Throwing Away the Alarm Clock

my father always said, "early to bed and
early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy
and wise."

it was lights out at 8 p.m. in our house
and we were up at dawn to the smell of
coffee, frying bacon and scrambled
eggs.

my father followed this general routine
for a lifetime and died young, broke,
and, I think, not too
wise.

taking note, I rejected his advice and it
became, for me, late to bed and late
to rise.

now, I'm not saying that I've conquered
the world but I've avoided
numberless early traffic jams, bypassed some
common pitfalls
and have met some strange, wonderful
people

one of whom
was
myself—someone my father
never
knew.

Video of the week

Embrace Life: Always wear your seat belt.

You can’t make up such a thing as that, I dare you to even try

Websites of the week

And finally, the culmination of millennia of scientific endeavor

In 1964, Louis Armstrong became the oldest performer to have a Billboard No. 1 song, knocking the Beatles from the top with his hit "Hello Dolly!" Louis Armstrong (books by this author) was 63 years old at the time. And today is his birthday: Louis Armstrong was born in New Orleans in 1901.
His many hit recordings include "What a Wonderful World," "Ain't Misbehavin," "Stardust," and "Dream a Little Dream of Me."
His nickname was "Satchmo." short for "Satchel Mouth." He got the nickname because that's what his embouchure looked like. Embouchure is the technical term for the shape that a trumpet player's lips make when blowing into the instrument and the way he uses facial muscles. When Louis Armstrong played the trumpet, his mouth resembled something like a messenger bag, or a satchel bag, so he got the nickname Satchel Mouth, or Satchmo.
He loved New Orleans cooking and food in general, and he sang songs named "Cheesecake" and "Struttin' with Some Barbecue" and "Cornet Chop Suey." He also was very concerned about his weight, and he raved to his friends about how amazing his brand of laxatives were.
He helped popularize scat singing, that thing where jazz singers vocalize nonsense syllables — like "doo wop dee wa ba doobee doo" — often to the melody. His first big recording to use scat singing was "Heebie Jeebies" in 1926; he claims he dropped the papers with the lyrics, couldn't remember them, and started singing scat as a result.
He loved to write letters, he enjoyed dirty limericks, he smoked a lot of pot, and he embraced a bevy of Judeo-Christian religions. Whenever someone asked him about his religion, he said he was friends with the pope, raised Baptist in the South, and wore a Star of David around his neck.
He's the author of the memoirs Swing That Music (1936) and Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans (1954).
When asked to define jazz, he said: "Man, if you have to ask what it is, you'll never know."

Sunday, August 1, 2010

August 1. 2010


Before you were born of the week

It was on this day in 1981 that MTV — Music Television — had its premiere.

Meditation of the week


Fair play is primarily not blaming others for anything that is wrong with us.
 
--Eric Hoffer

As adults, we accept responsibility for our feelings and our circumstances. We haven't chosen our own troubles, but we have the job of dealing with them. If a man falls and breaks a leg, he might say to someone, "It's your fault, and I'll make you pay for this!" But that won't fix his leg. The healing still has to come from within.

Our impulse to blame others is an attempt to escape our responsibilities. We become overcritical. We want someone else to take the rap for our pain and our misdeeds, but this only delays our wholeness. There is no point in blaming ourselves either. When we first confront our discomfort directly and accept responsibility for dealing with it, we feel an inner urge to escape again. If we stay with the discomfort a while, a new stage begins -- the healing and acceptance stage. A feeling of wholeness comes, a feeling of being a real person, of having reached our full size.

May I not indulge in blame today - toward myself or anyone else. Instead, may I be strong and responsible.

Poem of the Week

Gil's Story

Gil tells you his story in the company truck
on your first job under his wing.
He cuts the engine and pulls

to the shoulder, which is alarming.
He's a big man who talks rough all day
to drillers, but you know he's kind—

everybody in the office says so. Gil's
a sweetheart, they say without elaboration.
He rolls to a stop and waits,

which prepares you, I think; it wipes
the fake smile off your face. He clears
his throat, then it streams like a steady well—

that lazy drive home from vacation,
his wife napping in the camper
before she and their daughter switch,

his careful introduction of the boy
who has drifted an entire lifetime
into their oncoming lane. It's beautiful

really, the way they crash into the boy's
car, how it parts the boy's curtain
of long blond hair and death anoints him

with a dot of blood on his forehead.
A single hubcap bounds like a tin deer
across the highway. Gil's frantic wife
pries the camper open to find their dead girl
whose eyes are closed as though
she's dozing through a horror movie.

Then silence. Gil turns expectantly to you.
As you sit speechless, he'll nod
at whatever sound or breath escapes you.

He starts the truck with a roar
and you're driving again to the field.
All afternoon he babies you with the pipes,

the pump, and the rig. And when you return,
the whole office comes out to greet you,
touching your shoulder, saying your name.

“Not that old” of the week

It's the birthday of filmmaker Ken Burns, born in Brooklyn, New York (1953), who has made documentaries about the Brooklyn Bridge, the Statue of Liberty, baseball, jazz, women suffragists, Thomas Jefferson, Mark Twain, and Frank Lloyd Wright, among other subjects. His nine-episode series on the Civil War, which came out in 1990, is considered his masterpiece. It won more than 40 major awards and more than 40 million people have seen it.

Video of the week

Puppies!

Websites of the week

10 Words For Things You Didn't Know Have Names