Thursday, April 18, 2024

Too Many Die Young

 Too Many Die Young

    For most of those who live to be old, it is a beautiful thing to die in the later years, with wrinkles and age spots.

    A five-month-old just died this week, not too far away. 

    A month before this a young mother of a newborn passed, just weeks after the birth of the baby son.

    My college age daughter's friend's friend died in a car accident this week.

    My old colleague (former, that is), died a month and a week ago, changing a tire, to a reckless drunk named Carlos. My friend was 30 as of February. He lived his last breath a short month later.

    Natural diseases and accidents take so many as it is, we do not need wars, crimes, and violence.

    I wish we could learn this better.

    Ukraine, Palestine, Sudan.


    ENOUGH! 

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Israel and Iran: This is Looking Quite Severe

 Israel and Iran: This is Looking Quite Severe

    Not sure how this is going to develop, but it does not look very peaceful right now.

    Israel withstood a few hundred attacks, retribution for the Gaza campaign since last October.

    Tough year for the Holy Land, 2024.

    We all have friends and sympathies there, no?

    Sorry, very sorry for this.

Saturday, April 13, 2024

Golf and the Black Man

 Golf and the Black Man

    Two subjects that I know less about than many, golf and black men, but the two things combined has my interest this weekend. Indulge me, please.

    For the record, I have little experience with the game of golf. It has mostly been peripheral to me, compared to many other sports. I do not play golf, I do not watch it much. I started paying more attention to it in the late 1990s when Tiger Woods came on the scene. Like many Americans or perhaps millions of others around the world, many of us started to care and pay attention. I had a serious girlfriend, for example, who raved about Tiger. She was white, if that matters. That fact might have increased my awareness, I suppose. Others everywhere were talking about him more in the media, too.

    He transcended the sport in many ways.

    Until a Black guy (his mom is of Thai ethnicity) broke into this sport, it seemed that this slow-moving and rather dull competition was an elite, wealthy, white man's thing. Wrong or not as a characterization, Tiger brought a lot more eyes to the golf. This is hard to argue against.

    It is a sport that requires some wealth or special access to play and be a part of, in most quarters of the world. Many Black communities had little or no access to it. I did not have much of it, although I could have had I pressed or cared. But, I did not. I played basketball, ping-pong, other sports. I was decent at swimming, playing some football, baseball, volleyball, tennis.

    Conjecture about Some People and Thinking

    I know a lot more about basketball and people who play that sport. Perhaps basketball has been over-indulged by me? It is more accessible and real to me. For me, (and I believe many folks) golf is still more a wealthy, staid, and boring affair, in general. However, it has become more diverse and open to more of the masses, to its credit. Which has brought newer and more diverse eyes to it. I know that some of the best NBA players of all time, Michael Jordan and Charles Barkley, have spent a lot of time caring about golf. Neither of them grew up with golf, I presume, and maybe I am wrong-- but nonetheless, neither could become elite in this game despite their efforts and interests, plus a lot of money and wagering.

    Welcome to the "white man's world", some might say? The rich man's sport? That may be too simplistic a depiction, or some might accuse me of being racist for thinking such a thing. Again, I am not Black. In my 50 plus years of living on the planet, I have gotten to know and be friends, colleagues, and at times intimate partners with many men and women of African-American heritage. Incidentally, this past month a buddy of mine was killed by a drunk driver: I thought of him a lot. He was a great Black man, and race or nationality or no, he was a sweet person. And, for the record, I have reflected the last few years of my time in the military, and generally I have concluded that my cohorts of the African-American demographic have been better than some of the white people that I have dealt with, on average. This has been in my head, admittedly.

    I think of it as a realistic assessment, my views of golf being more a cultural part of the U.S. and the globe's white world, from what I know. Again, I could be wrong, but please continue to indulge my thoughts. The history of segregation and less visible involvement of ethnic minorities and golf is relatively an easy call. 

    Tiger's Psychology and Uniqueness

    Many of us know or at least believe that the U.S. military brought new opportunities to the African-American community in our country over the last generations, more and more since World War II. I think that Tiger's dad was one of these people. He also, (again, gathering this from a general observation) met Tiger's mother because of the dad's service in the Army. Perhaps his dad would have met her otherwise, but I believe the Army set up this connection.

    Tiger himself was a product of the Army father socially, for instance, how at young age he was disciplined and exposed to the game of golf in the first place, likely due to military privileges. Later in life, as a peak performer and one of the best golfers of all time, I read in a lesser publicized article (around 2009?) that Tiger seriously hurt his knee doing serious training with Army special forces, many of whom did not know what Mr. Woods was with them doing that to begin with. But, Tiger was driven to work out and train with them. This vital body part damage, to his knee, as well as the others that affected Tiger over the years, like from notable car accidents, may have been the most detrimental to his overall career and current state of not being able to be as he once was. Who knows?

    It has been established that had Tiger not been an amazing golfer, that he was fascinated and driven by Army elite performers. This is coming from interviews with him.

    Again, I am no expert on golf, nor men who are Black, nor this celebrity but I throw this out there to make us wonder how we are in 2024. And specifically, the first and still rare Black man who so affects the perception and history of this sport. Tiger has performed very poorly the third day of the Master's this month, a venue that he has owned as younger man, a generation ago. Injuries and age have caught up with him. His arms and physique look great, for being 49-years old. I am not sure about his brain and mental stamina, but maybe his legs and more reportedly his back ailments are the major impediments to him having success. But could the Army setback be the worst of it?

    Is this the curse of his life, the same military lifestyle that exposed him (perhaps) to this sport, gave him the desire or quest to be like the military elites that his dad knew while he was a child? And that isolated him from his own age peers, and kept him connected to these men who knew military lives? Did his dad's practice of driving Tiger on the courses and away from his peers turn Tiger into who he would become?

    I read that Tiger did not have many same-age peers as a child, but was better friends with his dad's adult military friends. Tiger was abnormal, which help him prepare for a life of lonely, austere, concentrated competition and skill. Those older men, among them his father, were his heroes and intimate partners. His dad's loss may have exacerbated the longing for Army guys, and his own quest to be a powerful soldier, hence leading him to work out with the Rangers or Green Berets and messing up a crucial part of his physical apparatus for life. Perhaps. 

    I do not have the answers. But some of these questions are worth pondering, and reflecting on, in my opinion. By the way, I would like Tiger to win another 4 grand slams to be the all-time champion in the sport. Many think that it will not happen. Blame it on the Army, maybe. Both credit and blame go to this institution, and the psychology of the super star who was in it at birth. As being of a certain age myself, born in the 1970s, I would like to see the old record fall. However, the military may be the ultimate thing that gave occasion to and reduced the chances for this outcome. 

    I could be way off. But maybe not.

    

Tuesday, April 9, 2024

I get Heart Ache about Basketball, while children and families are starving

 I get Heart Ache about Basketball, while children and families are starving...

    Babies have died of malnutrition and starvation now in 2024.

    I have done little to nothing but complain a little, a few times in person and in social media.

    Shame on all of us. We are sick monsters way too much.

    We do not get it.

UConn Huskies, the Men, Win their 6th - Three coaches? Ugh, I am jealous and exhausted...

 UConn Huskies, the Men, Win their 6th - Three coaches? Ugh, I am jealous and exhausted!


    Yes, as a lifelong Indiana Hoosier fan, the Huskies have me questioning all things. Well, many things.

    Not even the home grown Purdue rivals could stem the inexorable tide from Storrs. Storrs! Whoever heard of such a thing?

    Purdue, the Boilermakers I was forced or obliged to root for, hopefully bringing my home state and the Big Ten conference more glory and cache, could not do it. They had a couple of chances, but loose balls and calls, and ultimately shots did not go their way.

    I saw a Boiler woman crying. Poor thing. Her face was red and her nose was distinctive, practically aquiline. Hawkish? Pointed? Yeah, whatever. Purdue girl.

    Indiana has not touched the championship realm for 22 years. As long as our oldest has been alive.


    How time marches on. Stop the Huskies! Help us all...


    I could go on about more details, like I have another college team that choked first round, but my native Hoosiers turned down the NIT... Not in the Tournament.

More. Later. Humph.

Wars and their Awful Aftertaste, Ramifications

 Wars and their Awful Aftertaste, Ramifications

    A few days ago Israeli Defense Forces, which has inarguably been being too drastic and brutal in its war ...

Began April 3. Now the 9th, things need to change.

Monday, March 25, 2024

Religious and Eternal Questions

 Religious and Eternal Questions

    This has been a good religious month for me, overall. I was able to help lead a Bible class, the second time in a row, from the month before, and there were good students with faith in Jesus Christ and the Bible. We prayed and communed together, and shared our faith in God.

    I went to church yesterday, and peace and... conviction, or resolve, were there. I was set apart to be a missionary.

    I have family members who are working for the Lord, representing Him worldwide.

    Things with work are all right, family is doing okay. Children are moving along.

    Close to, and working with things. Learning and growing, within my Christian faith and knowledge of the world and other beliefs. Other thinking, worship, philosophies.

    Political systems and governments, we all work and live to buy and be remunerated by the systems under which we work.

    Not so great in Israel and Palestine, Russia and Ukraine, and other countries, like Yemen and few others. Libya has done better lately, it seems. Some African countries always have problems, like Somalia. Nigeria has not been great lately, some bad kidnappings and their regular shenanigans.

    Haiti is a shambles, lately, I must not forget that. Ecuador has had its share of heavy happenings.

    My faith, my particular faith, is going forward well internationally, but we lose a lot of our youth over the last years. People in the media glom on to cases of extremists and bad examples, but the organizations and its members continue to grow and expand.

    And Christianity in general is still going forward, as the nones (those who claim no religion) are still growing stronger, day by day. Muslims grow, but the Taliban and ISIS and a few others give them and us real headaches. Moscow and Russia have been recent targets, and after Chechnya in the 1990s, it makes total sense to me.

    Hindus are being robustly strong in India, to the detriment of Muslims, and the Sikhs, who hold their grudges from many decades past.

    The streaming devices seem to attack beliefs and organized religions more than bolster or boost them. The bottom line (money) comes to light. Too much violence, way too much sleaze in language and sexual actions, pornography...

    These things take the place of our holy wishes. Some call it art.

    We are all pushed and pulled by these factors, some more than others.

    My friend Bobby was attracted and tempted. He died in LA, not long after arriving. I wonder if Jeremy was pulled that way...

    My battle buddy Gregory B. was killed three Sunday mornings ago.

    I hope to see all of them again.

    I have hope in eternal life.