Sunday, January 4, 2026

Appreciation and Perspective

 Appreciation and Perspective


    The second day of 2026. Should be a good year. I woke up sick, so I did not go to work. I can submit Leave Without Pay time, and hopefully make up the hours of pay later.

    Money. It matters. We in the United States and everywhere care greatly about wealth, prosperity, production, comfort, affordability.

    I will continue to battle. We have awesome family and friends that sustain us.

    Love you! Still going.

    Peace.

   Pray that Venezuela works out. Bless Delcy Rodriguez and all the rest.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Many Can Feel Down at the Holidays - It is Not Abnormal

Many Can Feel Down at the Holidays - It is Not Abnormal

    Dear Elders, Sisters, Brothers, and Friends,

    Happy New Year! Today is the first day and now night of 2026. Are you down, maybe bummed? That is not too far fetched. It happens. Many of us in the northern hemisphere are in dark and cold times. That can reflect on our lives and feelings, our tender or fragile egos or characters.

    That is okay.

    You are okay. If you are physically ill, I am sorry. That happens. We hope and wish and pray that you recover soon! Herbal teas, warm comforters, blankets, comfy socks or gloves or other warm garments, perhaps nicer boots or ear muffs. I just heard about a nice young lady giving away her prized scarf to an older woman, to cheer her up and literally succor her.

    Read a warm story, or create your own. Write up a cheery letter for someone else. Think of someone who you have not thought of in a while, and send them a greetings. May not be much, but only something.

    Rest, sleep, or maybe you need do some pushups or the plank? Maybe you need to sweat? Maybe you have to re-read a special letter or note to you from a while ago? Or a special verse or story that makes the heart warmer?

    We do not have all the answers. I know that I do not.

    In Decembers past I have lost a few buddies that I have worked with. Soldiers who were smart, nice, capable. Rob and Nicholas. They were super nice to me, smart, and by most terms successful. But I guess the December blues or down times got to them.

    Can you do me a favor? Can you get through the cold months and live and love for another day, another week, another month, another year? Can you think of something that inspires you? Whatever it takes, whether it be just an extra nap, an extra snack, an extra something. 

    Pray. God will come through, with your patience and love. He has it all. 

    But we know that life is not always so clean and easy.

    Don't despair. 

    Keep going; things will get better. However, we understand that things can be hard.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

A Death in the Family

 A Death in the Family

    After twenty five years of a fruitful marriage, my wife thinks that I write a eulogy, obituary, or memorial homage of all those that die.

    Truth be told, I do not. I cannot. I believe that there are millions or at least hundreds of thousands of people who die, every day. I am woefully behind when it comes to writing about them all. I can only do so much. There are some eulogies that I could write, perhaps, even quasi-eloquently, that I have not. Some write-ups are more required than others.

    I would be remiss and ungrateful if I did not write and reflect on my father-in-law, who left this earth in the spirit early this morning.

    I saw him laugh, and love, and care, sharing with many, many people. He was upbeat, and funny; he had interests and unique qualities that were admirable. He made my wife laugh and smile. He taught her many things growing up that came in handy in her life and our shared life. He imbued in her many qualities that I have enjoyed for the last quarter of a century, and I hope to have another 25 to go, the fourth child of this young octogenarian. Or more than another twenty-five years with my spouse might be best. Like me, my wife is now a little more grown up since the passing of a parent. He will always be the dad that raised her and gave her her foundation. I am grateful to him for that.

    Steve was a man of many inner strengths, and external ones, too. He, like the rest of us, was by no means perfect. He knew he had limitations, like we all do. I remember when he was perhaps 72 or so years-old he sent out an email or text to his eight children and by extension the spouses and his dozens of grandchildren that it was hard to be able to keep up with all of them, and us, spread out from Virginia, Texas, California, Utah, and Washington. And sometimes further, like Mexico, Guatemala, Peru, and Sierra Leone. Understood. Life was not always as simple as we would like to have it, that is for sure. Communication and messaging is not that easy for many of us, especially when the numbers become more prolific.

    Steve brought love and joy to those that knew him, and maintained close relationships. But at times the relationships grew distant and there was some hidden strains of separation. Or how else to call it? But I know that the love and care that he was able to share was noted by those that knew and loved him. He would bother to pay attention to me, a distant son-in-law, even in his last days. He was surrounded by many who cared for him, including a dear grandson that he was able to relay his last word of thanks to shortly in his last breaths.

    My point of view is mostly farther and more distant than those that he raised and then later came to know, like his grandchildren and others. I met him a little after meeting his daughter in Southern California, about a half year after moving to the Golden State. Okay, I am not sure how long after our acquaintance, but it was enough time to know that I wanted to marry her, which might have been quite a few weeks in. Now that I think of it, had I proposed to her yet? Probably not... But I informed her father at the French style restaurant Mimi's that I was serious about his adult child and pursuing her, and she me, enough for marriage. Steve seemed agreeable, amiable, to my statement of intention;  I think that he more or less intimated back that if she was interested, that he would be good with the arrangement. Maybe he said that seemed like a decent enough guy.

    Later that spring I saw him and my fiancĂ© in his vehicle near his work in Redlands, California, while I was waiting in line for a play. Out of context, I was not sure who he was, smiling with shiny white teeth from the darkened cab, me without my glasses and having no idea that he was in a large black pick-up truck, then realizing my girl friend was sitting next to him! Papa Steve, as some called him. Dad and daughter riding together again.

    We went to Lake Havasu right before our wedding, he taking us out on a boat in the refreshing river waters, and sleeping in the hot desert night in and around his camping RV. Over the years we saw him in different parts of Southern California, with my wife seeing him more in his his later years in Washington State, which is where he finished out his days.

    82 years. How to measure those revolutions around the sun, the birthdates young to old? In children sired? Those progeny raised? In the grandchildren produced, as results of the children now made adults? In who the person loved, or assisted, or touched, or supported?  In his professions, his interests, his hobbies, his passions?

    How do we measure lives? In memories, feelings, gifts, times and experiences, lessons learned, looks, embraces, tears shed, laughs and smiles rendered.

    We visited with him on the East Coast when my wife celebrated a significant milestone. We took him to a number of places, as a family, but my wife was able to spend some times alone with him, including a dinner that she had with him at an Olive Garden, one I pass on the way to work every day. When I see it, this Italian food restaurant, I think of a past colleague that took my wife, children, and I there on his work voucher, treating us two adults and five children, followed by ice cream at a nearby mall. 

    Memorable to me, for sure, when getting a full family meal for his largesse, a friend and cohort from a previous place coming close to my home. Most of the kids, even though some were toddlers, still remember Kent's contributions there. But not my wife. The Olive Garden is where she ate with her dad.

    Fittingly so. That is where she ate with her dad.

    You see that Olive Garden? That is where Steve ate a memorable meal with his beloved daughter.

    'Tis so.

    He is gone now, in the new year with other family thinking and reflecting on his life of presence and love. Some mixed memories of melancholy and loss. Family and friends spread across the country and  globe. His spirit has moved to the next plain. The others are moving on with their lives, forever holding in their hearts and minds a man who was with them, brought them to the sea, the beach, the lakes, the mountains, to his plants and gardens, his garages and classic cars, his meals and movies, his jokes and stories.

    May his spirit, his life, his death and passing, his personality and his loved ones, be in a peaceful way, and the legacy of his light and hopes go on forever.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

Dystopian Stories Help Us Cope

 Dystopian Stories Help Us Cope

    Most, or many of the stories, are not that centered in reality, but some have very realistic qualities, which help us understand and deal with what is going on in the world, past, present, and future.

    Some classic stories by Orwell and Huxley tell very realistic portrayals of fiction, in my opinion.

    ---To BE CONTINUED. Things have happened; I must write up about some current happenings...

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Water and Pools Can Take us Away

 Water and Pools Can Take us Away

    There are people who swim on a normal basis. I know a few. Most of them do laps and get their exercise, both physical and mental. Some depend on it as a way to acquire the peace and comfort, or the way of life that allows them to be how they wish to be: strong, moving, working out, getting their limbs stretched and healthier and feeling better, their blood and heart and vital organs flowing and pumping well, to include the brain, which in the end is likely the main organ that drives everything.

    Water and ammonia and chlorine and H2O. That is therapeutic for a few I know; I am glad that they have this mode and mechanism to work out, swim, release their hormones or pheromones or demons or monsters or better angels, whatever the metaphor or process is. Exercise. At the pool, in the pool, going back to the chlorinated waters.

    Swimming. Doing laps. Moving. Churning. Completing strokes, achieving the goals set, the routines laid out. Making it across the pool tiles towards the next wall, the next flag, the next milestone.

    An active, healthy life. Life giving, generating, inspiring. Pools and waters help restore and relieve, assist in bringing the swimmer closer to what they seek. Respite, restoration, and all the good "r" words.

    Relaxation. Rest. Right living. Working in the lanes of restorative liquids and soul stimulation.

    Good on ya. With a clean bill of health. Water and pools, yay! To include hot tubs and spas. Hurrah for their life giving sustenance and presence!

    On the contrary, with waters and pools, rivers and oceans, lakes and streams, and even factory cesspools and pits of overflowing acids and gases and leaked oils and solvents, there is the dark side of what pools can do. Not to mention pools of blood or other human wastes. 

    Why so dark? Because with all good there is bad, with all light there is dark, with the appreciation for all things good and bright, there ought to be contrasts of what is good and bad, happy and sad, pleasant and painful. We can bring the good and meaningful from the polar opposites, those stories and realities that awaken us from ignorant slumber, prick our consciences from innocent ecstasy toward the harsh yet honest realization of mortality, in all its sheer beauty and depth.

    I know and know of some people who died in pools and bodies of water. It happens. We cannot, or at least I shall not, forget the things and places and people who perished by the very means in which others derive their blissful exercises and workouts, or carefree frolicking and play. Unlike the otters my sons and I saw cavorting in the pristine waters of Maine, these poor folks found their last breaths near the watery surfaces where they were attempting to recreate or play in. Not fair, not nice, but real. Hence my tales of their fates. James Joyce derived beauty and pathos from the cruel fates of death on contemplative nights under the cold, falling snow. I wish to share my own stories of reflective woe and remembrance, grateful for people and times past and tragedies survived. We make it past these hurdles and challenges, and count our numerous blessings.

    Not far from my house growing up there was a public pool where some poor victims drowned. I was there one day, maybe age ten or so, when a young man disappeared in the four foot area of the large Olympic-sized pool. He may have been partially obscured on that warm sunny day because of the swim lane chord with its plastic floating apparatus. What was supposed to separate the more organized, serious, if you will, swimmers, ended up being part of the end of this little guy. Was he older than me? Perhaps. Was he from the country, the outer neighborhoods and houses of Monroe County, or was he a townie like me? I never knew. I did not know him personally, but he impacted me.

    That otherwise normal afternoon he was moved to a gurney, then into the ambulance. They put an oxygen mask on his face. I saw them come and go, hushed or humbled by their movements and somber meanings. I do not think that he made it.

    Gone, after a would-be fun, summer pool day. He slipped, or never new how to really hold his breath, or how to float and paddle. He would never be a future boy friend, or older uncle, or cousin, or husband, father, and on. Not his fate. Not to be.

    Like my first grade mate Jeff Kinzer, who apparently went under the ice in a rural county country creek with his brother; maybe both perished in those frigid waters. Sunny or overcast, the Kinzer boys were claimed by the waters of unforgiving gripping and frigid tentacles likely close to their home. Out in the boondocks, where he was bussed into town to go to school with me. Water, hot, tepid, or cold, shallow or deep, fast moving or still, like a living thing, a monster capable of swallowing us whole. An Indiana frozen stream. Two boys not out of elementary school, laid down in their smaller states, together on earth and now in heaven. Forty five or more years ago, for me, for us, thinking of better sledding memories and experiences.

    We recall them, these watery victims, as shadows of who they might have been. Christmas past and future to not play out for them, like so many of us year after year. We should be relieved and thankful for our own lives kept and retained, that we did not meet these tragic circumstances wherever we have found ourselves.

    In the summer in my later twenties, the placid reservoir north of town, Lake Lemon, claimed the life of the roommate of Michael Van (name slightly altered), who was a young man from the nation of Colombia, who maybe did not know how to swim. Or maybe it was a severe cramp? Mike did not know him well, but noted the empty space left behind by this erstwhile friend and budding man in a foreign land.

    In Israel my roommate Shaeffer and I both pushed too far into a dark, water-filled corridor in a fun and refreshing water park. Israel, the land of living waters, for millions, almost snuffed out him or me. I was less threatened, as I held my breathe in that tunnel of water and did not dive as deeply in as him. His recounting was harrowing, and humbling. There for the grace of God, we kept enough air in our lungs and kept our brains alive and well, coming away from the Holy Land vibrant and ready for the next adventures of life. May we live forever!

    Some will drown in boating mishaps, some children will slip into pools in backyards, others may crash in from a bridge or a slick road. How many people drown per year? In our country alone? Across the world, it might add up to the millions. What of the Spanish Armada, for instance? Or the Chinese fleets making their way to Japan and its divine winds.

    The two boys of Santa Juana disappeared into the swirling quagmire of the local river, the great Bio Bio. This was the summer of 1990-1991, in Chile, where Christmas and New Year's are hot and dry. My missionary partner and I, Elder Newton, went to the home of the family and friends of the two young men that we would never meet. Maybe their bodies were never found? The river took them.

    A young man I knew at Brigham Young University, a native American or First Nation strong youth from upper British Colombia, Canada, was taken by his local river up there, somewhere. I knew he and his sister the summer of 1993, but when I saw her a year or so later she sadly explained that her younger brother died in a canoeing mishap. I was shocked. Was he wearing a life vest? I do not think that he had one. Either way, his life was over. She had left him up north. More than thirty years ago. Not married, not college graduated, a still photo capturing who he was to so many. What river fed by the Yukon or Northwest Territories, perhaps, or the Canadian Rockies of B.C. or Alberta. Which snows and ice became the liquids that would embrace, embalm, and snuff out this poor soul's spirit.

    It matters not. Some say it was meant to be. I beg to differ. We are not supposed to be drowned or have our heads knocked about by boats or rocks or waterfalls in streams and rivers, oceans and lakes. Right? We are not supposed to be sunken in battle ships, or crushed in submarine explosions, or freeze to death in ice berg sinking luxury cruises, or be swallowed up by titanic waves and overturned watercraft in storms or other crazy, wave-based anomalies.

    No, not supposed to happen. But it happens. Missionaries drowned by the beach in the Canary Islands, a rogue wave. Missionaries sank in a high Bolivian lake, the boat capsized. Regular ferry goers drown en masse in the Baltic Sea of Sweden, or the Bay of Bengal in India or Bangladesh, or the typhoon sweeps up a village of the Philippines, or a tornado and huge tempests sweep out camping girls in a Texas flood plain, or the hollows of the mountains of North Carolina.

    No, no, no! But alas, yes, yes, and so tearfully yes. Water comes in the least expected ways and flood and drown the dozens and hundreds of us. If not frozen or drowned at sea, some seamen and sailors are more horrifically consumed by the frenzies of the sharks, like the U.S.S. Indianapolis of World War II in the South Pacific.

    My beloved aged Arabic teacher, Helmy Raphael, who in his last breathe spoke to his partner teacher back in California, "I am going, I am going!", he exclaimed excitedly as he approached the Minnesota lake dock to allegedly take a trip in a kayak, by himself, without a life jacket.

    Helmy was found beneath the lake waters. Death by drowning.

    It happens. We of his last Arabic class attended his funeral at the local Catholic church, bigger than Egyptian-born Helmy's Coptic church, which would not contain the number to bid farewell to him, and his three adult children. Helmy lived out his life, and gave back to many, and us. His Arabic papers sit on our kitchen table this Christmas season as my son prepares to learn more of that ancient tongue, learning to speak the language of the Copts and the Orthodox of the Middle East.

    Jonah did not drown in the waters of the Mediterranean, on the way to Tarsus, Spain. John and Jesus dunked themselves in the River Jordan two thousand years ago, revivifying their lungs and spirits for greater climes and altitudes above. And thus to others, baptism represents death of the spirit and the body, but signifies the soaring nature of our souls: onward and upward, we will fill our chests and throats and mouths with the cries and songs of victory and glory.

    Hallelujah! Hosanna! We breathe in and out, absorbing the invigorating airs of freedom and love, gasping and grasping, forever beyond the clutches and pangs of the stultifying depths of the waters and oxygen-less atmospheres of the void of space, the waves of hate or apathy that wash over too much of humanity.

    Oh, no, not me! Stand back, deadly waters of the Red Sea, or the tempestuous crests of the Galilee, that would destroy wayward or little-faith fishermen of millennia-past. No, I will surpass these troubled waters, these bridges that buoy us and carry us beyond the inundations and craven storms of all times, both physical and mental, the life-giving and death provoking waters that might surge us ahead, refresh our souls, but a minute later soak us, sink us, and suffocate us to the point of no return. 

    What will it be, waters and waves of shores and rivers and lakes and pools that go on and on beyond the spaces of time and the universe?

    What will it be? 

    Life or death? I say to you and them all, I will take both: I will receive them all, and I will gladly hold my breath and subsequently open up my lungs freely to the waters and waves and surges and flows and lapping wakes, where I will go and who I will be what I was placed here to do.

    Take the plunge. I am coming in.

Sunday, December 21, 2025

Capitalism, Communism, the Quest for a Greater Good

 Capitalism, Communism, the Quest for a Greater Good

    Many people within the systems of capitalism look inward and and are self-serving, thinking of their own bottom line. That is too bad. We should live in ways that we can provide for own needs with less stresses and be able to help others. To live well and be generous to others. Most governments strive to address the needs of most of its citizens, to help all, or the majority of the population, thrive and succeed. We want to find a healthier way of living, while maintaining the public and private good.

    Marxism tried to make things fairer for the heavy laborer, or poor wage earner. The working class, or proletariat. For everyone, there was a hope of assisting all to be successful and productive. Less high income wealth, and more general prosperity. The less selfish state was going to be the vehicle to help overcome the chronic ills of endemic money and private ownership. Unfair wealth disparity.

    Life is not fair, my hard working electrical contractor dad always said. Is this what we must face?

    Capitalism versus communism. Not the only options, because there is also the socialistic options in between. There are also despotic authoritarian regimes.
    
    But we will will discuss these two main nodes of economy. Okay, maybe not flesh out the 

    Both ways have their serious problems and issues.

    We want the greater good, yes? Most of us. The majority wants the great society, as it has been called over the years. We want to be in a world where all of us can strive and thrive, where none of us are hungry, or always under the threat of missing the next pay check.

    Yet, too many of us are found in this way. Marx and Engels thought they had a plan to outdo the woes of Adam Smith and the rest of the western ways of economics. Owners and owned, the wealthy and those that serve. Servants.

    We all own things. Should some own the majority of everything? How do we share our freedoms and goods? What government systems and programs allow the most equality, or equity?

    Equity. Equality. 

    Can we achieve them? Equity is defined by being fair and just.

    What is fair and just? That a chronically sick or feeble person who cannot work receive hundreds and thousands of dollars or rubles or yen. How should we all earn our livings? What if there are those who cannot work? How much do they share?

    In the "free world" we vote for elected representatives that make laws that govern these principles. We vote for executives that uphold or implement those laws. The rule of law under principles and equity.

    Principles.

    Equity.

    Words to live and die by.

    Are these concepts worth fighting for? Dying for?

    What would we, individually and collectively, sacrifice for and even die for?

    We need police. We need militaries.

    We need God. Or religion. Or do we? We need humanitarian charities and philanthropic givers and donors, organizers and pro bono benefactors. Or do we?
 
    What does God, religion, and philosophy, all the secular ethical thinkers and postulators, all the heavy handed dictators and benevolent monarchs, the Chief Executive Officers, the bosses and managers, the judges and the chiefs, what do they all have to say about and do for the benefit of us all?

    Or, like us, the smaller time individuals, do they, these power arbiters, only control their own pieces of the pie? We can only do our parts of influence and help where we are found and operate.

    Yes.

    Communism versus capitalism. 

    Chile just picked Kast over Jara.

    They are both seeking the greater good.

    The greater pie remains 

    

Saturday, December 20, 2025

So Many Things Wrong with Me

 So Many Things Wrong with Me

    However, there are the things that are right.

    What can we say?