Clinch It Sooner or Later
Blogging about life, sports, news, books or literature, faith, and many other things.
Friday, January 17, 2025
Bob Uecker RIP; Thanks for all the Laughs
Thursday, January 16, 2025
Hoosier Men Be Stinky -- Basketball Team is Getting Whooped
Hoosier Men Be Stinky -- Basketball Team is Getting Whooped
Monday, January 13, 2025
All You Need is 14 Saves to be Among the Best Thousand Closers of All Time
All You Need is 14 Saves to be Among the Best Thousand Closers of All Time
1. | Mariano Rivera+ (19) | 652 | 1283.2 | R |
2. | Trevor Hoffman+ (18) | 601 | 1089.1 | R |
3. | Lee Smith+ (18) | 478 | 1289.1 | R |
4. | Kenley Jansen (15, 36) | 447 | 868.1 | R |
5. | Craig Kimbrel (15, 36) | 440 | 809.2 | R |
6. | Francisco RodrÃguez (16) | 437 | 976.0 | R |
7. | John Franco (21) | 424 | 1245.2 | L |
8. | Billy Wagner (16) | 422 | 903.0 | L |
9. | Dennis Eckersley+ (24) | 390 | 3285.2 | R |
10. | Joe Nathan (16) | 377 | 923.1 | R |
11. | Jonathan Papelbon (12) | 368 | 725.2 | R |
12. | Jeff Reardon (16) | 367 | 1132.1 | R |
13. | Troy Percival (14) | 358 | 708.2 | R |
14. | Randy Myers (14) | 347 | 884.2 | L |
15. | Rollie Fingers+ (17) | 341 | 1701.1 | R |
16. | Aroldis Chapman (15, 36) | 335 | 760.0 | L |
17. | John Wetteland (12) |
LDS Church Growth- Logging in to Make Comments- Can be Tricky
https://www.blogger.com/comment/fullpage/post/2786908254617003646/4055522756426628880?pli=1
Post comments.
Cannot
Had to log in special.
Saturday, January 11, 2025
Global Warming: It's a Thing
Global Warming: It's a Thing
Thursday, January 9, 2025
L.A. Dreams, Fires and Mayhem
L.A. Dreams, Fires and Mayhem
Mexico: An Itinerant History Chapter 8 La Bufadora and Ensenada Segunda Parte
Mexico: An Itinerant History Chapter 8 La Bufadora and Ensenada Segunda Parte
Ach, nein! I lost the Second Part, after finishing it this morning.
Problems with posting and saving. Had problems with other sites like this.
Basically, I wrote about the four people that did not go on the chartered van to La Bufadora.
80-year-old mother and grandmother (and great-grandmother) born and raised in Pasadena, California.
77-year-old father, step-father, and all of the above, born and raised in San Diego, California.
50ish year-old wife, born and raised in San Bernardino.
40ish year-old sister-in-law, born and raised in San Bernardino.
I broke down some of their backgrounds, some of how they may view Mexico based on their perspectives. Living in southern California with many Mexican-Americans, the various travels that they have done and experiences that would give them insight into a visit like this, to downtown Ensenada, with good reminiscing and service and relaxing.
PUBLISH CHECK.
The matriarch of 8 children and umpteen grandchildren, in the 30s now, plus the next generation, she lived in Provo, Utah, shortly, was married in Hawai'i, and taught for decades in highly Latino San Bernardino, both as a public middle school teacher and community college professor. She learned quite a bit of Spanish, enough to communicate many things.
She has been the mother to full-time missionaries to Portugal (and Cape Verde), Spain (and Morocco), the Philippines, and Spain again. I lived in her home for two years while I served in the Spanish branch in the Waterman building, mixing with Mexicans, Mexican-Americans, Salvadorans, Guatemalans, and some extractions of Colombia, Peru, and few other outliers.
She has definitely been in and around Mexicans and the country, she has many life interactions with the peoples of Mexico and those that have come and gone.
Zoltan, as he has been known, fought in the Vietnam War as a Marine. He returned, injured, surviving a IED explosion, and drummed. He had two sons, both of whom married a European, an Italian and a German. That is an American thing, right? Marrying outsiders and all becoming one big melting pot. Zoltan recently retired for good, done with the junior college career after selling outdoor pools most of his adult life. He had been to Mexico a little bit, but not as much as the grandma (we call her abuela because of the proliferation of grandmothers), and I believe he can give you the rundown on the U.S. -Mexico relations over the decades.
My wife grew up going to Mexico, to Ensenada beaches, not too far from home, then with her mom, her best friend, and her mother to Guadalajara and Puerto Vallarta, of the big jewels of Jalisco state, a place that I desired to go to many years later, having my own journey to discover the places in Mexico to go. Trying to catch up with my wife. She and I did our trips together, mostly between 2000 and 2005, plus the 2018-day trip to Tijuana. Was that 2018, or the year before or after? It was mostly a Doheny Beach reunion, near San Clemente, Orange County. My wife and I checked out the historically significant San Juan Capistrano mission up the road. Earlier iterations of Mexico.
My wife and kids made it Roatan, Honduras, and two more stops in Mexico along the Caribbean, including the big excursion to Chichen Itza, in the heart of the Yucatan. This was end of the year 2021.
We divide and conquer Mexico, like the time I walked into Ciudad Acuna, Coahuila.
The sister-in-law, like my wife, grew up going to the Baja Peninsula (North), and later married a man who lived in Chile, so now she has been there twice. Based in the nice suburbs of Dallas, they now go abroad and see different countries. I am impressed by what she learns of the local histories and cultures. She has gone to Mexico on some trips with her family, including to the northeast Sea of Cortez. She sent her oldest daughter to a mission in and around Phoenix, Arizona, where she worked mostly with Mexicans and Spanish speakers in that part of the States, which is a huge mix of all of the peoples.
So, the four of them had a good time eating and relaxing in Ensenada, near downtown, while the 18 of us others went to the three stops in about 8 hours. More of that in the Tercera Parte.
UPDATE: President-elect Trump has been talking a lot of international geography, like Panama, and Greenland, and even the Gulf of Mexico, which he thinks would be better known as the Gulf of America.
Claudia Scheinbaum, the first female Mexican president, came back with a few retorts, which I do not blame her for. While Prime Minister Trudeau is now ending his lengthy Canadian reign, there is discussion about they become our "51st" state. Yes, ridiculous.
But, that is what we get with open elections and free society.
Long live freedom. And the United States. And Mexico! ! Viva mejico! Viva la revolucion continua.
TO BE CONTINUED...