Thursday, April 23, 2026

What is Up with these Short Posts? This is blog-fation, in the Time of Hormuz Uber Stratification

 What is Up with these Short Posts? This is blog-fation, in the Time of Hormuz Uber Stratification

    I am finally getting through the big book the Silk Road, by Peter Frankopan.

    Is this tetchy? (A word that Frankopan, a British citizen, methinks, wrote in page 470 or so. Lots about Iran, with plenty of Iraq and Afghanistan. The Cold War, i.e. U.S.S.R., and us, of course, made them important. Oil and the sea access. Strategic areas. Links, as the Silk Road has always been.

    April Glaspie gave tacit approval for Saddam Hussein to take Kuwait? Hmmmm....

    Harold Bloom loved literature of all types, both prose and poetry.

    I read up on what the Yalie prized and treasured. Oh, so much!

    The modern stuff surprised me.

    Bloom. Rest in Peace.

    Good, night, Poeta.

    Que descanse en paz, tambien.

    Estas in el sur de Chile, ? o que?

Only One Post with Pablo Neruda? ?Que lo que que?

 Only One Post with Pablo Neruda? ?Que lo que que?

    I searched for what I wrote back in 2019. It came up fast with keyword search of Neruda.

    Huh. Only one mention? I guess poetry is not in me that much.

    I write it more than I read it. But then again, there is music and lyrics.

She Loves Me. She Loves me Not. She loves me Again. Still. Be Still. She Loves Me!

 She Loves Me. She Loves me Not. She loves me Again. Still. Be Still. She Loves Me!

    She loved me years ago. I know she did. I know that she did.

    She did! I know it.

    Time passes, I get lazy, I show weaknesses, I fail and I can be less than what I have planned, or hoped, or what was in store.

    She wonders. No wonder.

    Does she love me? Some times it is hard.

    Are there hopes stunted, hopes deferred, hopes blunted, hopes inerred?

    Yes.

    So we continue on.

    Hoping for the the best hopes.

    And hopefully love.

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

She Wants to Flee

 She Wants to Flee

    Sometimes I feel that she wants to be anywhere,

    But with me.

    That is okay, I guess.

    She loves the moon, and the stars, and the outdoors.

    She craves the air, and the night, or the day, and the sights.

    She needs the outside, and its freedom, and promise.

    That is okay. That is great.

    It is a large part of what makes her, her.

    As long as she comes back, I cannot complain.

    Too much.

The Young Single Adult Branch of Bloomington in the late 1990s, Going on Part II

 The Young Single Adult Branch of Bloomington in the late 1990s, Going on Part II

    Some of us moved to Indiana newly in the fall of 1997. I was back from a five year stint in mostly Utah, although some great stays in Chile and the Holy Land. Who else came with me that fall? John and Trevor Irwin, the contrasting brothers from Hurricane, Utah. The smart one could not find the address of where to return his rental truck, and circled the whole beltway of Indianapolis to finally get it back to where it belonged.

    Who else? David A. had gotten there some months before me, think. Paul Schumann had been there a year or so, maybe? He would be a graduate student who would introduce Ann (later A.) to David A., who would marry and go one to have four children together.

    Tricia Nagel joined the church that fall of 1997, and eventually married Jared Barker. Jared came back from the very wet mission in the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State. He did well in marrying Tricia. 

    Who else did we have? Jared Asay, James White, Liz Wood, Rhea Le Master, Dave Hawkins and his sister: I cannot recall her name! Megan Knight, Zlota, of Czech Republic. Tara Tribble. Chris Arick. He joined the Church (of Jesus Christ), our Young Single Adult Ward. We were good sized and growing. Julie Taylor, Sandy Padron, Kaaren Saafsten, Margeret Gingrich. There were more. 

    Ben Sweeney, Tim Young? Andre Snyder, Darxavia Stephens, Kristen Clark...


    To be continued...

The Young Single Adult Branch of Bloomington in the late 1990s, Going on and ...

 The Young Single Adult Branch of Bloomington in the late 1990s, Going on and ...

    Caitlin Shirts!

    Nicole Nichols!

    Her brother Eric!

And on...

    Real names, real people, real times, the end of the 20th century.

    A 19th century restored religion bridging into the the 21st...

    In the centralized state of Indiana.

    Stay tuned for more, dear readers. Should I used all the real names? Maybe not all...

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Nimit Moore of Mali - Gone Too soon in the Wilder Sahara

 Nimit Moore of Mali - Gone Too soon in the Wilder Sahara

    I watched "Out of Africa" with my wife last night. Made in the middle 1980s. I think that it won some Oscars back then. Robert Redford and Meryl Streep. Not bad. It shed light on parts of Kenya, and things between Europeans and Africans in the 1910s. Thought provoking, my wife commented. Yes. The local ethnic groups with their particular cultures and differences. She, as well as I, were interested in the dynamics and interests of the characters of the story. The woman, the man. The things.

    This morning I was thinking about her, my wife, in Morocco, interacting with many displaced nationals of French-speaking Niger. I think that there may have been some people in Ceuta, (Sebta), Morocco, enclave of Spain, from Mali as well.

    Nimit was from near Gao, Mali; perhaps within 50 miles of that town. Around 1984 ABC television did a spotlight of the drought and malnutrition occurring in Mali. An Indianapolis family adopted a boy that they saw on TV, Mohammad. He was Tuareg; later he wished to have his best friend come to him, so the Moore family of Bloomington adopted him. (Later they acquired another boy from Mali, Adam.)

    Things went well for a while. I met Nimit at my Scout Camp in rural Jackson County, Maumee, when I was 15, that first summer he was in the U.S. We were asked to clean some dishes in the mess hall kitchen. I remember being interested in his newness and the novelty of his change of lifestyle. He was kind of cool, as the local paper explained. I had read up on him. Years before the Internet.

    My parents lived in West Africa. Togo and Sierra Leone. Some things about the continent and the peoples there spoke to me. Later, people I knew like Joseph Hill and Robert Bogh had further, deeper experiences and lessons there. Greater West Africa. In Sierra Leone, Senegal, and into Mali. And other lands. I know a good deal of people, including the natives themselves, of most of the nations of Africa. Quite a place.

    I saw Nimit again after my South American mission in the summer or fall of 1992. Maybe he was a freshman? He was three years younger than me, as I see it based on ages mentioned in articles. He had plans, and went through with them, to set up tours of his home country.
    
    It all went tragically awry when he brought his American family there in January 2001. A local tribesman, perhaps resentful or jealous of Nimit, shot and killed him. A long rifle, I presume, to Nimit's forehead. The man was never charged.

    Articles celebrate and lament the life of Nimit.

    I do that here, now. Blessed to have known him. He inspired me, and many others.

    Africa, with its billions, living and dead, has done more good to the world than bad.

    Nimit was among the best of them.

    We thank God for him. His memory will live on.