Tuesday, April 25, 2023

October 6-7, 2019 Communications

This was when my oldest daughter had left the home for college, and it took getting used to. I was trying to establish a line of communication via writing since we both like to do that.

Childhood Issues

    Thanks for the opportunity to contemplate and try to answer questions about things to talk about, related to the inner self. Rich topic, indeed.

    When I was attending UCLA and you were a baby (2001-2003), a couple of Scientologists got to know me during the Bruin Walk, a time for fellow students to meet each other on campus; they were interested in sharing with me and potentially converting me, bringing me into their faith like I felt like I done with dozens of people till that point in my life to mine. I knew the ups and downs of attempting to share my personal beliefs with others and receiving indifference or even scorn, so I decided that I would show some interest and accept some of their lessons. After all, apart from not wanting to be hypocritical to entreat others as I would wish to be entreated, was I not in graduate school to learn?

    I shared two sessions with them, and between those discussions and having purchased a 50 cent copy of Dianetics, I learned that they believed that confessing all the pains and turmoil up until the person was first conceived in the womb would help the individual become “cleared”. To be rid of all stress and angst that weighs us all down. These beliefs were founded on the teachings of their founder, L. Ron Hubbard, a person I had heard about from years before, so some of this exploration was scratching some itches that were among my curiosities from my years as a teenager. They thought, according to my understanding, that even hard times while in the mother’s womb would weigh an adult down throughout their life! So then you have to get “cleared” to be healed, essentially confess all your weighty pains of life. Apparently Tom Cruise and John Travolta had achieved this status, and this was part of their success. Success in Hollywood, a topic for another day…

    I don’t know how much stresses or tendencies from early childhood tell us about ourselves. Our family was very attached to a baby that was abused so young before being with us, and I hope she is not tormented by those early months of her life all these decades later. Truly awful, abuse.

    Mom would usually put you to sleep with her milk, and ever so carefully try to lay you down without you waking and wailing for more mommy’s comfort. Sometimes I could rock you to sleep and carefully lay you in your crib like you were some delicately sensitive explosive ordnance, ready to explode with any slight touch or misstep. Yeah, you would cry for comfort in the first months. I am not sure if it was from TV or a book, or some expert in person, but the advice was to let you (after maybe 5-8 months, I guess), to let you cry hard in your crib when we knew you were good and tired, and that after 10-15 minutes you would learn to go to sleep on your own. I believe an episode of “Friends” has a similar funny incident with a baby that two of the characters share. I think all parents know this feeling.

    I still remember watching the door behind which you cried yourself to sleep that first real night of letting you be more independent. I recall having to assure Jen that you, and she, would live. She had a hard time letting go, which was fine for the first so many months. Of course she was the one arising 2-4 hours later to feed you again, normally in a rocking chair by your crib. Sometimes you might come into our bed, but probably not too often. And, I always felt reassured that she as a full time care taker helped your little soul that you were never truly abandoned, just that good night time meant you could lay down without our direct touch.

    Driving was a chore sometimes, esp, same ecially if we forgot the binky. You would get very loud and upset without the blessed pacifier. That lasted maybe till you were 18 months? Two? And at 12 months almost to the day you rejected breast milk and went to the bottle. That was nice, neat, and kind of funny. No more of you, mama! It was a nice transition. At church you could be restless and I or mom would follow you out into the foyer, or we would at least sit at the end of the pew so you would not escape. You would try, and always there were times that you would slip under the benches and end up a few families away. I cannot remember if any of the other kids were as rambunctious as you in those early years. In L.A. the foyer had stairs and I had to make sure that you would not fall down. Up. Down. Up again. You were set to move. Like the time we lost you after church and circled the chapel many times, freaking out (especially Mom), until we found you chasing around other toddlers of slightly older ages. Whew!

    More than once there would be a movie on that would upset Jennifer (not hard to do, like when the police are laying into Rambo), and you would spontaneously cry from the next room. Jen and I would look at each other like it was no accident. You were connected, I am sure of it. Same milk, same blood, same genes. It was always interesting to me when a baby got to nine months; that meant they had achieved more life outside the womb than inside. Amazing.

    That is some about you.

    Me as a dad has an influence, and perhaps I can provide insight there to chew on.

    From 2002 to 2005 I took the foreign service exam yearly, and failed it at some level. I had thought that I was built for the State Department, but they didn’t. The lack of success or direction in things like that lead to us being in Chile, for example, where the money and work were not the sure thing of spending money on everything that came to mind. You, at that age, would daily ask for an ice cream when we lived in the peaceful town of Angol. A bar or sandwich of helado maybe cost 100-200 pesos, or better ones for 300-400. A half dollar to a dollar. I would try to explain to you sometimes that we needed to save our money to make sure we had enough for all our needs. Meanwhile, at least one if not both of my parents would scold me for troubling you about money concerns at such a young age. “I never bothered you about those things, Eddie”. However, I do remember my dad being extremely irate with me when I lost a toy plastic Mountie while in Niagara, Ontario. It was probably more the duplicated effort of purchasing the toy again, as he wound up doing. Funny how we can still feel the heat of tempers after all these years. 1976, the year was, pretty clear in my memory banks to this day!

    We tried pretty hard to make you a bilingual in Spanish, but similar to a Chinese linguist that I came to know in 2012, he said his little four or five year-old finally pleaded with him: “Pae (dad), no more Portuguese, okay?” He told me this with a little tear in his eye, the language loving earnest father returned missionary from Brazil. He also spoke Hebrew and German; he wanted his oldest to at least know two growing up.

    Entertainment has always been challenging. I remember you crying yourself to sleep after you saw the scary scene from I Am Legend, and me feeling guilty for terrorizing a tender mind. I have watched a lot of TV and film that is considered disturbing most of my life, and I have to compartmentalize times and places to “get away with it”, which sometimes means staying up way too late, which can also be unproductive or unhealthy for parents and children alike. Some things I have to see or witness, or experience. Some of that quandary or paradox might be explainable in My Name is Asher Lev. I feel like that book explains me, a bit. Chaim Potok really speaks to me. I have read almost all his books. I should re-read a few, too.

    With sports, as obsessive and time consumed and madly entranced with so much of them as I am, at least they do not have questionable content when it comes to adult themes and violence and things for not-mature audiences, so within the worlds of sports I can feel that I am not corrupting others in my choices of entertainment as much as otherwise. Maybe simply neglecting their needs, by not sharing the same likes as theirs (people I live with) in endless games and competitions that have little meaning to the people that I share my life closely with, like animation and romances, yes, but not outright offending them with stories of war or skewed sci-fi, or crime and intrigue. I was always encouraged for your penchant for reading; I loved how you devoured both the worlds of Tollkien and Lewis. You did not have as much an interest in science fiction, at least you did read the first Star Wars book, at my behest, but Clarke and others would not hold your interest as much as fantasy. When I tried the female author that I enjoyed, McAffrey of the Dragon series, it appeared that a character living out of wedlock was too scandalous to introduce, or perhaps that was your alabi for showing little interest in the author or series. Although, that reasoning was consistent with some of the later books of L’Engle, of Wrinkle in Time fame.

    Anyway, there is also the whole to-do about my history (now yours) with War and Peace, which could be psycho-analyzed one hundred and one ways, hopefully not in solitude (humor: see Garcia Marquez). Oh, 6th grade English teacher Mrs. Albright, so cute and cheery! What would you think of me now? Passing along generational guilt and laziness…

    Speaking of laziness and motivation, there is a whole other ball of wax to delve into later…

    But we shall broach those subjects later, ‘kay?

    Thanks for sharing! Enjoy.

    Love, Dadderonio



Sunday, April 23, 2023

I do not Define Myself by my Skin Color - Others Do

I am not defined by my race - Others Define Me as Such 

    In the times since the protests of 2020, we are now approaching 2023. I am still thinking about definitions, labels, skin color, race, privileges, economics, racism, discrimination, and all the privileges and defined limitations that those things imply. The media, in radio, television, film, Internet, our social digital communications, constantly assure us that race and skin color define who we are, what we do, what opportunities are afforded to us.

Attempted to flesh out 18 November 2022. Failed.

More later...

    


Staying Away from Vices

 Staying Away from Vices

    I was thinking about a guy that was friends of a few other college dormmates who all hailed from Cincinnati. I got to know him and them when I moved into the dorms. He was a tall guy, he seemed pretty nice, and he was talented. I heard that years later he became addicted to pornography, and that perhaps things were not that great for him. He was divorced, his life was not that promising as he had seemed in the early stages of when I knew him.

    Pornography can become a vice, we learn.

    Drugs, gambling, sexual addictions, all forms of habitual and unhealthy vices. Some think that religious activity and dependency can be a vice or a compulsive habit. Video games, watching sports, there can be other vices that overcome or overwhelm us. Alcohol, of course.

    We have to stay clear from habits and addictions that can trap us. Some seem innocuous, non-harmful.

    Some think that marijuana is non-harmful or non-addictive. I heavily disagree.

    There may be some medical uses for cannabis that are beneficial to the user, but the recreational part is a lie. I know some who become addicted to this weed and its abuse, and I think that it drives some to psychosis, suicide, mass-shootings, and general malaise.

    Yes, I have said it before, and I will say it again: I believe that THC use and abuse is causing some elements of our society to go more psychotic and wind up going on shooting sprees.

    I have claimed this observation and asserted to others, even police and military analysts. Many have questioned the accusation and beg for evidence. They question the logic.

Fine.

    But rest assured, vices are bad. And not all bad habits lead to death and destruction, but many of them do. Too many of them.


Shawnee and Thom

 Shawnee and Thom

    I wanted to explain a couple of things that have stood out to me lately.

    American Indian or Native American tribes have had their impacts on the world. Each one has their ways and influences. Last year I learned about the three major cultures of Southeast Alaska when I visited there. One of them is the Tlingit, for example. The other two are on or in my peripheral memory. I have met and known some Tlingit people over the years, not as much with the others.

    Where I grew up in Indiana the Shawnee peoples are one of the foremost tribes that go back in the region and history. Growing up I tried to learn and read a lot about native peoples, the indigenous of the Western Hemisphere and elsewhere. It made sense to understand the world around us better by understanding some of these groups, not just traditional Western history and culture.

    I cannot recall which happened first, but my mother gave me a copy of "From Sea to Shining Sea", which is about an American family and its members that made a significant impact on our United States legacy. It is the Clark family that were Virginia gentry, then eventually provided the Lewis and Clark expedition to the Pacific Coast, a then undiscovered area, by way of the upper Inter-Mountain West Rockies.
    
    James Alexander Thom does a pretty amazing job of writing this book and others. He brings to life our shared American history. My sophomore year of high school I met Mr. Thom, who was kind enough to visit my class. I spoke to him; he was gracious and kind. He was a special person who wrote masterfully and with a profound sense of the culture of the Shawnee and other peoples in our shared history. He married Dark Rain, becoming an honorary member of the Shawnee, producing some intense and probing literature about the native tribes and the interaction with the greater cultures of our world.

    Fast forward more than three decades and I find myself in Virginia, the place of the Commonwealth of the Clarks, and friend of my full-blooded Shawnee friend from Kentucky, not too far from my hometown in southern Indiana, where Thom lived and died.

    Thom died this year in January. This year of 2023; I read up on it a few weeks ago, this spring. He lived a long life, relatively, and made an impact for the better.

    Long live his soul, his thoughts, his energies, and the Shawnee peoples.

    I think I explained what I wanted to say.

    Oh, yes, that copy of his book all about the coast to coast Clark family? It is missing by me. I think that I loaned it out, but I am not sure where or to whom. Maybe my friend who deployed to Iraq a couple times has it? Who knows? But, the book was internalized by me, and it is out there.

    Like the soul of James and others. They are looming. As the Shawnee. As the Tlingit. As the rest of us.



Saturday, April 8, 2023

Defending Jesus

 Defending Jesus

    A lot of people on the earth are very confident in the role, purpose, and mission of Jesus Christ. It is big, it is awesome for those that believe. I am one of them.

    Jesus the Anointed One covers a lot of ground. If we have faith in Him and repent, we will have peace and will inherit a lot of rich things. If we worship Him and follow His Commands to the best of our ability, we will have everything worth having.

    If He is lying, then we have to resort to something else. Perhaps Judaism, Islam, Buddhism, or Hinduism, or another supernatural or cosmically divine plan would be the ticket. Atheism seems pretty harsh. It could be true, but that remains to be seen. There could be nothing else at the end of this life other than converting to other molecules.

    But for now I am firm believer that Jesus is who He says He is.

    I also believe that He has a proper authority, a priesthood, or priesthoods, that He wants us to abide by. I believe that He has apostles, and many priests, and all people share this priesthood of Him and His Father. Our Heavenly Father, who is God above.

    How does all this take shape?

    We all have to do our best to find out; try to figure out where we fit in the plan. 

    The Plan. 

    We all fit, we are all a part of it.

    We matter to Him, and He is our Savior.

    God bless us all to find and embrace these things.

 
 


    

Waging Wars and Battling On - Summative Poetry

Waging Wars and Battling On - Summative Poetry

    We choose our battles, while others are thrust upon us

    We travel and seek out the things that inspire and remind (us)

    Who we are. What we do. What we think and believe.

    
    Poverty, yea, hunger, is a pickle-

    Wars and battles of lifetimes and personas

    
    The endless bouts of slavery and wages and work/power struggles

    
    We visited the humble cabin of one great president, struck down in hatred,

    Whereas we pay a handsome stipend for a tour of an earlier national leader, who

    Owned hundreds, and sired children with at least one of them, a girl from youth,

    Sally, whom he convinced to return from Europe, with promise of freedom

    For their children.


    Their children.


    Theirs are ours; we have inherited a legacy of love and hate, 

    Toil and prosperity

    Powers and divisions.


    We, the greatest country in the world.

    The most powerful the world has ever seen, ever known.



    We alight the streets in rage when a poor man on drugs was abused

    Mishandled and killed by police.

    Now locked up for the foreseeable future.


    It is 2023. A cold, but sunny and somewhat restful Saturday...

    For many of us.


    Go to places on the map and there are battles:

    Israel, where settlers and residents take one another's blood

    Missiles launched

    Across the border in Syria, the factions continue to shoot and push one another.

    U.S., Russians, Turks, and Iranis push their forces


    Some might call it the Great Power Game, going on hundreds of years


    Where else?

    Fighting amongst the cartels of Mexico, which is lamentably typical

    Blood-letting among our U.S. gangs

    Shots and bullets killing more than even the active shooters

    Of which there are not a few


    There are Islamic jihadi movements in Africa, at least 10 countries

    There is the infighting of post-Western Afghanistan

    
    Some are actively writing books on such

    While the Yemeni cannot reconcile their quarrels

    Davis, Lee, and Jackson tried to keep their own lifestyle

    
    But it was not meant to be.


    Are we all power-hungry racists?


    Are we getting better at helping the least and unempowered among us?

    
    Do Marx and all the socialists have the answers?

    Does anyone?

    A religion, a leader, a movement?

    
    We will continue to wage these wars and battles for the time being.


    Wage on, soldiers and troops.


    Do your best.





What does THC do to the brain and society?

What does THC do to the brain and society?

    I have been thinking about these questions a lot lately; it is helpful for me to organize my thoughts and ideas in order to take stock of what I am ideating. Perhaps it can help others.

    We know that THC within cannabis has been increasing generally, that the potency of the chemical has gone up. True?
    Does increased potency of THC (the chemical that makes marijuana mind-affecting, in many different ways) cause more extreme reactions, physical and psychological, on those that consume them?

    Makes sense, right?

    Does cannabis or THC cause the smokers or consumers of the weed to have an increased rate of psychosis? Is there scientific and medical evidence for this?

    I think so.

    Does marijuana consumption cause paranoia in the short and long terms?

    I think so.

    Do most people who become active shooters smoke dope?

    Undetermined. But, I think so. Case after case.

    People who go psychotic and kill themselves and others are prone to do these things anyway, no matter their consumption of any other stimulants or chemicals.

    Okay.

    But all these upward trends are pointing in a generally true direction.

    It seems like simple math to me, but I have not always been that great at equations or mathematics. People much smarter and keener than me should either be able to corroborate or debunk these hypotheses or ideas.

    The frustrating thing for me is that too many people advocate the alleged positive effects, both socially and economically, of the recreational use of marijuana.

    I am not talking medicinal marijuana. I am talking recreational usage. I think it is personally abusive, then it becomes a bigger problem.

    Lots of people are getting hurt. Sadly, tragically, horrifically. Almost no one talks about this.

    Television, radio, and the Internet only talk about guns.
    
    Gun control is at the root of mass shootings and active shooters? Pundits and people complain about gun laws. Not pot use. Younger ages of use, higher THC levels, more legally-aided consumption and proliferation...

    Hmmm...


"Until we understand those links, it is nuts to enact lax laws that ­encourage more young people to use a drug proven to trigger mental illness."

See the above link.




Friday, April 7, 2023

Modern Days and the Blogger: 2023

 Modern Days and the Blogger - 2023

    If Hemingway were alive, if Orwell were alive, if Steinbeck were alive, if Clemens (Twain) was alive, if Melville or Tolstoy were alive...

    What would they write? Would they be prolific like James Patterson, with paperback novels filling up the supermarket shelves? Would they be prolific essayists or op-ed writers?

    Or, would many of these great authors be reduced to so many bloggers, as the majority of the writers in the world have become?

    How many voices populate our screens and windows on the world that we know and live in?

    Millions. Perhaps not a billion. Yet.

    Spring break 2023; I have seen parts of my home state that I had not seen before. Southern hills near the Ohio River and Kentucky. We re-visited the birthplace home of Abe Lincoln. Many memories... or a few memories there. Nostalgia, on a personal level, but also speculation and contemplation on the macro-levels of our world and history.

    I slept in Asheville this evening into morning. I have family or ex-family here. We visited with the productive working niece in Hendersonville. We ate Thai food. Reminded me of my mother, of which I reminded her of, her grandmother that has been gone more than nine years. Gone for now.

    I read of my friend Robert's father dying less than a week ago, April 2; he made it to age 90. That is a good life. Way to go, George! With children (surviving) in Colorado, Pasadena, California, and Nashville, Tennessee. Ever the musician, that son. I read an interview of him online this past year or so. The obituary did not mention his wife. Perhaps he is single now. I will reach out to him and offer my condolences.

    His old best buddy, my ex-brother-in-law, is struggling and crashing on couches in the Inter-Mountain West. Down and out on the Wasatch Front.

    We have family from East to West in the United States, even a soldier nephew in South Korea.

    God bless us, every one.

    Israel and Palestine have problems this Easter weekend.

    All the service networks keep churning out their shows: we all get our entertainment fixes through multiple media sources. The kids have done it this Spring Break foray through Roku. That facilitates the media, like Psych from a decade ago.

    My dreams were affected by the show, me in Saudi Arabia or some such desert-like city environment.

    With buddies and comrades.

    We are good in North Carolina. Managed stop-lights in South Carolina, repaired a punctured tire in Georgia. Good, handy mechanics. One from the state of Mexico and the other from Michoacan. Not too bad a price, and we wound up there circuitously.

    I have email junk block, report or delete.

    I have my daughter's awesome post on "Artistic Musings" that I cannot find. Following ‹ Reader — WordPress.com My Home ‹ Artistic Musings — WordPress.com

    I have a novel to pre-clear and publish. It might be called "The Watchman: A Reflection on Afghanistan and the World that We Live In".

    We stayed at Stone Mountain, hiked it, camped and ate. And we saw and reflected on the Confederate leaders. Fading away, literally and figuratively. 

    I saw a prominent Confederate flag, I think by the side of the road in South Carolina.

    We are in the post George Floyd, post-pandemic lockdown days.

    What would all those writers be scribbling about now?

    Russia and Ukraine? Year two in that conflict. Wagner sends men to die for the Russian dreams of supremacy.

    Happy Easter. That gives many of us hope, among other things.





Wednesday, April 5, 2023

Stone Mountain is a Part of Our History - Real and Present

 Stone Mountain is a Part of Our History - Real and Present

    I visited the monument for the second time in my life. Sobering, pleasant in the present. Peaceful.

    A lot of people died violently under the power of Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, and Stonewall Jackson.

    Millions earned their freedom by dying in the fight for the U.S. Civil War.

    Abe Lincoln wanted to maintain the Union.

    He did, and dozens of American commanders have since.



We are blessed to be free, for sure.