Wednesday, September 27, 2023

Hail to Brooks Robinson, one of the Best of the Best

Hail to Brooks Robinson, one of the Best of the Best

    He was born the month before my own dad in 1937. So, he was 86 when he just died. I did not see him play live, in person but I have seen the numbers and I have heard the stories. A great player. From all accounts, a really good person. He had some of the best hands at third of all time, and he could hit. And win. Orioles won it all in 1966 and 1970, the year of my birth. About that time of year. October and the magic of the national pastime.

    He will be missed, but he generated a lot of memories, good will, greatness, and success.

    Baltimore and the O's are forever part of the nation and its lore. Robinson was among the best of the best. Glad I went to Camden Yards for the first time last year, and got to take in some of the spirit and the nostalgia of such a guy.

    Rest in peace, sure hands. 



Monday, September 25, 2023

Ode to Daughter in the Mountains - 2023

 Ode to Daughter in the Mountains - 2023

    She came, she went, she conquered.

    I remember when she first came, a rollie pollie girl laying on our carpet.

    We would put her on her tummy; she would lift her neck and look around.

    Wide eyes and searching looks.

    We played with her inside and outside.

    Perhaps on the beaches of Santa Monica and Los Angeles

    She was most aware?

    Salt air and fresh ocean breezes.

    
    We kept moving, moving back to the Inland Empire,

    A place of higher mountains, and mountain fires, and people with whom she grew.


    On the other side of the continent, we played on the Atlantic beaches, and alighted on a rental home

    It's chlorinated pool offered us fun and sun.

    We made our way to South America,

    To a skinny country,

    Where we met many others, short and pudgy, slim or stodgy

    From Chile to the mountains, the trails towards snowy tops

    And back and forth we went.


    She would grow. She would learn.

    Books, and shows, and star fall web pages

    With music, and dances, and plays, and camping, and traveling

    She went to schools, and more pools, concerts and performances,

    Late night phone binging, early morning wake ups,

    Swimming, reading, writing, drawing, singing, dreaming

    Running, studying, vacationing

    Making friends, ending relationships,

    Growing into new ones.


    Living on hopes and dreams and actions.

    Helping the sick, assisting the needy, those who have less.

    Heading to the mountains, making them part of her,

    And returning home, to venture out again.


Sunday, September 24, 2023

Reflecting on Reading and Writing, 2023

Reflecting on Reading and Writing, 2023

    We as humans have to do it. Many of us do it for our jobs. Most of us, if not all of us humans, and even some other animals and plants, benefit or at minimum are affected by it. Harold Bloom valued it and made a living from reading and writing. I think that he can be wrong about many things, which is my right and privilege. I can be very wrong, too. That is the beauty of life and writing. And reading.

    Reading. Writing. 

    Listening, speaking, and moving, acting and working are all correlated to the vehicles of literature and literacy. But the thing about reading and writing is that it programs us to know and understand things that we normally want to know, repeat, remember, and follow through with.

    Document. Record. Analyze. Improve. Substantiate. Secure. Ensure. All of these things are key to our existence. Laws, regulations, life creeds, plans, goals, objectives, after-action reviews and post-operation analysis, fantasies, fictions, histories, reports. Scriptures, journals. Essays, novels, historical tomes and statistical ledgers and journals. We now have the Internet and its subsidiaries, which also promote verbal and audio conversations and dialogs, talking and listening. Writing goes along with all of it.

    What year of your life did you read the most? What year of your life did you write the most?

    We all think. Some of us think about smaller things, or bigger things, and then we can write.

    What do think and write about?

    This blog post is now a part of it. I could say, or write, a bit more, or a lot more.

    But I wanted to write, and read, some other things. Like a book that I started in 2021. Going on two years now, it would be good to finish it and publish it.

    Be up there with David Levithan.  Or Steve Hely. We all have things to say. Some of it should be more heard and seen than others.


Thursday, September 21, 2023

38 Undefeated after Week 3: Things will change this Weekend

38 Undefeated after Week 3: Things will change this Weekend

1. Georgia 3-0, and should crush UAB after not being that great last week against South Carolina.

2. Michigan 3-0, should handle a rather feisty Rutgers.

3. Florida St., 3-0 against a tough line Clemson. Caveat emptor. Tigers might be the victor after BC played the Seminoles tough last week.

4. Texas 3-0, against a seemingly weak Baylor. Longhorns slower against Wyoming last weekend.

5. Washington 3-0, against the Berkeley Bears. Should be wipe out. Penix, the former Hoosier. Heisman candidate.

6. Ohio State 3-0, versus the unblemished ranked Notre Dame. I picked Buckeyes by two touch downs.

7. USC 3-0, versus an appearing to be weak Arizona State. Sun Devils gonna be burned, I think.

8. Penn St. 3-0, versus a perhaps strong Iowa. I say the Nittany Lions will roar.

9. Notre Dame 3-0. See above. The Dome is not as big as we suspected. Irish pie, expected forecast.

10. Oregon 3-0 versus the Prime Time Colorado Buffaloes. Ducks by a lot. Neon will eat some reality.

11. Utah 3-0, versus the lossless UCLA Bruins. Might be a good game. Regular QB for Utes still out.

12. (13th ranked) Oregon State versus Washington State. Should be a good game.

13. Oklahoma 3-0 versus Cincy Bearcats. I see a slaughter. These are not last year's Bearcats. Or the year before. Sooners are coming.

14. (16th ranked, behind Alabama) Ole Miss versus the 'Bama Tide. Whoo boy! Go Rebs! Hit 'em while they're down! Saban....

15. (17th ranked) Duke 3-0 will play UConn. Should be mostly Dukes.

16.  (18th ranked) UNC 3-0 versus Pitt. Might be a tough one, but Tar Heels can score.

17. (19th ranked) Colorado 3-0. See above. Deion Junior will still be number 1, I guess!

18. (20th ranked) Miami 3-0 versus Temple. Expect the fortress of Philly to be wiped clean.

19. (21st ranked) UCLA 3-0 at Utah. See above. I think the Utes will have better defense.

20. (24th ranked) Iowa 3-0. See above. The ghost of Joe Pa might be the most this match.

21. (25th ranked) Washington State Cougars 3-0 thost the Beavers, as mentioned above. I feel like these Cougs are looking mean.

22. (26th ranked) Missouri Tigers 3-0 up against the other Tigers of Memphis. Color me Show Me State.

23. Kentucky (28th ranked) Wildcats 3-0 will take on Vanderbilt. I think the Cats will thrash the 'Dores.

24. Maryland (29th ranked) Terrapins (3-0) will play a down Michigan State. Sparty gonna get spanked. Nothing to so with their coach doing naughty shenanigans.

25. (32nd ranked) Kansas Jayhawks 3-0versus my BYU Cougars. Cougs gonna play some ball! I hope.

26. (33rd ranked) Louisville 3-0 versus Boston College. The Eagles showed some pluck, watch out Cards.

27. (34th ranked) UCF 3-0versus Kansas State, bit by a SEC record tie-breaking Field Gold to Mizzou. Good game, methinks.

28. (35th ranked) Auburn 3-0 versus Texas A & M. More Tigers. Should be tough. Contested. Good match.

29. (36th ranked) BYU Cougars 3-0 at Kansas, in Manhattan. COOOOOUGARS!!! Can we? Please.

30. (40th ranked) Fresno State Bulldogs 3-0 versus the Kent State... Aces? Whatever they are, the Dogs gonna eat 'dem bones.

31. (41st ranked) Syracuse Orange 3-0 against Army Knights. I want the Cadets, not just because I put on the uniform. I generally like the service academies more than most programs.

32. (43rd ranked) Air Force (3-0) at San Jose State. I think the Spartans-- West Coast-- will go down. Falcons!

33. (46th ranked) Wake Forest (3-0) up against Georgia Tech. Might be an upset. I hope so.

34. (49th placed) James Madison 3-0 versus Utah State, in Ogden. I would like the upset, but the Dukes are mean.

35. (52nd ranked) Memphis 3-0 versus Missouri. See above. From what I have seen, the SEC has the edge in this one.

36. (59th ranked) Rutgers 3-0 contra Los Lobos Roentes.  I do not think that the Scarlet Knights are that low in the ranking. But Meechigan is better. Upset would be fun, though.

37. (68th ranked) Liberty (3-0) versus FIU. I forget the mascot. I like the Flames. They schooled my Cougs last year. Alas.

38. (85th ranked) Marshall 2-0 versus Virginia Tech. Should be fun. I think I pick Tech. Those Hokies of yesteryear...

39. Oh! 39! Georgia State 3-0, soon to be 4-0, because they are beating Coastal Carolina as I speak. By two TDs in the 4th. I mean 17. They look mean, and they can pass and run. GSU is ranked by CBSSPORTS: 86th, but they are going to rise.

And there you have it! 39 teams with no defeats, but things will change soon.

Enjoy.

Go Cougars. Especially the BYU kind.


4. 

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

I Hope they Called Her on a Mission

I Hope they Called Her on a Mission

    Growing up I wanted to serve a mission for my church. We call it The Church. Because for us believers that is what it is. The Church of the Lord. None other than Him. It's a big deal, from the small and seemingly miniscule to the big, overpowering, everything. It is all and everything, for many of us believers.

    So, the answer to why is pretty explanatory, besides all the social norms and sociological pressures that we go through. Peer pressure. Mandates and invitations. Inner drives and desires and feelings, certainly for me and many others. There was a freedom to it, in many ways. To engage and escape the World, all at the same time.

    I could be about my Father's business, getting away from my earthly ones, some felt like drudgeries in a fallen and at times decadent earth of misery and ickiness. But those too shall pass. Many of us have needs and wants like that, to out-distance: To move on and up. I did. I wanted to move on and up. I needed distance, as so many of us do. To run, or swim, or fly, or race. Away. Get away from the grades, the system, the Establishment of the State and all the Big Brothers who had entrapped me, so many of us feeling entrenched and constrained by worldly things. Even my native English tongue. To be freed of the old; breaking open new wine bottles without consuming the soul-sickening old wines of contempt and addiction.

    We all have our own reasons, too. I did. Like many others I have known. It all made sense, to me. We are promised freedom and joy. We believe this.

    It made sense to my mother and step-dad, years later. I cherished this time that they went away to serve. And serve God and mammon. Having their cake and eating it too. Yes, the best of all worlds in places like Cambodia and Indonesia. All my parents served and gave, worked and worshipped. They all gave of themselves and gave and shared with others. Lights on a Hill, without a doubt. I saw it in many, many others. I could emulate this, too. We could all contribute to the greater cause.

    My wife did her things on a mission for the Lord, in far off Africa and Europe. All of them need the Lord, from us believers' point of view. We go forth and serve. We have been given so much, and we must continue the gifts and giving. Giving of thanks and giving of the heart.

    We find meaning and joy and worth in it all, even the hard, and painful, and lonely times.

    For the Lord Himself suffered such privations. And His closest Friends. We became such. To Him, to our shared hopes and dreams and creeds and covenants and promises.

    Us parents, we have hopes and faith in God, and ourselves, and the police and neighbors and doctors and vaccinations and grocers and meat-seller butchers and the cheese street vendors and dozen other youth-care people from church to pre-school in multiple countries, even in Mexico or the Central Americans in the local California-church, or the Virginia wards, communities others call congregations, in the DC suburbs, looking for life and jobs and love and passions, some childhood or now adulthood dreams, aspirations, plans, some call pipe-dreams or ill-founded goals...

    But things happen, and kids come and grow, and we did our best in our ways, and we rose and fell, and we failed and succeeded, sometimes many times in a row. And we prayed, and worshipped, and sang, and ministered, and served here and there, and were served and loved shown mercy and kindness from family and friends, some total strangers on the roads, and we did not crash, and avoided wrecks, and traveled far, and many times stayed close, tight like a family can be.

    I tried. We tried. We did not give up. When my drill sergeant called out to the third platoon of Echo Company, whether we really wanted to be there, late at night, toes on the line, me at the end of the hall on the third floor after weeks of the boot camp; he yelled and cajoled and pleaded, "Do you really want to be here? If not, go home, get out, tell me, hang it up!"

    No, drill sergeant! I responded to him loudly and with vigor. I voiced with emotion and volume to my platoon and anyone else, to God and the Heavens, I was there to do it, and I would not quit. I want to be here, Drill Sergeant!

    Yes, that is my Uchtdorf. My time in uniform, it has become my flying analogy and symbol of my faith, my understanding to the eternities and purposes of life. 

    Like I was a Scout years before, from my once valiant youth, dressed in uniform. I did not give up, give in, quit, or relinquish. I retreated at times; I was not always brave or resilient, nor noble or true. But I stuck with it. I kept putting on the uniform of my God. And, I achieved the ranks that the prophets said would make a good missionary, a good emissary, a good representative. I was part of Christ. I was His, He still had me. Despite my faults and lacking, and my imperfect actions or thoughts. HE still had me. HE promised. I believed, and this was my truth. Like millions of others. Even those who died and were not resurrected. Yet. But us believers have that promise. The promise of life and love everlasting. Nothing greater.

    He had me, I was sure. Even when I wasn't purely sure in my Man and Shepherd Above, others assured me it was so. And that was enough to push me along. We were all in the same boat, after all, and we had enough rowers and sailors and the ever-promised Captain to guide us through the storms and endless peaceful waters of the gulfs and bays and shores and open seas...

    Endless are the oceans upon which we drift and move. Sometimes in fast torrents, and other times in gigantic vast heated lulls. Fast or slow, choppy or sublime, we move, float, and sail along.

    So, the daughters and sons come along, not just ours but all the others, family and friends and others, endless are their plights and trajectories. Our mutual destinies and fates, eternal and never ending.

    Though some say death and hate end it all.

    There is more. There are hopes and sermons that surpass all those lowly, human and naturally fallen things. We are called to lift ourselves and look; look out and find and invite others to do the same. To follow Him.

    So, one person dons a tag, a placa, a chapa, a name-identifier, she goes off on a plane to unite with others, to commune with others, bring light to others, in places far and sundry, with flavors and tongues quite distinct and possibly strange, wonderful and at times scary, but exhilarating and wondrous at the same time.

    Even in the most minuscule and even trite, there is deeper wisdom and meaning. There is a Father and Mother watching, listening, waiting, loving. 

    And they have called her on a mission. So blessed.

    


Monday, September 18, 2023

How Do we Save the Planet?

 How Do we Save the Planet?

    We have energy issues, the 8 billion of us on the planet in 2023.

    For instance, this past weekend quite a few people were protesting to not burn fossil fuels anymore. Yeah, right. Like we can do that with our present economic situations, both personal and collective.

    Hybrid cars and electric vehicles are not where they need to be in price, accommodating people and their needs. It is not economically feasible to go very green right now, especially based on cars and trucks. And planes and boats. Perhaps fueling our facilities, but no...

    People can protest a lot, like the people who were eco-protestors who made a stink at the recent U.S. Open tennis tourney in Flushing Meadows, New York. One guy glued his feet to the floor, and delayed a major match for about an hour.

    Others flay paints and oils on master works of art in museums.

    But we are not very ready to rid ourselves of fossil fuels. Gas, oil, even coal. We need to burn them for a lot longer. While we figure out how to eat and educate and medically insure each other.

Sunday, September 17, 2023

Cougs are Looking Good after Week 3; Hoosiers might be Okay Enough

Cougars are Looking Good after Week 3; Hoosiers might be Okay Enough

Big win, as a friend texted me late last night. Whooo! BYU trailed the hometown Razorback Hogs twice, by 14 in the first quarter and by 10 in the third, but overcame both of those deficits and overcame the SEC foes of Fayetteville. Not bad payback for getting steamrolled by them to the tune of 52 points last season, in the elevations of Provo.

    BYU gets clutch plays on offense and defense, and walks away with a 7 point victory; the betting spread being 8 points the other way. Take that, skally wags of decadent Vegas and the greater gamblng-sphere! CBSSports had BYU rated 61, one up from the week before, and Arkansas at 32, 3 down from Week 1. The SEC does not look that good right now after 3.2 weeks, and the Big-12 has its issues, too. The soon to be non-PAC 12 is looking the best, perhaps. BYU does not have much of them this fall, so their schedule might look a lot more doable now. Kansas beats Nevada by one score, so let us see how thing shape out the last nine games for the Brigham Young Cougars.

KANSAS, Week 4: currently 3-0 at 29th by CBS, up 15 from the week before. After this competitive game against a lightly regarded Nevada Wolfpack (133 of 133(!), the absolute worst in FBS, lower based on Week 2 and bottoming out by 2 less), Kansas will probably be in the 40s while BYU should be at least in the 40s as well. We shall see!

    I think that BYU could take down the Jayhawks on the road, because by my estimates the Razorbacks are better than the Kansas team. Although, I saw a lot of speed from the Jayhawks Week 1. I think the Cougars should eat up the Hawks.

CINCINNATI, Week 5: Lost to lowly Miami of Ohio yesterday. Cincy was rated 39th, up a whopping 27 from the week before; I think they, the Bearcats, will drop back to the 60s again. Meanwhile, the aforementioned Cougars, my favorite football alma mater, might more likely be in the 30s. Yeah! Maintain! We can do this and be 5-0, poised for the top twenty-five. I forgot to mention that many so-called top teams are looking suspect. Even Georgia. Alabama is struggling, as did Texas to Wyoming. Ohio State could be weak... Michigan struggled some against Western Michigan. Not so bad for Notre Dame against Central Michigan. But I think BYU could play with most of them. Even Florida State, barely besting Boston College. "For Welles". 9/11 hero from 2001. Lost by two to the Seminoles. Everything is up or grabs! Tennessee and Kansas State upset...

    Bearcats have to visit Provo, at around 4,500 feet in elevation.

TCU Horned Frogs, Week 7: They lost to Colorado and Prime Time, who struggled yesterday to get by pedestrian state rival Rams. We can do this, Cougars! Frogs currently rated at 28. They won easily yesterday. Over some other Cougars, those of Houston. Frogs were given two higher spots than the week before. Game at Texas.

    Weeks 8-12, we have Texas Tech, Texas, West Virginia (I should be there), Iowa Stare (lost to Ohio!), Oklahoma (may be tough), and Oklahoma State, that got walloped by South Alabama. I did not know South Alabama was a real school or program till about 2006, after writing and analyzing college football for a few years.

    I think we can go 10-2, with some health and good bounces. The right coaches and players are making thing happen for BYU.

    Go, Cougars! Beat the Jayhawks! See you next time.

    Good job Slovis, Martin, Kingston (speedy and savvy), Roberts, Rex, and Tooley, Heckard, Vanpanchain (I may learn to pronounce or spell it someday), and Bywater, the rest of the defense. Even the punter (consistently stellar) and the new place kicker Ferrin. 

    Very sweet! Top twenty here we come.

    More on IU later, who might be good enough to win 6 or seven....

Wednesday, September 13, 2023

Baseball Underdogs with a Chance in September - 2023

Baseball Underdogs with a Chance in September - 2023

    On the National League side, we have the Milwaukee Brewers, winning their division. That would be amazing for their organization and the city, the state. Not a fan of beer, but a fan of the underdogs, the never-been-champs.

    In the American League there are more candidates, like the fast-starting Tampa Bay Rays, and the Texas Rangers and the Seattle Mariners. Other teams are like underdogs, like the Baltimore Orioles, but they have won it before. The Cubs and the Phillies and the Diamondbacks are fighting for wild card spots, as are the Giants. But they have all won it this century, at least once. Philly made it to lose the World Series last year. Trea Turner is hitting like a maniac. Harper is getting more powerful lately.

    The Braves and Dodgers are teams to beat. The Braves are looking unstoppable, while the Dodgers have some pitching ills with legal woes and injuries. Still really good.

    So four never-haves have a chance as we speak. I hope on or more of them can do it.

    Maybe Texas? Seattle would be better, even.

    My book is slowly moving... Ever slowly.

    Reading Hemingway, Shaara, Hely, and some essays and biographies. Trying to keep up with literature.

Tuesday, September 5, 2023

Poem of Expression on a Tuesday in September

Poem of Expression on a Tuesday in September

    I read about the poet ee cummings: something of when he was young and with others.

    Reading of Picasso, likely, or perhaps Hemingway and Dos Passos.

    Either way, a while before my time. Before my dad's time, and my mom's.


    I think back to them, like where my mother went to church near Cape Cod,

    Or where my dad wandered by beaches and bridges.


    A bit like the author Paul Theroux.

    New England stock.


    Those are my folks. Myself and my siblings hail from the Mid-West.

    This is the United States.

    So we are ... Americans.

    We are.

    As was Hemingway, as was Faulkner, as was Fitzgerald, as was Steinbeck. 

    And London and many others.

    I was battle buddies, for months, with a guy named London.

    Different century.

    All Americans.

    I started a novel over there; where battles were fought a few decades ago.

    I saw the generals of us and them, our allies, speak of it.

    These battles for space that mean so much.


    Battles for space, and time, and freedom.

    We all need to do this in our own ways.


    Be free.


    Like Mr. Cummings. Or mr cummings.

    
    Yes, I am working on a novel. Started almost two years ago.

    I am progressing. I am.

    It is about a place and people that I saw, or almost knew, over ten years ago.


    It will come with time.


    My poetry and feelings comes with time. As it should be.


    So many other things. Job explorations. Children and vacations.

    My wife and my friend, finding lost treasures.

    Grateful and content.


    Dropping pounds, a mere three pounds away.

    Looking for words, seeing them in books and in my soul.


    Games, games, games. Some I play. Like chess, or ping-pong, or basketball.


    Others I watch, like football, tennis, and basketball.


    Life is pretty good, but I do need to sweat and go to bed hungry.

    Not bad.

    I could work harder, be more motivated, to learn my foreign languages.

    Be a better money earner. Things at our beck and call, and we refuse.


    I am writing a novel. In English.


    My native tongue.

    All things I ponder, and continue to move along.


    We dress, we shower, we brush, we visit the dentist today. 

    An old filling needs new filling.


    There is much more to say:

    My battle buddy in South Carolina said:

    Say less.

    Say less.

    Say no more.


    So be it.