Category Archives: Food for Thought
Don’t Back Down From The Sharks!
Filed under American Character, Food for Thought, General Interest, Military
A new American revolution
Planned to write a blog post this morning, but making some braided ribbon bookmarks with one piece of ribbon and watching kumihimo braiding tutorials sidetracked me a bit. Politics vs. crafting, hummm, well, no real competition there. Talented people fill the blogosphere with great tutorials, so it’s like a virtual crafting and sewing circle of creative ideas. I often sew simply hemmed receiving blankets as part of my baby shower gifts and I found this pretty cool self-binding receiving blanket, that I’ll have to try.
Yawn, yawn guys, I know. I shared this, partly because it’s truly how I spent my morning, but moreover to begin this political post about how we’ve lost sight of respecting individuals in our polarized, diversity-crazed, hyper-politicized culture. This cuts across just about every aspect of American culture, where even the most innocuous things like an Easter egg hunt, can turn into a full-throated battle about religious sensitivity/intolerance. No aspect of American life is immune from being targeted as somehow offensive, insensitive or subject to being banned by some politically-motivated idiots. Our daily lives seem confined, coerced, constrained by ever-louder nutty rules, edicts, criticism from fellow citizens caught up in the throes of particular political agendas and we’ve reached the point where commonness curtails any hope of finding common ground.
Watching TV political punditry follows an in the gutter, street-fighting ethos behind perfectly coiffed hair and syrupy smiles, lies partisans liable to hit below the belt and even stab with stiletto-tipped talking points prepared ahead of time. Two incidents this past week made me pause. CNN and FOX offer the “balanced” fights, like the Mother’s Day face-off with Debbie Wasserman-Schultz and Michele Bachman hosted by Candy Crowley. Even more disgusting was Dana Loesch and Jessica Erhlich going at it on the Kelly File on FOX last night while discussing the Benham Brothers controversy centering on their personal religious beliefs regarding homosexuality impacting their HGTV show deal. No one discusses much of anything. Folks choose a side, memorize the partisan rhetoric and off they go, indoctrinated to the point where objective truth, objective weighing of facts or objectively seeking solutions no longer matter. It’s all about scoring political points and forcing your agenda on the other side.
Admittedly, my political leanings fall far to the right, that’s upfront and obvious on my blog, but I try to keep politics out of my everyday life as much as possible. I prefer to talk to people and learn as much as I can about their lives. You won’t find me holding up a hashtag sign, attending a political rally, protesting, or forcing my political views on anyone. John Schindler, at the XX Committee blog wrote a piece on America today that’s definitely worth a read. I rarely agree with his expert foreign policy and strategy writing, but in this concertedly “even-handed” critique, he hits on the sad shape of American society:
“If you cannot get out of the country, read more. Talk to foreigners, see the world through their eyes for a bit. Get out of your comfort zone. If you think either FoxNews or MSNBC has a monopoly on truth, you need to diversify your mind. If you believe the flaws in our foreign policy can be explained by just one word, and that word is either “Bush” or “Obama,” you’re part of the problem.”
Last year I wrote a piece, “Getting To Know You”, which sums up my view on the problem of living your life “knowing about people” compared to getting “to know” people and our leaders could start by talking to each other rather than sending out political hit squads to annihilate their opponents. I’ll stick to my advice in that piece, for a new American revolution…… getting to know your fellow Americans:
“Americans need to wake up and realize that before they side up against other Americans they had better take the time to walk up to those who hold different views and sit down and talk first. Perhaps by actually getting “to know” other people, we might be able to bridge the gaps and build a stronger nation, where all views from all people get heard at our political kitchen table. And just maybe communities might get back to holding potluck dinners where everyone comes and shares a meal and gets to know his/her neighbors. What an amazing concept that is – getting to know other people, up close and personal. It just might revolutionize America;-)”
Time to get supper finished – stuffed pasta shells tonight and tossed salad….. I like to cook too:-)
Filed under American Character, Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Politics
You owe them your Freedom
The Meaning of Memorial Day
Memorial Day originated on a crude wooden speakers’ platform at the Civil War battlefield of Gettysburg on the 30th of May, 1864.
President Abraham Lincoln, the last speaker in a long line of distinguished orators who had come to speak that day at the dedication of the memorial cemetery to the dead of the Gettysburg battlefield, made a few remarks he had hurriedly scribbled on the back of an envelope on the train from Washington, D.C. His Gettysburg Address is considered one of the finest pieces of tribute ever written to honor any nation’s fallen.
President Lincoln said, in part:
“…From these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain…Let us never forget that these gallant dead must not have died in vain”.
His words, printed and reprinted in newspapers all over this country, were taken into the nation’s consciousness, and have become an important part of our history.
The Grand Army of the Republic, a group of Union Civil War veterans, was the Nation’s first chartered veterans’ organization. The “GAR” began observing the anniversary of Lincoln’s historic tribute to the gallant dead at Gettysburg by decorating the graves of Civil War veterans in cemeteries all over the country with American flags and flowers.
Begun as a private remembrance of fallen comrades, the American people soon took the day to their hearts, and solemnized the sacrifice of their sons to the preservation of the Union with annual prayers and ceremonies nationwide.
On May 30th, 1868, President James A. Garfield, himself a former Union general, spoke at Gettysburg on the occasion of the first official national memorial observance. Describing the Union’s honored dead of the Civil War, he said:
“…They summed up and perfected, by one supreme act, the highest virtues of men and citizens.”
Until 1882, the day was known as “Decoration Day”. In that year, Congress declared the 30th of May an official national holiday, and re-named it “Memorial Day” to honor the dead of all America’s wars. In the 238 years of U.S. history, there have been 29 wars, major military conflicts and actions, which claimed the lives of 1,343,812 Americans.
At a military funeral, the flag draping the casket is carefully folded by the burial detail, and presented to the wife or mother of the deceased by the escort officer, with the words:
“Accept this flag with the thanks of a grateful nation.”
We as a nation sometimes forget the sacrifices that made us, and keep us, free. The families…the fathers and mothers, the husbands and wives, daughters and sons… never forget the price that has been paid.
Since the Congress passed the National Holiday Act of 1971, and Memorial Day was designated as the last Monday in May, the day set aside to honor America’s war dead has become just another three-day weekend to many people. Few bother to pause and honor the fallen. The families, and their living comrades, remember them and their sacrifice.
Pause this Memorial Day for a moment and remember the men who froze in that terrible winter at Valley Forge (and Bastogne, and Chosin Reservoir), the men who fought on Seminary Ridge at Gettysburg (and San Juan Hill in Cuba, Blanc Mont in France, Bloody Ridge on Guadalcanal, Monte Casino in Italy, Heartbreak Ridge in Korea, and Hamburger Hill in Vietnam). Remember the men who fought outnumbered at Concord Bridge (and the Peking Legation, and Bataan, and Koto-Ri, Khe Sahn and Fallujah). Remember the sailors and Marines entombed in the U.S.S. Arizona on the bottom of Pearl Harbor, and all those gallant men of the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard who have found a watery grave in the world’s seas in the defense of your liberty. Remember the pilots and aircrew who were shot down in flames over France in two world wars, and the graves of those who died over Germany and Japan. Mourn for those who died in the Persian Gulf, and those who have died in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Think, for just a moment, of Molly Pitcher, who took her wounded husband’s place at the cannon at the Battle of Trenton. Remember the Army nurses that refused to be evacuated from Corregidor, and the patients who needed them: many of both died in the prison camps of the Philippines and Japan.
Remember that the Vietnam Memorial has inscribed upon it the names of eight women who died serving their country.
Remember those men whose inscriptions on the Vietnam Memorial read simply: “M.I.A.”
Remember them as you drive past the cemeteries in the towns and cities of America this three-day weekend, and see the many small flags on the graves of those who served.
Remember all of them, dressed in ragged uniforms of many eras, in their ghostly ranks. Remember what they sacrificed for their country, their loved ones…and for you.
Remember them. You owe them your freedom.
Respectfully submitted,
Kinnison
Lieutenant Colonel, Armor, AUS (Ret.)
…and former Sgt. & “Mustang”
Capt. of Marines
Filed under American Character, American History, Food for Thought, General Interest, Military
Dilapidated in America
Last weekend I posted a link to a video on how being too connected in the virtual world is dehumanizing us in the real world. As one who hates cell phones and rarely use mine, I do look up and around me. I enjoy looking up at the sky each day and noting the stars at night. In public a sort of hobby of mine is watching people. People are endlessly fascinating. Last week I worked overnight shifts at my store to do some major resetting of shelves to a new lay-out. The McDonald’s nearby stays open 24/7 so I ordered a large cup of unsweetened iced tea (yes, a sacrilege here in the land of “sweet tea”) and prepared to read a book on my kindle tablet during my lunch hour at 2 am in the morning. Yes, yes, that sounds like it contradicts my cell phone assertion a few sentences ago, but bear with me as I go through another one of my stories.
I sat down with my iced tea fully intending to read, but an old woman sitting in a booth caught my attention, as she paged through an old dilapidated book, with yellowed pages, threadbare cloth cover and the binding so loose that the pages looked ready to fall out at the least draft. The book seemed in better shape than this thin old woman, with her shabby clothes, unkempt long hair largely hidden by a straw floppy hat she had pulled down to mask most of her face. All of the other patrons were co-workers of mine, yet none of them paid the least attention to this woman, but she piqued my curiosity. I wondered why on earth was she in McDonald’s in the wee hours of the morning.
A couple of days ago I noticed an old, dilapidated little white car pull into the parking lot at my store, as I had just gotten into my car to come home for lunch, which I do every day when I work my normal daytime shift. I come home, fix lunch for my husband, who is disabled, and make sure he’s set-up for the rest of the afternoon. He has hydrocephalus and the shunt in his brain helped slightly, but he walks with a walker and has significant short-term memory problems. Another story, but after over 24 years in the Army and being retired for over a decade, he’s still waiting to have his VA disability reevaluated. Personally, it sure feels like nothing with the VA moves much. The first go-around with this VA claim took two years and now that his condition is worse, well, this looks like it might take that long again.
But I digress, back to the old woman. So, this little car with the front bumper hanging on by a prayer caught my attention. Then I noticed that straw floppy hat and it all made sense. Her car, I noticed was piled full of stuff. She’s living out of her car. Her car has been in the same spot for two days now and when I came home for lunch a few minutes ago, she walked past me heading into the store, as I was heading to my car. She was wearing the same clothes and her ubiquitous hat. When I returned from my lunch hour she was heading out of the store, in a different set of clothes, with the same hat. I assumed she cleaned up and changed in the restroom. Of course, there’s probably a long pitiful story as to how she came to be living in her car and I’ve been weighing whether to try to help her. I failed miserably trying to help the young guy who was sleeping on the swing display on the patio at work late last summer. That I am hesitating even talking to this woman to find out her situation makes me feel guilty. A dozen easy excuses come to mind, like I have enough on my plate with my own problems, like what if she’s got mental health issues or an even more worrisome head issue to me – like head lice. What if her stuff has bed bugs – yes, these are the shallow thoughts that crossed my mind.
Knowing that the social services behemoth of both state and federal programs don’t work to effectively help people in need makes me wary. That young guy talked about being given lodging for a month under a homeless program, then being back on the street when his time was up. He said he was on a waiting list for housing. It’s like traveling in circles, one expert referring the hapless to another expert, on and on and on. The churches don’t do much either. One big dilapidated social welfare mess, with no comprehensive coordination to take these people by the hand and lead them to a self-sufficient existence.
So, here I was thinking, if I offer a helping hand, I am committed to share her problems as my own to a great degree. And the other part of me is anguishing that I haven’t already offered her a helping hand. When I left work today, she had a dilapidated sun shade up in the windshield and towels draped covering the front door windows, with the driver’s side window down. The backseat was piled high with stuff. It was around 90 degrees Fahrenheit and she was in that car with one window rolled down and a towel blocking the air flow…
Look up, look down, look away – but I live in a small town, not a big urban area and I didn’t even think we had any homeless people here until last summer when Trey was sleeping on our swing display.
Filed under Food for Thought, General Interest
Virtual living
“Look Up”, a spoken word film for an online generation. That’s the description, but it’s a pretty harsh glare of reality about our virtually connected lives.
Here’s a recent study in “Pediatrics: Official Journal Of The American Academy Of Pediatrics” on mobile device use by caregivers with children in fast food restaurants. Children learn most social skills by patterning their behavior on the people around them. The impact of the technology deluge isn’t fully understood yet, but the level of disconnection from people in our real lives as so many people live their lives fixated on electronic devices can be observed all around us. Keeping technology in its proper place in your life rather than as your life looks to be the challenge ahead.
Filed under Food for Thought, General Interest
Finding that 18th horse
JK sent this short math problem, that’s worth thinking about:
A farmer died leaving his 17 horses to his three sons.
When his sons opened up the Will it read:
My eldest son should get 1/2 (half) of total horses;
My middle son should be given 1/3rd (one-third) of the total horses;
My youngest son should be given 1/9th (one-ninth) of the total horses.
As it’s impossible to divide 17 into half or 17 by 3 or 17 by 9, the three sons started to fight with each other.
So, they decided to go to a farmer friend who they considered quite smart, to see if he could work it out for them.
The farmer friend read the Will patiently, after giving due thought, he brought one of his own horses over and added it to the 17. That increased the total to 18 horses.
Now, he divided the horses according to their fathers Will.
Half of 18 = 9. So he gave the eldest son 9 horses.
1/3rd of 18 = 6. So he gave the middle son 6 horses.
1/9th of 18 = 2. So he gave the youngest son 2 horses.
Now add up how many horses they have:
Eldest son……..9
Middle son…….6
Youngest son…2
TOTAL IS…….17.
Now this leaves one horse over, so the farmer friend takes his horse back to his farm.
Problem Solved!
Moral:
The attitude of negotiation and problem solving is to find the 18th horse i.e. the common ground. Once a person is able to find the 18th horse the issue is resolved. It is difficult at times. However, to reach a solution, the first step is to believe that there is a solution. If we think that there is no solution, we won’t be able to reach any!
I quickly found a couple different takes on the 18th horse story, but the essential wisdom remains the same:
Filed under Food for Thought, General Interest
One life
Here’s a very short video from Charles Lipson at the American Thinker about Sir Nicholas Winton, who organized an effort to rescue hundreds of children from Czechoslovakia during WWII. This video will bring tears to your eyes. To learn more about his rescue efforts, you can click his family website here.
The Gelman Educational Foundation has more information (here) about this amazing effort to save children from ending up in Nazi concentration camps. Sir Nicholas wears a ring given to him by one of the children, inscribed with a line from the Talmud:
Save one life, save the world.
Filed under Food for Thought, Good Advice, History
Trey
In early December I began this post, then hesitated, thinking what could I possibly add of value to address a topic, which multitudes of experts from academia, to philanthropic agencies, to churches on to public officials consider a problem too big to solve. So, today being brave of heart, here’s an attempt to talk about homelessness in America, another one of those “insurmountable obstacles” in our land of plenty…… yes, especially plenty of excuses.
We all know how these heart-wrenching stories go about homelessness, written to pull at our heartstrings by focusing on children, of course. In December 2013 the New York Times ran a lengthy piece, replete with lots of photos and even a few videos of a young black girl in New York City’s shelter system titled, “Invisible Child, Girl in the Shadows: Dasani’s Homeless Life”. This 12-year-old girl, Dasani, lives in a squalid room with her stepfather, mother and six siblings in one of the worst shelters in the city.
The reporter, Andrea Elliot, began interviewing this girl and her family in 2012 and while she presents this family’s plight with an overabundance of empathy, she veers off into blaming political and economic forces as the cause for this little girl’s plight, when clearly having two drug addicts for parents would be the place to start heaping the blame. Ms. Elliot treats the drug addicted parents to heaping doses of understanding, instead of stating the obvious – they’re unfit parents. These poor children will have little hope if they remain in the care of two addicts, who can’t even take care of themselves, let alone 7 children. Okay, call me a cold-hearted, judgmental, racist white lady, but thems the facts folks. Certainly, read the piece, because it’s truly worth reading and if you can bear with me for a few more paragraphs, I’ll revisit Dasani’s life in more detail.
Also, in December 2013, Kevin D. Williamson, National Review’s roving reporter, wrote a piece about intractable poverty in “white” America titled, “The White Ghetto”. Williamson wrote his piece from a keen tourist perspective – no children as political props to be found in his piece, where he travels to Kentucky, the heart of Appalachia and describes what he finds, “If the people here weren’t 98.5 percent white, we’d call it a reservation.” Williamson wades through the history, demographic realities, economic travails and along the way debunks many of our preconceived notions about our social ills. Williamson is a superb writer, so please read the piece, despite my less than spectacular description of his work.
Now, I’ll tell you a story about a homeless young black man I met at the end of last summer. One bright, late summer morning when I arrived at work, some fellow workers from the lawn and garden department told me they had found a boy sleeping on one of the porch swing displays on the patio when they got to work. Now being a store that is open 24/7, customers come and go at all times of the day and night.
Most irritating to me have been the customers who come in during the wee hours of the morning, dragging along small children, who should be at home, sleeping in their own beds. Thankfully, I only work overnight rarely for major resets of shelves, so I bite my tongue during these encounters, because without fail, these poor tykes are crying or screaming, while the clueless parents meander along, oblivious to their offspring’s misery. Some ignore the cacophony, others add to it by screaming at the poor kids. Finding a homeless boy, well, this was something new, like a scene out of that Billie Letts novel, “Where The Heart Is”, about a pregnant young woman living in a Wal-mart in a small Oklahoma town.
I walked out to the patio, where this boy was still sound asleep on the green porch swing, with his small backpack beside him. He opened his eyes when I approached, furtive and tense. So, I asked him what his name is and he mumbled, “Trey.” Being a curious sort, I started talking to him and asking him questions. He told me he was 18, but I think he told a fellow employee he was 19, not that it matters much – he was past the age where getting help is easy, as you’ll see.
His story was that he lived with his uncle in a nearby tiny town and his uncle decided to leave and go drive trucks for a living. He said he was on his own now and had nowhere to live, no family to help him. I referred him to a private charity here that offers food assistance and I also gave him cash to be able to eat for a few days, because when I asked him when was the last time he ate, he hesitatingly told me, “yesterday.” I didn’t know if that was true, because this poor kid looked awfully thin. And I gave him my name and phone number. Now, when I asked him what his plans were, naturally his were totally unrealistic, given his circumstances. He was dirty, has no home and he told me he would like to find a job. No employer is going to hire some dirty, homeless kid, with no means to get to work and no means to come to work clean and presentable.
I called that private charity and the lady told me to send him to them and they have referrals to help and she advised me not to give him cash, because cash might be used for drugs, alcohol, etc. Over the intervening months, I saw Trey occasionally in the store and I gave him money for food a few times too. Each time I talked to him, I urged him to go to various places where he might get help. I told him to go to the police. He told me he went to them. He said he went downtown and was given a motel room for a month under some program for the homeless, but his time was up there and now he is on a waiting list for housing. He said there’s a shortage of housing, so he’s back to being without a place to stay.
I urged Trey to try some churches, because for a small town, we’ve got four pages of churches listed in the yellow pages and probably dozens more that aren’t listed. You can’t go a quarter-mile here without running into several churches – we’ve got loads of “white” churches, loads of “black” churches, loads of “mixed demographics” churches and due to a large Korean population, we even have a lot of “Korean” churches too. With so much Christian zeal around, you’d think finding a helping hand would be easy and you’d think we wouldn’t have homeless kids wandering around. He told me he stopped in one church and they told him they can’t help him. Now, whether he really did seek help at all these places, I don’t know, but listening to him, it became obvious what he needed was an adult to take him by the hand and guide him. He doesn’t seem capable to find his way to being self-sufficient, in the socially acceptable sense, on his own. He mumbles, he avoids eye-contact, he seems to have some emotional or perhaps learning disabilities. During one conversation he told me he was expelled from school in the 9th grade, so he’s very limited with opportunities. He carries a notebook and seems to like to draw pictures though.
The week before Christmas, I saw Trey sitting in the shoe department sleeping one evening. The weather had gotten cold and he had on a coat, but was wearing the same shorts he had on when I first met him. I asked him how things were going and not much had changed, although he looked thinner and more desperate and he looked hopeless.
An elderly cashier asked me if he was okay and I gave her a bare bones summary of his plight. She insisted she would call her daughter, who works for the department of family and children’s services here. I told Trey I was getting off from work in a few minutes and then I would take him to the McDonald’s at the front of our store and get him something to eat. I told the elderly cashier that is where we would be. She met us at McDonald’s and her daughter gave the same referrals – the police, the private food charity, churches. She explained that her daughter said it’s really hard once kids turn 18, because there aren’t many options. She left and I sat down with Trey to eat our meal. I could see him withdraw as the elderly cashier repeated the same referrals that he had tried. He told me at one place they told him there’s a shelter in a city that’s not all that far away (but it’s too far to walk in the cold wearing shorts) and he doesn’t know anyone there, so he didn’t want to go there. He ate one of his burgers, but I knew he wanted to keep the other one for later. I gave him some more cash, but I had to get home to my husband, who is disabled and can’t be left too many hours unattended.
I had thought about bringing Trey home, but hesitated, because my husband is no position to defend himself, if I had misjudged this boy’s character. I sought advice. I asked a kind-hearted, black lady, who is an assistant manager at work, if she knows of any churches that might help. I asked a black department manager, whom I know is a lay pastor in his church. I emailed my friend, Gladius, who is always a reliable source for great advice. The kind black lady told me that black churches aren’t all that they should be and in her opinion mostly they want your money. The black lay pastor, agreed with that assessment, but he told me that he would ask around. Gladius advised me not to bring Trey to my home, because it’s too risky and he told me not to tell him where I live, because he might lead others, who are a threat to my home. I hadn’t even considered that. Gladius gave me a few more places to check into. And Gladius told me white churches aren’t all they should be. The lay pastor got back to me a week or so later and told me of a lady who runs some sort of small private place for the homeless, but he didn’t know much about it.
I didn’t see Trey for a while, but recently he returned and he avoids me. I assume he’s given up on anyone ever really helping him and one of the security guys in my store pointed him out to me as someone they are watching, because he’s shoplifting frequently now. It seems likely that Trey will become just one more statistic of a young black man making his way through the criminal justice system, but if I had been better at helping him, this could have been avoided. Sure, it’s easy to say, it’s not my problem, or that I did all that I could do, but the truth is he arrived in my town, with only the clothes on his back and I know he needs help. I keep thinking I should have done more to help him, because that’s what neighbors are supposed to do.
It’s easy to stereotype, based on our perceptions of various ethnic and racial cultural situations, but at the end of the day, Trey is a kid – he’s not a man by any stretch of the imagination. He doesn’t know how to find a way to a productive, happy fulfilling life on his own. And I wonder how well I would have fared if I found myself with no family or friends to turn to, hungry and alone with only the clothes on my back at 18 or 19 and coming from his type of home environment.
In the urban plight piece, the little girl, Dasani, has dedicated teachers and the principal of her school, mentoring her. She might make it, despite having unreliable parents (drug addicted parents are not reliable – sorry, they’re not).
In Williamson’s report from the “white ghetto”, it’s not out-of-wedlock births that’s the issue, it’s the cascading effect of scarce jobs, crushing generational poverty, drug and alcohol addiction and a litany of bad personal money-management skills that seem almost a genetic trait among America’s poor, which truly is the case among America’s poorest, regardless of race and ethnicity. A barrage of more government programs, replete with state of the art “referral capabilities” and federally subsidized hand-outs won’t change the culture that produces this sort of human misery and hopelessness.
Solutions start with people, not with more government intervention.
Local folks trying new ideas and more people offering a helping hand would surely provide many more needed ideas and potential solutions. I felt pretty useless with my first attempt at helping a homeless person, but I’m still thinking about ways to help Trey and I keep hoping that he doesn’t end up in jail.
At Christmas time I hesitantly mentioned Trey to my younger sister, fully expecting another of her oft-repeated lectures over the years, about how I need to quit adopting stray people and their problems and how I can’t save the world. This time she surprised me and told me that locally back home they’re trying to get a program going for kids like Trey, who reach adulthood and aren’t eligible for programs for children any longer. These kids still need a place to live and adult guidance to avoid becoming statistics of young people passing through the criminal justice system. Local efforts sure appeal to me more than federal behemoths that always come with endless mazes of red tape and multi-tiered bureaucratic hoops to jump through. None of this is helping Trey and I wish I had just brought him home, but I didn’t know enough about him to risk my husband’s safety.
Does one more kid falling through the cracks matter?
He should matter in America.
I wonder how much money is raised through private charities and allocated through government sources in America. I wonder how many homeless people there really are in America and then I wonder how much money per homeless person that all comes out to. While talking to the lay pastor at work, he asked an elderly black lady, whom we both know is very active in her church, if her church has a program for the homeless. She told me they do a walk every year to raise money for the homeless.
As with most things in America, I suspect the answer is that we’re good at raising money and awareness, but not so stellar at using that money and awareness to effectively reach those in need. What Trey needs is parents who care about his well-being and in lieu of that he needs some adults who care about him. Government programs don’t offer caring – they excel at referrals. And yes, I failed him too and I’m still worrying about him, especially when the temperatures dropped last week. What if he got sick – no one would even know.
Filed under Culture Wars, Food for Thought, General Interest, Politics
Worth a rerun
In April 2013 an Hungarian dance group, Attraction Shadow Theatre Dancers, performed on Britain’s Got Talent 2013: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4Fv98jttYA
This performance left such an impression that I’ve watched this video several more times throughout the year. Who says a dance routine can’t speak to big geopolitical issues and they did it without saying a word….
Filed under Food for Thought, Foreign Policy, Military, Politics
$2.75 can make a difference…..
Happy New Year! To start off 2014 on the self-improvement track, what better than a unique list from cracked.com’s executive editor, David Wong, “6 Harsh Truths That Will Make You A Better Person”. As the title denotes, there’s no sugar-coating on his bitter pill offering, but be brave, man up, and swallow. You might even grow some chest hair if you actually follow his advice or you just might, ahemmm, become a better person:
“While other people are telling you “Let’s make a New Year’s resolution to lose 15 pounds this year!” I’m going to say let’s pledge to do fucking anything — add any skill, any improvement to your human tool set, and get good enough at it to impress people. Don’t ask me what — hell, pick something at random if you don’t know. Take a class in karate, or ballroom dancing, or pottery. Learn to bake. Build a birdhouse. Learn massage. Learn a programming language. Film a porno. Adopt a superhero persona and fight crime. Start a YouTube vlog. Write for Cracked.”
This article was pointed out to me by my ever-curious son, who bored me to tears with a cnc machine video a few days ago and told me he wants one. He’s already buying components to build his own…. I’m trying to get my other son’s attention long enough to read this article, but that would cut into his computer gaming time (he’s hard at work on building Civilization V, geesh). ….. A mother’s work is never done….. My adventures into learning new skills this year – well, I plan to actually spend some time to learn Latin, which is something that had been dropped from my public high school by the time I got there and I’ve talked about attempting this for years. I also want to venture into writing some short stories with actual plots. G. Murphy Donovan’s stories from his childhood at New English Review inspired me to attempt the short story format. His latest, “Goldie”, with the poignant Anne Frank quotes, sure offers rich layers to his story about much more than hero sandwiches from his childhood.
The difference between those who will pray “for you” and the rare person who will actually act costs $2.75. On Tuesday, I covered the register, so my cashier in lawn and garden could go to lunch. Scheduling pitfalls and a call out from work from another worker, left us short-handed as usual. Just about everyone in line was purchasing food items for New Year’s celebrations. A lady paid for her purchase of a few food items with a gift card, but she still owed $2.75. When she started to tell me which items to take off, the customer behind her quietly said, “I’ve got it.” And she handed me the cash. The lady thanked her profusely and this customer demurred and said, “It was nothing!” But really it was worth a whole lot more than $2.75. To borrow an Anne Frank quote from GMD’s story, “No one has ever become poor by giving.”
Filed under Food for Thought, General Interest, Good Advice