I'm so disillusioned about so many things in the political sphere these days, left and right, I'm almost at a place of political paralysis. And the murder of Charlie Kirk just takes me even a deeper place of sadness. The real shame of it all is that I think the biggest difference one can make is to donate to our favorite political entities, people and organizations, and I hate that so much.
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Thursday, September 11, 2025
Monday, July 21, 2025
I was in the grocery store checkout line today, about 5th in line. There was a man looking to be in his mid-forties in front of me holding 5 or 6 items and in front of him was a woman of the same approximate age with her teenage son. They had a particularly full cart that was ready to be placed on the conveyor belt.
As she began placing each item on the belt in the usual way, spacing the items out each from the other, her son was instead picking random items out of the cart and flinging them on the belt, almost daring his mom to scold him. As the man in front of me and I watched as much out of boredom as for any other reason, but also waiting to see how or whether the mom would react, the son picked up a bag of potato chips and threw it on the belt, forgetting that he had already opened it, likely when he first sneaked it into the cart.
As if the chips were saying, "Yo Mom, we got this!", they proudly took on the her role of embarrassing the son in front of the rest of us, splaying themselves all over the cart, the floor and the conveyor belt.
The mom, seeing what happened, sighed, looked at him and went back to placing items on the belt. The son, avoiding her glance, not to mention all of ours, hesitated and then, seeing that the mom was leaving it to him to clean up, began to sheepishly do just that.
The man in front of me averted his eyes from the chip carnage in my general direction and I said to him, "I guess we were all teenagers once." He smiled and nodded, waited a few seconds and said "Yeah, we sure were."
Once again reinforcing Cheryl's belief that inside every grown male is an 8-year old boy.
Saturday, July 19, 2025
Winning, not whining II
My updated version of what Democrats need to do to regain power:
Democrats, to make the American Dream affordable again and to bring prosperity back, will:
1.
Provide access to:
a.
quality, affordable health care
b.
free adult vocational education, including:
i.
classes on job-related computer skills, from
spreadsheets to coding
ii.
classes at community colleges
iii.
hands-on job-training in the fields of plumbing,
electrical, mechanical, HVAC, etc.
2.
Give substantial incentives to corporations of
any size to provide free onsite childcare
3.
Reject corporate welfare, subsidies and tax
credits for huge conglomerates and corporate monopolies that have driven out
small businesses
4.
Incentivize corporations to share their profits
with their workers
5.
Remove limits on contributions to Social
Security accounts so high earners and their employers pay their fair share
6.
Continue to push back against those who block
rational, legal immigration reform
7.
Put American citizens’ needs ahead of anyone
entering our country illegally
8.
Limit the power of investment houses to buy up
houses and hold them from the market in order to force an increase in the price
of housing
9.
Pass laws requiring term limits for all federal
and state level politicians
10 Institute
age-limits for Supreme Court justices
11 Nominate
justices who will overturn Citizens United reducing the role of money from
billionaires and corporations in politics
12 Give
military priority to fighting wars that impact on our own national security, while
making sure all spending on our national defense is spent efficiently
13 Reduce
unnecessary overseas military installations and use the money to strengthen our
factory towns
14 Make
sure our veterans have access to free mental healthcare for life
15 Commit
to a full audit of the nation’s drinking water systems and make repairs a top
priority, giving everyone access to clean water
16 Take
a stand against hate speech toward people who have different political opinions
from ours, no matter how much we disagree. Our fellow American citizens are not
the enemy within.
17 Do
everything we can to keep the government out of your life…unless you actually
need or want its help. If the private sector can do it more efficiently for
less cost, the government shouldn’t be doing it at all.
18 Give
special attention to supporting small businesses, which create more jobs than
all the Fortune 500 companies combined. This includes removing burdensome
regulations and unnecessary government-imposed mandates.
19 Eliminate
gerrymandering by removing politicians from the redistricting process
And 20th, never forget to remind people how wonderful they
are. The best of what makes America great isn’t based on how we vote. It’s what
we do every day regardless of our party affiliation: getting our kids off to
school, shopping, making dinner, going to religious services, volunteering at
the food bank, cutting the grass for a sick friend or neighbor regardless of
what their voter registration card says, caring for our elderly parents, and
yes, maybe even running for public office.
As James Brown said, “People feel you before they hear you.”
I have plenty of people in my life whom I love and respect, who are thoughtful,
loving, supportive people…who vote straight Republican, yes, even including for
Donald Trump. We need to validate, and try to understand, their feelings and
beliefs, just as we’d ask that they do the same for us.
Monday, July 14, 2025
Reliving Live Aid
"Reliving Live Aid"
It was an incredibly hot day with little or no water or food but certainly all worth it.
I went with a young woman named Anne Clark. Well, that's her name now. She was the girlfriend of my friend (via Dennis) Mark who looked at me askance when I told the gang I had an extra ticket and Anne said she'd go with me. She's one of the most likeable people I've ever met. I visited Mark and Anne 10 or so years ago when I was in Denver for a conference and it was so great to see them. I think Anne might have packed sandwiches for us. I got there quite early and stayed until it was over.
RandoThoughts
A few random observations, thoughts I thunk while Cheryl and I were talking tonight:
- On judgement: I try never to say what I would have done in someone else's situation or to judge what they should have done. What I try to say is "Based on what I know of the situation, and I don't know everything, what I like to think I would have done is..." And of course, the best thing would be to just not say any dang thing at all because it's none of my business. Which leads me, kind of, to...
- There are so many things I've said over the years that I wish I could take back. And off the top of my head, I can't easily think of any of them. I just know that too often my wont is to speak quickly and bluntly and I know I've hurt people with my words. I guess a small part of the reason is that I'm ashamed and it reflects badly on me, but really the main reason is how my words have hurt. I sincerely hope I've said more supportive things than negative.
Interesting though, as I proofread that before hitting the "Publish" button, it occurred to me that the single biggest critic in my life (at least to my face) is a fellow from Meeting, name of Harry, who has really let me have it a few times, maybe even more than a few times, and to some extent, his words are the inspiration for my second point above. There aren't many males I can think of whom I adore more than Harry. He has spoken quickly and bluntly to me, about me, and I appreciate him, even when his words do hurt and are memorable. So there's that.
Saturday, June 21, 2025
Last May, Judy, Sherry, Laurie and I took a train from Chicago to St. Paul (visiting 2nd cousin Molly McMahon and her cool family, joined, to our surprise by Gwennie, Tom and Mole), Portland (visiting with 2nd cousin Kaeri Schaefer and her also cool family) and then to Los Anglese (visiting 2nd cousin Brian McVickar and his joyful friend Danni).
Before we left, Laurie suggested to all the nieces, nephews, and kids that they think of interview questions for the 4 of us to discuss and record on tape for posterity.
The only two people to respond were Anita and Becca. Anita asked us to share our memories of Gary and I'll cover that separately.
These were Becca's questions:
Traditions:
Funny to me how few I can think of, and by "few", I mean I can only think of one, waving to people or blinking the front lights as they left the house and drove west on Black Horse Road across the front of our property. Not many people know about it now and of those who do, seem not to want to be bothered with it, except Trev who still embraces it with enthusiasm.
Life Lessons from Siblings:
This is a tough one, because I can only think of one thing specifically, which is when, after Gary died, Laurie observed that our body only allows us to experience grief in portions we are able to handle because if it hit us all at once, it would be too much to handle.
But in a more general sense, the way they, and their kids too, have helped me, is they just just care about me and make me feel I'm important to them. There just really is no more important gift one can give.
Bill Bradfield
Way too many to put in print but I'm somewhat embarrassed to admit that it was kind of an exciting time for me as a 20-something year-old to be so close to someone who was on the front page of all the local papers and magazines and who was someone I visited often throughout, growing close to all the people involved and guilty in the eyes of many.
Joyful Childhood Memories
- playing games outside, occasionally in the dark
- going to swim at Sixpenny and Hopewell
- visiting and visits from my best childhood and maybe even adulthood friend, Jim Daly
- time alone, staring at the ceiling
- watching TV shows as a family on mom and dad's bed
- sledding in the front yard
- Downingtown Friends School
- Hanging with the Bradfields, kids and adults, including daytrips to the Jersey shore
Laurie Finding Out
I wasn't there so I can't add anything but I do remember the family dinner probably not long after when Mom and Dad not only telling Judy and me that news but also that their real 1956 wedding date was in April, not February, which is when they wanted us to think they'd been married because I was born in December of that year (you can do the math). It was nice to have Laurie as a full biological sister but it didn't really change anything since we always thought of she, Gary and Sherry as full siblings anyway.
A McVickar a McVickar
Well, we are opinionated and outspoken but good listeners; strong but gentle; spiritual but not all religious; Democrats in every case except for Wyatt; good friends to have; loving, tolerant, fun, funny, emotional, communicative...and although not every one of those fits every one of us, there is one thing we all have in common: We are all very, very lucky to be in the extended McVickar family - siblings, nieces, nephews, aunts, uncles, grandparents, cousins, second cousins, and however to describe the luck of having the al-Rubaiay family as part of ours now too. LUCKY!
Ancestor Connections and Grandparent memories
Sadly, we can't go too deep here, as none of us knew our (Matthew) McVickar/(Arno) Osterhaus grandfathers. My maternal grandmother, Clarita Osterhaus, who we called Nanny for some odd reason, was always pleasant with us though rarely seemed to have much interest in knowing us at any level. We thought of her as quite wealthy, though I doubt she ever had much more than $40-50,000 to her name. She would allow Mom to buy each of us one "expensive" gift - up to $40 or so - at Christmas that she would pay for, of course. When Judy, Laurie and I were all under ten years old, she would occasionally put red lipstick on all three of us and I remember being disappointed when it was decided that it would not be appropriate to include me. She and mom loved to laugh together. She would drive out once a month or so and she and Mom would catch up on all that was going on in their worlds. I don't remember them talking on the phone much, or ever, really.
Our paternal grandmother, Sarah Jeannette McVickar, who we called Mema, was 11 years older than Nanny and was reminiscent of the character of Aunt Bea on The Andy Griffith Show, if considerably less gregarious. She was strict with us when she would watch us when mom and dad went away on vacation, with a number of peculiar rules required of us kids:
- we couldn't drink any milk at dinner until we finished all our food
- the oldest kid - Laurie - got to decide what TV shows we watched
- we had to "make a BM" before we were allowed to go to bed
- and we had to say prayers first too: "Now I lay me down to sleep" is all I remember.
So other than those two wonderful ladies, I guess the only ancestral-type folks I had any real contact with were Dad's siblings and Uncle Art was and still is an inspiration to me. He was a wonderfully playful uncle and also was incredibly fit, well into his 70's. In fact, I remember him not just playing volleyball with us at age 76 at a family reunion, but playing extremely actively, even more so than some of the rest of us.
I hope that helped, Becca! Sorry it took so long. Let me know if you have any more questions. You'll think of many after we're gone.
Friday, May 23, 2025
Friday, April 18, 2025
Friday, April 11, 2025
Tuesday, April 8, 2025
Picture this
News Item:
Detroit assistant general manager Sam Menzin resigned his post last Thursday, just before the team was planning to fire him for improper workplace conduct. Multiple women, including two Tigers employees, confirmed to The Athletic that Menzin sent them unsolicited lewd photos, some of which date back to 2017. Find out more. Nah, I'm good, thanks. Besides which, I just don't get dick pics. Literally or figuratively. And I am fine with that. |
Friday, March 7, 2025
I mean, even if it has all been with m'lovely!
We've all heard the expression, "Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it."
I'm just wondering if it's okay to ignore the best sex I've ever had.
Thursday, March 6, 2025
Oh, so like maybe you have a better idea!?
We need to be clear about what are our better ideas.
So far, I don't see enough of that coming from us.
Friday, February 28, 2025
Yeah yeah, I know I have too much time on my hands
Here are things I think about...but refuse to Google
apparently:
- Why
are some words bad? Bad parenting probably.
- Why
do words hurt? Seems just like getting punched in a sore spot, the more tender
you are, the more they hurt.
- Why
do we say things to hurt?
- Why
are there silent letters? That’s just dum.
- Do
antelopes eat cantaloupes?
- How
do trees get so tall just from dirt, water, sun and a tiny acorn?
- Why
do we stop growing? (No fair referencing my belly!)
- What
is it about music that we love so much?
- Why
doesn’t all our hair grow like the hair on our heads?
- Why
don’t trees leave a massive indentation in the earth where they grow from,
after having sucked out all the nutrients?
- If
the water cycle is a fact, how and why can we run low on water?
- Why
do we use big words when little ones will do?
- How
can the US ban the sale of semiconductor chips to China, when we bought them
from Taiwan in the first place? And isn’t that ban all the more reason for
China to invade Taiwan?
- At
the equator, the Earth moves at around 1,000 miles per hour due to its
spin. And they tell us that we don't feel the Earth spinning because it
rotates at a constant speed, and we are moving with it. So why would I
fall off the top of a moving car if I'm moving with it?
Discuss:
- If
you had a choice between never feeling emotional pain or physical pain the rest
of your life, which would you choose?
- Do
males or females change more (in all ways other than physically) between the
ages of 13 and 31?
- If
you add zero to any number, did you add anything to it?
I'm done. I hope I didn't add nothing to your
brain.
Friday, February 21, 2025
A Plan for Winning, not Whining
Updating my list of suggestions for the Democratic Party on how to win future elections.
Democrats will:
1 –Aid and protect you with:
- access to quality, affordable health care
- free adult vocational education of any kind, including:
- classes on job-related computer
skills, from spreadsheets to coding
- classes at community colleges
- hands-on job-training in the fields of plumbing, electrical, mechanical, HVAC, etc.
2 - Reduce the strangulating power that corporations have over our lives that keep all of us from a better life
3 - Reject corporate welfare (subsidies and tax credits to companies and industries unrelated to the common good)
4 - Incentivize corporations to share their profits with their workers
5 - Remove limits on contributions to Social Security accounts so high earners and their employers pay their fair share
6 - Put American citizens’ needs ahead of anyone entering
our country illegally
7 - Limit the power of investment houses to buy up houses and hold them from the market in order to force an increase in the price of housing
8 - Pass laws requiring term limits for all federal and
state level politicians
9 - Institute age-limits for Supreme Court justices
10 - Nominate justices who will overturn Citizens United
reducing the role of money from billionaires and corporations in politics
11 - Only involve our military in fighting wars that have an
impact on our own national security
12 – Reduce unnecessary overseas military installations and
use the money to strengthen our factory towns
13 – Commit to a full audit of the nation’s drinking water
systems and make repairs a top priority, giving everyone access to clean water
14 - Oppose hate speech toward people who have different political opinions from ours, no matter how much we disagree. Our fellow American citizens are not the enemy within.
15 - Do everything we can to keep the government out of your life…unless you actually need or want its help. If the private sector can do it better and for less cost, the government shouldn’t be doing it at all.
16 –Give special attention to supporting small businesses, which create more jobs than all the Fortune 500 companies combined. This includes removing burdensome regulations and unnecessary government-imposed requirements.
17 – Make sure all spending on our national defense is
spent efficiently and is directed toward the most up-to-date weaponry.
18 – Make sure our veterans have access to free mental
healthcare for life.
19 – Give substantial incentives to corporations of any size to provide
free onsite childcare
And 20th, never forget to remind people how wonderful they are. The best of what makes America great isn’t based on how we vote. It’s what we do every day regardless of our party affiliation: getting our kids off to school, shopping, making dinner, going to religious services, volunteering at the food bank, cutting the grass for a sick friend or neighbor regardless of what their voter registration card says, caring for our elderly parents, and yes, maybe even running for public office.
As James Brown said, “People feel you before
they hear you.” I have plenty of people in my life whom I love and respect, who
are thoughtful, loving, supportive people…who vote straight Republican, yes,
even including for Donald Trump. We need to validate, and try to understand, their feelings and beliefs, just as we’d ask that they do the same for us.
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
This is an excerpt from an email I recently sent to a friend:
I have lots of takeaways about the election. One can
correctly blame Biden; Kamala's emphasis on joy while ignoring people's pain;
paying Beyonce and Oprah $1m to endorse her; worry about the border
(why?!); the Dems fascination with people's identities, from gender to race;
along with the list you included above.
I think it's every single one of those things.
Thing is, we Dems need a candidate who has many of the same
goals as the absolute political genius lunkhead in the oval office right now -
questioning everything about the way our government works and playing more
hardball than many Ds are comfortable with.
What annoys me about the Ds right now is we are doing so
much navel gazing, philosophizing, ruminating, discerning and threshing, but
not coming up with specific plans instead of general ones, that speak the
language of the guy at the end of the bar. Or maybe just the bartender.
FCNL had a call the other night of actions we can take
to fight back. I signed up for it but opted to get the transcript. It's 33 pages long. I've read, or at least
breezed through, the first 16 pages and so far, the only thing they've said is
to lobby moderate Republicans. Genius! The rest of it is thanking each other
and explaining problems we all already knew about. I'm not going to read
the rest, but if you do, let me know if it gets more constructive.
I am working on my own list of things that Dems should be
pimping left and, especially, right - specifics, that speak the human language,
with no references to ad hoc stopgap subcommittee bipartisan bilateral blue ribbon
adjunct hardworking American roll up our sleeves best practice bread and butter
existential inflection point game changer kitchen table common sense
initiatives. (Did I forget anything?!)
Monday, February 17, 2025
Ruben Gallego for President!
I used to post articles like this, with my comments, on Facebook, but for some reason, I'm just not into doing that anymore. In fact, the last post below this, I put on FB and a few days later deleted it I guess because I don't want and care for, approval from the masses and I don't feel like pushing my political views on anyone anymore. Or at least not to the extent I had been. I still post (political) things there from time, but not generally and definitely not to the extent I had been leading up to the election.
And why I even post them here I'm not entirely sure. My blog data says that anywhere from 5-20 people look at my posts and honestly, as far as I can tell, really only 1 or 2 do: my dear niece Becca, bless her heart, actually truly does read them, though I think my sister Laurie checks in from time to time. So who I'm writing for, I'm not really sure, especially the political stuff. But I enjoy it. Maybe it's for venting. I really don't know.
Anyway, here are the two excerpts from this interview with Ruben Gallego that I like best, with my favorite parts in red:
"You won Latino men by 30 points in an election in which Trump dominated that group. I know men are a very broad group, but what do you think Democrats have misunderstood about them?
That we could be working to make the status of men better without diminishing the status of women.
A lot of times we forget that we still need men to vote for us. That’s how we still win elections. But we don’t really talk about making the lives of men better, working to make sure that they have wages so they can support their families. I also think some of this is purely psychological — like we just can’t put our finger on it. During my campaign, I noticed when I was talking to men, especially Latino men, about the feeling of pride, bringing money home, being able to support your family, the feeling of bringing security — they wanted to hear that someone understood that need. And a lot of times we are so afraid of communicating that to men, because we think somehow we’re going to also diminish the status of women. That’s going to end up being a problem. The fact that we don’t talk this way to them makes them think we don’t really care about them, when in fact the Democrats on par are actually very good about the status of working-class men. It was a joke, but I said a lot when I was talking to Latino men: “I’m going to make sure you get out of your mom’s house, get your troquita.” For English speakers, that means your truck. Every Latino man wants a big-ass truck, which, nothing wrong with that. “And you’re gonna go start your own job, and you’re gonna become rich, right?” These are the conversations that we should be having. We’re afraid of saying, like, “Hey, let’s help you get a job so you can become rich.” We use terms like “bring more economic stability.” These guys don’t want that. They don’t want “economic stability.” They want to really live the American dream."
And:
"How do Democrats stand for what they believe in without being seen by voters as outside the mainstream?
"It’s easier for us to be hit as being extremists if we’re not also known for something, if we’re not fighting to make someone’s life better, to bring down the cost of living, raise wages.
If we’re not
actively fighting for that, it’s going to be easier for people to take the most
extreme positions and say, “Well, that’s actually what the Democrats are.” I
think most Americans are very much pro-L.G.B.T. I think they are pro-women’s
rights. I think they’re more aligned with Democrats than with where Republicans
are. But when we aren’t identified as doing something for the grander America,
they’re just going to be able to say, “They’re just so focused on these small
little niche groups instead of you.” And that resonated.
I know someone’s
going to say: “Well, the G.D.P. under Biden was the highest. And we had the
lowest unemployment ever. Ruben Gallego is wrong.” Yes, that was all true. But
people were not feeling it. People were just not feeling it. If we want to lie
to ourselves and say, “Well, things were really good, the economy was really
good” when people were telling us it was not, we’re going to continue having
this problem. It’s going to be easier for people to take away some of these
basic rights if we allow the middle of America to continue to suffer
economically."
Sunday, February 16, 2025
This column really spoke to me. I know there are plenty of my friends who are so ready to fight, resist, activate and push. God bless them. I'm behind them. Like way way behind them. I'm not there. My goal is to try to be a better person. To be kind. To plant seeds of joy and love and return to basics. Friends, family, every person I know or even meet for the first time. A smile. A conversation. A hug when appropriate. And someday, I'll be ready to reactivate. Just not now.
Saturday, February 8, 2025
In case you aren't tired of me expounding more on validation
Thinking more about my posts a few weeks back about no longer needing validation, this article impressed upon me the other side of that thinking which is that if one doesn’t need to be stroked, as it were, one also eliminates, at least theoretically, any need to be defensive or to feel (negatively) judged. If someone speaks to or of me unkindly, it wouldn’t/shouldn’t matter. If I don’t need or seek validation, it doesn’t just mean I don’t need to be judged positively, it also means I don’t care if I’m judged negatively.
That article helped drive that point home for me, where the husband, who came to admit the problem in his marriage was himself, was at his worst when he was criticized, or felt judged by his wife. As I read it and he gave an example, I thought, “Dude. Either accept it or ignore it and move on.” Easier said than done, of course, but that’s what I strive for, not always successfully, I admit, or as Cheryl can tell you (but probably wouldn’t).
The other thing from that article that stood out to me, is
the impact of one’s childhood on how healthy one’s adult relationship with a
partner might be. For me, as my sister
Laurie used to frequently remind me, I was annoying as hell as a 12-14 year
old, ok, maybe 11-15 year old…and sometimes 68 year old…before I began around
age 15-16 to retreat semi-permanently into my bedroom, coming out only for
meals.
The root of my being annoying was a quest for attention,
negative being better than none at all. I grew up in a very loving, supportive
household, but as wonderful a man as my dad was, my tween years sensed that his
interest in his art superseded his interest in being a present dad, though I
suspect that is what he likely learned from his dad. (And my greatest fear
might be that my kids feel the same about me and my interest in sports. It’s
not true, you guys! Being a dad was my favorite thing ever in my entire life!)
And so, as I moved into adulthood, I believe I probably
brought some of that need with me, hard as it is to admit, or put in permanent
writing. Close friends of mine once called me a gadfly, and, once I looked it
up, it hurt, but if that is their or anyone else’s perspective, I can’t help
that. It does regretfully though fit my narrative.
Finally, if one accepts the idea that one’s childhood will
impact one’s relationship with a partner in adulthood, then I have one last
observation.
I remember in my 20’s being confused by women who, while we
were still in bed after sex, possibly at my/our most vulnerable, asking me
personal questions about former girlfriends.
I think it was my aforementioned sister Laurie who I asked
at some point what the heck that was all about and she said it was probably so
they could find out what I might say about them someday if things didn’t work
out. In the bigger picture, maybe they were trying to probe my emotional depths
as to whether I portrayed likely negative (break-up) experiences in any kind of
angry, vengeful tone or if I thought of them positively (which I did, in every
case) to see what kind of person I really was. (I mean, it’s not like guys’
personalities change any once they achieved conquest…orgasm…had a
mutually beneficial loving intimate interaction with a girl! Amirite?!) Or
heck, maybe they just wanted to know if they had any competition to worry
about.
So now I’m thinking that if their goal was to get some sense
of what I might be like as a long-term partner, they’d be better off asking about
my childhood and how happy I was and how validated I felt.
In a family where the youngest got the most positive
attention (and not without reason, Judy was everything I was not – happy,
positive, fun to be around, full of joy) and the oldest, Laurie, got plenty of
negative attention in my tween years, I felt very loved but not often terribly
happy, and rarely validated.
Thursday, February 6, 2025
Father and son at 2006 opening day
I love the simplicity of this special day that I summarized in an email on 4/4/2006 to a group of people I thought might enjoy it:
Sherry called me today and suggested that I write an email to everyone about my day with Trev yesterday, and since I have some time to kill - what a concept! - between work and a political meetin' (Gone With the Wind reference) at 7, I’ll do it now. The meeting at 7 is with a Democratic Party group whose main goal is to defeat Rick Santorum. Yolanda, if you don't know who he is, he's our senator and maybe be politically to the right of GW. He’s a very, very bad man.
Anyway, yesterday, Trev and I did our annual day together - his 7th opening day, which is pretty impressive when you consider he's only 5 years old (one in utero, obviously). (Opening Day is the first day of baseball season - the first Phillies home game of the year.)
Last year was the first time it was just Trev and me, Cheryl very nicely agreeing that between the expense and the hassle of taking both Trev and Emma, and likely Evelyn too, it would be easier to have it just be a dad/son thing. And as with last year, I took the full day off from work. Of course, Opening Day should be a national holiday, but we won’t get into that right now.
Last year we stopped first at the Reading Terminal Market and pretty much got there and Trev wanted to leave to get to the game, which was still 2 hours from starting which was just too much time to kill with a 4-yr old in a crowd of 45,000+. But this year, we went again and it went much better. We had lunch from one of the many homemade food-type vendors– macaroni and cheese and a big delicious piece of cornbread (When I asked Trev if it was better than mommy’s, he said, Yes, but don’t tell her!) and pink lemonade, which we agreed was actually red, since that is the Phillies color. Then we got some Bassett’s ice cream (I have a picture of me with Anneke eating ice cream there) and then some of the amazing double chocolate chip cookies from the Famous Deli, which I believe is what they’re famous for. I took them home for Ev and Cheryl and brought the rest in to work, where they were quickly gobbled up.
Geez, I need to leave soon, so I better speed this up.
So we left and got to the game pretty quickly with about 20 minutes to spare, which was good cuz it gave us time to get the most important thing of the day – cotton candy, of course! And we saw the guys parachute in with the ceremonial first ball, which was then thrown out by Kimmy Meissner who just won the world figure skating championship and trains nearby. (Art Garfunkel sang God Bless America at the 7th inning stretch, but we were long gone by then). And they had a huge flag covering center field carried by a hundred military types and the Phila Boys Choir sang the national anthem and the Phillie Phanatic was all over the place – all quite the spectacle.
Let’s see, well, by the fourth inning, the Phillies were losing 10-0! But more importantly, we had time to go out and get hot dogs and more lemonade and walk all the way around the stadium with Trev on my shoulders most of the way. We only actually sat in our seats for about an inning, which happened to be the inning the dumb cardinals scored 8 runs! And Trev just squirmed the whole time, climbing on me, running up and down the aisle, literally poking the 20-something year old in the seat next to him in the shoulder with his finger and then looking away. And he was showing off his shiny penny that he had gotten squished flat into a pig at the Reading Terminal (long story) to anyone who would look. And generally just being very excitable, not bad, just uh…active. So we left about half way through the game, Trev falling asleep on the almost 2-hour ride home (big traffic jam).
So the best part of the whole story is last night, I was carrying Trev into bed, and I told him what a great day it had been even if the Phillies had lost. He paused for a moment and said “They did?!”
I just laughed and told him I loved him and gave him a huge hug.
Perfect.
Oh yeah, and of course the only bad news is that they won’t be able sell beer at the Phillies games the rest of the year. Why? All together now: “Cuz they lost the opener!!!!!!!”
(Uncle Art told me that joke about 40 years ago.)
Love to you all.
- Jame
Monday, February 3, 2025
As the pendulum swings...
Just a few thoughts about a topic that I find to be an almost universal concern among the males of a wide age range I've brought this topic up to: What it means to be a male right now. A concern that I believe had a great deal of influence on the unfortunate outcome of the 2024 election.
Men are confused right now, which is a bad thing, but some of the reasons are good ones, including the fact (opinion, actually) that men's roles needed to be shaken up.
Here are a few links that I found interesting or just fun:
This article "outlines the current state of America’s working class men and describes recent trends in the key areas of employment, earnings, health, and family."
From the article:
- Working class men face alarmingly high risks of dying young, particularly from “deaths of despair” such as suicide, drug overdoses, and alcohol-related deaths.
- They are also more vulnerable to other health challenges, including workplace injuries and chronic diseases.
- Young working class men (aged 25 to 34) are more likely to die than middle-aged non-working class men (aged 45 to 54).
- Employment rates for working class men have significantly declined over the past four decades.
- Black working class men have persistently faced the greatest hurdles in the labor market, while white working class men have experienced the most dramatic recent declines in employment rates.
- Meanwhile, wages for working class men have been stagnant.
- Marriage and family formation rates have declined significantly among working class men.
- Social isolation is on the rise, with fewer close friendships and weakened social bonds, contributing to a deeper sense of loneliness and disconnection. In the past there was hardly any class gap in marriage and family-formation. Today there is a huge one.
So those are all the problems, but here is one definite solution! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XOt2Vh0T8w
And finally, for those who think there's some advantage or in any way that it’s still better to be a man than a woman, I
have two words for you: multiple orgasms.
Sunday, February 2, 2025
Saturday, February 1, 2025
We have met the monsters and they are not disambiguates
I’m not going to write much about this, except to excerpt from this interview two things:
Take a look in the mirror. Might that be a monster
looking back at you?
In her wide-ranging, weirdly fascinating new book, Humans: A Monstrous
History, historian of science Surekha Davies tells the story of
humanity as an epic of monstrification, following the evolving definitions
of what it means to be human, and of what it means to be placed outside of that
definition. Davies describes how Westerners saw that the places they colonized
were populated by beings who looked, ate, spoke, and behaved differently — and
to fill the gaps in their understanding, imagined them as monsters, beyond the
limits of humanity. She traces how that impulse underlies how humans have built
nations, drawn borders, created scapegoats, and justified the destruction and
enslavement of whole populations.
But monsters are us, writes Davies, and
understanding the process by which we make them and how they continue to
dominate our imaginations is a key to recognizing our mutual humanity. She
proposes that people might reclaim monstrification to embrace difference,
rather than reject it — first by recognizing that the boundaries between the
human and monstrous are drawn, by humans, for human purposes — and that it’s
possible to draw those boundaries differently, or not at all. Understanding
humanity, that is to say, means understanding monstrosity
And this:
You bring up in the book that humanity is good at
dehumanizing people and humanizing non-humans. And you can see this in
capitalist work relationships, in the evolving idea of who is allowed to have
free speech in the United States; increasingly it's these corporate beings,
while people are dehumanized, made into numbers, made into raw material, made
into resources.
That's an interesting question. I think the category of
the human has always been like growing and shrinking, growing and shrinking. In
certain times and places, only if you were a male property owner, could you
vote. In the early 17th century, in the British Caribbean colonies, these slave
and servant acts were written to disambiguate the Christian
servant from the black enslaved person. There are these moments when stories
are told in order to separate groups, to make it easier to exploit one group of
people, to divide up groups that actually had a lot in common.
Or maybe I just like it because I’m in the third season of
Dr. Who which is chock full of monsters!
Or…or…maybe I just love the word disambiguate. I would love
to find a time and place to use that in a sentence.
Monday, January 27, 2025
In fact, the times did a-change...
Cheryl and I went to see the Bob Dylan biopic a few weeks ago and we both really liked it a lot. I’ve never been a big fan of his, but after seeing the movie, have a new appreciation for him. And soon thereafter, Peter Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary fame passed away.
So I listened to a few of their songs. And a handful of
Dylan’s. And what hit me most solidly, well besides trying to make any sense of
meaning of Dylan’s lyrics at all, my previous post about poetry and lyrics
notwithstanding, was the earnestness which drip from their every word. They
delivered each lyric with great intent and feeling and importance.
And it all took me back to that time – the 60’s - when I was
a kid and the world was pretty darn wonderful. Not only was it wonderful, if
kind of boring to be honest, but it was a time of simplicity and great hope and
excitement about the future. Our family hung out with people like us, many of
them Quakers: the Marohns, Kietzmans, Browns, McQuails, and, at Quarterly Meeting
gatherings, the Zorns. All people who shared our values and our belief in love
and caring for each other and a gleaming future absent of prejudice and war.
And seemingly all the families drove VWs – bugs, buses, Carmen Ghias,
squarebacks – and they were a beautiful simple political statement of their
own.
We had soundly defeated the extremism of Goldwater and the John Birch Society and we were sure we were going to march and protest and wear our peace sign medallions until we had left Vietnam. It was a time of great promise.
Thursday, January 23, 2025
It's going to take 4 years of all kinds of body contortions: chin up, stiff upper lip, growing a spine, keeping an eye out, and the nose to the activist grindstone
My approach to Trump’s first term was not unlike the path our country too often takes when outraged by the actions of another country: all-out war.
My approach to his second term
will be more aligned with the way I’d prefer we deal with conflict: diplomacy,
finding common ground, listening carefully to their positions and trying to
understand then, but speaking truth to power when necessary, working together
to find acceptable solutions and calling out injustice when we see it.
And in this case, making sure as
many people know our position, in specifics, on any given issue, when I
disagree with the solution they’ve forced on us. But also, more radically, give
the other side credit when they do something I agree with or that has proven to
be successful. And I desperately hope
President Trump will take the same approach with us…as well as the foreign
countries doing things we don’t approve of.
Along the same lines, I watched
the recent Senate confirmation hearings of the (likely) incoming “SecDef”
Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, and cheered on the Democratic Senators
grilling him about his personal shortcomings involving excessive drinking on
the job, financial mismanagement of organizations he ran, and allegations of
sexual assault, as well as statements he has made regarding women in the
military. It wasn’t until I read posts from Mark Cuban that I realized I should
have been jeering many of their questions instead. Sure, 1 or 2 of the Senators
should have attacked him about those semi-relevant issues, but what they really
should have peppered him with were questions about the actual job ahead.
Cuban wrote: “I'm sorry but the
Dems are ridiculously bad at their Hegseth questions. IMO, if you want to prove
someone is incompetent, you ask them the hardest strategic questions they will
have to know to succeed at the job. What would I ask? "What was your
analysis of the Houthi Bombing in October? What counsel would you give POTUS
regarding next actions?" "What should the US strategy be in Syria
?" " How would you counter Chinese aggression on the south China Sea
?" ‘How would you assure civilian oversight of DOD’"
And it is similar to the bigger
issue I started with. What are the real issues here – his past or his future?
It’s like a comparison of China’s foreign policy vs ours. They care little
don’t care at all about human rights. They care only about how it impacts them
financially and in terms of global power. Meanwhile, the US (to our credit) cares
greatly factors in a country’s record on human rights when making decisions
related to foreign policy. Or at least we have, historically, particularly when
Jimmy Carter was President.
And we should continue to, but
respecting their approach and working with them, not against them to right
those wrongs, not taking a militaristic approach, but the same approach I’d use
when my friend or neighbor has a different way than ours.
All that said, a number of friends have reached out, asking how we are dealing with the then impending Trump presidency. This was my reply to a friend this morning:
"I/we are really trying to not just stay above the proverbial fray but avoiding it entirely, or as much as possible. Frees up a fair amount of time, at least. Just ignoring it and pretty much everything DJT-related beyond the unavoidable headlines. I'm just in a completely different place than I was 8 years ago. Acceptance and revulsion co-mingled, and an absence of hate or protest, with a touch of hope that he can do some really good things. What I see in the headlines are just so effing awful. People talk about Dems needing to grow a collective, or even individual, spine/s, but my hope is that some of the Rs do, as they begin to realize what exactly he is doing to the people of this country. Collins and Murkowski in particular, but even Mitch McConnell and John Kennedy (LA) among others."
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