Wednesday, July 31, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 POLICIES

Time was when political elections featured well-formulated policy statements, called platforms, from which voters were to choose. For example, look at the 1952 election, a time seemingly proposed as worth returning to by many Americans (of specific race and gender.)

Both political parties spelled out their aims clearly.

The Republican platform pledged to end the unpopular war in Korea, supported the development of nuclear weapons as a deterrence strategy, to fire all "the loafers, incompetents and unnecessary employees" at the State Department, condemned the Roosevelt and Truman administrations' economic policies, supported retention of the Taft–Hartley Act, opposed "discrimination against race, religion or national origin", supported "Federal action toward the elimination of lynching", and pledged to bring an end to communist subversion in the United States.

The Democrats favored a strong national defense, collective security against the Soviet Union, multilateral disarmament, repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act, equal employment opportunities for minorities and public assistance for the aged, children, blind, and the disabled, expansion of the school lunch program, and continued efforts to fight racial discrimination.

Americans chose the Republican candidate, Dwight D. Eisenhower, who claimed victory graciously, over the Democratic candidate Adlai E. Stevenson, who accepted defeat graciously.

Neither vowed to claim fraud or to spur violence over the results.

Voters then went on about their business.

Neither platform sought simply to build raw power at the expense of the common good.

Neither platform described the other party as “garbage.”

Neither platform vowed the use of religion as retribution if enacted.

Neither party employed a professional wrestler as its spokesperson.

Maybe there are some tidbits of the past that could make America an even better country.




Tuesday, July 30, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 SECULARISM

This time I think we have gone too far. It seems, at least according to the internet, that a representative from one of our political parties has insisted that we must become a “Christian Nation.” He also said women have to have babies or they won't count, or maybe only as 3/5 of a person. We'll get to that later.

Meanwhile, I dunno.

I am not up to the task of being an evangelical voter. Now there may be some folks who are, but I am fairly weak in spirit, physical strength, and financial resources.

First, we would have to become a forgiving nation, to wit:

Then Peter came to him and asked, “Lord, how often should I forgive someone who sins against me? Seven times?”

“No!” Jesus replied, “seventy times seven!” Matthew 18:21-22:

Now take those people who stormed our United States Capitol on January 6, 2021. If we were a bona-fide Christian Nation, and there were statutory punishments in place for un-American activity, I suppose I could forgive them. If I had to, and if the penalties for non-Christian behavior were severe enough, I suppose I might make it twice or even three times. But let me tell you, before we got to 70 times 7, I would fall by the wayside and who knows? The man (?) who called me a sucker/loser for serving in in foreign war? Rather than forgive him, I might find myself in a cell with a big bully in a white robe wanting to show me the “treasures of the universe.” Just maybe.

We couldn’t get divorced as citizens of a Christian nation, except for adultery. Of course we could make it unilateral, i.e. an option only available to men. Now I don’t want to. Get divorced, that is, hard to imagine a set of circumstances under which I would. No, wait a minute. I beg your pardon … If I were to ever catch her watching Fox News, I’d be out the door in two seconds flat and nobody could blame me. So, there are two major points of concern.

Here’s a third: I’d have to give away all my belongings. That’s one of the plainest demands within the scriptures. Now if I gave away all my money, I’d have to rely on non-believers to take care of me.

Oh gosh. The meek would inherit our country. I find those people tiresome in their nondescript little houses and their weekend family fishing trips.

Peace makers! Who needs them? Halliburton stock would be worthless.

In seeming contradiction to some of the other mandates, we would have to be a more vengeful nation. I guess we could keep a war or two going. That would require a reinstatement of the draft probably. I’ve been through that, so it might not affect me. On the other hand, remember the Volkstrum. If I did get pulled in, I do have a problem with this stricture that would become part of our legal system.

Now, therefore, kill every male among the little ones, and kill every woman that hath known a man by lying with him. But all the young girls who have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves. (Num. 31:17-18, Revised Standard Version.)

We now come to my final question. Whose Christianity? I am not going to hand out The Watchtower on Saturday morning and miss the Bowery Boys movies on TCM. Just get my cell ready.

Also, if the Mormons win out, I think I should rather live in the Windward Islands than wear Magic Underwear. My wife might go along with the harems if she could be First Wife, but she’s not about to accept that secondary citizenship business.

Snake handling? Forget it.

And, so help me Charles Darwin, I would rather be locked up in the Opryland Hotel with a dominatrix on steroids than to be in the same room with Joel Osteen


Monday, July 29, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

LOGIC

 Last week I saw a video of a speech where an evangelist claimed that an abortion for a 12-year-old girl who had been raped by a stranger, or even a father, should not be allowed because, “all lives are precious.”

Last week I saw a video of a speech where an evangelist claimed that we shouldn’t be concerned about the annihilation of children by his god’s people since the murder of a child would immediately send that child to paradise, preventing a life of toil and trouble. Joshua was really doing the children of Jericho an act of graciousness by following his god’s orders when he “… destroyed with the sword every living thing in it—men and women, young and old, cattle, sheep and donkeys..” Although not evangelicals, the conquistadors received absolution for bashing the heads of Indian babies against walls for it sent them immediately into Heaven.

In another epoch, we read of the Iraq-Iran war during which Iranians marched young children across mine fields to clear them after assuring their parents an immediate entrance into paradise where virgins awaited their pleasure. Oh, only for the boys.

What might we gain from this?

Perhaps it is that the concept of congruity in our thought process has escaped too many people. That is why so many ultra-religious among us vocally and actively support the candidacy of a man who has achieved national prominence by gloating over a life marked by love of the seven deadly sins and who campaigns in direct repudiation of the Sermon on the Mount. How is this possible?

When I was young, they tried to keep us occupied on trips by giving us what they called “connect the dots puzzles.” Completed successfully, isolated lines produced a coherent picture of something recognizable.

I think it taught us, subconsciously, that the same might be true of our thoughts. When connected carefully, an acceptable conclusion would appear. It requires logic. What should concern us today is that a startling percentage of American voters could not answer the following with confidence:

A equals B

B equals C

Does A equal C? Yes or no, and why?




Sunday, July 28, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 LEADERS

When I started my professional career, I had the opportunity to work for many of the cities in our state. Without fail, the leaders of those cities, not necessarily the elected ones but those holding power, looked like I do today.

Old fat white men.

Yep. And as time passed, I heard a consistent message from younger potential leaders. “Those old men won’t step aside and let us assume leadership positions.” Of course, women and minorities weren’t even part of the conversation. But that’s how the baby boomers felt.

Now the baby boomers are in charge, today even joined by selected females and people of color. Guess what the young folks are saying?

Yep. As a friend pointed out during a lunch yesterday, it’s probably true with each generation.

“They just won’t get out of the way and let us in to lead.”

That’s one—just one—of the magnificent aspects of President Joe Biden’s speech this week. The most powerful man in the world, not the leader of some mid-sized town in Arkansas but the most powerful man in the world, is “getting out of the way.”

One immediately hears the opening of the fourth movement ofBeethoven’s Fifth symphony erupt.



Saturday, July 27, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 HEALTH INSURANCE

Many years after my service in the military, I was working for a national company and enjoyed one of the best health insurance programs in the nation, a grand employee benefit. I travelled a lot back in those days when auto manufacturers didn’t provide much back support in vehicle seats.

So I developed some nagging back problems. They progressed to the point that I felt I needed medical attention.

“No problem,” colleagues said. “You have good insurance. Go to the doc and charge it to your insurance.”

But wait.

This was back in the day. Back in the day, we are told, the return to which would make America great again.

Just wait a moment.

There was this idea that health insurance companies relied upon called, “pre-existing conditions.” Simply put, if you were ever diagnosed with a malady, it freed all future insurance companies from paying for treatment on that malady.

If I saw a physician claiming back problems, that insurance would pay, but any future insurance providers could refuse any coverage related to the back. Treatment of a minor muscle problem could free future insurance companies from treating a deteriorated spine. Insurance companies had access to a huge database that recorded such things.

So what did I do? I called a GP popular with runners and denied having insurance, assuring the office I had the ability to pay cash for an office call.

I did. The doc, known for his concentration on cure and not compensation, told me to put a cardboard support behind me in my vehicle and do sit ups. Cost me $45.00. Probably more than $130 today.

I did. It solved the problem. The company health plan provider never had a clue. My spine was safe.

Think the Cult is cute? Welcome back to the good old days.


Friday, July 26, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

CHILDLESSNESS

Evidently one political party endorses the view that a childless woman, expanded to a childless couple, doesn’t deserve a role in determining the fate of America.

Having a history involving this concept, I can offer a personal opinion.

This is a political stand of almost unbelievable cruelty.

We, my life’s partner and I, produced no children in our marriage. Once, we were on the path, but a miscarriage ended the process and no further attempts proved successful.

If Cult members could see the look on the face of a woman who has just seen the process of motherhood fail, would it change their minds?

I doubt it. Cults demand the repudiation of empathy as much as they do reason.

There is a larger picture here, though. A couple having suffered through a miscarriage or a failure to procreate doesn’t represent the only childless Americans.

Men have had the opportunity to avoid the responsibility of parenthood for years. Women haven’t. Now they face opprobrium by their personal decision. That should lose the cult half the vote in an election.

It won’t. Cults demand obedience to doctrine over any sense of personhood.

Finaly, the Cult accepts, by non-refutation, the concept that those who have no children don’t deserve the honor of having a stake in the future of America.

Really?



Thursday, July 25, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 NEW DAYS

There is an old British idiom that warns, “There's many a slip twixt cup and lip.” Who in their right mind would predict the results of a November election in these troubled times? Too much could happen in a country already weary from false and hyperbolic dialogue. There are too many chances for a “black swan” that could topple our dreams.

But some things are starting to simmer in this stew we call American politics.

Using racial slurs and “dog whistles” against political opponent is so “1950.” Even though transporting America back to that age is the avowed platform of one of the parties, racial foghorns don’t seem to be selling tickets for the ride. Good for us.

Another idea floated to the surface in a speech last eve is the idea of sacrifice, the notion—out of favor in recent years—that a person should sacrifice personal aspirations for the good of the country. It resounded with me, and I’m sure others who made such a decision during the Vietnam War era. "What's in it for me" does mock the very premise of the Sermon on the Mount. Oops, forgot.  The evangelicals on the far right recently redacted that passage.

Then there is the concept of reaching bottom and looking up. Four nearly eight years, many Americans have asked themselves, is there a bottom to the depraved words and actions of politicians on the national stage? First it was mocking the disabled, then veterans, then it was medical professionals, and only this week it was women who have not given birth to a child.

That all may be over. It’s like Americans looked up from dark pit and saw the sun break through.

May its rays reach us all and everyone.




Wednesday, July 24, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 CHANGE

Events of this week have touched me to and amazing extent. First of all, they demonstrated once again how wrong I could be.

Yes wrong.

I had avowed that the drag on one political party was the thought that a mixed-race Californian as a vice-presidential candidate would be come president sometime before 2029. America wasn’t ready.

Seems I was wrong.

So what happened?

I’m thinking the events caused some sort of cosmic shift in our national psyche. That happens, often negatively. Look at what happened in my part of the country when America elected an African American president. Bigotry didn’t simply emerge as valid political weapon. It exploded like a dormant volcano.

No, this enervated something good and decent in our genetic banks. Maybe America was tired of the sight of two grumpy old men dominating the media and our national psyche.

Sometimes we just want to see the image of what we think America needs. I think it happened to some extent with the emergence of Ronald Reagan as a presidential candidate. After the nightmare of the Nixon debacles, America longed for a kindly old uncle, or at least an actor who could play one.

Too late we discovered that our kindly old uncle wasn’t averse to taxing Social Security payments so the rich could pay less taxes.

But now.

Now I think we want to see a fresh face of decency. We remember civility. We remember love of country. We remember respect for our military personnel. The so-called “suckers and losers,” along with their friends and families, longed for some sense of decorum.

At any rate, the news has shaken things up. One can tell by the reaction of the opposing party. I longed for an apt description. I searched and researched my memory.

Finally it came, attributable I think to Henry Miller in his Tropic of Cancer:

They are sh*****g arpeggios.

Yep.




Tuesday, July 23, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 SURVIVORS

An old friend called me last week. Well over a half-century ago we had been college roommates for a spell. He dropped out of college because, as he put it, “Inertia overtook me.” He fell under the spell of an army recruiter named “Sergeant Goforth.” ( I am not making this up.) This super-salesman sold my friend on the idea of enlisting with a goal of becoming an officer and then a Green Beret.

He made it, and served a tour working with a group of Montagnards in Vietnam. He went through so much training that I had finished my tour there before he ever left the states. When he returned stateside, the Army told him they didn’t need captains that had finished their tour, but he had to fill out the remaining time of his commitment. That resulted in some sad stories for him and other detainees at Fort Hood. But he survived.

The reason for his call was to tell me that he had received a bad medical report with an estimated life expectancy of no more than two or three years. He is currently using oxygen as a medical assistance.

This from a former Green Beret?

That’s a hard pill to swallow. My first question was, “Agent Orange?”

No, years of extensive woodworking without using a mask.

Not service related? Not directly, but maybe. A military experience, particularly one that included a tour in a war zone, tends to make a survivor feel impervious to common, everyday dangers. And though the VA denies most claims, with good reason, those with Agent Orange hovering over them can’t shake the feeling that, at the least, it may serve as a catalyst. It is like an invisible demon, placed above one by a fickle fate to be called into action when we least expect it, a fitting tool for a country that never forgave those who served in that miserable little war.

At any rate, somewhere on the east coast of America, there is an elderly man sitting in public with an oxygen cylinder by his side. Young ones pass by, nudge each other, and manage to hold their giggles until he is out of hearing.

They couldn’t imagine. They just couldn’t imagine.


Monday, July 22, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 STEREOTYPES

Interesting day yesterday was. A sitting president finishing his first term and actively campaigning for a second ended his effort. He endorsed his vice-president who is female and of a mixed-race heritage. Most Americans know little about her other than her party affiliation.

That’s all that matters to many.

For the sake of argument, we might for a moment consider that she is, in fact, the chosen candidate to run for the seat in November.

How will the press stereotype her?

The press does that. It stereotyped Gerald Ford as a harmless, but clumsy, nobody when he tripped exiting Air Force One.

It stereotyped Jimmy Carter as a clueless, hardheaded outsider.

It stereotyped Ronald Reagan as America's favorite old uncle.

It stereotyped Bus the Elder as America's rich uncle, but invisible.

It stereotyped Bill Clinton as a lovable rogue. (Yes, they do get close on occasion.)

It stereotyped Bush Jr. as a cowboy. (Go figure.)

It stereotyped Barrack Obama as cool, except in the South. The South viewed him differently.

And Joe Biden as dottery.

Then there was the one who defied stereotyping, one who simply, like a pinball, bounced from one display of idiocy and malevolence to another so quickly that labels didn’t stick.

Now what?

An angry woman out to avenge her sex?

A liberal icon who will sacrifice the future of working families in order to protect the least of those among us?

An accidental president?

A surprise?

A sheep among wolves?

It would be a simple matter of speculation if the future of our planet didn’t depend upon it.




Sunday, July 21, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

BACK DOORS

It was the evening watch and I had only been sailor in the United States Navy for a few months. It was a small but important base located on a former hotel complex. The fleet admiral housed there. I served with a young Ensign on quarterdeck duty in what once been the hotel lobby. My job was to assist and run errands. That’s when it happened.

A message came in for the Admiral. The ensign took it, folded it into an envelope, wrote the proper note, and told me to take it to the admiral’s quarters.

I did. Right up to the door I went and knocked on the door respectfully. A steward answered and I delivered my assignment.

He took it, looked at me as if I had just crawled from under a kitchen cabinet and said, “In the future, you should use the back door.”

No big deal but I took my time walking back to headquarters thinking. I was a grown man, a white one from a middle-class family. In my entire life, I had never been told to go to the back door of any home.

No big deal, but it made me feel small and think of people I had known, including shipmates, whose parents and grandparents had been told this for their entire lives.

I guess that’s why I don’t hold the town of Savanah, Georgia with such religious ecstasy as my friends and colleagues do.

Oh, I think it must be quite a beautiful place in its central core. I can see why some people make their friends and families travel there for a wedding. It must contain a plethora of significant homes.

But I would always wonder, as I worshipped, if the slaves who made the bricks, produced the lumber for those homes, and built them for whatever pay their owner saw fit had ever been allowed, socially, to use the front doors. 


Saturday, July 20, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 ALMIGHTY WILL

One reads many strange things these days about how people view the will of their particular god.

Some condone sending a 12-year-old girl into full-term pregnancy, perhaps to die giving birth to a rapist’s child, because their god views all babies as precious. More precious than the mother? It would seem so.

Some say that the murder of children, as in the annihilation of all of Jericho’s inhabitants, was intended as a blessing to the children as they would see paradise, guaranteed.

Adults avowed the same for the children marched in lines to clear minefields in the Iran-Iraq wars. They even threw in some virgins to await the boy-children in Paradise.

The Spaniards, it is said, guaranteed the salvation of babies of native South American peoples by bashing the babies' heads against walls.

The death and suffering of children seems to be a favorite method of showing kindness.

Now we also read that a god directed a bullet, fired by a madman, away from a favored leader and into, instead, an innocent bystander. Anything, it is avowed, is permitted for a good photo-op.

Tsunamis and tornadoes, likewise, spare the chosen.

All in all, it seems that a member of the Almighty Club is granted the most extreme methodology in the execution of any chosen chore.

Followers are not at any liberty to question this process. In the words of a character from a popular TV series, “His ways ain’t our ways.”

All alone in a dark place, though, we might wish that some almighty might be more like Mr. Rogers and less like Charles Manson. After all, an end achieved by a blessing would be as worthy as an end achieved by a bullet.

Friday, July 19, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 STRUGGLES

Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. once wrote an interesting piece about working hard at something you’re not good at. The idea is counterintuitive, contrary to what some great thinkers said. Joseph Campbell, for example, wrote that we should follow our bliss. Shouldn't we concentrate on what energy and talents we have in areas of our strengths and talents?

 It makes me think of my own life. Are there examples therein?

 I once tried architecture. I was horrible at it, but I learned that fitting an idea to its setting was not only sublime, but functional. I learned lessons about such ideas as articulation, modulation, balance, and form that can relate to almost all professional endeavors. I also become an emotional companion to some of the most wonderful expressions of creativity ever imagined by humans. To follow our bliss, mustn't we first have to determine what bliss is?

I tried sports and was terrible at it. But I learned that it’s okay to be knocked down and lose as long as you get up and keep going. I learned that fear is transitory if you will it so.

I tried music and was terrible at it. But I learned that to strive to get a little better at something each day is of more value than seeking to be an overnight success. I learned that prodigies aren't good teachers. Prodigies say, "Just do it. That's what I do. That's all there is to it." The good teachers are the ones who have struggled to become good at it and are best friends with hard work. And, of course, I learned that nothing can heal like music.

What was I ever good at? I don’t know. Not much I guess, except picking friends and finding a wife. Oh, and I learned that one way to be successful in a profession is to be willing to do the things that others don't like to do. Usually these are things that it is hard for anyone to be good at. In my profession, it also involves the ability to see the good and beauty of places that history has treated unfairly, places most people find deplorable, places where people must pick themselves up and continue the struggle.


Thursday, July 18, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 POPULARITY

One hears it often during this political season in America: “I don’t like either candidate.”

That’s all. No policy analysis. No review of historical records. No consideration of past actions. No prediction of future implications. No educated guess about what either candidate might do to hurt or help the people of America if elected.

Just, “I don’t like either candidate.”

The election of a president of the United States of America might be likened to a taste test of two sodas. 

Elections have more potential consequences.

Germany had an election in 1933. It’s very likely that a majority of Germans didn’t like any of the candidates involved. Perhaps many stayed home.

The Brownshirts didn’t.

In 1945, General Dwight David Eisenhower, head of the allied troops in Europe, forced the people of selected villages in Germany to march past the final result of the 1933 elections. The programs and intentions that brought about these results had been spelled out very clearly in a 1925 manifesto that sold over 12 million copies, including a braille edition for the blind.

People had known.

How many people in these sad lines do we imagine might have been thinking, “But I didn’t like either candidate?”




Wednesday, July 17, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 DANGER

Some years ago I read a scientific treatise stating that we have a genetic trigger withing us that alerts us to danger. This made sense. When we roamed the savannah, danger, immediate and unforgiving danger, lurked everywhere. After the old and weak, the overly complacent probably found themselves eaten next. One might even say stress was good. Maybe it still is, within certain boundaries.

The piece, more interestingly, stated that the genomic trigger still activates when all seems safe and calm. Perhaps it is there to tell us that seeming safety is the most prevalent forecaster of danger. In other words, when all seems safe and secure, that's the time to be most alert. Ever know any of these feelings?

  • Something just didn't seem right.
  • I had this feeling something was wrong.
  • It was too quiet.
  • Some sixth sense told me to be careful.
  • I felt as if someone was watching me.
  • What had I done to make everyone suddenly start acting so nice toward me?

Perhaps we shouldn't be so critical of a little stress in our lives. I say, "a little" for when genetic triggers suffer negative mutations, chaos can result. Responses can seize and direct us when there are no modern-day lions and tigers in the vicinity. What is even more alarming is that scheming people and institutions can use these triggers to generate responses, to accomplish their own ends, within those willing to listen without reasoning. Whether danger exists or not, we mentally stand ready to take action.

When that goes to an extreme, we don't simply plan a safer route through life, we climb onto a building and start shooting people.

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 ELECTIONS

Our next election won’t rely on facts. Both extremes of the political factions denounce any facts that don’t resonate with embedded emotions and this phenomenon is spreading laterally.

It won’t rely on the Rule of Law. We are abandoning that.

It won’t rely on majority rule. The electoral college obliterates that.

It won’t rely on history. We distrust the telling of history, sometimes for good reason. (See: The Lost Cause Myth.)

It won’t rely on information. Too few control the dissemination, quality and content.

It won't rely on calm reflection. Our cell phones demand too much of our time for that.

It won’t rely on a concept of morality. The most commonly accepted source of morality in America is a book that lauds mass extermination, the murder of innocents, slavery, and harems, among its other tenets.

It won’t rely on sacrifice for the common good. That goes without saying.




Monday, July 15, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 CIVIL WAR

Was rereading parts of the memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant last evening concerning the Battle of Missionary Ridge. In the midst of describing preparations for this great American victory, Grant suddenly stops and delivers this reflection:

"There was no time during the rebellion when I did not think, and often say, that the South was more to be benefited by its defeat than the North. The latter had the people, the institutions, and the territory to make a great and prosperous nation. The former was burdened with an institution abhorrent to all civilized people not brought up under it, and one which degraded labor, kept it in ignorance, and enervated the governing class.

With the outside world at war with this institution, they could not have extended their territory. The labor of the country was not skilled, nor allowed to become so. The whites could not toil without becoming degraded, and those who did were denominated "poor white trash." The system of labor would have soon exhausted the soil and left the people poor. The non-slaveholders would have left the country, and the small slaveholder must have sold out to his more fortunate neighbor. Soon the slaves would have outnumbered the masters, and, not being in sympathy with them, would have risen in their might and exterminated them. The war was expensive to the South as well as to the North, both in blood and treasure, but it was worth all it cost. The enemy was surprised"

What an interesting concept. He would go on from there to defeat Robert E. Lee and help restore our country. It is gratifying to note that his reputation has enjoyed a major refurbishing in recent years. I recommend, for those wanted to know him better, the reading of the memoirs, considered one of the best personal reflections of war ever penned.



Sunday, July 14, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 VIOLENCE

The first time I ever saw a dead body that wasn’t a victim of old age, it made an impression on me. It was that of a Vietnamese man of maybe his late thirties. He had been found by a Marine patrol on a routine mission. He hung from a tree on Monkey Mountain in Vietnam on the South China sea. It was an area which I, myself, had covered on patrol.

The noose still hung around his neck as his body rested in a pickup truck bed on our Navy base. It was located next to an enlisted men’s club, so the drunks had a good time commenting as they passed it by.

Our leaders used it as a lesson for caution and strict obedience.

The village next to our base was especially quiet for the next few days.

What caused this death? Who knows?

Was it a warning as to who controlled this barren spot of real estate outside the City of Da Nang?

Was it punishment for a failure of courage?

Was it a warning to other villagers whose loyalties might waver?

Or was it, as I tend to think, simply the remains of a poor being who tired of living in a country that had been at war off and on for over 300 years?

Violence has its collateral costs.

It also always has its adherents.

Today in America, we read of violence again.

Political parties will “make hay” of it.

Special interest groups will frolic in unilateral explanations.

The media will know it has fuel for another week.

All of this will occur, though, while families mourn and America bows her head in shame.


Saturday, July 13, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 MORALITY

After reading Steven Pinker’s The Blank Slate, and related works, I’m coming to the understanding that what we view as moral standards are not based on spirituality or philosophical thought. Rather, they are based on some 200,000 years of reciprocal agreements that help society avoid some of the destructive tendencies created by evolutionary psychology. This includes particularly those tendencies emerging from the instincts to protect the tribe, or group, against other tribes or groups.

This was a hard intellectual pill for me to swallow.

But it explains a lot of things, particularly those concerning how America has become so divided in recent years.

There would seem to be nothing to be gained by such divisiveness as we currently experience other than triggers within our genomes that spark when the tribe is threatened. In the field of mechanics, there are systems that operate contrary to established laws of physics. For example, a current should flow between two identical capacitators. Therefore, when energized the system runs smoothly. In reality, no two capacitators or totally identical, so this anomaly is used to start and stop the system.

Our genomic map has currents that should flow except that primordial triggers can activate when perceived danger occurs.

We don’t regress as much as we revert to systems that meet our archaic mechanisms.

It goes a long way in explaining the Donald Trump syndrome.


Friday, July 12, 2024

STORIES FOR FRIDAY

    As a young boy, I loved marshmallows like a missionary loves a sinner. I thought those little white lumps of confection absolutely represented the highest order of human achievement. Because of them, I

-       Despised kids who could afford a ten cent bag while I was stuck with nickel one,

-       Ate more than my share at any opportunity,

-       Boasted that I could eat more of them than any kid at Lakeside Elementary,

-       Dreamed of resting in a soft, yielding, embracing pile of them,

-       Stole them at ever opportunity, and

-       Once shoved my little brother because he wouldn’t give me one of his.

This gave rise to the great plot and subsequent adventure. It was 1951 and I was eight years old, in school all day without the attendant good sense to control my impulses. These were more innocent and peaceful times, so when a kid reached the third grade and was sentenced to schooling for an entire day, the taking of lunch presented a veritable range of choices

One could bring lunch in a brown paper bag and enjoy it in a designated lunchroom, a choice generally reserved for the poor and the untrustworthy. One could take a quarter and walk four blocks north to the Pine Bluff High School cafeteria. One could walk the same distance due west on 15th Street until one reached a diner called “The Little Chef” and have a hamburger or chili dog with drink. One could walk one block farther and dine at a corner drug store lunch bar, expensive but classy. The rich kids, most of whom lived within walking distance dined at home.

            When not on probation and sentenced to the lunchroom, I opted for the western sites. This way, if I skipped a drink with a meal, I could purchase a five-cent bag of marshmallows at the corner drug store.

            Neither drugs for the dope fiend nor solitude for the poet had a greater pull than the thought of a bag of marshmallows on me.

            Therein sprang the plot.

            You see, they didn’t just sell nickel bags at the drug store. They sold ten-cent bags as well. Theses were tempting, but the piece de resistance, the Holy of Holies, was a 25-cent bag of marshmallows the size of a small pillow. They hung from clips on tall display stand like talismans. As I concocted my plan, the image of those bags grew until I thought of little else except the day I would buy one and devour its entire contents—at one sitting.

            But how? I only received a quarter a day for lunch, knotted in a lady’s handkerchief and placed in my left pocket each morning by my mother, who knew too well that to advance a boy of my age funds for more than a day’s food  was to telegraph an open invitation to Satan to make room for another soul.

            No, I would have to operate within the perimeters set for me. I had to skip the normal meal. It was that simple. Besides, a meal of marshmallows had to be at least as healthy, probably more so, than a chili dog. Tastier too.

            So one late autumn day found me walking west along 15th Street with a jaunty air, clutching a a quarter. Passing the diner, I concentrated on a repair shop across the street to avoid prying eyes from lunchtime clients of The Little Chef. I turned casually south on Cherry and slid into the drug store. Phase One was successful.

Once inside, I assumed a practiced nonchalance. I eased to the candy area and took what seemed like an hour, but could only have been a few seconds, to peruse the candy offerings as if I had the prerogatives of a Rockefeller.

Without warning, synapses tuned by billions of years of evolution registered danger. An adult stared down at me. “May I help you?” it said.

“Just want some marshmallows,” I said. “I have money.” I showed it, then retrieved the largest prize on the rack. I stood without moving, feeling its weight against my chest, and waiting for the intruder to disappear.

“Having a party at school?” it said.

Now I was in a jam. Lying, my mother had warned me, was a terrible sin, one of the worst. She petrified me telling about its deadly consequences and those of similar vile habits. A liar who allowed the allurements of sin to rule his actions was destined for a cruel fate, even blindness, or a partial state thereof. I felt sweat forming on my brow. The potential consequences of my actions swirled about me like debris around a funnel cloud. My heart pumped harder at the thought of continuing this sinful escapade: regrets, nightmares, pimples, full or partial blindness…

The spectacles upon the bridge of my nose bear mute testimony to my next act.

“Yessir,” I said. “I’m supposed to bring the marshmallows.”

Surprised that I could still see, I stood patiently while it patted my head before moving to help another customer. I paid my quarter like a gambler paying his debt, executed an “about face” and left the drug store, Phase Two completed.

            A young dandy walking down Cherry Street snacking on a knee-high bag of marshmallows must have been a remarkable sight, even in a city as large as Pine Bluff. I swaggered as I tasted the first fat victim from the bag, allowing the flavor to roam my mouth like a pony circling a corral. The entire process lasted a block.

            On the next block, I crammed pair after pair into my mouth at once, just for the fun of it. As I chewed, I turned back to the east, deciding to flaunt my wealth by returning through one of the richest neighborhoods in town.

            Four more victims went down. Like the Cyclops tasting the crew of Ulysses, I let out a soft roar and devoured another pair. I continued east, passing the homes of any number of pretty girls who must have been watching from their kitchens with amazement. I ate a few in rhythm, grinning all the while.

            Then I released my inner gymnast and began pitching the soft white balls into the air and catching them in my mouth. Another block passed in this manner. I missed the fifth and it rolled into the gutter by the sidewalk. I didn’t pick it up, for I had plenty.

Besides, I was beginning to feel a little odd.

            Lest what follows strike the reader only as burlesque, allow me to produce empirical statistics that should be recorded to serve as an object lesson to the logic-challenged of future generations.

            Statistic One: The difference between wanting another marshmallow and beginning to think you have had all you want is approximately five marshmallows.

            Statistic Two: The difference between thinking you have had all the marshmallows you want and not really wishing to eat anymore is approximately four marshmallows.

            Statistic Three: The difference between not really wishing to eat any more marshmallows and vomiting a white stream of projectile foam onto a fence in an alley behind a house is three marshmallows.

            Statistic Four: The length of time an eight-year old boy must sit with his head in his hand lurching with drive heaves from too many marshmallows is somewhere between ten and 15 minutes.

            No cars passed through the alley as I suffered, only my life, and my regrets. I hadn’t apologized to my sister for stealing her scrapbook. I hadn’t looked after my little brother properly. I hadn’t asked Nell Phillips to be my girlfriend. Heck, I hadn’t even made out a will.

            When I quit retching, I folded top of the bag of marshmallows—it still appeared to be full—and gained my feet. I used alleys to escape attention from the fancy homes and found my way back to 15th street where I placed the remainder of the bag of marshmallows in the hollow of a tree, although I knew I wouldn’t return for them. Back at school, I avoided classmates as I eased into the classroom and began the worst afternoon of my life.

            This was 60 years ago and I have never willingly eaten a marshmallow since. In fact, I become nauseated at the very thought of one, and I think of this incident often. Recently, I happened to be in my hometown to participate in more adult matters. With my business in the city completed, I drove the route of the described affair. Lakeside School stood closed and boarded. It had yielded to a mega-campus wherein they incarcerate students all day to prevent episodes such as mine.

            The neighborhood is no longer affluent. Some homes have disappeared, all that remains are slabs that look too small to have belonged to real homes. I slowed when I came to the corner where the tree stood in which I had stored the remnants of my unholy plot. All that remained was a withered stump, the rest having fallen, as have so many of my dreams, to age and reality.


Thursday, July 11, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 RESEARCH

Sometimes I read Harper’s Index and dream that if I happed to be younger, smarter, and more educated, I would consider my own topics, such as:

The percentage of the terrorists who attacked the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021 who were card-carrying drag queens.

The ratio of women who said, in 2016, that they didn’t like Hillary Clinton but now say they analyze their voting decisions more carefully.

The percentage of evangelicals who affirm reading the Book of Numbers in its entirety and feel concern for the Midianites.

Percentage of affirmed MAGA voters who voted against Bill Clinton only because of his sexual misconduct.

Percentage of voters who feel multiple divorces is not a concern of Christians in selecting a president.

Who believe that the sexual orientation of married couples is.

Number of Trump supporters now in prison who worked as librarians.

Percentage of Americans who believe Lyndon Johnson personally fired the shots that killed John F. Kennedy.

Percentage of American registered voters who can name the U.S. Presidents in order since Herbert Hoover.

Percentage who can name the last ten Grammy winners for female vocalist of the year.

Percentage of mass murderers in the U.S. who were transgender.

Percentage of Americans who believe that the percentage of Americans serving in the military is greater than 25 percent.



Wednesday, July 10, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 EGOS AND EMPIRES

I helped win World War Two. I can help free the Cubans.

I’ll not be the first American president to lose a war.

I’ll not be brought down by a third-rate burglary.

I can pardon whomever I wish.

I’ll say who uses the tennis courts and when.

Go ahead and sell them the weapons. I can act my way out of anything.

I’ll raise taxes just a bit to straighten out his mess. Who can stop me?

Who will care in the long run? If it feels good, go for it.

I’ll get the man who tried to kill my daddy.

People will love me in a brown suit.

Let them drink bleach.

It’s mine, my precious.



Tuesday, July 9, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 DECISIONS

The most interesting thought this week derives from a post I saw about rational thinking. It dawns on me late in life, that the following is true:

If a person finds themselves in a situation because of decisions based on emotion, not rational thinking, they will not extricate themselves from that situation through decisions based on rational thinking, and not emotion.


Monday, July 8, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 AMERICA

Given the daily news, that so many Americans condone behavior most similar to that prevalent in 1930s Germany, we must wonder. Has something happened to America? It would appear so as a superstar of mendacious conduct controls a cult comprising a terrifying percentage of our people. Many of those had behaved, in all outward aspects, within normal boundaries until recently.

We now seem to have normalized bad behavior. It generates seductive news reporting and thus receives more than its reasonable share. We can’t seem to escape wallowing in its repulsive filth. Some examples:

-          Insurrectionists are heroes.

-          Facts are tools of the Dark One.

--       America needs a government operating on evangelical Christianity.

-          The Sermon on the Mount is banned from pulpits.

All at a time when America is outpacing the rest of the world in most standards of living.

Did something happen that threw us from an orbit of cognitive thought and rational behavior?

Or, some might say, have there always been flaws within our system? Did the election of Barack Obama as President of the United States of America open fissures that allowed the demons to escape?

We hope not.




Sunday, July 7, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 AGEISM

America is dealing with a new “ism” lately. That would be ageism. I never thought about it when I was younger for they always told us that old folks had more sense than we did. Now it seems old folks, that would include me, don’t have any sense at all.

I’ve only encountered ageism once in my professional career. That occurred during a political campaign, and I was doing some work for the wrong candidate. I don’t think the other party hated me as much as she did society at large. She hurled the word “elderly” at me like a Roman centurion throwing a spear.  I didn’t pay it much mind for I spent a year of my life hoping to live long enough to be an elderly anything. In the interim, I dealt with experts, even professionals, in the area of mendacity. Amateurs amuse, more than provoke, me.

I have come to believe that ageing is a remorseless fact, but I’m not sure we measure it effectively. I have young friends, even relatives, who quit learning at the point where logic became binary and facts were only useful when they agreed with emotions.

On the other hand, I have friends and acquaintances, some older than I, whose minds are, as they say down in LA, “sharp as tacks.”

I do think old folks tend to be a bit forgetful and hesitant in their responses to stimuli. I’m not sure that this is due to malfunction as much as to overloaded hard drives. They also maintain an imbedded acquaintance with the "law of unintended consequences." That can slow a response as much as anything.

Stories of achievement by those termed elderly—such as Frank Lloyd Wright and Grandma Moses—counsel against ageism. Stories of youthful folly abound. Think of the Cuban invasion and the refusal of 20-something “me” to buy Walmart stock when his wife told him to.

Why don’t we move away from thinking of age and dwell on policy analysis? Yes, it would be harder, but the results might astound us.




Saturday, July 6, 2024

EPIPHANY OF THE DAY

 HONOR

In the final assault at the Battle of Gettysburg, the extreme left of the rebel force comprised men of North Carolina, Alabama, Tennessee, and Mississippi who had been heavily engaged in the first day’s fighting. They made it to the farm and barn of a family named Brian. The image below features their house as it stands today. (For some reason, the sign features an alternative spelling of the family name.)

Abraham Brian, his wife Elizabeth, and their five children were not living in the house at the time of the battle. The family fled the Gettysburg area upon news of the Confederate invasion.

Why? Well, you see, they were members of the local African American community. Yes, as free as you or I are today. The trouble was that Robert E. Lee’s army, as it marched north into Maryland and Pennsylvania, captured free black American families and transported them south to be sold as slaves.

In most of my adult life, which I have spent in Arkansas, a statewide newspaper ran an editorial each year on Lee’s birthday (a state holiday) dedicated to the proposition that he was the embodiment of honor and decency, the most model American figure to emerge from the Civil War, save the one who removed the shackles of slavery from the families that Lee’s army captured.

Odd that the editorials never mentioned Abraham Brian or the collateral damage done to free Americans by the Confederate insurrectionist on their way to Gettysburg.

Friday, July 5, 2024

MEMORIES

 VACATION BIBLE SCOOL

No Vacation for a Pirate

By Jimmie von Tungeln

             The following happened in different times. Not ancient times, just different times. Most mothers were home all day then. Most fathers were away working. Children followed their own instincts and must have been particularly annoying. Mothers missed no opportunity to be shed of them for a few hours, or even all day. As I was to learn, it was also a time set aside for my religious instruction, specifically for a consolidation of my vague images of Hell, in form of a particularly nasty institution known as—one can still almost hear thunder and the neighing of horses at the mere mention of the word—Vacation Bible School.

            Perhaps the ill-timing of it all fueled my extreme reaction. They seem always to plan these things in summertime and this was a particularly bad bit of scheduling. It seemed to be set out purposely to interfere with the duties of a group of ten-year-olds who had no other mission than protecting both the physical and reputational well-being of their community. We had, over the last few months, coalesced into the sort of group about which folk songs were written during the Dark Ages. We were heroic. We were virtuous. We were protective of our lands and people. In short, we had responsibilities, and they didn’t include religion.

            A group of invaders from north of Bayou Bartholomew, for example, was in the process of building a raft with which to ravage the settlements to the south. This was the established territory of our little band of privateers. Who would stand between the invading hordes and our men and women folk if we were to be called away? There were forts to be built, traps to be laid, and counter-offensive craft to be built.

            The alternative spelled utter disaster. Ben Shannon explained it to us as we gathered around a hastily built campfire near the bayou’s edge. He was not our leader, per se, just older and more educated. “They’ll come rapping and pillaging our women,” he said. “At tar’s pure histry.”

            We shuddered at the thought as our blood ran hot and fired our anger like an open circuit suddenly lighting a darkened room. Rapping and pillaging indeed! (As adults, when we absorbed the difference between rapping and raping, many of us would come to think we would prefer the latter, but that’s a story for another day.)

            Pirates were only a part of our problem. At the same time, a group of rustlers from the Union Community had begun to range perilously close to our hideout on Ferdinand Thompson’s land. We had to settle affairs with them once and for all and it wasn’t going to be a sight that innocent folks should witness.

            On top of that, a group of semi-professional baseball players from the Hog-eye Bend area was threatening to descend upon the field on the edge of Ridgway’s dairy land and issue a challenge to any locals brave, or dumb, enough to meet it. We weren’t the type of fellows to back away from anyone, even from a team that reportedly fielded a player who could re-wrap a baseball with electrical tape so tight that it hit almost like a new one. We’d knock his fancy ball right back in his face.

            In the midst of all this, the two Hester boys, O.G. Stanford, Bobby Joe Benson, his brother Robert, and I all heard the sentence pronounced.

            Unity Baptist Church is having a two-week Vacation Bible School and I have signed you and your sister up,” my mother said. She said it so softly and matter-of-factly that she might have only been stating we were having leftovers for supper. It failed to even register in a mind that was filled with sword-fights, running gun battles and strikeouts.

            “That’s nice,” I heard myself say, not realizing the doom to which I had just sentenced myself.

            I forgot it all until the next Sunday evening. I had lived through another Sabbath and was preparing to assume my duties as the gang’s quartermaster the next day. In my kit, I had packed a penny-box of matches and a book of cigarette papers filched from my father’s grocery store. Eddie Holland had been swiping pinches of Bull Durham from his daddy for weeks now and we had the goods to provide a swell smoke for the entire gang. I also packed away a five-cent package of firecrackers left over from Christmas and a picture of a Marilyn Monroe in a bathing suit that I had torn from a Parade Magazine. I had my Uncle Jack’s survival knife from the Korean War and a magnifying glass that was useful for starting fires, and also for frying ants. It was going to be a good Monday.

            Then I heard my mother yell from the living room, “Jimmie get in there and lay out some clothes for Bible School in the morning. Misses Cochran’s coming at 8:30 and you better not make her wait.”

            My blood froze. Bible School? Was she kidding? I answered back immediately in my best pirate voice. “Huh?”

            “You heard me.”

            “Did you say something?”

            “Now don’t even think about opening that little smart mouth of yours to me. You get ready.”

            “Aw momma.” Did she want to be rapped and pillaged?

            “Don’t you ‘aw momma’ me. I gave them a love offerin’ and you’re goin’.”

            “But Sonny Averitt has a new snake and he said we could come over and look at it in the …”

            “Don’t make me have to come in there.”

            So, the gang of prisoners dutifully reported outside the church next morning. There were five of us—Bobby Joe had rubbed some mustard in his eyes and convinced his mama that he might have the “chicken pops.” True pirates are born to embrace suffering.

            Anyway, we lined up as if we were awaiting the boat to Devil’s Island outside the church door. They let all the girls in first, including my sister who was older than the rest of us and ended up being a sort of guard for the duration, in addition to her normal job of reporting my every movement and utterance to the authorities at home. There were about 10 of us boys in the group, and not a happy face among them.

            Finally, our teacher, a Misses Krebbs, appeared at the door and bade us enter the foyer. Once that far inside, she stopped us and, as we huddled in a tight bunch near the coat racks and tables piled with offering plates, taught us the daily prayer we were to utter before we entered the church each morning.

I am a sinner, let me pray,

God has given me this day.

At every step, I’ll stop and say,

He will guide me all the way. Amen

            I think she made it up herself because she seemed mighty pleased with it. After a dozen or so tries, we got to where we could say it together and she allowed us in the church.

            Miss Krebbs was a stout little woman with reddish hair pulled into a bun. She had obviously been through this before, for the first thing she did after she sat all the boys down in the back of the room—the girls were already up front singing songs—was to single out the baddest looking boy in the room. He was a big boy, older than the rest of us, named Terry Clayton and was from the east side of town where they raised the tough ones. We learned later that he was in Vacation Bible School as an alternative to reform school, so he was prepared to endure a good deal of unpleasantness. It started immediately. Miss Krebbs brought him to the front of our little group. He turned and faced us with magnificent defiance, and we all envied his “look.” She then presented him as the type that would reap great benefits from the coming experience. She patted his back. He turned a crimson red, and those of us who were experienced in the ways of the truly fearsome saw dead bodies and raw bloody veins swirling in his head.

            Next, she looked at him and asked, “What do you expect to get from coming to vacation bible school,” she asked.

            Well, she might have just as well asked him what he thought of the philosophy of Immanuel Kant. Here was a boy who had never planned even a half-step beyond his immediate existence in his life. He turned even redder and finally looked at the floor.

            Miss Krebbs made him suffer for what seemed like minutes before she sat him down, broken and humiliated. Then she asked, “Who in here loves Jesus?”

            Every hand shot into the air.

            I won’t go into great detail about the ordeal that followed. As the remnants of our little band proceeded, without us, to build a raft capable of transporting the band all the way across the bayou to intercept the interlopers, we were cutting out pictures of the prophets to paste on large poster boards. The only part of our day that offered any chance of relief for our tortured mind was singing. It didn’t take long before we discovered that we could change the words of songs ever so slightly without drawing the attention of Misses Krebbs or one of the other guards. Of course my sister was a little more worldly-wise than the adults so we had to be extra careful. She knew the easy ones such as Gladly, the Cross-eyed Bear. We did manage, though, to slip by her such gems as Flour in the Mud.

            But our pleasures were few, all in all. Once, we had to study the Book of Job, which consisted pretty much of a story about how God and the Devil took bets on how this poor guy named Job would act if they played tricks on him. I guess they thought it pretty funny. Actually, we had done the same thing a few times with our gang’s favorite jester, Buddy Austin. We would, for example, twist him up in a bag swing and let it twirl him around a bunch of times and then take bets on how far he could walk before he fell. It was a kid’s game, at best, but I still think we showed more decency than the other two I mentioned.

            The study of poor Job did provide one bit of drama. Toward the end, when the unfortunate man had endured almost more than humanly possible, Misses Krebbs stopped the discussion and asked who could provide an explanation for it all. Well, old Terry Clayton just sat there for a few minutes. We were ten days or so into the sentence by then, and I suppose the imagined peace and manly freedom of reform school were beckoning him like the Sirens of Phorcus.

            He all of a sudden blurted out, it was the first time he had spoken since his opening day humiliation, “I guess it means that when you have nothing to lose, it’s better to be the shooter than the dice.”

            It was the last I saw of him until a number of years later when he stopped me for speeding. He was five years in the police force by then and let me go, a favor from one victim to another.

            On another occasion, they brought in this carpenter who was going to show us how to work with wood. We thought this was going to be really neat until we found that the project would consist of building crosses and not anything useful.

            I immediately got crossways with our instructor because he didn’t like my choice of wood. I was, and still am, partial to the darker woods like walnut. He claimed we should use lighter wood to symbolize the purity of Christ. Jesus!

            After a few days of sawing and bending a number of nails, our crosses began to take a number of shapes, few of them recognizable as the stated intent. On top of it all, the man refused to answer any questions of a practical nature, such as tips on building rafts or stockades for a hideout.

            As the end of our cross-building approached, O.G. Stanford finally asked Misses Krebbs what the finished products would be used for. She didn’t hesitate a second. “You are building them to be donated to the poor nigra churches in town.”

            We just looked at one another. Hadn’t these people suffered enough already?

            The absolute most idiotic thing about the experience was that Misses Krebbs never even learned my name. She knew my sister’s name, and she knew our relationship. But for some reason, she insisted on calling me Jimmie Valentine, for the pure sadistic pleasure of it I suppose. I still have, among my clippings about the Tet Offensive, my photos of a storm at sea, and the results of a tornado which I survived, a small folded certificate stating that Jimmie Valentine had, indeed, survived (it actually says “graduated from”) Unity Baptist Church Vacation Bible School.

            Ten week days passed like turtles doing the shuffle and the worst ten years of my life neared its end. In this case with “Boo-Hoo Day.” That’s the day they wrap it up with a children’s sermon from the church’s preacher and, traditionally, all the girls get “saved,” some of them for the fourth or fifth time, boo-hooing louder each time. All the boys declined the honor except for Johnny Staples and that is a complete story in itself. Let’s just mention he later went to California to become an actor and salvation probably held him in good stead.

            For the rest, we returned to our gang to learn that, in our absence, the remnant members had discovered that rafts made from green pine trees don’t float well enough to support the weight of a pirate gang. To make matters worse, Ferdinand had discovered our cowboy hideout on his land, torn it up, and reported the discovery to my father to whom he handed over the bottle containing a half-inch of bourbon that someone, we denied any knowledge, had been carefully collecting from throwaways for months. Of course the baseball game had to be forfeited and our team was forever known and “The No-shows.”

             A pretty sad experience? Yes, in many ways. The gang never reorganized. The next summer my father secured me a job working on a milk truck and a succession of summer, then part-time, and finally full-time employments followed until one day I awoke to be staring at the face of a grown man in the mirror. Sadly, it was not the face of a pirate. It was a face, however, honed to some degree from raging along the banks of Bayou Bartholomew, once, with a ragtag gang of fierce warriors, protecting an imaginary group of innocent women from the prospect of rapping and pillaging. So I am glad of my youth, even with that summer’s terrifying experience. Outdoor freedoms such as we enjoyed back then seem to have disappeared along with pirate gangs and second-hand baseballs.

Were there lessons learned? There was one, After enduring Misses Krebbs, and vacation bible school, there was never any doubt in our minds about the true horrors of Hell. That has always provided a little touch of religion in the night.