Sunday, August 9, 2009

Dad comes of age

(Full Transcript below)
As the culmination of a 6-week "Coming of Age" program at the UU church, a program which is usually afforded to 9th graders but was offered for the first time to adults at the church, Dad and ten others offered "statements of faith" before the congregation.
Dad's chosen topic was "Is there life after death?"

I missed Dad's first line, an ad-lib, which got a good laugh from the audience:
"What Happens After Death? I'm sure you'd all like to know."

The transcript:

*What Happens After Death?
That is a question that humans have been pondering since life began.

And it is indeed one of the most significant questions that I face. The multitude of responses that humankind has generated to that query over thousands and thousands of years speaks to the profound and continuing power of that question.

It's fair to say that death terrifies me perhaps more than anything else. That it will happen one day is a certainty.
So as I see this matter, humankind came up with the best answer to this awesome and real fear many years ago. To put it simply, the answer is known as GOD. But any definition of God always transcends the explanations we receive when we ask help on this matter.
The many religious forms that exist around the world cope with a wide range of answers to that question...with heaven and hell being the ones with which we are most familiar. We UUs do not know if there is an afterlife... I do not dwell on such an overwhelmingly difficult topic.
So the existence of hell, heaven or purgatory are not of concern to me...and are not in my vocabulary of beliefs. But I do respect the rights--and sometimes the needs--of you and others to hold to your own beliefs. And that includes calls for help with coping with deep meaningful matters...from whomever is available.
I for one appreciate the concept of eternal life....admitting and/or agreeing that the term has many definitions. For me,while eternal life is a most profound mystery, I very much appreciate the deep comfort this term gives to me. Pondering questions about death and the afterlife is one of the reasons I come to church and why I am speaking today.
I see myself--and all of us--as being on a spiritual journey. We will all come--sooner or later--face to face with death......and then we will know the ultimate TRUTH.*
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Monday, June 22, 2009

Josie shows the boys how it's done.

Josie scored three goals yesterday. Got one of em.

Josie Bear plays soccer and scores

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Tinfoil hat

Here's a pic from Mammapalooza for y'all.  Rob, you said I should be wearing a tinfoil hat cause of what I was saying about Dad's early career in the State Department.  Turns out Dad wore the hat in Orlando.
J( *}
 

Mark's B'day Tale





Happy Birthday, Sally!



I haven’t written this until now in part because I’ve been busy, and in part because it was traumatic and embarrassing. It’s sort of funny, from a distance, but I still wasn’t particularly looking forward to reliving it. Be that as it may, here is my contribution to Sally’s Memory Book:


I was up early on Haydee’s mother’s 80th birthday, 8:30 my time but 5:30 a.m. in Florida. Early enough to maybe do something useful, I had actually purchased a wire brush so I could scrape and paint her wrought iron front gate. She is such a beautiful person and opened her home up to us; I was hoping to do something nice in return. So I tiptoed downstairs for a little precious alone time with just me, my book, a fresh cup of coffee, and the beautiful sunrise over the lake.


Sally’s custom is to dry what few dishes accumulate by stacking them on the electric stove. The back burner had nothing on it, so I filled a pan with water and turned on the heat. “I’ll put those dishes away as the coffee filters, that way I won’t overflow anything. I’ll be right here so nothing will make a mess. It’ll be perfect.” As Pete’s (or perhaps Jill’s) plastic travel mug began melting into the glowing red burner, I opened the drapes to the new day, picked up my novel, and eased myself into the rocker in front of the sliding glass door. Perhaps as many as five minutes later, a flicker of light caught my attention.


The flames were nearly two feet tall, not quite licking the white exhaust hood over the stove, as dense, viscous, oily, evil black clouds of smoke billowed out from the stove like demons on a mission to foul the entire house. Confronted with a flaming ball of molten plastic, I faced the emergency like any red blooded American male: I ran around in a panic like a toddler with a shirt full of bees. For some reason I focused on the smoke. After turning off the burner, (about the only thing I did right), I ran to open the sliding glass door. The latch on Sally’s sliding glass door is a marvel of modern engineering; it knows if you are in a hurry. I actually got it open on the first try, but forgot the stick that acts a safeguard. Once the stick was gone, however, I couldn’t open that *&#$^@! thing again for love or money. Time ticked by. Smoke billowed.


Things get mixed up in my mind after that; I was thoroughly flustered. I remember most of what happened, but I’m sort of guessing at a timeline. I scurried back to the stove, and turned on the fume hood. I finally wrestled the back door open and got both front doors open. Somewhere in this continuing tragicomedy, the smoke alarm chimed in and I had to take time to disable it lest the whole house discover the shambles I was making of the downstairs. I finally got back to the stove and tried to figure out a way to deal with the conflagration still raging there. Part of the problem was that nothing at my disposal was mine to ruin, and I knew I had to ruin something in order to remove the mess. I eventually grabbed the blazing lump with a dishtowel, chucked it in the sink and doused it with the spray nozzle. This is when the extent of the soot really hit home. I noticed it before but I had been preoccupied by the actual fire. Approximately seventy bazillion black soot particles the size of little exclamation points were wafting their way around the first floor! Being ever so slightly heavier than air most of the particles settled near the source, but some of them floated to the far corners, settling on furniture, family photos, curtains, plants, books, knick-knacks, literally everything…


As I surveyed the devastation, I recalled a conversation with Sally from a previous day; she was lamenting that it aggravated her to have people move things around in her house. I knew that to have even a remote hope of fixing this, I would absolutely have to move EVERY SINGLE THING IN THE ENTIRE DOWNSTAIRS. Even then it would be touch and go. Happy birthday Sally! A puff of air would dislodge the soot leaving no trace; but if it got touched, say wiped or brushed or sat on, each little speck would leave an indelible half-inch smear that could only be removed with straight dishwashing detergent, (I discovered this by cleaning the fume hood). I started cleaning, which essentially meant taking everything that wasn’t nailed down outside and blowing it off, the stuff that was nailed down got carefully vacuumed and I would mop the floor last of all. Because of the meticulous nature of the clean up I knew this would be a tedious process.


I also knew the house would soon be teeming with the young boys and various others in search of breakfast, coffee, etc. Ian was the first one down, and he was miffed that his morning routine was upset. Even the thought of breakfast out was little consolation, but after some juice in a red cup and a full mea culpa on my part he was fine, as was the rest of Pete’s family. Haydee was another story. Don’t get me wrong; she was invaluable in helping to return things to normal. But she didn’t pitch in with the light heart and inexhaustible optimism one looks for in these trying situations. The laughter in her eyes was absent. For some reason she seemed annoyed that her mother’s house had nearly burned down on her 80th birthday; annoyed at me of all people! Actually, her attitude was quite understandable and she relented as soon as it looked like things would clean up o.k. She even let me go golfing.


Less understandable was Sally’s cheerfulness. She seemed to take it all in stride, as though houseguests routinely set fire to her kitchen. Her faith in me was daunting; she was convinced before I was that we could restore everything. She wasn’t thrilled about the idea of breakfast out either, but she was calm, pleasant, and encouraging as we hauled everything outside, blowing, scrubbing, and vacuuming as needed. There was soot on every horizontal surface on the lower floor of her house, and I was amazed at how many surfaces there were: baseboards, picture frames, door and cabinet trim, there was even soot inside the cabinets. After we were done and I took a shower it was as though I was rinsing black dye out of my hair, it left a dark ring in the tub. That was the biggest stain on an otherwise great trip.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

memories . . .

I remember when we lived in Omaha I absolutely LOVED my 4th gr4de teacher, Miss Parde and Liz loved her 2nd grade teacher Miss Morrow. At Dad's suggestion we both had our teachers over for dinner (on different nights). Miss Parde brought her guitar, (just like my other idol of the time, Julie Andrews) and I remember after dinner she played and we sang. One song about a boll weavel, and the classic "Down in the Valley". I guess she kind of leaned toward countryish type music. Don't recall much about the night Miss Morrow came over. Liz?

*** OTHERS MAY ADD COMMENTS (as ever) BY CLICKING "COMMENTS" BELOW ***

Monday, January 19, 2009

Where did they live?

LocationArrivedLeft
Blackhawk HeightsSummer-54Fall-59
Clarendon HillsFall-59May 64
Hinsdale rentalMay-64Aug-64
OmahaSept 64Sept-66
NorthbrookSept-66Nov-68
Rental in Lenexa, KSNov-68Dec-68
Kansas CityDec-68Oct-78
EdinaOct-78Nov-88

Add your favorite memories in "Comments" below.

Example: (Jeremy: Clarendon Hills: I remember beingin the snow with Mark Strickler when I first met him. I said, "My bootsare bigger than your boots." He said, "Yeah, but mine are bigger, too." It was Clarendon Hills, but we always called it the Woodstock house.)

I can try to add them to this grid, or might post a link from here to a Wiki, where we could all just link and enter our own changes.

Inauguration concert

You can find lots of excerpts of the Inauguration concert, possibly the whole thing, on YouTube.
J( *}

Friday, January 9, 2009

Mammapalooza 2009

Here are links to various sites with pictures of Mom's 80th bash.

Click the name to see pix:

Jolana
Liz
Sal

haydee's pix of Mom's 80th











Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Basketball heartwarmer

Autistic guy gets to take a shot.  2 minutes.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ek1iIOTsiRo&feature=related
 
Rob

Monday, January 5, 2009

This American Life: Favorites

Any time you have an hour to spare, maybe while doing chores, maybe while sitting quietly, click on one of the links at the website linked here.

You are guaranteed to find it interesting, maybe fascinating, certainly entertaining. Who guarantees this? I do.

Love,
Rob

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Mom's Book of Memories cover



Mom and Dad, Jeremy, Haydee, Liz, Jon, Ken, Rob, Sal and Pete in 1971

Shawnee Mission, Kansas