Sunday Selections #806
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*Sunday Selections* was originally brought to us by Kim, of Frogpondsrock, as
an ongoing meme where participants could post previously unused photos
lan...
tradition
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For quite a few years I had seen on
http://local-kiwi-alien.blogspot.com/
A sailing boat all lit up for Christmas.
Apparently it’s tradition amongst the...
Day Ahead
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I'm not excited for the day ahead.I've got to drive to Sweet Home to try
to get three of the Quartville road cats out of a cage so they can go to a
barn h...
Welcome Christmas
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Christmas is my favorite holiday. It is not because of the gifts although
that is a part of it.
Christmas is the time when we are all a little nicer, a l...
dog booty
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Since we've started allowing the girls in our bed, they've completely taken
it over. Josie likes to sleep on our bed even during the day, so we got a
sp...
Tis The Season
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I love Christmas. JB and I gift plenty of special cards, presents or
cookies or dinners at our table. For a reason I don't understand, I feel
especiall...
GOVERNING ... DIFFERENCES RESPECTED IN 2025?
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Our United States are challenged to be governed in the best interests of
ALL of our citizens ... appreciating ... respecting ...... our cultural,
racial, g...
So Much Happening
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You might remember that I was given notice of impending redundancy back in
October. Well, I applied for a role in the transition team and I got it.
Out...
Debatable Issues
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I viewed about 15 minutes of each of the infamous debates. I don't
take them too seriously because as we know, the way politicians get elected
is no...
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Sword and Planet League Index:
1. First post. Generic Sept 16, 2023
2. Sword & Planet (S&P) fiction, ERB’s Barsoom series: Sept 16
3. Swordsmen in the ...
Fall Catch-ip
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As I write this, we are experiencing yet another power outage expected to
last 4 hours, better than 4 days as some of our other outages have. Still
it is...
I'm Back
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LITTLE JOHNNY LITTLE JOHNNY LITTLE JOHNNY LITTLE JOHNNY LITTLE JOHNNY
A teacher said to her class, "Right, I'm going to hold something under the
desk...
Untreated Chronic Pain Is Terrifyingly Agonizing
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I am having the worst pain of my life this week. I know there are many
others suffering, too. It is unbearably debilitating. 🥺
§~§~§~§~§~§~§
“Few thin...
fires , climate , faith
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I am not of the mindset that *insert bad news story* is a punishment from
God or a message from Her or any other thing. I usually see disasters as
disaster...
One step back, two steps forward
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I missed you. It's that simple. I just missed you all. After my divorce
and move to a new house, I put up a few posts to let you know I was still
alive an...
Never Too Late To Learn New Tricks
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I'm half way through completing a degree in Music Production and am
absolutely loving every minute.
One more year and I will be a fully fledged Producer, ...
Slow food
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I've had a strange summer. In mid June I fell while getting out of an
elevator, in a rush to get to my hotel room after a loud, noisy, crazy
family party....
Ridgeland Roadhouse
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*From the Don Jackson Collection*
"A small buidling is home to a restaurant in Ridgeland." -- Library caption.
Get your Schlitz here. And your home cooked...
I
will always be a child, and my parents will always be my parents.
My
country’s leaders are wise and good.
Thunder is caused by the devil beating his wife over the head with a frying pan. The
police only want to help me.
Pretty women are angels with hidden wings.
My
country exemplifies bravery, generosity, and every other virtue.
Claw-hammers and Colt .45 revolvers are wise, and wise things don’t want to hurt me.
All
airplanes and some women are beautiful, and beautiful things can’t hurt me.
If
you have enough money, you can hire experts to do anything. For example, you could
throw a very small rock into the middle of the deep woods, and the right experts could
easily find that very rock; or you could get your head blown-off by a shotgun, and
they could put it on again.
Behind
the woods are the backwoods, and people who look like Lil’ Abner live in the
backwoods, but you never see them because the backwoods are too far back. Having sex with enough women will protect me.
Jesus
is real, and he loves me.
Jesus’
father is real, and he wants to send me to hell.
The
Holy Ghost is a vapor that does whatever Jesus and Jesus’ father tell him to
do.
Doctors
know too much to make mistakes.
I
create reality as I go along, and it stops existing when I’m gone.
Everything
is alive and knows what is going on around it.
My
belongings appreciate me for taking such good care of them, and they miss me
when I go away.
My houseplants enjoy getting a shower.
I
am over most of these, but I’m hardly delusion free, and that’s only counting
the delusions I know about. What do delusions offer that they keep me
enslaved against my will, and how do my delusional beliefs compare
with the delusional beliefs of others? For example, how do religious
people—once they are grown—hold, not just to isolated delusions but to a
thousand interrelated and often contradictory delusions, and not only NOT try
to recover from them, but try to cling to them more fiercely; and how is it
that I have been able to escape those kinds of delusions, but not others—the
last three things on my list, for example—even though I recognize their
delusional nature?
It’s
easy to get an airplane off the ground once you get used to steering with your
feet and working the gas with your hand. The hard part is getting the plane
back onto the ground. Most student pilots do their first solo after 15-20
hours of flying, but I knew a guy who never soloed, and I didn’t want to do it
either, but my reasoning went as follows: (1) I can probably get this plane back onto the ground
without killing myself and without too much damage to the plane. (2) If I refuse to solo, I will be a
coward, and I will be disrespecting my instructor’s judgment
of my readiness. (3) I have no choice but to solo. (As
I prepared to taxi onto the runway alone for the first time, Peggy came running
over and asked for my car keys because she had left hers at home, and wanted
to be prepared in case mine ended up in a tree somewhere.)
Twice,
during my brief flying career, the engine quit, and I had to make on-field emergency
landings. Another time, I smelled smoke from an electrical short, and had to
make another on-field emergency landing. On a third occasion, I accidentally put
myself into a spin while I was doing something that my instructor had warned me against doing alone—practicing approach stalls. Back then, at least, most VFR pilots
(the lowest level of pilot; Visual Flight
Rules as opposed to InstrumentFlight Rules) weren’t taught spin
recovery, so when the plane’s nose instantly went from pointing 20° upward to 85°
downward and the ground started spinning up at me, I got busy trying to
remember what I had read on the subject. If I had been a poor student, I might
have died, and I never got over that fact, although I kept flying. Indeed, the first thing I did after I got myself out of that spin was to regain altitude and do another
approach stall. After I recovered from it, I flew back to the airport, made a
bad landing, and found that I was having a little trouble walking.
I now feel stupid for having done that last stall, but most young men live by rigid rules regarding courage, and can torture themselves for years if they break one of them. This means
that it sometimes seems easier to a man to get out of a bad situation by
risking death than by playing it safe and having to live with doubts about his
courage—and therefore his manhood. (This naturally raises questions about what constitutes
courage. After all, if one man charges into machine gun fire because he fears
censure more than death, while another feigns a mental collapse because he fears death
more than censure; who is really braver?)
After
I logged about 200 hours, I sold my one-sixth interest in a Cessna 150 because
I was preparing to move. By then, I had learned three things about flying that
kept me from going back to it. One, if you live in the American South and you fly
a small plane VFR, you can never count on making it back home in a timely
manner if you travel very far because the area is so prone to overcast, scattered thundershowers, and 250 mile long thunderstorm fronts (These
fronts are too high to fly over, and no one in his right mind would fly a
small plane within thirty miles of one because of the likelihood of being
hurled 35,000 feet into the air, having his wings snapped off, and then being
slammed into the ground). Two, it costs a hell of lot to fly even if you share
expenses, not so much because of the original investment in a share of some old
and tiny airplane, as because of maintenance costs. The sad truth is that airplane
labor and parts cost more than the same do for cars, plus the government requires frequent
inspections and lots of periodic maintenance (like a motor rebuild every 2000 flight hours). Third, you’re a danger to yourself and others if you only fly occasionally, and this means that, to be a safe pilot, a person has to spend a lot of time in the air when he had rather be doing something else.
Looking
back, I’m glad I flew a little, and I’m glad I survived because as dangerous as
it looks, I found it to be even more dangerous for someone of my limited
experience who was flying a raggedy-ass old plane. Of course, it could be that my various close calls scared me more than was reasonable, but maybe that was for
the better. You wouldn’t think that adding an up and down dimension to the
usual left, right, and forward, would make much difference, but it wasn’t just the up and down that was disconcerting, it was that I
was moving through an unstable element. In case you haven’t been in an 1,100
hundred pound plane with a 34-foot wingspan, I should mention that small planes bounce all over the
place, and the moment the pilot gets them adjusted in response to one air movement, another wind, updraft, or downdraft hits, and they have to be adjusted all over again to forces that can neither be seen nor anticipated.
Me
being an atheist and all, you might be wondering if I was ever scared enough to
pray. The answer is that I was plenty scared, but if you truly don’t believe,
you don’t believe, so you’re unlikely to pray no matter how scared you get. I
won’t say that no atheist ever prayed in a dire situation, but I’ve never known of any. Of course, it was also true that I
never had something go wrong in an airplane that left me with enough leisure to pray. It’s a
wonderfully focusing moment when you suspect that the only things between you
and death are luck and experience, and you can’t control the former, and you have little of the latter.
I get a lot more done when Peggy is away because her presence is a distraction. During this absence, I’ve been roofing our new deck
during the day and making crackers and soups at night. When I’m
working in the kitchen, I watch films one after the other. Tonight, I watched
two war documentaries. The first was The Corporal’s Diary, which was
about an American soldier who died in Iraq, and the second was Heroes of Iwo
Jima. In a few minutes,
I’ll go to bed and continue my nightly reading of a newly-released book entitled Survivor:
Auschwitz, the Death March, and My Fight for Freedom, which is surely the
last first-person account of a Nazi death camp that the world will ever see.
When
I was younger, I sometimes experienced regret that I had never gone to war because I saw it as a rite of passage like no other, and because it enables men to bond closely with
other men. Yet, I went to great lengths
to avoid the only war I had a chance at. I’m not sure whether I did this
because I thought that only suckers voluntarily went to Vietnam, or because I had no stomach for any war. I suspect the former because,
unlike World War II, which made at least a little sense to me, and during which
those who didn’t fight were viewed with suspicion, I never felt the least inner
desire or societal pressure to go to Vietnam, although I felt a lot of pressure
from the draft board, which was forever eliminating my latest exemption in what
seemed like a cat and mouse game with me being the mouse. When it seemed as if the cat finally had me cornered, my doctor wrote to the draft board saying that I had passed
several kidney stones, so I was reclassified from 1A (kiss
your ass goodbye) to 4F (we wouldn’t draft a worthless fucker
like you no matter what) for a year, and by the time that year ended,
the war was winding down. I was surprised to learn that I had suffered from
kidney stones, but I wasn’t about to argue.
Tonight,
as I cried my way through Heroes of Iwo Jima, I glanced over at Brewsky and was
startled to discover that he was watching me with an expression of consternation unlike any I had ever seen in him, and I knew it was because he didn’t
understand my tears. I very much wanted to tell him what was going on for me, but
how does one describe feelings about war to a cat? Not very well, I shouldn’t
think. When the war films were over, I watched another documentary, The Cruise,
which was about a NYC tour bus guide. This guy had depth, honesty, creativity,
sensitivity, eloquence, and a unique world-view, which is to say that he was
everything I would like to be when I’m around people but am not. Of course, it’s a lot
harder to be all those things given that I mostly avoid people. Like this morning, I
got to feeling lonely, what with Peggy being gone, so, it being Sunday, I
thought about either visiting the new Unitarian Church or calling someone about
getting together, but I decided against either because they seemed like too
much work. That decision being out of the way, my friend Cliff called to ask if
he could come over, but I didn't answer the phone. About an hour later, I
called him back, and we took a walk. It was good, but there’s such a wide gap
between myself and others that I sometimes think about seeing people in the
same way I think about taking medicine. I know it’s good for me, but it’s
not altogether pleasant, although it can sometimes be very pleasant indeed,
which is another parallel between people and drugs.
I
saw life as predictable and everlasting because time moved so slowly that I
couldn’t imagine myself growing up. Days were alike except for weekends and
holidays, which seemed so far apart that I once tried to hurry Christmas by
pulling leaves from September trees. I knew that real change would someday come, but the time seemed so far away
that thinking about it was like looking through the wrong end of a telescope. I lacked the words to say so, but I regarded change as theoretical rather
than actual in the same sense that the earth someday being obliterated now seems
theoretical rather than actual, although it will certainly happen.
My
concept of life as more or less a status quo affair lingered into my fifties
because, while many changes had by then happened around me, I stayed constant
within myself. Then, my health changed in ways that left me with pain and
limitations, and once a person can’t trust himself to stay right, and other people can’t make him right, life becomes more
serious. Now, when I look back upon all the people and events that I once knew
and experienced—and are gone forever even though it once seemed that they would
continue forever—I become panicky and nauseous because I know that the people
and events that are currently a part of my life will also cease to exist, and that
the time before it happens no longer seems like looking through the wrong end
of a telescope but through the right end of a microscope.
I
have an 87-year-old friend who says to me every time I see him: “Growing old
isn’t for sissies.” He says this with a solemn voice and baleful eye as if it’s
his own original and profound discovery even though he’s been saying it for years,
as have millions of other people. He says it this way because it is his own discovery and it is original and profound, although the
bromidic words with which he expresses himself can’t begin to impart his
private realization that life can and will go horribly wrong no matter what we do, and that, all too soon, everything will be lost. All the work, all the
years in school, all the relationships, and a million little things, will soon disappear
in the same way that light disappears when the bulb blows.
In
late adolescence, I began to think of life as the product of how one looked at
it, which meant that if I looked at it as a game, I could avoid suffering. Yet,
even then I knew what it was to step on a nail, to fall ill with strep throat,
and to bend double from food poisoning, and I would guess that no one ever said
that life was a game while he had a nail sticking out of his foot, or was having
diarrhea in a toilet while throwing-up in a trashcan. There are even books that
promote the view that life is a game, but I very much doubt that any of them
were written in Palestine or Darfur or by people who were in intractable pain. The
irony of life is that the same brevity and powerlessness that make it
meaningless also make it profound. Indeed, when I was able (on my better days) to
view life as a game, I had yet to understand that life is more akin to a gasp that
bursts from the eternal blackness of the void only to be sucked back into it. Once
that thought reached my core, life became a tragedy. As my IOOF ritual put it:
“I
have seen the rose in its beauty spread its leaves to the morning sun. I
returned and it was dying upon the stalk; its grace and form were gone; its
loveliness was vanished away; its leaves were scattered to the ground, and no
one gathered them together again. I have seen man in the pride of his strength.
He walked; he ran; he leaped; he rejoiced in that he was more excellent than
the rose. I returned, and life was departed from him, and the breath from out
of his nostrils.”
All
but one of the nine men who used to stand around a coffin with me as we
performed that ritual are dead. “Death is in the world,” they said; “All who
are born must die,” they said, and so they died, leaving only my 87-year-old
friend and me.
Given
such a reality, I can understand why people turn to religion and spirituality,
and even today, I wish that they could be true. Yet, from adolescence, I viewed their content as so fanciful that I could but cling to them desperately in order to enjoy
even the fleeting illusion of a permanent hold. I asked the darkness around my
bed why, if there really exists an Eternal Beneficence that reaches out to us
as eagerly as we reach out to it, doesn’t that Beneficence reveal itself
equally and undeniably to everyone rather than leave us to interpret the words
of dead men in contradictory ways, all of which promote hatred in the name of a thousand different Gods of Love. Finally, I couldn’t go
on believing in God anymore than I could go on believing in Santa Claus, there
being so few things that make life bearable that the rest must of necessity fall
away. What could possibly make life bearable for an atheist, some might ask. Kindness, integrity, intimacy, art, music, literature, good
health, simple pleasures, adequate resources, writing, reflecting, studying, time in the woods, and, most of all, truth.
Given that there are so few, none can be relinquished without the loss
outweighing the gain, and religion and spirituality required that I relinquish truth as I believe it to be within my deepest self.
The truth of which I speak is that the existence of certain persistent questions regarding
the possibility that our lives possess an ultimate purpose, doesn’t suggest
the existence of answers, but rather a need that there be answers, and so it is
that answers are invented—both by religion and philosophy—not to satisfy a
truth need, but rather a psychological need. Some people are satisfied with
these answers; others appear to have been born with a lack of interest in the
questions; and still others are left with the questions despite the absence of
any hope that there be answers. They are left to feel that religion,
spirituality, and philosophy have all failed to satisfy their needs and, indeed,
that their needs are unsatisfiable short of death. Wittgenstein expressed
philosophy’s failure as follows. Religion and spirituality are unable to
address their own limitations so humorously.
“The
correct method in philosophy would really be the following: to say nothing
except what can be said, i.e. propositions of natural science—i.e. something
that has nothing to do with philosophy—and then, whenever someone else wanted
to say something metaphysical, to demonstrate to him that he had failed to give
a meaning to certain signs in his propositions. Although it would not be
satisfying to the other person—he would not have the feeling that we were
teaching him philosophy—this method would be the only strictly correct one.”
In
case his words are obscure, I will tell you what I think they mean. The only
truthful tack that philosophy can take is to say nothing about that of which it
knows nothing. If it does this, its remarks will be limited to natural science, a field unrelated to philosophy. If someone should come into a philosophical
circle and make a remark about the existence of a reality that transcends natural science, philosophy can but dismiss his or her remark by breaking it down
into its constituent parts and pointing out that they suffer from a lack of
clarity and specificity, and are therefore nonsensical. The person who made the
remark will not find this approach satisfying, and won’t even understand what
it has to do with philosophy, yet those who offer it can take comfort in
knowing that they have presented the best that philosophy has to offer.
To
put it another way:
“Even
when all possible scientific questions have been answered, the problems of life
remain completely untouched. Of course, there are then no questions left, and
this itself is the answer.” –Ludwig Wittgenstein