Commentary on quotations from a variety of folks. Some famous....and some not. To receive Jack's Winning Words via email, copy the link at the end of this message, paste it into your web browser address, and complete the sign-up form.
http://eepurl.com/gicpvf
Wednesday, November 04, 2020
Jack’s
Winning Words 11/6/2020
“When all else
is lost, the future still remains.”(Christian
Nestell Bovee)There are many things on
my mind with regard to the future – personally and with world in general.When I was a teen someone taught me this
phase – “I do not know what the future
holds, but I know who holds the future.”I offer it to you for use when you are concerned about what’s happening
in our country and you wonder about the things going on in your life.;-)Jack
Jack’s Winning Words 11/5/20
“Essentialism: the disciplined pursuit of less.” (Greg McKeown) I know several people who are minimalists when it comes to recycling - putting those tiny plastic bottle tops in the bin - making pumpkin soup out of the Halloween Jack-o-Lantern and roasting the seeds for a snack. I’m a “limited” minimalist…but at least I believe in essentialism. I do have a recycling bin, and it’s emptied each week. It’s emptier now without the political ads. How’s your pursuit going? ;-) Jack
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: i do the same as you..===JACK: I could do better. So, maybe I'll try harder...tomorrow..
FROM RS IN TEXAS: Recycling and composting....trying to do both as best we
can. Making sure all "electronic" waste doesn't go into the
landfill, either. We are fortunate to have a free dropoff facility
about 20 minutes from the house for all "hazardous" waste. ===JACK: I'm ready to drop off the political ads in the hazardous waste area.
FROM WILLMAR REV: Ours were separated into three containers
earlier years gone by . . . now one large container with everything thrown in
together. I guess I have just graduated into a minimalist! 0;-)===JACK: It seems as tho your community is heading back to be a maximalist. What's going on?
FROM J&S: We have lots of ideas on how we’re trying to minimize! ===JACK: ...and from what I hear, you're putting some of those ideas into reality.. The world needs MORE people such as you.
FROM TRIHARDER: Like
backpacking, bicycle riding. Less is more.===JACK: Bikers and kiers know how to do more with less,
FROM MAIL,MAN MIKE: Good
one, Jack. All one really needs is a begging bowl, a robe, a prayer mat,
one meal a day, and a job at a recycling center. How minimalist is that??===JACK: ...and there are many people in the world who have a "job' like that.
Jack’s Winning Words
11/4/20
“The only thing new in the world is the history you don’t know.” (Harry
Truman) I cast my first vote for HarryTruman as President. It was a
BIG deal when he made a 1948 “whistle-stop speech” in our community. Not
many people know that he was well-versed in history, knowing that historians
don’t always tell the whole story. I wonder what story will be told of
this year’s election?. A friend of mine was a long-time impersonator of
HST at the Truman Library. ;-) Jack
> FISH IN NOVA SCOTIA: My parents took me to
the opening of the Truman Museum. We met him in the reception line, and he
recognized my mother as a member of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra,
where he had front-row season tickets.===JACK: That is amazing. Your "home" certainly influenced you in many ways. Truman's is the only Presidential one that I've visited. I thin that the Obama one to be built on the Univ of Chicago will be awesome.
FROM YOGIB CA: Right? Would love to hear what history is
told about this election in 100 years.===JACK: Maybe i'm too cynical. I suppose there won't be a museum.. Visitors will be able to listen to Tweets.
FROM RS IN TEXAS: Time will tell what will be written - and how accurately -
about this election. For me the Presidential election was pretty
simple....a choice between a political agenda/money and
character/decency/honesty. So far it's really disappointing that for
almost half the population the former was more important than the latter.===JACK: Each generation has its memories. I'm glad that mine are of Truman (the minimalist) and not of Trump (the maximalist).===RS: Don't remember Truman, but more and more Jimmy Carter is
becoming my favorite because of the values he has.===JACK: I wonder if that means that a person of values has a hard time being presidential?
FROM FLIGHT INSTR TOM: Jack
- I was in 1st grade and the entire school went down to the local railroad
station for the train to stop by with President Truman. Back then, as you
know, they were called whistle stop tours. Hope all is well.===JACK: My first whistle-stop experience was Alf Landon from Kansans when he was running against FDR. I still have a campaign button from that ...shaped as a sunflower.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: I AM SO IMPRESSED, AFTER READING HIS BIOGRAPHY A FEW YRS. aAGO WITH HIS INTEGRITY, AND 'PAYING HIS OWN WAY" IN THE WHITE HOUSE. HE AND BESS KEPT TRACK OF EVERY PENNY SPENT, AND PD. FOR ALL THEIR GUESTS, ETC. ! UNHEARD OF TODAY! HE WAS ADMIRABLE IN MANY WAYS! CROSSING MY FINGERS AS THIS VOTE COUNTING GOES ON AND ON...!===JACK: Joan's mother would not vote for Truman because "he swore." Trump would send her spinning in her grave, ===OAKS: When someone asked Bess if she couldn't get him to stop saying "Manure", she replied, "Do you
know how long it took to get him to say that instead of the other word for manure??!" Ha!===JACK: I knew where you were heading with your response and kept looking ahead to see if you would "write" the other words. As expected, you did n't. Did you ever say it accidentally?
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: i have been to the Truman Library in KC, MO. it
is very impressive!. i learned a LOT that day. every
kid in America should be made to visit our presidential libraries.
they are just full of American history. ===JACK: "You can lead a horse to water, et." I can't believe all of those Tr8ump voters never took a History or Civics class.
Tuesday, November 03, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 11/3/20 “When you go to buy, use your eyes, not your ears.” (Czech
Proverb) Today is election day, an end to all of the words and all of the
faces of candidates. It is now time for us to use our brains and mark our
ballots. One way or another, some will be disappointed and others will
rejoice. Hopefully, our country will be going back to being the “United”
States of America. Do you think that God cares about the election
outcome? I think He cares that we love one another as He loves us.
;-) Jack
FROM SF IN FL: Praying
for good outcomes, both in the person elected and the behavior of the
electorate. I am scared and shocked at the tactics of the current
administration and his followers. People are dying and our grandchildren are
witnessing a side of humanity that is appalling.===JACK: When it comes to prayer, answers that I like inspire me. Unanswered ones are a puzzle; tp me. "Wait and see" are a frustration....but I still believe that conversation with God is a good thing ( like the ones Tevye had)
FROM HUMBUG: Yes,
He calls us to be light in the world. Peace, John===JACK: To be "the light of God to the world:...what can be greater than that? So....no matter how the election turns out, We are God's light to the world. Thanks for the positive thought.
FROM SALON SUZY: 🇺🇸Amen!🇺🇸===JACK: A saying that I remember..."There's so much bad in the best of us, and so much good in the worst of us, that it behooves none of us to soeak ill of the rest of us,"
Monday, November 02, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
11/2/20
“Just because I can’t see it doesn’t mean I can’t believe it.” (Jack
Skellington) Perhaps one reason for the spread of “the virus” is that we
can’t see it; ergo, it doesn’t exist. Think of things invisible
that we DO believe in …Santa leaving presents on Christmas Eve…love
between people…theologically, one attribute of God is that He’s
invisible. Our belief allows us to pray, although we don’t see. Can
you think of other instances of the power of the invisible? ;-)
Jack
Friday, October 30, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/30/20
“Where there is no imagination there is no horror.” (Arthur
Conan Doyle) Tomorrow’s Halloween, the scariest day of the year.
Spiders, black cats, ghouls...Oooooh! For me, I don’t like fake vomit (or
real, either). It was suggested that my daughter change her address
because it contained the numbers, 666. The Hound of the Baskervilles,
both as a book and a movie, really took hold of my imagination…a fake dog, but
no fake fear. What causes goose pimples for you? ;-) Jack
FROM WILLMAR REV: The first thought that crossed my mind this
morning regarding "what causes goose pimples for you?" was
delivering a death notification yesterday to a friend that his wife had
purposely walked out in front of train a few hours previously. He and his wife
are very close friends of mine for many years. She has always seemed to be a
very positive person and in her late 60's; however, she had been suffering for
over a year with dilapidating health problems. 0:-/===JACK: NOW that even causes goose bumps for me. When it comes to meeting people in their needs...Lutheran or AG? It doesn't really matter, does it?
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: getting out of the
shower when the room temp is much too cool:):):) ===JACK: ...or, getting out of the shower and looking in the mirror.===SP: that is when you are sooo glad the mirror is all
steamed over!
FROM NORM'S BLOG: There is an interesting, and one might say necessary, interplay
between imagination and faith. Indeed faith cannot become strong in someone’s
life without imagination. Religion is built upon things that we cannot
physically see; rather we must believe and try to imagine what God and
Heaven and other major part of our religious beliefs must be like. That is both
good and bad – good because our imagination allows us to wrap our heads around
what would otherwise be enigmatic, but bad because it confines our understanding
to the pitiful limitations of our own imaginations. We are told that we will experience a peace in the afterlife
that is beyond understanding and then we try to imagine what that must feel
like. We are told that Jesus has gone to prepare a place for us in his Father’s
hose, a place with many rooms and we imagine a giant Motel 6. We buy into the
cartoon images of people with wings standing around talking to each other and
the thought that we will again “see” everyone who has gone before us, as if we
are at a vast family reunion.
FROM DR J: I like that one. Autumn is my favorite time of the year!
Thursday, October 29, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/29/20
“Autumn is a second spring when every leaf is a flower.” (Albert
Camus) Camus was a French philosopher and author. The leaves this
year have been particularly colorful. “Autumn flowers” described them
well. I once saw a book of thoughtful sayings like: God was
having a good day when He created the rainbow. God was having a
great day, too, when He made the flowers and the Autumn leaves. …and
especially people. Don’t think that beauty is onlyin the mirror.
;-) Jack
FROM GUSTIE: Brent’s
daughter (my Carol’s age) is named Karma.===JACK: Karma...a nice-sounding name. There's usually "a story" behind why names are chosen. Is there behind yours?
FROM YOGI CA: Love this ! My bday is in the
fall so - i love the season.===JACK: I love each of the seasons for the good things they bring with them. There are bad things, too, if you want to concentrate of them. I choose not to.
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/28/20
“Karma is what happens to a person
because they caused it by their actions.” (Free Encyclopedia) “They
had it coming!” is a very satisfying phrase. One that you don’t hear
often is, “They got their comeuppance.” (Literally, it means to
appear before a judge, probably, God as Judge!. Now, that’s really
Karma! On a more positive note…there can be Good Karma,
too. For example, Mother Teresa was named, a saint by her
Church after a lifetime of service to the poorest of the poor. ;-) Jack
FROM NORM'S BLOG: Lately we have been hiding from the Corona Virus mugger that is
running rampant in our world ravaging those whom it has infected; however,
there is no way to hide from the cat burglar of age that creeps up on all of us
stealing yet another precious day from us each night. What we can do, all of
us, is to steal a part of each day back from that burglar by getting the
maximum value and enjoyment out of each day such that there is nothing to
regret having done or not done as sleep casts it’s nightly veil over us. If we begin each day thankful for God having given us yet
another opportunity, we should end each day thankful to God for having been
with us as we had the experiences of living through it. We should pause to
reflect on the people that we met the challenges that we overcame, the knowledge
that we gained and the joys that we experienced. That moment of reflection and
thankfulness serves to steal back the day and lock it in our memories in a way
that even the cat burglar of age cannot take from us. The longer one lives the
greater is the treasure that is stored in those memories. Age may steal our
endurance and our strength, and bring with it aches and pains to remind us that
it is there, but, for most, it cannot steal our memories and need not dull our
minds. It is easier to retain those memories is one starts the day in
the right frame of mind. Perhaps you could start with a little prayer asking
God to help you: to be more open to new ideas and new people, to be more calm and thoughtful in the face of the day’s
challenges, to be more ready to listen and less ready to talk, to be more understanding and less judgmental, to strive to love thy neighbor as Jesus loves you. If you actually lived the day with those thoughts in mind, I’ll
bet that you will end the day with new treasures to add to your memories;
memories that the cat burglar of age cannot take away from you. Have a great and memorable day!===JACK: Thanks for giving me something to chew on today.
FROM ER IN FL: This is truly how I see the way you structure your life. You
have told me that it makes you happy to give, and that you get back twofold. I
would say that's pretty good Karma! You make me want to be a better version of myself. Thank you
for that. ===JACK: KARMA!!! Thanks
Tuesday, October 27, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/27/20
“While disease is a mugger, age is a cat burglar who steals but a
single day each night, and the thief has learned patience.” (Madeline
Albright) I wish that I could write in Madeline’s descriptive way.
One of the elements of this writing is to get the reader to use their
imagination. While I was no Madeline, I enjoyed writing essays.
“Cat burglar” is certainly a descriptive term. In the Bible, the story of
Daniel in the lion’s den fascinates me. What catches your
attention? ;-) Jack
FROM SF IN FL: Awesome statement. I love steeping my mind in good
writing!!!! When I can’t put a book down, I am in (one of) my happy places!!!===JACK: Words can be similar to bricks that are used to construct a building. A beautiful house or a beautiful story? Madeline knows how to use words.
FROM WILLMAR REV: Remembering Sunday School, the paper cut outs of
Biblical characters pasted upright in the shoebox and looking through the hole
cut out at the very of the box while the teacher told the story!! I can still
imagine most every Old Testament story that was made alive by the Sunday School
teacher!! 0;-)===JACK: I, too, learned Bible stories through pictures. Every Week, in Sunday School, we received a leaflet with a picture on the front. I especially remember the one with Daniel facing the lion in his den.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: Certainly descriptive! I'm not all that conversant with her writing, unfortunately! I was so impressed with Jesus feeding the 5,000, with a few loaves and fish! And to have 12 baskets left over! WOW! Also when very small,, the story of Noah and the Ark! : - )===JACK: The more I read of her writings, the more I'm impressed by her. She was a masterful Secretary of State for our country.
Monday, October 26, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/26/20
“When I was young my teachers were the old. Now when I am old my
teachers are the young.” (Robert Frost) I remember seeing
poet Frost read one of his poems at JFKs presidential inauguration. I
thought to myself, “This is a lifetime experience!” What modern poet
might be the future’s Frost? I have a hard time thinking that it would be
rapper 50 Cent. Maybe the point of Frost’s quote is that we can learn
from people of any age…as long as we’re willing to keep learning. ;-)
Jack
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: a few years ago i got a traffic warning from a cop who
looked like he wasn't even shaving yet! not sure he had even gone thru
puberty! actually, his voice was kind of
high:):):) ===JACK: When he got home that night he probably told his wife and kids about that old guy who was holding up traffic by going so slow with the wrong blinker on.
FROM ER IN FL: Robert Frost has always been a poet that I have have a
fondness for. His poetry typically makes me nostalgic and reflect on my
childhood of country living.===JACK: My favorite From poem is "The Road Less Taken." Have you ever wondered what it would have been like to have taken a different path? I have...but I'm satisfied that the choice I made at the time was the choice I made...and I can't go back and change things. Sometimes, in the marriage vows, it's said, "For better or worse." It is what it is.===ER: A television show that I watched after talking with you tonight ended with the actor saying, "I took the one less traveled by, and that has made all the difference." Coincidence? Not in my world.===JACK: Eerie, isn't it?===ER: The Road Not Taken was the first Frost Poem that I was
introduced to. I fell in love immediately, but as my experience with the poet
grew I became enthralled with The Mending Wall. The first half of the poem
reminds me of growing up on the farm. Fences always needed mending even though
they we seemingly untouched. The pictures Frost paints, and the solutions to
dismantling walls/fences make me smile every time. As I have matured the two refrains he uses throughout the
poem give me pause. Even today Frost stops me in my tracks to think about both
his viewpoints. What is your stance on, "Good fences make good
neighbors?" ===JACK: I don't mind fences. I think that Frost said that it depends on what you are fencing in and what you are fencing out. Stone walls can be very attractive; the Border Wall, on the other hand, is a negative, IMO>
M SF IN FL: I believe in surrounding myself with teachers and friends of
all ages. Keeps ideas fresh and life interesting!===JACK: Isn't it interesting...how the choices we make so dramatically affect our life?
FROM NORM'S BLOG: When we are younger we look to older people to learn from,
because we believe that they have learned things that we don’t know but would
like to know. As we become adults, we look to the people around us who
may have already had experiences that we have not yet had. In addition, as we
get older we look to younger people because we are sure that they have adopted
and learned about new things that we have yet to try – like how to operate our
smartphones.===JACK: As the birthdays come and go, I become more thankful for the teachers I've had during my lifetime.
FROM LBP: I was going to counter your final words ... “keep learning”
with “keep and open mind” or “keep listening” or other such things. But
actually you capture it all there. To keep learning we must be open to the fact
that we don’t know it all and hear what others are sharing. I’m still learning! ===JACK: When Michelangelo was in his mid-80s he wrote: "Ancora Imparo," ..."I am still learning." I have his words posted by my computer.
FROM DR JUDY: I was
going to suggest Maya Angelou, but since she’s so much older and already
deceased I decided to go with someone more current/youth. Check
out Brandon Leake. He won this year‘s America’s got talent. His spoken word
poetry is mind-boggling. Here’s his first appearance on AGT you can Google
more. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=tdjIFkM-ohQ (Yes you can share this on your blog)===JACK: You're the second one who's suggested Brandon to me today. Thanks for the link.===DJ: Have kleenex===JACK: I do have sort of a runny nose today.===DJ: The things I like to learn now are about acts of kindness
and caring. I hope I hear them everyday!
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: Not familiar with modern poets. Maya Angelou, perhaps one of
the best. Here is Josiah Gilbert Holland, I believe, right after the
Civil War. The words appear pertinent now. We have no one reporting
anything but guarded self-interest for current events.===JACK: What is it that makes a poet a poet? Are rappers our modern poets?===JON: Probably, except where they descend into repeated profanity. But a great deal that I've heard is excellent. Here's a few lines from Dessa:
I don't need an agenda
I just tell the truth (yup)
Let it off the leash and
Don't touch it
It knows what to do
===JACK: Who defines profanity? It seems as though the definition has changed as times have changed. BTW< thanks for the Dessa words.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: do we still have poets?===JACK: Who do you classify as a poet? Are Eminem, Snoop Dogg and Kanye West modern poets? Just because their words might not fit our style, are they still poet===FL: no more so than musicians of the past..===JACK: ...such as?===FL: .whom do we consider to be a “poet” in the music industry? i
can’t think of anyone...===JACK: I quoted The Eagles recently. The music, to me, overwhelmed the good lyrics. Modern songwriters seem to focus more on the tune than on the lyrics.===FL: elvis costello comes as close an anyone to musician and
poet...===JACK: I thought that Costello was part of the Abbott and Costello comedy team - famous for "Who's on first?"===FL https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9SYczqCVFQw&feature=share elvis is married to diana krall. he’s british, so he has
that odd ironic humor, as they do... a wry social commentator w/a knack for a
catchy tune.===JACK: I remember when he first appeared on the scene. He was a hit.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: The young teach me computer skills and phone
skills! I still need help mastering my Christmas Smart phone!! Yes, I had my "time" of teaching for 24 yrs, but
imagine that would be hopelessly outdated today! Still our kids learned and certainly had a mastery of the 'basics" in English; reading, and math. by memorizing, etc. Now their computers and phones think for them! Fascinating to think what the future holds, if we ever master this Virus!===JACK: The best teaching is when we teach each other, and the best learning is when we learn from each other.
Friday, October 23, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/23/20
“Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated
simple, awesomely simple, that’s creativity.” (Charles
Mingus) I came across a listing of simple inventions that have changed
the world. You might guess that the wheel was there, and so was the use
of fire. Surprises were the tooth brush, the nail and Velcro. What about
humans? Are we complicated or simple? It really doesn’t matter because God, who
creates everything, loves us all…it’s as simple as that. ;-) Jack
FROM BLAZING OAKS: AMEN, to that! Invention of the Microwave Oven ranks high on my list!! SO handy to have for so many uses!!===JACK: That was one of the inventions of NASA's space age program. Others: Dustbuster,, computer mouse, Speedo swimsuit material, smoke detector, Tang, memory foam, freeze drying...and others.
FROM JK IN NV: Yes
— simplicity
is not simple! Childlike faith is not childish. Further
along these lines, French philosopher Blaise Pascal wrote in his Lettres
Provinciales (“Provincial Letters”) dated 1656-57: “I would have written a shorter letter, but I didn’t have the time.” In
the legal field most courts have word count limits on written submissions
(“briefs”). It is an art learned by hard work to cover persuasively all
necessary detail in the fewest words. ===JACK: So, that's the origin of the word, briefs. It's interesting when I learn something new.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: As we EAT, the simpler things are the better. We like
to shop but whatever comes in means something goes out. To keep things
simple.===JACK: Ooooh. She has a sense of humor!===JUDY: Hard to believe???===JACK: There has to be a sense of humor behind that laugh of yours.
Thursday, October 22, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/22/20
“So often in time it happens, we all live our life in chains, and
we never even know we have the key.” (The Eagles) It’s said
that the Eagles’ song, Already Gone, has one of the great lyrics of
all time. It expresses a thought that I’ve found to be true: “Things
always work out for the best in the end.” And there’s another
truism: “Chains” sometimes keep us from having a better life. The lyrics
say that we have the key to a happier life. We don’t have to live
in chains. ;-) Jack
FROM GOOD DBT JON: Sherman set the way back machine to 1975. “There’s
17-year-old Jon and his girlfriend Terrie, sitting in a booth at LK Restaurant
eating patty melts and milkshakes. Terrie, the more lovely of the two, puts a
dime in the Juke Box and sings along (smugly) You Ain’t Seen Nothin’ Yet.
Towards Jon (of course, she was technically correct). After her stellar
performance, Jon would put another dime in the Jukebox (the control was right
at the table) and play “Already Gone.” Jon seemed to enjoy the
line, “…just remember this, my girl, when you look up in the sky, you can
see the stars and still not see the light.” That’s right. Back to the present day, I haven’t seen that girl since the
late 1970s. I hope she got a new song. Much later in life, I heard, “Thank
God for Unanswered Prayers.” Perhaps nothing in life is better than
knowing you are with who you should be. I’ve been married to Nita for 38
years. We just had our 4th grandchild, Gideon. I wrote a song in
2014 when my daughter was expecting our first; it was called Perfectness
or Sunday Morning. The 1st Verse:Another Perfect Sunday Morning, my time for walking and thinking My son’s safe and home from Iraq, my daughter’s having her first child, now how ‘bout that? It’s like God is making up for everything I missed, And right now I know He’s sending me His very best. Gratitude. I look across 3 generations now, something
my parents never got to do. Thanks for opening the memory flood gates Pastor
Jack. Now I have work to do.===JACK: Always a good and thoughtful response from you. Family...It can be a blessing or a curse. I'm glad that you and I can share our blessings.
FROM CS: I
look forward to your quotes every morning. Hope you are well. If
only the heart controlled the body - then we could all fly. Keep
on flying!===JACK: I like the song..Fly Me To The Moon. I hope to be flying to Minnesota in a week or so.
Wednesday, October 21, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/21/20
“The only one I know who behaves sensibly is my tailor; he takes my
measurements anew each time he sees me. The rest go on with their old
measurements and expect me to fit them.” (George Bernard
Shaw) I’ve changed. Have you noticed that my Winning Words are a
bit edgier than when I began over 25 years ago? Even the clothes I wore
then are baggier now. How about you? Everett Dirksen once said that
people who don’t change are in the cemetery. ;-) Jack
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: a very good one,
Jack! thanks. but my clothes are not baggier; their
tighter!:):):)===JACK: You probably wear your belt higher, too, as older men are prone to do. ===SP: it's either
above your belly or below your belly! as they say, men
get a gut and women get a butt. not always true but often.===JACK: Why should we care?...but we do.
FROM COPPER COUNTRY BOB: Heaps of thanks for Derxin quote. When the mines
closed I used his legislative model "TAX CREDITS FOR JOB CREATION.
We need something similar today. ===JACK: Will we ever be satisfied? Is there such a thing as Heaven of Earth?
FROM NORM'S BLOG: Sometimes events bring back to the surface thoughts that
were always there, but which had faded. The events which lead to the resurgence
of the Black Lives Matter movement brought back our memories of, and belief in,
the inequities and injustice suffered by people of color that had faded into the
background for many. Complacency oft fills the void left when commitment and
compassion fade. Jarring events like the killing of George Floyd serve to snap
those feeling back to the fore. Few remember that the Black Lives Matter
movement actually went back to the 2012 killing of Trayvon Martin and the
hashtag #BlackLivesMatter was first used in 2013. America had become complacent
again.===JACK: I like the poem (set to music)..."Change and decay in all around I see. O thou. who changest not, abide with me."
FROM YOGA GURU: Regarding changing or being
flexible- I keep doing yoga - there is plenty of afterlife time for me to
be "stiff". 😂Hope all is good in your camp. We
are being super cautious in this covid spike. Love your words Jack .===JACK: I relate to the yoga words, but the stretches and moves are too much for me.
FROM PR MAGGIE: : Your Winning Words are always a blessing whether for a challenge like today or humor that brightens our lives. Stay well my friend.===JACK: Winning Words is what gives me joy and keeps the mind active.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: And who
knows what the Taylor tells his wife? I’d like to think he keeps it to
himself...like a good friend would.===JACK: That's especially true for a pastor and a counsellor.
FROM BB IN CHGO: These are great when you’re edgy and great when you’re not===JACK: We're living in edgy times, so maybe we need edgier words. Something (or someone) causes me to write as I write. One of my favorite Bible stories is found in Daniel 5, when King Belshazzar saw the handwriting on the wall...and what it said. Now, that was something edgy!===BB: Each week I take the NYTimes news quiz. Today I missed 2 of 11, one of which was regarding new cave drawings found in Peru – the early writing on the wall? I guessed that the drawing was an Alpaca but missed as it was instead a cat. Share more of your faves with me. I know you’ve been reading and pondering over it a long time!===JACK: I think that it was the biggest cat ever know...something like 9 feet. I may be wrong about the size.
Tuesday, October 20, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 10/20/20 “Listen! The wind is rising and the air is wild with leaves. We’ve had our summer evenings; now for October eves.” (Humbert Wolfe) Humbert’s works are somewhat strange. I wonder why he wrote, The Blind Rose, Reverie of a Policeman and X at Oberammergau? Wolfe was Jewish, converted to Christianity, but maintained his heritage. Today’s WWs show his fascination with nature. He loved Fall’s rustling leaves and crisp air. I do, too. Do you? . ;-) Jack
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: we love Fall too but today we are supposed to get 2 to 4
inches of snow!. so much for a late Fall. oh well, there is
usually an Indian summer sometime in Oct. or Nov.===JACK: I wonder if there's a politically correct term is for Indian Summer? ===SP: good question. "Native American warm week" just doesn't seem to cut it:):):) ===JACK: No more playing cowboys and Native Americans, either.===SP: good point. what do we do with Indian head
pennies??? ===JACK: Be careful, you're playing in the conservatives band.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: Definitely my favorite season. The colors have been
unusually beautiful this Fall.===JACK: What I DON'T like about Fall...Winter's close behind...but then there comes the beautiful Spring and the nice warm Summer. I love the changing of the seasons. Life is something like that.
FROM BB IN CHGO: Definitely
love the rustle of the leaves as well as the autumn aroma in the air.
I’ve never read Humbert before; perhaps I will explore later in the day.===JACK: X at Oberammergau sounds intriguing.
FROM BS IN ENGLAND: Yes, and the beautiful colours. But clearing leaves from the lawns, now, that's a different ball game!===JACK: MacBrown who mows my grass also grinds up the dry leaves and hauls them away...but I remember the days when I raked and when burning leaves was permitted. I loves the small of the bonfire.
FROM STEVE IN WASH: Yes...and the fog on calmer mornings.===JACK: Is the fog because you live relatively close to the ocean?===S: Yes, as a source. Low elevation combined with water vapor
from the ocean, gets trapped against the Cascade mountains. The air temperature
drops to the dew point regularly in the Fall and Winter months. ===JACK: I knew that you might have the answer.
FROM TRIHARDER: Shorter days, no longer cooler nights. Time for nature's wonders to sleep.===JACK: I don't think that Daylight saving Time affects what goes on as we move from season to season. "You can't fool Mother Nature.==TH: It
only affects what time we wake up, what time we watch our favorite TV shows and
what time we go to sleep===JACK: Which do you like, EST or EDT or does it make any difference. I personally prefer ONE time, whatever that may be.===TH: I
don't like the sudden shift of sunlight or darkness to an hour later or earlier
on the clock. Most of the things I need to accomplish are in the early hours of
the morning when I prefer light over darkness. To that extent, I prefer EST.
Buf frankly, I willingly relent to whatever is for the greater
good.===JACK: You're very compliant today.
FROM D&K IN CO: We love the fall too and we've had a great fall
here except for the many fires. Many days they pollute our air so we don't go
outside. But we've still had the beauty of fall around us.===JACK: Amazingly, nature has a way of recovering from the forest fires. Global warming is another bowl of fish.===D&K: One fire is very close to Boulder and burned many homes so
fast that people lost everything. We see the smoke from that one. The
forest will recover and most people are thankful they are out safe.
Monday, October 19, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/19/20
“Fight for things you care about, but do it in such a way that will
lead others to follow you.” (Ruth Bader Ginsburg) I
watched the movie, On the Basis of Sex, thinking that it was one thing
and finding out that it was something better. Red or Blue, the women of
American owe Ruth Bader Ginsburg a debt of gratitude. She saw
“unfairness” and pursued a solution, in spite of many political roadblocks.
Ruth was an example of a caring leader right to the end. ;-) Jack
FROM SF: Amen. RBG...a true hero and role model. ===JACK: Each generation seems to have such an icon. A friend in Nova Scotia is currently reading Madeline Albright's book. She, too, was a remarkable person and an outstanding Secretary of State.
FROM EDUCATOR PAUL: And... one of her best friends was a legal opponent..
Scalia. I admire her for that, too.===JACK: In several cases I've read that the enormity of the SCOTUS job causes some justices to modify their view on how cases should be decided. John Roberts has mellowed.
FROM CZB: Not just the women of America... ;)===JACK: OK....I grant you that, but I was not discriminated in the way that women were before RBG...and she would not give up, either.
FROM THE FISH IN NOVA SCOTIA: I am entranced reading this latest book by Madeleine
Albright. Each of you three bccs has an interest in religion, I know at least
two of you have interests in politics, and I commend this refreshing book to
you, especially Chapter Eleven, “Things Unseen” As you may know, Madeleine first learned in her early days
as US Secretary of State that although she had been raised as a Catholic and
became an Episcopal when she married, she hadn’t learned that her family fled
Czechoslovakia because they were Jewish. As she said, she can have an
ecumenical discussion sitting by herself. In a constructive and non-cynical way, her book uses her
deep knowledge of world politics to inform her view of the impact and positive
and negative interactions of world religions including but not limited to the
“Abrahamic” religions. (I was going to use the Islamic expression “peoples of
The Book” but so far she hasn’t mentioned Zoroastrianism.) It’s often funny too. I have it checked out from the Annapolis Library, which
purchased it, so although there might be a waiting list it should generally be
around for two of you three.===JACK: Thanks for bringing this book to my attention. Ruth BG was "a special Person," and so was Madeline A. She was what a US Secretary of State should be...no political hack> I want to read her book. I laughed out loud when I read that she could have an ecumenical discussion while sitting by herself.===FISH: Madeleine Albright included the following thought in several of her many commencement speeches shortly after 9/11: She quoted from Tom Burnett’s call to his wife from Flight 93, realizing that two other hijacked planes had crashed into the WTC: “I know we’re going to die...but some of us are going to do something about it.” Albright concluded, “We are all mortal. What divides us is the use we make of the time and opportunities we have.”===JACK: Not to put down RBG, but there were other remarkable women. Madeline was one of them.
FROM DR J: Loved
the movie and RBG... a legend... grateful for sure!!!===JACK: Sexism, like racism, was worse in the past than it is now...but there's a long way to go. Who will be the new RBG< the new MLK Jr?
FRO ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: Amen to that!! ===JACK: Both you and I know...and had the experience of...how important it is to get people to follow us as we interpret the theological views of the Church. It's like starting out with a clean black/white board.
FROM NORM'S BLOG: Martin Luther King Jr fought for things that he
cared deeply about in such a manner that many others followed him. Mahatma
Gandhi was the same kind of leader, fighting for the freedom in which he
believed. You have probably known or known about other leaders who
demonstrated or fought for things that they cared deeply about and attracted
the following of others. The American Labor Movement was full of early pioneers
who lead the fight for better pay and working conditions. The recently
celebrated Suffragette Movement that resulted in women being granted the right
to vote was another success story, although not originally an American movement
(see Wikipedia from which came this - . The
term refers in particular to members of the British Women's Social and
Political Union (WSPU),
a women-only movement founded in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst, which engaged in direct action and civil disobedience.). More recently, we have seen groups taking to the street to
protest the killing of black people by police with the Black Lives Matter
movement and counter protests, which gave rise to groups like the Proud Boys.
In the midst of all of the protests, groups like Qanon and Antifa have taken
advantage of the resulting chaos to foment their vision of anarchy. In all of
those groups, there are leaders who are succeeding in getting others to follow
their vision of the future, albeit some are very distorted or hate-filled
directions. I’m sure that is not what RBG had in mind. The current political campaigns (which thankfully will soon be
over) are certainly example of the two sides both trying to fight for what they
believe in and to attract followers. Both sides engage in negative ads as well
as those that serve to encourage people to follow their lead. Were a casual
observer from another world to sit and watch the political ads on TV for a day
they might conclude that no matter which side wins the world is doomed. The
messages aren’t so much about “here’s where I want to lead you” as they are
about “follow those other guys and America will end up as either a Socialist
state or a Fascist state, but in a bad state no matter what. The messages are
not so much about a vision of better times ahead if one side wins, as they are
a forecast of eminent disaster if the other side wins.===JACK: I'm tired of the epithets. Show me by your actions. Let your words take legs.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: She is respected, if not loved, internationally! And
certainly that is the key to success; Tact, persistence,
listening to others with civility, and then presenting your case with
humor and wit, and deadly accuracy! Who indeed can take her
place?! she so wanted to live to see a different President elected.
I mourn that she didn't! I wonder what the title of Madeline A.'s new book is ?
I hadn't heard of it! There are many more women running for
office now than in previous elections! I'm sure 'she need to raise millions of dollars is a big deterrent to many who could
have been astute leaders in government! :-(===JACK: It was not meant to be that Ruth should hang on for political purposes. I think that God is still in control and we play the cards we are dealt. The world goes on. As for madeline, her book is "Hell and Other Destinations." Great reviews.
FROM SHALOM JAN: It was not meant to be that Ruth should hang on for political purposes. I think that God is still in control and we play the cards we are dealt. The world goes on. As for madeline, her book is "Hell and Other Destinations." Great reviews.===JACK: I'm awaiting the time when we can simply recognize people as people for what they accomplish. It's a putdown to say, "...and she was a woman."
Friday, October 16, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/16/20
“When you forgive, you live. When you let go, you grow.”
(Sent by Sandi) INC. magazine published an article on How to
Be a Better Person. Practice forgiveness was one suggestion.
Be open to change was another. Others: Let go of anger - Be honest -
Listen to what’s being said - Be polite and respectful - and there were
more. The point is that we’ve all made mistakes. If we want to grow
beyond our failings and be a better person, it begins with action on our
part. :-) Jack
FROM LBP: Was talking to my pastor a year back about slights that had
nagged me for years. She asked me, do you think God forgives you? Do you
forgive yourself? Me?!? That stopped me short. What she was hearing was my hang
up wasn’t as much the offense toward me but my response to it. Got to forgive
and let go of my own slips too.===JACK: I don't know if you've heard of such a thing as flypaper. We can be the most loving and kind person, but sometimes it's so hard to practice what we preach. Things we should let go of hang on like a fly to flypaper. "All we have sinned and fallen short." I t reminds me of the pious lady who prayed at the Ladies Aid..."O Lord, forgive my falling shorts."
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: "Love grows when a fault is forgiven.” Proverbs 17:9===JACK: One of my favorite Bible books is Proverbs, but I can't remember reading 17:9, at least in that translation. It's a good one.
FROM NORM'S BLOG: Letting go. Forgiving. Listening. Being polite and respectful.
These are all conscious efforts, but they are not efforts that you must do
alone. In the business world there is the concept of having an accountability
partner – someone with whom you agree to be completely honest and who agrees to
hold you accountable for the things that you commit to do. They make sure that
you make the effort to reach the goals that you have shared with them. In life, one may also have an accountability partner, someone
that you trust completely with your life’s secrets; however, I submit that we
already have that partner – God. If we are honest with ourselves and God about
wanting to be a better person by doing all of the things listed above, then we
must hold ourselves accountable to God for what we have accomplished and what
we have left undone. We do that through daily prayer, because that is the time
when we open ourselves up to God and hold our lives up to His light. It may
well be that the thing that we often think of as our conscience – that little
voice that we hear inside our head that tells us the difference between right
and wrong – is really the voice of God holding us accountable. We know when we haven’t
made the effort, because that little voice admonishes us.===JACK: The ultimate accountability is when we stand before God's judgment seat and we find out that our works have not been enough...that we have to rely on the mercy (grace) of God. I can't do enough. There's a song..."My God and I." God is my partner.
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: a very good one
today, Jack. thanks!===JACK: IMO, a good one fits my needs and causes me to think positively.
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: You can't pursue a credible future while dragging the
past. No part of your past is more dangerous to your health than
unforgiveness or constant prejudging of others' motives. ===JACK: Yes, it's not good to rely too much on the past...but, since "the past" is responsible for much of who we are today, we can accent the positive and e-lim-i-nate the negative and move on to be a better person.===JON: Agreed, as I recall
in GDBD, I wrote, “Use the past as a reference library, not a place to
dwell. Draggin, around a carpetbag of old grievances, makes life very
diffi===JACK: I like the carpetbag visual.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: Which is one of the reasons I would never vote for Trump!!! He's amoral, a bully, ignorant in handling relationships and working with stafF, etc etc etc. Never has said, I'm sorry, I was wrong...:-( !!===JACK: What would cause you to forgive him?===OAKS: Certainly nothing he's done so far...although his life
doesn't personally impact mine. He just appalls and offends
me...daily ! ===JACK: Not to denigrate what you've written, but WWJD?
Thursday, October 15, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words 10/15/20 “The least I can do is speak out for those who cannot speak for themselves.” (Jane Goodall) Chimps do have voices that most of us don’t understand, but Jane does and has given her life to speaking up on their behalf. There are people who, for some reason, can’t speak for themselves and are being taken advantage of. Let’s be thankful for the “Jane Goodalls” who speak for them. Call these “Janes,” do gooders, but I think that world is better off because of them. ;-) Jack
FROM SF: We just watched a Netflix documentary called “Crip Camp”. I
think that you and Joan will really appreciate it. It’s about a group of
handicapped kids who go to summer camp each year and eventually become
activists for the passage of Section 504 of the ADA. It is an amazing story.
Sad that it took so long to pass and that it required such a strenuous journey.
Inspiring people who found their collective voice and used it for good.===JACK: Some people think that Jane is nuts, that people who care about the voiceless are quacks. IMO, the world is a better place because of them.
FROM OUTHOUSE JUDY: Does that include the unborn babies?===JACK: That's an interesting question and deserves more than a YES or NO answer. Good people are Pro-Life and good people are Pro-Choices. Does one group have the right to choose that which affects the whole group? The issue involves religious views, medical views and should "a questionable" law be passed that affects all? I know that I've been dancing around the issue, but I do so, because there seems to be no clear-cut solution. I'm satisfied to let those who want to avoid abortion do so (Let Catholic Hospitals refuse to perform the procedure). Roe v. Wade is contentious. Repealing that law would be contentious, too. In a land of free speech, let religious groups and all persons express their views. Speaking for the unborn is something some do, but others do not consider that to be the issue. ===OJ: I
truly can’t imagine anyone...especially Christians, can condone abortion at
birth. It’s unimaginable! Abortion is an abomination at anytime but this
late term abortion is just plain murder. I know of three couples who
would take any of these babies.===JACK: That's one of the issues that is open for ethical discussion. Not all Pro-Choice believe it's black & white...where to draw the line...but most P-Cs believe that it is not something to be decided by a group of politicians.===[OJ: It had been decided but not by politicians.
But by the Word of God===JACK: But, the Bible is the book of the Christians and Jews, just part of America. BTW< speaking for the voiceless, how about those who choose to be vegan? I have grandchildren who are vegetarian/vegan for that very reason.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: iF IT WAS CRAZIER THAN NOW, I WASN'T AWARE!! THE WHOLE WORLD IS A MESS!!! :-(===JACK: Think back....to the 60s...Viet Nam protests...Kent State...the assassinations of Jack and Bobby Kennedy and MLK Jr. and you saw what happened during peaceful protest. I guess sometimes the tummy ache we have NOW seems more painful that the toothache we had years ago. ...just some rambling as I think back.===OAKS: i GUESS i WAS TOO BUSY RAISING A FAMILY AND DOING MY CHURCH WORK TO DWELL ON THESE THINGS, BUT OF COURSE WE MARCHED FOR AND WITH /DR. KING, AND I ILL NEVER FORGET JACK KENNEDY'S ASSASINATION...i WAS IN THE DENTIST'S CHAIR (HE BELONGED TO OUR DIXON CHURCH, AND WAS NOT A FAN OFKENNEDY,) SO I WAS DEVASTATED, and HIS COMMENT WAS,
"WELL THAT'S NOT THE WAY TO DO THINGS IN AMERICA" BUT HE'S NO BIG LOSS, IN MY OPINION! " NOW THAT I KNOW
ALL THE IMMORAL THINGS THAT WENT ON DURING HIS ADMINISTRATION, WITH AFFAIRS, ETC. HE DOESN'T HOLD SUCH A HIGH REGARD IN MY OPINION!===JACK: I was referring to "the state of the country then, as compared to now. Today is not necessarily the worst. The Great Depression and WW 2 days, in their own way, were worse than today...or just as bad....and, with regard to affairs, Donald probably could teach Jack a few things.
Wednesday, October 14, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/14/20
“Personally, I’m always ready to learn, although I do not like being taught.”
(Churchill) One of my favorite NPR programs is Ask Dr Science, who states “I’m not a real
doctor, but I have a Master’s Degree in Science”. In a humorous way, I’ve
learned about kidney stones, celiac disease and vaccines. Usually, we
enjoy learning when the teaching is enjoyable. Did you ever have a “fun”
teacher? ;-) Jack
FROM GOOD DEBT JON: Yes,
in my MBA program (2008) Niccole Chandler Hyatt Ph.D. she was finishing her
Ph.D. and now is encouraging me still. Good people are good people across the spectrum
of life. She
moved to Savannah but we still zoom. She's sort of a unofficial mentor for me
in my Ph.D studies now. We catch up by Zoom video. I had several fantastic grade school teachers along
the way too.===JACK: Thanks for mentors who challenge us to keep on learning. "The pandemic" has introduced me to Zoom (speakers for our Optimist Club - church services - Saturday chat each week with two close friends - family gathering from multiple states. While Google isn't the best and most accurate, it helps satisfy my curiosity.
FROM LBP: I’ve had engaging teachers over the years. Now I try to be
one of them. My latest thought experiment is how to bring what I’ve learned
about teaching to adult learners into the area of faith formation.===JACK: I read someplace that "Faith is caught, not taught." I loved teaching confirmation classed, but I'd do it differently today.
FROM FACEBOOK LIZ: i loathed school...===JACK: I'm sorry to hear that. You must have gone to the same school as Churchill.===LIZ: i think we both were prolly bored to tears bc it did not
interest us, nor did it move along at our pace. i went to private school mostly, which was waaay better than
public. i liked the people and the architecture... st katharine’s in dport,
graduated from the villa. ===JACK: I think that it's the teacher, rather than the school, that makes being taught, fun. Were your teachers mostly nuns? I know of children who went to 1-room schools...enjoyed it and got a great education. I seem to remember that you got a great education at home, too.===LIZ: st katharine’s was episcopal, but not when i went there. there
were episcopal nuns in my mother’s day. the villa had nuns... mostly very kind
souls. i did not like that the catholic girls made fun of them. school felt like jail... boring, LET ME OUT!===JACK: I was a clock watcher.
FROM ST PAUL IN ST PAUL: Dr. Roy Harrisville at Luther Seminary was a hoot!
Taught N T theology... ===JACK: G. Everett Arden would dramatically act out Biblical stories...Like Abraham and Isaac and the altar. "Dad, where's the lamb for the sacrifice? Why are you looking at me that way? What? You want me to climb on those rocks?"
FROM WILLMAR REV: Good question? One to ponder. More so when back
in the classrooms of earlier years. ===JACK: What was your hardest class in school? Mine was math.===REV: High School-- Geometry!! I even dropped it.
Being from Kansas and dealing only in square dimensions, I couldn't get in my
head how that course could help me? ===JACK: Farm boys have to know how to figure out bushels per acre...or something like that.
FROM SHOP TEACHER DAN: I always tried to make learning fun. Dan===JACK: I spent many hours in "shop," most of them in the drafting room. In fact, after graduation that was the direction I was headed until I got the call to become a pastor. In shop I liked woodworking best and often thought that I would like to have a lathe. Machine shop was OK, but not a favorite.===DAN: That is the reason I became a drafting teacher. One of my
students Mike McCoy loved wood shop. He started his on business Coy
Construction ===JACK: At times the twists and turns of life are fascinating. It's almost as though God is there pulling the strings.
FROM TAMPA SHIRL: I love to learn and I love being taught!===JACK: What Life-Long Learning classes have you taken lately....or what ones were especially interesting to you?
Tuesday, October 13, 2020
Jack’s Winning Words
10/13/20
“Running Cross Country is the closest man will ever get to
flying.” (Joseph Vanderstel) Olympic running champion,
Paavo Nurmi, was called “The Flying Finn,” so I guess x-country is close to
flying. During the Civil Rights Movement of the 60s, Malcom Boyd wrote a
book of prayers, “Are You Running With Me, Jesus?” As I
“fly/race” through life, it’s a comfort to know that I have Jesus by my
side. If you ever feel that life is turning into a rat race, remember
that you’re not running the race alone ;-) Jack
FROM NORM'S BLOG: The description of Boyd’s book of prayers describes the era in
which he wrote it as the “turbulent 60’s”. Having lived through those turbulent
times, I reflected upon the events that were taking place that warranted that
label. There was the assignation of JFK and later his brother RFK, the whole
hippie movement and the drug scene, the Viet Name War and the antiwar
protesting as highlights of the nightly news. I guess it was a turbulent time.
Perhaps the times that we are currently in will someday be called the turbulent
2020’s .It is comforting to know that as one runs/flies through life,
they do not have to do it alone. Jesus is right there running with us. There
are many time that I now look back upon and thank Jesus for saving my bacon by
being there with me. At the time I may have just thought that it was a
fortuitous coincidence that I was spared some calamity, but upon reflection I
can see the hand of God in my life, keeping me safe in time of potential peril.
Even in times when something bad did happen, I can recall the comfort that I
was able to find in my faith. I was not alone. There is a well known poet, “Footprints
in the Sand” by Mary Stevenson that serves to illustrate the
importance of running with Jesus in our lives. There will be many times in
anyone’s life where they will need to be carried by Jesus through the hard
times – were their faith will provide the only shelter in the storms. Few of us are runners and even fewer are cross-country or
distance runners, yet all of us have the ability to experience the exhilaration
of flying that Vanderstel alluded to in his quote. Believe in Him. Run with
Him. Let your soul fly
with Jesus.===JACK: While the pandemic and the current political situation seem to be "once in a lifetime," you speak of the 60s and the "once ion a lifetime" that hbappened then...are there more of these kinds of events in store for us? Who knows? What we do know is that we are not alone. We run the course of life with a partner by our side. O...I forgot the TV series, the Flying Nun. But, that was mmake blieve.
FROM SHALOM JAN: When I tire of the rat race, it also helps me to remember
that I am not a rat. I am a beloved child of God. You are,
too. Thank you for Winning Words!===JACK: Speaking of rats (not political), I remember a book...Who Stole My Cheese? I'll be Googling back to see what it's about. I have a curiosity that calls to be satisfied. Have a good day.
FROM ME IN NEWPORT BEACH: Nice. Spoke w cousin
Joanie Gennrich yesterday and we always remember you in the most positive of
ways===JACK: Have you ever heard the expression about coming from "good stock?" You and Joanie come from good stock. I think I know what that means, but I'm curious enough to look it up.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: I loved that book...lost track of it years ago! :-( Yes, it's a comfort to know our Lord is with us in this crazy time!!!===JACK: The 60s were a crazy time, too,,,maybe crazier. Do you remember Kent State. It was akso a time when DJT discovered that he had bone spurs.
FROM LBP: Occasionally I dream that I have the ability to fly. In
those dreams I usually discover I have an innate low G buoyancy and can float
or bound about. How about you?===JACK: In fact, I've had some weird dreams (Actually, I've recorded some of them in a notebook), but none of them have involved flying of any sort.