Logic is a systematic method of coming up with the wrong conclusion with confidence.
All posts by Jim
A Tale of the Sea – Return to Newport
Newport, Rhode Island from April to July 1969 was magic for me.
The abrupt, unexpected ending of my very short marriage had left me devastated, but i learned of the end being legal at the last of the Hawkins trip to GTMO.
The trip back to Newport put me in a good frame of mind. We had the usual rough seas off of Hatteras when i was CIC watch officer. The radarmen to a man were losing the battle against the seasick monster. We illegally had the hatch on the starboard side open to get as much fresh air in the space as possible. It didn’t help much with the ventilation, but it did readily serve as immediate access to the side of the ship where the evening mess and midrats were being served to the sea.
After i had resisted my initiation to sea sickness on the USS Lloyd Thomas during my ’63 midshipman cruise, i apparently was unsusceptible to the seasick gods. i let my watch take turns at the rail while while myself and the ones left standing ran the four-hour watch. It was good thing we were steaming independently and no contacts were around.
i found myself proud of the way i ran that watch. It also taken me away from what i would face in Newport.
♦ ♦ ♦
Upon arrival, i went to the apartment i had rented. i leaned toward closing out my rental agreement and decide to do with my belongings. i did not relish living on the ship and the place was incredible. i didn’t really have time to decide as we were headed back to sea to Yorktown to load our ammo and our ASROC (anti-submarine rockets) in the launcher and magazines. Then, two classmates showed up from Norfolk to attend training and asked if they could stay with me. i told Doc Jarden, and marine whose name i will remember and replace here, they could stay in my place if they would help with the rent. They readily agreed and moved in as we got underway once more.
The saga continues…
Bohr’s Axiom
The opposite of a profound truth may well be another profound truth.
The Party’s Over
A big shout out (a current phrase i’m told for “great job” or the Navy’s “Bravo Zulu” (“BZ”) to Mac at Apple Care. After a reformat of my hard drive about a month ago, nothing seemed to work correctly. Today when i lost two important pieces of work i updated last night, i finally called “Apple Care.” For anyone who owns an Apple product, i strongly recommend you get Apple Care. It’s the best customer service i’ve encountered in a long while. For now, here is one of the pieces of work i lost:
It is raining still, harder than at party time. The party is over.
i took my sister Martha, the last of my relatives from out of town, to the airport today (Monday). A normal 20 minute trip one way took an hour and a half to get there and an hour to come home. You see, folks in the Southwest corner don’t know how to drive in the rain.
Later, Martha called to tell us she was on the plane and an hour after the scheduled takeoff, it was still on the ground. The delay is likely to cause her to miss her connection from Atlanta to Chattanooga.
It was raining during the party but thankfully, not enough as this, no, not this much. When it does rain here, the Southwest corner floods in lots of places because it was never intended to have much rain. And this folks, was and remains a rainstorm. It started on the morning of the afternoon party. Even though the party is over, it’s still going. This gully-washer is one of the longer water bearing storms we’ve had lately.
My brother-in-law Danny departed for Crossville, Tennessee early Sunday morning. Our daughter Sarah departed for Las Vegas after Sunday lunch at North. Our daughter Blythe, son-in-law Jason, and grandson Sam left Sunday morning for Austin, Texas.
The other party guests were gone by 8:00 p.m. Saturday evening. The party is over.
The house is back in order with only a few exceptions. The many loaned tables, chairs, tents, and coolers are staged in the garage to take back to neighbors and friends when the rain stops. The left over beer, wine, and non-alcoholic drinks are poised to be given to friends or properly stacked in our wine rack and refrigerators. The party is over.
All the gifts i requested folks not bring are opened. “Thank you’s” will ensue. The party is over.
It is one of the few parties i’ve hosted that met my goals. There were just short of 70 attendees, more than both of us expected. Our next door neighbors, Gabriella and Jesus Avila are the owner of Chuchy’s Taqueria catered with incredibly delicious carne asada, chicken, and birria tacos with sides.
i didn’t want the party to celebrate me. i wanted the wide range of folks who have had positive impact on my life to meet each and enjoy each other. That happened. i’m pleased and honored to have had them here.
Now, it is time for me to get back to work. Even past 80, i find my most satisfaction from taking on tasks and completing them. i don’t intend to stop although the tasks may change as i age further. i don’t know. i am in a good place, and have wonderful wife, family, and friends. Life is good.
My sister has landed in Atlanta but did miss her connection home to Chattanooga. After spending the night in the airport, she made it home this morning.
(From last night) Our brief respite from the rain ended about a half-hour ago and we can hear the raindrops again. It is supposed to end sometime tomorrow and be sunny in the mid to high 60s by the weekend. But we have fire in the fireplace, and it is quiet.
The party is over.
Mushy Old Man
i readily confess i am a mushy old man. i don’t know how i got there. Strangely, i think i got it from my father. i saw him cry twice and heard him cry once.
The two times i saw him cry i was with him walking outside our home. He was in his eighties both times. He cried because he was so moved in appreciation of his wife, my mother. i heard him cry once in his nineties. My mother was ill enough for be to be back home to help him deal with it. She was in rehab. We had watched a baseball game. He wrapped up the evening at 10:30 p.m., a routine he had since the television evening news became our last evening event in the early 1950s. i stayed in the family room of their duplex condo to read a bit. i heard him praying and crying for my mother. Needless to say, it was a pretty emotional event for me. i never told him i overheard.
He was a man, the kind that went through hard times worst than what we have experienced, war, depression, and they not only survived but became, or perhaps already were, men of substance, caring, hard workers, and eventually success. That kind of man back then did not talk about his emotions. But he cried.
i feel like that gives me the privilege to cry. i don’t think i’ve ever cried, except, of course, when i was an intolerable toddler, for not getting what i wanted. Nearly all of my cries have come when something touched me deeply, like when my two daughters gave me a framed photo of them holding each other for my birthday. They both knew i would cry.
Today, an impulse hit me. i have no clue why. Maureen was at her hairdresser ensuring she was beautiful, Maureen, not the hairdresser. i had done a number of home chores, fighting through a very mild reaction to the latest COVID booster. Tired. Since she wasn’t here, i headed for, what else, a golf course bar. Bonita Golf Course, one of my favorites. Now, i’m not saying i wavered from dieting healthy, but i suspect there are a bunch of nutritionists whose neck hair stood on end. On the way home, i listened to my records, digitized for my phone. The song playing for most of the way was Richard Harris singing Jimmy Webb’s 1968 song, “MacArthur Park.” That’s when the impulse hit me,
i called Maureen. “Let’s watch “Camelot,” tonight.” To put it mildly, she was surprised but readily agreed.
So last night as usual, we set up our dinner trays in the family room. Maureen served, as usual, a terrific healthy dinner. i started a fire in the fireplace, and we turned on “Camelot” on the television.
Now folks, musicals in 1968 were different than now. The movie began with a musical overture. No credits. No screen action, just a pleasant scene on the screen and about five to ten minutes of nice music. i was enthralled. Then, this wonderful, tragic, magical love story of majestic folks but like you and me, trying to do right while plagued by all of the impediments, mostly people with less than noble intent, that disrupt harmony, caring for individuals, common sense, and a willingness to buy that snake oil the bad guys are selling.
Maureen and i were taken back to a more innocent time. Ours. She sang along on most every song. i came close to weeping several times. i was captured by the story of King Arthur and enthralled with the idea of Camelot and the Round Table again. i rooted for Richard Harris and never liked Sir Lancelot or his portrayer, Franco Nero, since i watched the movie 54 years ago — However, thought the first movie in which Nero starred, the Italian Western ‘Django” the most outrageous, and funny movies of that genre, even banned in many countries.
i was enraptured, enraptured for three hours. There was even an intermission. What a concept.
i don’t do movies anymore. They seem to be so contrived. Sex scenes and excessive profanity seems to me to be some attempt to distort reality, to titillate our senses. All of the new graphics capabilities are apparently thrilling to many, but again, they take away from the essence of the story. “Camelot,” for Christ sakes, was a musical. It was sexier than any movie i’ve seen since Brigette Bardot movies without throwing it in our face. It was moving. It was magical. It made you think. And the music fit.
When it was over, Maureen went to bed. i sat in my chair and confessed i am a curmudgeon. But damn! They don’t make ’em like they used to. That makes me sad.
However, regardless of your age and your take on movies, i think you might enjoy “Camelot.”