Tuesday, December 28, 2010

"T" is for "Tolerance"

       It's a given: as attention-arrestors go, pet behavior is a slam-dunk.  The video clip which accompanies this entry is instructive, albeit in an admittedly simplistic and child-like fashion.  If only what is seen could be applied in the world of adult-like contention!  The interplay between puppy and cat does provide us with a teaching moment or two about the virtue of tolerance.  Who knows how much of the following litany of lament could have been erased, were principle offenders compelled to watch it, and watch yet again:
               A former Oregon State engineering student who happens to be muslim, failed in his attempts to detonate a bomb during a tree-lighting ceremony in a jam-packed Pioneer Square, a.k.a. "Portland's living room".  Short days following, an inmate in a local correctional facility was severely beaten; ostensibly because he happened to be muslim.  At about the same time, a mosque in Corvallis was fire-bombed.  (Whether either of the latter two incidents came as a consequence of the former is moot, and for the sake of this argument, frankly beside the point.)
                The Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kansas routinely sends out "emissaries" to attend soldiers' funerals nation-wide, in protest.  Their claim is that war deaths are God's punishment for immorality in our society.
                Outside a Multnomah County tavern, patronized by gays, two customers are mugged.  The only "justification" provided was the victims' alternative life-style.  This is an all too frequent occurrence, according to sheriff's deputies.
               The forgoing is a small sampling of the most recent, local news items which underline the flagrant disregard for the freedom, and personal space of others.  Like weeds, swastikas and racist epithets blight the urban landscape.  Bombings of abortion clinics and murders of its practitioners continue.  So do trash-talk, arrests, and deportation of illegal immigrants who come to this country only in hopes of etching out a less meager existence in a world shadowed by fiscal ruin.
                 To those who pull constantly against the forces of greed, jealousy and hate, while pushing for humane treatment of others, you are to be commended.  As the poet/musician, Leonard Cohen, wrote, "There is a crack in everything.  That's how the light gets in."  Thank you for continuing to seek it out.
               To the light-challenged we encounter, isn't it about time that we extend a calm, but assertive "paw" while admonishing with but one word...."ENOUGH!"?
               There is much to be learned from our pets.

(ed. note: The additional videos you may have noticed came as "part of the package", could not be separated or divorced from the intended, and do not represent the political views of this writer.  Asking him if the inclusion was really worth it, is a fair question.)

Monday, November 29, 2010

Verbicide

       Motherhood richly deserves its lofty status and celebrity.  It undeniably belongs just beneath God; and just above, the flag and apple pie.  It also occupies an uncontested niche, a few wrungs up from gold deposits (mother lode), computer circuitry ( mother board), and a time-honored anthology of chidrens' nursery rhymes.
          What distresses this writer is the absence of any veneration for the Mother Tongue.  Where, for example, would Mother Goose, or our pledge to "Old Glory" be without it?  Sadly, no national consciousness has surfaced in the cause of guarding and protecting our precious and beloved English language from the forces of decay.  The following  is presented as prima facie evidence of this neglect:  

Verbicide: The practice of arbitrarily ascribing verb status to words previously recognized as nouns only.  
            "incentive" which has been given coinage as "incentivize", as in, "to get others involved, we must incentivize participation."
             "message" with three (3) definitions in the Websters New Collegiate Dictionary; none of which are verbs has been "economized" by political pundits into "messaging" (v. trans.), as in "the brand x political party must do a better job of messaging its platform." (The economy must be found in the fact that "sending a message of....." requires four times (4) times the number of words.  That's obviously too labor intensive.
              "calendar" has transitioned into "calendaring" (v. trans), which has become a regrettable part of the spoken word of business, and is oft-heard in the vernacular of agenda: "Our next meeting will include the "calendaring" of the upcoming month."
                  A notable also-ran is "foundationing". which was summarily red-lined by this writer's spell-check software.

Misuseticide: Why can't disciples of our language make obvious distinctions of usage?  For example, "further" has assumed the meaning of "farther".  Can't we all agree that we travel farther on a gallon of Signal gasoline,  and not further?
Does anything further need to be said?  Well, yes.
                  In moments of candor,  practitioners have been given to say, "To be honest" as a preface to a heavy disclosure.  Oh, really! Should I be re-evaluating what you told me previously? Hmmm.  Maybe, if you had said, "quite frankly", any doubts could have been dismissed.

Overuseticide: "Twenty-four/seven" ("constantly" still works for me, and it's a two syllable-advantage in energy efficiency)  "There you go". (The standard charge for servers at a restaurant)  Well, where am I supposed to go, now that the meal is placed in front of me?  "Good job!"  (The classic phrase where high praise and low expectations converge)  Usually heard where minimal effort is expended, then acknowledged.  Commonly used with kids, while they perform tasks that are routinely expected of them as in: "You may have swung at the ball three times, and missed, but good job, Ned!"  In classroom evaluation, that's a "D-level" result, at best; accorded a courtesy "B".  (It is hoped that a "B" grade in the classroom still signifies above average performance.)

Frankensteinicide: Words so grotesque that they must have been created with spare parts in the baron's laboratory.  Foremost examples include: "Misunderestimated" (Dr. G.W. Bush), and "refudiate" (Dr. S. Palin).

         Please note that with all the "cides" previously taken, all were employed for illustrative, one-time-only purposes.

          Ironically, this eviscerating of the English language stems from the fact that it is a living language.  With every passing year, Merriam and his merry band of Websters invite new words and definitions into our lexicon.  Verbiage that was once unkown or frowned upon by scholars has become accepted. "Refudiate", for example, may well eventually be accorded rights of entry.
          Latin, on the other hand, is stone-cold dead.  Apart from adaptations in animal-plant classification, and medical terminology, it is totally immune to the abuses previously described.  "In hoc signo vinces" means the same as it did 2,500 years ago; when all of Gaul was divided into five parts!  There is absolutely no need to fret over revision or addition with this most respected of western idioms, and the fount from which sprung not only our Mother Tongue, but also the romance languages of French, Spanish, and Italian.  The Romans knew what they were doing, didn't they??
            So while, in some quarters, the hue and cry has gone out to "take back our government", let us lovers of a pure, perfect, and undefiled idiom unite with one voice to counter-call, "Bring Back Our Latin!!!"
            Here's to you, my mentor, Miss Schmidt.


                             

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Lawn Sign Wars

Many years ago, Giovanni Guareschi wrote a book entitled, "The Little World of Don Camillo" in which he chronicled the life of a priest and his atheist-antagonist-mayor; both of whom lived in a remote village of the Po River Valley region of Italy.  Fr. Camillo and his advesary were continually jousting in a game of one ups-manship.  Many of these games resulted in dialogues which the priest would have with the crucified Christ, who resided above the altar in the church sanctuary.  The Don was perpetually rationalizing his behavior to the risen Lord, stating, for example, that a verbal zinger or a blow to the backside with a pine bough was completely justified.  Naturally, Jesus had an entirely different perspective.
                      Welcome now, to the little world of Hal Camillo, where he and his adversary dwell in a hilltop hamlet of seven homes, overlooking greater Boring, Oregon, in the shadow of Mt. Hood.  His antagonist lives across the road and a scosh south of the Don's compound.  Without specific labelling, let it be said that one household belongs to the "R Squad", and the other is affiliated with the "D Squad".  Suffice to say, "Research and Development" is not applicable terminology in this duel of wits and deployment, which began in the fall of an even-numbered year, over a decade ago.
                         In preceding years, all was bliss and brotherhood.  Together, principal parties would wine, dine, joke and lie at a fairly friendly, neighborly clip.  Then, it happened.
                          The "R Squad" fired the opening salvo with a single, distinctly colored political lawn sign on HIS grass adjoining the neutral zone, which is Wally Road.  Well, a report such as that needed an equal and opposite return of fire, didn't it, and it came in short order.  Each year the stakes have been raised to the point where now, one cannot see the the elision fields for the political turf tussle.  Our opponent has appropriated the sod of a kindred spirit (aka: "henchman"), whose property adjoins his.  However,  he has not found a way to stake on claim on blacktop.  Hence, the first sign any passerby sees as they climb the upper reaches of our hilltop belongs to the team with the greatest frontage, namely moi.  Moi may be outnumbered, but he is not outflanked.
                            It behooves a newcomer or tradesman travelling in the neutral zone to be aware that heeding the signs - either to the left or to the right - for a significant period of time, he/she does so at his/her own peril, lest he/she be stamped as either an R or D Squad sympathizer.
                             Two other considerations are worthy of mention:  Firstly, ours is a dead-end road.  The only regular traffic it ever sees are meter-readers, mail, parcel and newspaper carriers. Secondly, the most mature, rational explanation for continuing this political battle: he started it.  Forgive me, Lord.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Here's to the Class of '55

Every five years, as summertime nears,
An announcement arrives in the mail.
A reunion is planned; it'll be really grand.
Make plans to attend without fail.

I'll never forget the first time we met;
We tried so hard to impress.
We drove fancy cars, smoked big cigars,
And wore our most elegant dress.

'twas quite an affair; the whole class was there. 
It was held in a fancy hotel.
We wined and dined, and acted refined.
Everyone thought it was swell.

The men conversed about who'd been first
To achieve fortune and fame.
While spouses described their fine houses,
And how beautiful their children became.

The homecoming queen, who'd once been
lean, now weighed in at one ninety-six.
The jocks who were there
Had all lost their hair.
Cheerleaders could no longer do kicks.

No one had heard about the class nerd
Who'd guided a spacecraft to the moon;
Or poor little Jane, who'd always been plain.
She married a shipping tycoon.

                                                                                                                  The boy we decreed "most apt to succeed"
 Was serving ten years in the pen.
 While the one voted least was now a priest.
 How wrong we can be, now and then!

 They awarded a prize to one of the guys
 Who seemed to have aged the least.
 Another was given to the grad who'd driven
 The farthest to attend the feast.


 They took a class picture, a curious  
 mixture of beehives, crew cuts, wide ties.
 Tall, short or skinny, the style was mini;
 You never saw so many thighs.

  At our next get-together, no one had cared
  If they impressed their class mates, or not.
  The mood was informal, a whole lot more
  normal.
  By this time we'd all gone to pot.

It was held out-of-doors, at the meadow lake shores.
We ate hamburgers, cole slaw and beans.
Then most of us lay around in the shade
In our comfortable t-shirts and jeans.

By the fiftieth year, it was abundantly clear,
We were definitely over the hill.
Those who weren't dead had to crawl out of bed,
And be home in time for their pill.

And now, I can't wait; they've set the date!
Our sixtieth is coming, I'm told.
It should be a ball; they've rented a hall
At the Shady Rest Home for the old.

Repairs have been made on my hearing aid;
My pacemaker's been turned up on high.
My wheelchair is oiled, and my teeth have been boiled,
And I've bought a new wig and glass eye.

I'm feeling quite hearty, and I'm ready to party.
I'm gonna dance 'til dawn's early light.
It'll be lots of fun, but I just hope that there's one
Other person who can make it that night.
                                                                                                    
                                                                                         Iambic Hal-tameter, by poets laureate
                                                                                                                           Al Mond  and Phil Bert
                                                                                                                   


Thursday, September 9, 2010

Ode to a Backstop

"TO everything there is a season, and a time for every purpose, under heaven." Who is to argue that the scribes of Ecclesiastes would not have included baseball backstops in "everything", had they but known?
           Our Beloved Backstop (hereafter referred to as "BB") has stood like a sentinel, watching over the diamond at BenWay Park-Rees(er) Stadium for eight summers.  Not only does it serve as guardian, it also has protected against a variety of slightly errant deliveries; from the knuckler, slider and cut fast-ball (all questionable) to the patented mystery ball and hesitation pitch (legitimate and verifiable).  A plethora of players, from as far away as Indianapolis,  have taken their swings at the plate in front of its perch.
                    It also has stood watch as Ben, the elder grandson, first cleared the fence with a mighty blast in June of '08, and Rees, the younger, followed suit two months later.
                    As the picture above attests, our BB has withstood the withering effects of the sun's glare in the central Oregon savannah since the summer of aught-two.  The strike zone shows symptoms of attrition, commonly referred to in humans as middle-age sag....not that any batter ever conceded a called strike to an un-erring, but voiceless umpire - sag or no sag.  It has endured the indignity of countless patchings and re-bindings, yet still manages to nobly preside over an infield with foul lines and pitcher's mound that are non-existent.
                 Every Memorial Day Weekend, "BB" has been paraded out of the shed; lately to the strains of the Colonel Bogey March (think: "Bridge on the River Kwai"), and correspondingly retired every Labor Day, all performed with the fervor, if not the precision, of a drill team.
                Alas, nothing lasts forever, as the characters of Toy Story 3 will tell you.  Ben, now approaching his fifteenth birthday, walks around the bases, unless severely challenged.  The Elder even suggested that our baseball be switched from soft hide to wiffle.  Evidently, the search for the homerun ball, after the fact and beyond the fence, has become a tad wearisome.  The Younger still swings and runs with gusto, and the fence, for him, still beckons.  The angst inevitably returns when pondering how long these good times will last.
               As Woody allowed to Buzz Lightyear, Mr.&Mrs. Potatohead, and company, "We all knew this day would come."  Understandably, their owner couldn't bring it upon himself to tote along his precious relics of childhood as he headed off to college.  So, it must be reluctantly acknowledged that other diversions and venues will one day occupy the place now held by "BB" and the spartan patch of turf in the backyard of 157 North Circle Drive.
               Yes, Lord, it all must come to pass.  But please, don't let this season be the last....for the sake of the Backstop, of course.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Cheers to Boring

              In my days as a classroom teacher, I would start every new school year by telling students that they may call my methods "dull", "insipid", "bland", or,  gasp, "uninspiring", but the word "Boring" must not be employed as one such adjective, inasmuch as for the upcoming year it is to be considered a proper noun. The justification: it was, and  is the place where I happen to live. 
              This has been our home for 41 years.  As with the tv series, "Cheers", eveyone knows your name.  That's the good news.  It's also the bad news.
           The name of the town derives from the surname of the original settlers - not a collective state of mind, as some auslanders have implied.
            Having said that, the local gentry has been known to suffer occasional fits of intense apathy.  Our Sunday Farmers' Market had it's grand opening with a terrific fanfare.  Two years later, all the vendors and musicians had folded their canopies and scattered to the four winds.  Melodramas at the local grange have suffered the same fate, leaving some delightful damsels and dastardly villains to wonder when the next footlights would be beaming in their direction.  Consider also the west-side road sign pictured above, for which truth in advertising was obviously not a primary consideration. It is now shrouded in undergrowth, leaving it to the town's elder statespersons to locate and identify, like some archeological find, for passersby on State Highway 212. 
                       The ultimate statement of dispassion (which, after all,  cannot be considered synonymous with "boring") happened when the electorate could not even agree to become a "village", which would have at least granted us territorial independence.  As it stands for the present, we could fall prey to Sandy sprawl from the east, or Damascus deluge to the west, and all that is Boring could disappear from the postal service,  telephone directory, and county animal control unit data banks.
                       Despite all that could happen, I think paranoia wouldn't become us inhabitants.  Indifference is the virtue that will preserve our identity over all manner of consuming forces.  Velveeta cheese will still be found in the gourmet section of the general store.  Ten years from now, you might yet be able to score a '51 Packard Clipper hubcap at Grandma's Antiques, and Jeff will  continue to greet patrons with "How's it goin'?" when he serves up your double latte at his Espresso Depot, hard by the post office. (He is genuinely interested.  The more mundane the answer, the better.)  Life goes on at the same uniquely monotonous pace around our wide spot of the highway.  We are not a town.  We are not a village.  "Community" doesn't even fit.  We are an aggregation, and one which fondly embraces its vanilla umbrella.
                    When asked if life is really "boring" in Boring, my patented response to the curious is, "That's what we like the outside world to think."  Wink. Wink.
HLR 
                      

Monday, August 2, 2010

The Maiden Venture

This exotic medium is all so new to me that I feel just a tad intimidated and a scosh challenged.  However, the doing of things new and different is said to combat the effects of mental aging, so even for just that reason, it's worth a "go".   I've attempted to add a snapshot I took of a Lahaina sunset on the island of Maui.  Previews show no such addition - so please, don't expect perfection for awhile with my entries.
            The focus of this blog will vary from one day to the next and will be very mood dependent.  For example, when I am in a mild state of euphoria (such as today) I might be given over to posting about the San Francisco Giants, and their domination of the Dodgers.  If I hear the beckoning of far away places, I'll probably write about where we've been or wish to visit. If I'm snorting fire, it will probably be a day for a political rant. Those of you who've been invited to this blog already know of my affiliations, and are hereby forewarned. (hah!) Please, feel free to add your two cents-worth at any time.   I'll keep you apprised whenever "something new has been added."
HLR