Friday, March 14, 2014

Day 73 of 365 (Justice's Cost)

Truth and justice are elusive things when viewed through human eyes.

Sometimes we are required to act in the course of our duties in ways where the rule of law must be served. We take concrete actions that impact other human lives in ways quite large and possibly life changing. On balance these acts are for the greater good and are consistent with both precedent and the rule of law. We must take these actions for there is no choice under the law.

Still, after doing what must be done there is a lingering sense that the acts we have carried out have failed to meet a standard that is above the laws of humankind, that somehow the moral and humane thing has been missed. Somehow something tugs at the strings of your soul leaving a feeling that the true aim of justice has been thwarted. An unease with final acts, a deep sense of questioning as to what is right and what is wrong this is the burden a person who sits in judgment accepts.

It is a solitary thing. The emotions that roil and the disquiet that remains after a particularly tough call cannot be shared. The intellectual unrest and the emotional turmoil aren’t really amenable to meaningfully conversational distribution. You can’t talk it out and away. And so we who do these things accept that we must carry some of the darkness of the world within us.

Public service requires that we act for the public good. Citizenship requires we sacrifice. We all need to be engaged in the governance of our commonwealth but we must remember that engagement does not come for free.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Day 71 of 365 (Get the juices going)

Over the past couple of days I have had a bit of a mental block about writing. I went out searching for my favorite writing prompt site, onetwofiver but it doesn’t seem to accessible in any form to me currently. I went out looking for writing prompts. When I went to Warren Wilson college’s website I found some great tools. Here is the link. http://www.warren-wilson.edu/~creativewriting/Prompts.php

Here are some I am thinking of working with, so keep you eye on this space:

1) Describe a “first” (first apartment, first kiss, first time driving a car, first lie, first big success, first roller coaster ride, first time in this setting). Include as many details as possible, being sure to include an aspect relating to each of the five senses.

2) Describe a memorable event, positive or negative, and how it felt to you, but do not name the feeling. Instead, tell how it felt in your body (damp hands, metallic taste, tight throat, wobbly knees, etc.).

3) Create a story using words of one-syllable only, beginning with a phrase such as: “The last time I saw her, she...” “From the back of the truck...” “On the night of the full moon...” “The one thing I know for sure…”

5) Write the map to where you live. Start as close or as far from your home as you wish.

6) Describe a significant person (teacher, neighbor, mentor, coach, parent, sibling, sweetheart) with as many physical details as possible, but no clichés! (If you’ve heard the expression before, don’t use it.)

7) Write about your first name—why you were given it, what associations or stories are attached to it, what you think or know it means. Do the same for your last name. Given the chance, what name would you give yourself?

8) Describe a presence in your house (childhood home/current place of residence)—a person, a pet, a piece of furniture, an illness, a secret. Use all five senses. Be as detailed as possible.

9) Recall a photograph from your life and describe it in a way that suggests (but doesn’t specifically name) why it matters. (Remember the creative writer’s adage, “Show, don’t tell.”) Describe what happened either just before or just after the photo was taken.

12) Describe a routine or holiday ritual, using present tense verbs.

Feel free to join in the fun.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Day 70 of 365 ( I will be all right some bright day)

Life is joy. Well at least sometimes I think it is. On other occasions I wonder why I opt to fight on so unceasingly. I let the background music catch my attention.

All of my life my days have moved quickly from morning unto night. The hours flew by as I wandered about in my silent sideline kind of style. Standing still now for a mere moment, I catch a glimpse of the things of my life that are flying by. Glimmers of youth, of progress, of missed opportunities they are all part of the parade that goes by.

Day turning into night, night flying by and day turning into night again, the cycle is immutable. I am confounded by time’s passing. Moments of beauty have come and gone. Some linger and some don’t.

I hear an acoustic guitar strumming and then I am looking for you in a small café in the harsh winter of 75-76. I can almost smell the mulled wine in the overly warm bistro air but breathing it all in feels alright.

After a moment I become aware of the voices that bubble underneath the artist that is singing his oh so earnest folk song on stage. Cigarettes are burning low and the lights are muted. The singer stops and steps down. Grabbing a beer he sits down at a table and begins conversing animatedly with two women.

An old song comes on over the PA. Ian Matthews is singing “Woodstock” in that soft gentle way that propelled him to the top of the charts for a week or two in 1972. Yeah, utopian visions are so attractive to the young. Can I walk beside you as we head to the garden?

I keep moving through the café’ until I see you. I smile and you smile back. You flip your hair to the side.

These are days that will matter although I don’t know it yet. The failures of my life have not begun to mount up yet and the victories are changing me for the better. My harshest edges are wearing away.

The song is ended. I am back in the now. My times of running down along the shore are gone. My times of strolling along the river’s edge are gone. I am okay for today, this day.

In reality this is the early morning following a marathon session of my school board. Once again the same battles are being waged as to whether to close one particular school versus another. The battle is wearing. The battle is unceasing. It just goes on and on. I am tired.

I should have listened to that song that says, “You better bring your own redemption to the barricades of heaven when you come.” What I would give for one more night in that bistro. Life is a joy and with a few more bars of the song I will be grounded once again.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Day 60 of 365 (on writing)

On my iPhone I have downloaded the Blogger application. Of all the various applications I have on this electronic marvel Blogger works particularly well. The voice recognition component is pretty solid. The ease-of-use is also very good.

My problem with it is that I tend to think best when I'm sitting at a keyboard. There is something about seeing words appear one by one on the screen that makes the thought process work differently for me. It is clearly different from the process of dictation. I learned this early on in my legal career. As other attorneys in the office were using small tapes they would hand off to secretaries create their motions and briefs I would be crafting my work at a computer.

I guess you could see say I'm one of those visual people. Today I am forced to draft this entry by dictation. Secundus has headed off taking my laptop with him. Such is life. I want my keyboard back.


Day 67 of 365 (The Cost)

Years ago my father and I went to a dinner at the Elmer Grange. I do believe it was one of those fried oyster things wherein I gorged myself with about 30 or 40 of those bad boys and sucked down a gallon of ice tea. On the particular occasion I am remembering right now there was a speaker. He was one of the DuPont scions. When I looked at him that night he seemed genteel. He also seemed quite elderly. Standing at the side of the room before he spoke he seemed frail at least to my young eyes. But when he got to the podium he voice was lively and bright. His talk was part memoir and part motivation speech. His speech was part of the TED of the day. The key line I heard that night was “Everything has a cost whether you think about it or not. Thinking about the cost will make a difference in your life.”

As he talked this elder DuPont went to explain that his uncle loved little cigars and smoked them despite being advised not to. His uncle had been the CEO of DuPont near the start of the 20th century. His uncle of course was ravaged by and ultimately died of oral cancer. The speaker said that this was an example of cost. His uncle loved those cigars and they gave him joy. In the end the cost for those little bits of pleasure was his uncle’s life.

He went on to say that killing time had a cost too. Idleness meant that you weren’t working toward a goal, you weren’t learning something. He acknowledged that yes there was a benefit to rest, but that we needed to be aware of the tipping point between needed relaxation and a loss of motivation and direction.

He came back to his main point that everything has a cost in several different ways. But his digressions all had the same message, what you want, what you do cradle to grave, it all requires you expend something, time, money, energy, health or happiness. The cost may be worth it or it may not. His final point although I am putting in the jargon of our day was that to empower yourself, to better yourself you need to be aware of the cost. Ultimately you need to make sure the cost is appropriate and one you are willing to pay.

Sunday, March 2, 2014

Day 59 of 365 Pens

I will need to get back to the story about the house on Clemens Street and the party soon. But I warned you I have struggled to write this tale. Details about living in the collapsing Catholic commune and then with the band “Free Cheese” say so much about my shortcomings and my lack of focus at that time. Digging into those issues make it hard to write. Truth be told the profane nature of the whole experience is also somewhat hard to capture. I have read portions of the scroll version of “On the Road” and I just can’t go there. For today I will just focus on something else. Whatever I talk about today will not be about the unceasing, unending, ever accumulating snow of this the winter of 2013-2014.

 Sitting alongside my computer are a box of G2 Pilot pens. Don’t know why but I love opening up a box of these pens. Pens are peculiar, each person has to find the one that works for their hand and their style, kind of like picking a wand in the Harry Potter books. I through the years have gone through different times when I found a pen that I thought was my pen only to after a while see it shortcomings. There was a Uniball pen that I used to really like, the ink flowed easily and it was crisp and vibrant on the page. But the ball in the point would eventually pop out as you were writing and leave a long smear. And they had a habit of cracking the length of the pen and leaking.

 These G2 have a cushion grip and come in a blue ink, a power ink. The flow is just as smooth but I never really have ball point failure. They don’t leak but one should not leave a G2 in his pocket and then do the delicate laundry. One might on at least two occasions have to go buy his wife a new wardrobe. Other people like these pens to.

When someone comes into my office and needs to draft a note I often end up lending them my pen. Whoosh, there goes another 79 cents of my money. So about once every two months I have to go to a mega store and buy a big box of them. When I look there and see the unopened box I see potential. I see all the unwritten stories that I have within me. I see the grocery lists I will use checking off each item one by one. I see the checks I will write to college and educations programs and to the basic day to day bills that each of us hard working stiffs have to pay.

 A box of pens or months of life to be lived going forward, you decide what I am really looking at here.