Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Rake America Great Again



It wasn't windy when he started raking. I was on the roof putting up Christmas lights. Then the wind came and more leaves began to rain down on the boy. Usually we wait until the tree is bare to rake but the yard was so covered it required immediate raking. He kept his spirits up and got the job done!

Monday, November 26, 2018

Instant Family

My wife and I recently saw the movie Instant Family. I highly recommend it. Instant Family, based on the experiences of the movie's director, follows a couple as they become foster parents to three siblings. The movie is a comedy but also is very poignant. It was one of the most realistic depictions of foster care that I've seen in a wide-release movie.

The movie especially resonated with us since we are on a similar track as the film's protagonists. My wife and I are also on a foster-to-adopt path. For several months we have been fostering a child that we are on track to adopt, hopefully in the early spring depending on the speed of the court system.

Fostering is not easy. It can be very challenging. But it is one of the most rewarding things we have ever done. People always comment that we are changing the life of this child, but the reality is she is changing our lives as well. She is a light in this world and our family somehow feels even more complete with her in it.

I greatly encourage everyone to see Instant Family. Such a great film.

Friday, November 16, 2018

1834-1934


A colleague of mine gave me this the other day. He got it at an estate sale and thought of me. It's the Texas Methodist Centennial Yearbook published in 1934. Even has a letter from FDR in the front. Pretty cool book.



Tuesday, November 13, 2018

la condition humaine


I will let you know when I'm finished...

Monday, November 12, 2018

steps

Sometimes all life is about simply moving three steps forward, two steps back. But as long as you're moving in the right direction, you're doing good.

But three steps forward, two steps back can be really hard.

Saturday, November 10, 2018

First Man (the movie)

I saw the movie First Man this past weekend. It is an excellent film, a real cinematic achievement. I love NASA and space exploration movies. This one did an amazing job of trying to capture the danger, claustrophobia, confusion and exhilaration of a space mission. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

As I was walking out of the theater, I became more and more upset. In the weeks leading up to the film's release there had been a great deal of criticism lobbed against the filmmakers for not including a scene of Armstrong planting the American flag on the moon. Our nationalist President, Senator Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Chuck Yeager and even Buzz Aldrin said this film was not patriotic enough.

What utter nonsense! The American flag is featured prominently throughout the film. There's a scene of the flag being hoisted. The American flag is shown on the astronaut's uniforms. The American flag is actually shown next to the lunar module on the moon in several shots. The words "United States" was featured as rockets launched. There were real interviews shown from around the world of people expressing their admiration of the United States. My wife said this was one of the most patriotic films she had seen in a long time.

It became clear that none of these "patriotic" critics had actually seen the film before making their ridiculous statements. This was an obvious pandering to a political base. It was disingenuous and cynical. Absolutely and blatantly untruthful.

I can understand Buzz Aldrin's unhappiness with the film. Although the overall impression of Aldrin in the film is positive it does show (based on Neil Armstrong's and other's accounts) of how Aldrin could be difficult to work with on occasion. Aldrin has a flamboyant personality, we all saw that a few years ago when he appeared on Dancing With The Stars. The movie showed just a hint of that and I would not have been happy to have been portrayed that way either.

Yeager is just being manipulated. He hadn't even seen the movie when he gave his interview. He fell for the deceit of the President and Senators Rubio and Cruz.

This is a very well done movie. It really shows the great efforts of engineers, pilots, and NASA administrators to do the impossible. It's apolitical. There's nary a hint of political agenda in this film. I'm sad to think some won't give this movie a chance because they buy into political propaganda.

Friday, November 09, 2018

Beto



I, for one, would vote for Beto for President in 2020. 


In all honesty I guess that's not saying much. I would vote for my neighbor's goat over the current President.

Wednesday, November 07, 2018

Divides

Some stats and thoughts only a former poli-sci/history double major finds interesting...

According to the Texas Secretary of State's office this morning, only 52.64% of registered voters in Texas showed up to vote in the mid-term elections. So all that excitement of high turnout turned out to be anecdotal. It was indeed higher than past mid-term turnouts but I wouldn't get too excited about 53%. 53% turnout is abysmal. 47.36% lost their right to complain.

Also, the Texas elections highlight the rural-urban divide in American society. However, despite what media analysts tell you, this is not a new thing. The rural-urban divide has been present in electoral American politics for over 200 years. Federalists (urban) vs Anti-Federalists (rural) comprised our first party system in the country's history.

This week my AP U.S. History students were assigned to write an essay that compared and contrasted the two parties of the Second Party System in America in the 1830s and 1840s: Whigs vs. Jacksonian Democrats. The Whigs were mainly urban, the Democrats rural. This is nothing new.

Beto won every urban center (save Amarillo and Texarkana). Even Tarrant County (Fort Worth) voted Beto despite being historically Republican. In most urban areas Beto won big.

But in the rural counties...forget about it. He lost big in the rural counties. Not even close. Even though I live in a county adjacent to Dallas County, Cruz won 68% of the vote. Most of the suburban counties ringing the urban islands also went Cruz by huge margins. Rockwall County 68.8% for Cruz.

The rural-urban divide is not new. Voter turnout is the key. If Democrats can't get a higher turnout than 53% for a charismatic figure like Beto O'Rourke, then the party is doomed to lose statewide elections for the foreseeable future. Very few people like Ted Cruz. But too many voters are straight ticket voters. Straight ticket voting is intellectually lazy, but it helps gets unpopular politicians like Cruz and Dan Patrick elected. No one likes these guys, their favorability polls are in the dumpster. But as long as people cede their ideologies to party politics they can win in Texas.

Tuesday, November 06, 2018

missionary and ministry of our music...


Wynton Marsalis composed this moving tribute to Roy Hargrove this weekend. I love these words...

We lost a true missionary and minister of our music this past week in Roy Hargrove.

Although he faced an uphill battle with his health over the years, it didn’t deter him or even slow him down from doing what he was undoubtedly born to do – minister through music. That he did until the end.

I first met Roy Hargrove when he was 16 years old in Dallas at Booker T Washington High School for the Performing Arts. He was a phenom, playing all of the lead trumpet with incredible accuracy and also improvising original solos with gleaming nuggets of melody set in harmonic sophistication with generous helpings of downhome blues and soul.

Roy played piano, wrote songs, sang and had a great sense of humor. To top it all off, he possessed an unerring sense of time, in the pocket at any tempo fast or slow. Kids in the school just loved him and were all excited about his great musicianship and about the magic they experienced everyday listening to him and playing with him.

He played with an unusual and infectious combination of fire, honesty and sweet innocence. The first time I heard him it was clear, he was an absolute natural with phenomenal ears, a great memory and tremendous dexterity on our instrument.

He was diligent about his playing technically and emotionally. Playing with an uncommon depth of feeling with a very developed internal sense of that which is unspeakable about the intimate. A Roy ballad was always exquisite.

Just as many in the continuum of our music poured information and aspirations into him, Roy gave selflessly to others, particularly to young musicians. He did everything he could to ensure that the circle would not be broken, at least not on his watch.

His participation on the scene in New York most reminded me of Woody Shaw. Roy continued Woody’s tradition of sitting in all around town and of playing, of encouraging everyone to play (not just with incredible solos), but with knowledge of songs and with advice and with just the feeling of “we are in this together and this is worth doing, and it’s valuable.”

While I am truly saddened as I write this, I am also encouraged by the life and the legacy that Roy left. He meant it.

Rest in Peace Baby.

Wynton

Monday, November 05, 2018

Remember...

Remember remember the fifth of November, The Gunpowder, Treason and plot. I know of no reason why the Gunpowder Treason should ever be forgot.

Sunday, November 04, 2018

Rest in Peace, Hargrove...

Roy Hargrove died yesterday.

Age 49. Gone way too soon.

Roy's been a jazz hero of mine since my early college days. He was one of the great trumpet players of all time.

He died of cardiac arrest due to complications to kidney disease that he had been fighting for years.

Such a tragedy. I was devastated by the news.

I blogged about him just last year...twice. I called him an exploding light.

My son said this when I told him about Grovey's passing...

"He's not really dead. He lives on through his music."

Wise words from an eleven year old. I needed to hear that.

If you want to hear one of his great concerts...here's one of my favorites. Back in 2010 when Hargrove played the New Morning Cafe in Paris, France. Such a great set. Rest in peace, RH.

Friday, November 02, 2018

False Fidelity

"Fidelity to one's political party at the cost of loyalty to one's humanity is not fidelity, but most often betrayal."

- Robert Zaretsky (from A Life Worth Living, his biography of Albert Camus)

Thursday, November 01, 2018

Contemplation

Contemplating the world.

I was actually needing a break from standing so close to that rail so far up.

The world can be a beautiful place from high up. It's when you get down there that it sometimes can seem not so beautiful.