Terry Tyrannosaurus and … $1.50 per day?

Way back before the invention of the printing press, I was a young father.  As many young fathers often do, I invented some bedtime stories for my young children. While I am not much of a bedtime story inventor, I did come up with a few that both my daughter and son liked, and isn’t that what matters?

So, anyway, their favorite (and mine) was a series of three stories with Terry Tyrannosaurus as the hero.  Terry lived before the invention of time and so we don’t know when he lived, we just know he did.  His dad’s name was Rex, does that help? Now, I tried to create a story that had a meaning, a message, maybe even a moral! Heaven forbid!  In my mind, the best of the batch was “Terry and the Garble Bush”. Continue reading

What’s on Your Kindle?

What is on your Kindle (Nook, iPod, etc.)?  Isn’t it surprising how we accumulate books – books read, sampled, referenced, unfinished?  What does the array of titles tell us about who we are?  You don’t need to be an analyst to see patterns.

I took a chance… I inventoried my Kindle and, while I was not surprised, I was a taken back a bit.  I have 62 books on my device and 70 more I have archived.  Where did I find time for all that?  The 62 on my Kindle are probably more telling than all those I archived.  Continue reading

What Is a Heifer?

For a good number of years my wife and me had the most satisfying volunteer experience of our lives…We served as a volunteer (“Vol”) at Heifer International Learning Center at Heifer Ranch in Perryville, Ark.  We did not know what we were getting into when we first stopped at the Ranch for a visit with a friend who was already a “Vol”.   We had just spent a few weeks vacationing and had explored vacation rentals on the Gulf.  It took us just one day at the Ranch to convince us that we didn’t need to spend another winter on a beach or golf course somewhere, with its superficial elements of satisfaction, when we could be of service to a very important mission…addressing the issue of hunger and poverty in this world, including the U.S. Continue reading

Fear, Love and an Angel

As I write this blog a friend, I’ll call her Mary, is going through a double mastectomy.  I can’t imagine what Mary has been going through these past days right up to this day and this moment.  Even with a heart attack and nine surgeries of my own, including part replacements, I cannot get my mind around the impact that this surgery will have on Mary.  She is strong, and on the outside she will be who she was, but this procedure takes away so much and will be a measure of who she is on the inside.  I have faith and confidence that Mary will overcome and recover. Continue reading

Just When You Aren’t Expecting It – A Nudge from the Past

The following scribbling was written about 1970 in my “den”, a 1955 Yellowstone travel trailer.  “The Unfamiliar” has survived three moves and a lot more on the back of a Terry Andréa State Park map (Wisconsin).  Funny how you write something in one set of emotions, then decades later read it and you recapture the feelings of that moment, if only for a moment.   Peace…aloneness… joy…sadness… uncertainty…  A composite of conflicting emotions, now history, but, for that moment, very real. Continue reading

Waiting for Spring

The beautiful tulips that has adorned my blog header recently was there to remind us that sometime (months from now?) the snow will be gone and the beauty of the sleeping world will take center stage.   I am reminded of a line from Bette Midler’s hit “The Rose” which speaks of  new growth under all the snow that will come alive with spring and get all showy with blooms.  Something to think about for all us “cabin fever” sufferers. Continue reading