Archive for January, 2009

Jan 20 2009

Kids Say the Darndest Things… about Obama

Published by jean under Media sources

The Port Huron Times Herald invited children to write letters to the president-elect. Some of them were cute, like Lily who opined on what dog he should get and subtly fished for an invitation to the White House.

Several were serious. A young Mr. Foss specifically asked, “Please keep your promises. Please protect all Americans, including unborn babies.”

But my personal favorite was from a fellow who bravely put his full name and hometown (but I’ll just call him Ian). Ian’s letter was short and sweet:

Some people don’t like you, and I’m one of them. But I’m happy for you, and I pray for you. I hope you will make America a better place.

2 responses so far

Jan 19 2009

Prayer Request

David Coronado Jr. is a 6-month-old whose legal guardian has requested Dallas TX courts to remove his life support. When his parents brought him to the hospital, he wasn’t breathing. After his resuscitation, the doctors documented healed wounds and such severe trauma that he wasn’t expected to survive.

I read about him in the Sunday paper and just about cried.* With all the people in the world who would love and cherish a baby, he had the misfortune of being born to monsters.

If you would, my friends, please say a prayer for him.

If you can stomach it, there is more information here: http://www.individual.com/story.php?story=94956948

*I did cry, and for a long time, after I read about the father who punched and kicked his 2-year-old son to death this past summer. A police officer shot and killed the man, but the child was already dead. All I could ask is “Why would anyone hurt a baby?”

3 responses so far

Jan 15 2009

It’s not that cold… yet

Published by jean under Michigan My Michigan

It’s relatively warm still. I was in St. Clair just a couple hours ago and the temperature fell to -2 degrees Fahrenheit already. Yet it’s not THAT cold.

How cold?

As cold as my hometown in the ’70s, a decade that seemed rife with icestorms and blizzards that knocked the power out. At one point, we lost power so long that Mom cooked over the woodstove and Dad cut a hole in the ice to bring in lakewater for flushing the toilet.

Here are some impressions of the cold back then:  

We took showers at night. The kids who showered in the morning had frozen hair when they got on the bus.  There’s nothing like seeing a teenaged boy brush a fringe of hair away from his eyes – and the entire swath of hair moves like a toupee.

Our nostrils would stick shut when we inhaled because the moisture would freeze our nosehairs together.

We wore scarfs over our faces, but the inside of the scarves STILL stiffened with frost. You didn’t dare lower the scarf to wipe a snotty nose. That would make all the moisture freeze in an instant – the ultimate in chapped skin.

At least once during the winter, one of us would smile and bust a lip. Owie…

My elder brother scared me because he said the booming I heard outside at night was a monster. It was really the sound of ice forming and expanding on the nearby lake.

Several trees near our house exploded from within because sap or perhaps rainwater trapped in hollow spots froze and cracked the surrounding wood.  

The biggest trees in our neighborhood were the poplars, those giants with knobby twigs like arthritic knuckles. An icestorm took most of them down in one fell swoop, but our house wasn’t hit.

When it got cold enough, the snow sounded like stryrofoam underfoot and made the perfect sliding surface for racing. But it wasn’t nearly as slick as the amazing runs that Dad built out of snow. The first ones ran  from the wall near the driveway to the lake. Dad made them faster by pouring hot water on them – a do-it-yourself Zamboni. Later the neighbor’s hill became the launching pad that carried us over the ice rink and into the opposite snowbank. 

They weren’t sled runs – they were were for SAUCERS, those round dangerous things. The saucers were heavy plastic, but the straps were cheaper plastic that inevitably broke. Dad replaced them with leather straps held on with bolts.  They were perfect for aspiring juggernauts.

Ah, winter! Good times!

One response so far

Jan 10 2009

One of my predictions comes true

Recently I made five predictions for 2009. Sadly, one of them is on its way to coming true.  The Detroit News reported:

Metro Detroit’s hard-pressed arts organizations are reeling from a new blow. The GM Foundation has asked high-profile presenters like the Detroit Symphony Orchestra and Michigan Opera Theatre to exclude the foundation from budget planning effective immediately.

(…)

The cancellations are part of the GM Foundation’s global suspension of major gift disbursements that amounted to $31.4 million in 2007, the last year for which the foundation has a complete accounting.

The Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts lost out on $350,000. The president of the Music Hall was “stunned”, according to the story, because they’d recently lost funding from DTE (the electrical utility company). 

But so far, the other four predictions haven’t materialized. Only two black squirrel sightings…

 

6 responses so far

Jan 08 2009

The End of the World, Part I

The Anchoress has posted mortality rants. It’s a very Irish thing, I sometimes think.

Elizabeth Scalia, aka The Anchoress, was writing about  pessimistic comments about society changing, not for the better.  Senator Ted Kennedy told some friends that when they became his age,  ”the whole thing is going to fall apart”. And Roger Ebert, he of movie criticism fame, recently opined that politicians must work together because “It’s all coming to pieces”.

I was enjoying a cup of tea while I read.  I began to post a short response, but it grew. That happens a lot lately. Sheesh - reading The Anchoress is turning into homework. And my tea is cold.

Anyway, Sen. Kennedy’s “the whole thing is going to fall apart” and Ebert’s “It’s all coming to pieces” are nothing more than mortality rants.

Men and women both have them, but I think maybe women start earlier.* They come when a person starts looking back at the great days and perceives that few of those days lie ahead. Vain women complain, for example, about the unfairness of aging or the birthday with a zero in it.

Continue Reading »

3 responses so far

Jan 02 2009

New Year’s Resolutions: Improve our spiritual health.

Published by jean under Media sources, Prayer

At Creative Minority Report, Fr. Barron gives us advice for improving spiritual health.  Plenty of ideas there, especially about comforting the poor of spirit.  Check it out.

Note to siblings and cousins: When he says “Go to Mass”, it’s eerily like Dad ordering us kids “Go to bed”.   It made me sit up, that’s for sure!

No responses yet

Jan 01 2009

Top 5 Predictions for 2009

The Anchoress has a 2008 round-up of end-of-year reviews. Plus she calls for predictions from the readers. Here are mine: 

1. Local newspapers will survive while the big dailies continue their decline. Today Tim Dowd, publisher of the Port Huron Times Herald, explained how the local economy has led to changes in the paper. It’s a good paper, attentive to its readers and willing to go the long haul in investigative reporting (a rarity nowadays).  I hope it survives.

2.  There will be increased calls (perhaps even successful) to regulate Internet news sources.

3. Trusted newsbloggers will have egg on their faces when they’re taken in by a hot Internet story that turns out to be a hoax – or sophisticated propaganda by a political group.

4. Across the nation, liberals who revel in the decline of big businesses will be shocked and dismayed to discover how much their area’s arts, education, and recreation programs were underwritten by big businesses.

5. The black squirrel population will make a comeback across the Thumb of Michigan. 

4 responses so far

Jan 01 2009

Happy, Healthy New Year to All!!

Published by jean under Uncategorized

I decided to stay home for New Year’s Eve. When this post appears, I will either be asleep or reading a book. I will awaken to do major housecleaning, as per tradition. After that, it’s back to the grind.

I hope 2009 is a better year for all of us.

Lord Jesus, teach me to be joyful on this, the first day of the year, and on all the days of my life.  – Fr. John Catour, Joyfully LIving the Gospel Day by Day

No responses yet

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