Friday, July 26, 2013

...and I'm thinking about the Los Angeles Herald Examiner

Mr. Owens dropped our evening edition of the Herald Examiner newspapers off every afternoon at the Shell Station right next to Marty’s Hamburgers (Home of the Combo) at 10558 W. Pico Boulevard in West Los Angeles. My buddy Lawrence Wilcox and I would  arrive ahead of him most days, and we’d wait at Marty’s where Howard Bassman or his brother Jeff would sometimes serve us up a bag of Chili Fritos for about 49 cents. Some days…probably more times than not…they’d just give it to us. I can distinctly remember Howard discretely waving me off when I went to pay.  We’d sit on the stools that surrounded three sides of Marty’s and talk with the regulars. We’d kibitz with old guys like Bill, who  were dressed in khaki work clothes and worn ball caps and would sit drinking hot coffee on warm afternoons while telling stories about hunting rabbits in Cheviot Hills long before the area was developed with high-end homes and a golf course.




Eventually Mr. Owens would drive up with this American made gold station wagon (until he got a new avocado green Country Squire with faux wood paneling on the side), and hurriedly drop off our papers. He was always in a rush…and usually burdened by a slacking fellow paper-boy or who had called in sick thus requiring him to cover the route.
 
 
Lawrence had a traditional bicycle paper route that required him to fold and rubber-band his papers in thirds to make them easier to throw. I had a unique route in that I delivered The Examiner at the Century Towers…two tall upscale condominium towers in the Century City…right across from the famed Hillcrest Country Club (where George Burns and Milton Berle supposedly played cards every day). My papers didn’t need to be folded, so most days I’d stay and help Lawrence get his papers ready (he had about 40 as I recall) before dumping my 60 or so papers into my over-the-shoulder bags and peddling my 10-speed up Pico Boulevard (on the right side of the road next to the curb…not blocking a lane of traffic). Cars would whizz by as I rode up Pico past the Rancho Park Golf Course, the Presbyterian Church, the car wash and the Los Angele Rams season ticket office. Eventually I’d ride by the Hello Dolly set on the famed 20th Century Studio lot before pulling into the Century Towers complex to deliver my papers. I’d say high to Chuck the doorman (his son played running back as LSU), and then take the elevator up to the 28th floor of the west tower to start my paper throwing descent down the stairwells.
 
 
I had some pretty highfaluting clients in those days…people like David Jansen (at the height of the Fugitive…he was on east end of the 28th floor), Burt Lancaster (he was on 15…but had two condos converted to one…and you could see the ocean on a clear day), comedian Totie Fields, actor-comedian Phil Silvers,  Republican philanthropist Margaret Brock (she LOVED me…used to tell me I could be a senator someday) and even Betty White’s mother. I got to know her daughter, who would regularly come to visit at the height of her Mary Tyler Moore popularity.

I’d like to think there are few people that could have ever mastered that route the way I did. In the early years, when I was in about 5th grade, I struggled a bit. As I got older and moved onto Junior High, I could fly through both 28 story buildings in almost no time. In the last two years…just before high school, I prepared for my looming gridiron career by running up the stairs with the papers. I could spin the unfolded papers from 20 yards and get them to stop inches from the threshold with the evening’s headline facing the door.

Every year I’d write holiday cards (my mother would actually make me write them long hand), and I’d receive hundreds of dollars each December in holiday money (Mrs. Brock was especially generous). Immediately after, my father would make me write expansive thank you cards expressing my gratitude for the generous checks [BTW…for the folks in #1504 that kept asking me not to throw the paper under the gap in the door so that your little dog wouldn’t rip it to shreds…my inability to perfect that toss was directly tied to your inability to find your check book each holiday season]. After I’d finish both 28-story towers each day, I’d hop back on my American made Schwinn and ride up the 20th Century Studios entrance to deliver five evening papers at the guard shack. Once in a blue moon…I’d seem some big time actor or actress from the silver screen…and that always warranted a story at the dining room table with mom and dad. One night I saw Dean Martin walking across the set. He was wearing black slacks, a white long sleeve dress shirt and he was smoking a cigarette. I could spend the rest of my life trying, and I’ll never look as cool as he did for those few seconds.


 
I gave up that paper route when I entered the my first year of high school. The demands of football were too great to keep up the route, plus I wanted to make the most of the leg muscles I’d developed in the stairwell. Never accomplished anything of note on the field, but if there was a Hall of Fame wing for blocking sled stamina (or game time mediocrity)…I’d be in Canton.

What’s the point of all this? Well…as is too often the case here…I really don’t know. I was leaving the house for work about 6am yesterday and when I got to the  bottom of the front steps, I bent over, picked up the paper, and flawlessly tossed it up on the front porch like a pro. It made me reminisce about those early paperboy days, and I recalled that over the six years I had that paper route, my father never let me call in sick. Even on rainy winter Sunday mornings  when I didn’t feel well, he made me get up before dawn to deliver the Sunday edition (the one morning paper of the week). After serving in battle in WWII and Korea, he really wasn’t moved by any excuse I might have for not being up to delivering 60 papers in a carpeted, air-conditioned and heated building. I like to think that work ethic served me well both as an IBEW electrician and even now in my current work-life, but I fear much of it has faded.

Have a great weekend and if you can, take about 4 1/2 minutes and listen to this morning’s song. If you do…close your eyes and try to remember something in your life that was nice and really mattered. If you do, you’ll find yourself smiling…and it will set you up for an even better weekend.

Oh yeah, if you're old enough to still get a newspaper delivered to your home, try to remember the person that makes that happen this December.

Friday, July 19, 2013

...and in 2013, you shouldn't live without a television


It was sometime in the middle of the evening of a dinner party we attended last week when one of the couples mentioned something that was so disturbing that it’s haunted me all week. “We don’t have a TV.” Just thinking about it still sends shivers down my spine. Listen, I get that people have decided to live without the comfort of indoor plumbing, two refrigerators, a wine cellar, air conditioning or a commode mounted bidet (You'll have more friends)...but no TV? I mean it would be one thing if you thought you could struggle without the fourth flat screen in the kitchen, or that that the little 19in the master bathroom was excessive…but no TV in the entire house? Hell, why not just do without a washing machine, wireless home internet, your new espresso maker or a heated towel rack?

Just the analytics on this blog have shown have that most of the weekly offerings are total duds,  but the pageviews increase exponentially when the subject is quality television.  It probably has something to do with the fact that TV is just more important than most of the other subjects touched on here, but I also want to believe people find genuine value in the many great products available on informative infomercials. So, in response to the blog analytics, here ‘s another effort to enrich your lives and demonstrate that you’re doing a disservice to yourself and your family if you’re living without the magic of television.

If your teenage children are incorrigible and destine for a life term at Folsom because they’ve been raised without the benefit of modern conveniences like television,  go to www.stopdisrespect.com or call 1-800-642-8081 for the total transformation. This revolutionary program, headed up by child therapists Janet and James Lehman will completely transform your misbehaving teen into a model candidate poised for a full academic scholarship at Columbia.  Save yourself the humiliation of inevitable prison visits or embarrassing holiday letters providing updates describing your child’s cell. Go to www.stopdisrespect.com now.

The total transformation infomercial ended at 5am but thankfully tele-evangelist Joyce Meyer was on right after. She was preaching on a grand stage to a huge audience, and it may have even been from Joel Osteen’s Lakewood church in Houston (there was a big rotating gold globe in the background that looked like the one on Joel’s altar). Joyce was talking about god and saying that you can build a phony life or a sincere life that is modeled after what god wants you to do. Joyce asked how much the attendees were doing  in their lives that were designed to please people…but not god. Joyce said she believed what she was sharing could change lives…maybe not right away…but eventually. You see, it’s all about doing everything you do for god and not for yourself. Anyhow, Joyce’s sermon was pretty much a snore-fest but the essence of her message seemed to be to do every single thing you do because it’s right and because it’s what god wants you to do. It’s all about motives…and you can transform your life (if you have a TV and were able to see this) by doing everything for god.

If you love clean floors and carpets (if you prefer them filthy…you can skip this paragraph), Amy Motta is pitching a revolutionary floor and carpet cleaner called the Shark Sonic Duo. Amy and Shark’s CEO Mark (didn’t catch his last name) were on the show, and Mark was demonstrating how the Sonic Duo beats the average run-of-the-mill vacuum cleaner. You see…a rudimentary vacuum picks up only dry dirt, but the Shark Sonic Duo cleans “stuck on” dirt and actually makes your carpet brighter with each cleaning (it’s like the difference between conventional and HD television). They pulled a carbon fibers from both vacuumed carpet (with an old-school cleaner) and a carpet treated with the Sonic Duo. The fibers were magnified over 400X and the carpet piece cleaned with the Duo was shockingly cleaner. As noted, the Shark Sonic picks up “stuck on” dirt and it’s “the greatest carpet cleaning breakthrough in decades.” There were a host of people testifying to the Sonic’s “ trap & remove” technology and these weren’t your average trailer-park infomercial participants that needed subtitles so you knew what they were saying. There was even one Sonic user from Chevy Chase, MD…and folks in this upscale neighborhood are not going to go on trash infomercial television to sing the praises of some product without knowing it’s legit. You can learn more about the Sonic Duo and this amazing offer by going to www.TrySonicDuo.com or by calling 800-496-3967. You would think a revolutionary product of this magnitude would cost well over $500 dollars, but if you order right now, you can get the Sonic Duo not for $500…not for $400, not for even $300 dollars…but for only 5 easy payments of just $49.95. But wait!...if you call or go online now, Shark will make one of your payments for you. Start dialing now! Don’t know if you’re making the connection yet, but no TV=no Sonic Duo=stuck on dirt=subpar childhood=life sentence at maximum security facility.

If you’ve ever wondered why Roselyn Sanchez has such amazing hair, it’s because she uses Wen. If you’ve even wondered who Roselyn Sanchez is…go to Celebrities nobody knows to learn more about her. Alyssa Milano (was on some show with Tony Danza) uses it too…and they showed before and after pictures of her once frizzy hair and it was hard not to become a Wen convert.  You can get the Wen hair care system by going to www.Wen.com/Travel. The good news is you won’t pay hundreds of dollars for this amazing hair care system…you can get it not for $49.95, not even $39.95, but for just $29.95. If you don’t have a computer or can’t afford internet service because you haven’t watched enough TV, you can borrow a friend’s cell phone and  call 1-800-586-3449. If you’re skeptical, you need to know this is a Gunthy Renker product and it comes with a 60-day money-back guarantee. They had some cat named Chaz on the show that does hair for the Miss America pageant. Chaz was doing Miss Virginia (that reads funny) and Miss Texas’s hair on the show…and these girls were blown away. Miss Wisconsin noted that using Wen made her whole body feel better. She also won the Miss America competition…so get busy being beautiful and become a Wen girl now.

If your home carpet is clean and your hair looks good but you still need to drop 30 pounds and eliminate a couple of chins, you can solve your problems with a risk free trail offer of the Total Gym. If you thought Christie Brinkley was a talentless has-been that’s been relegated to bad infomercials that are only broadcast in the wee hours of the morning, well, you should know she’s working with mega star Chuck Norris to push this incredible Total Gym trial offer. This commercial was loaded with believable testimonials from Total Gym users that have lost astonishing amounts of weight in a very short time. All it takes is 10-minues a day. Katrina and (sorry…missed the name of the second girl) are the Tone it Up girls and they were pictured on the beach in Santa Monica, CA (just south of the pier in my old stomping grounds) using the Total Gym right on the sand. The girl’s philosophy (I so knew the Tone it Up Girls had a philosophy) is that you won’t use something unless you enjoy it…and they both had very big smiles on their faces while they were working out with the Total Gym on the beach. Trainer Todd Durkin was also on the show and he too was singing the praises of the great product. You can try the total gym risk-free in your own home for 30 days for only $14.95 by calling 1-800-459-9780. The aforementioned Chuck Norris, who appears to have the same amazing natural hair colorist as fitness guru Richard Simmons, was also showing the continued benefits of the Total Gym. He was working his back, his triceps, and he noted he stayed in shape for his latest movie Expendables II by using the Total Gym. If you want to check out Chuck’s chiseled Total Gym body in the movie, you can see him by clicking movies with a big cast that you've still never heard of.

Speaking of Richard Simmons, all those tears have taken their toll and he is now 65 and looking every bit like the prune he played in those old Fruit of the Loom underwear commercials. Richard has a new 90-day weight-loss program called Project Hope…but in general, he’s just as creepy and annoying as ever.  You might not ordinarily be interested, but this offering includes new songs recorded exclusively by Richard Simmons. If you haven’t been motivated watching him workout in those really short shorts, you have got to hear him sing. Whether your overweight, out of shape, or even if you’re just a washed up prune with a really badly dyed perm, Richard’s triple training method will help you burn 3X more fat than you do watching his infomercial. The workouts are split into 9 exercise programs over 3 months. You also get Richard’s 3-part electronic food-mover program to help you eat right too. BTW…just listening to Richard sing had my food moving.  It also includes motivational tips and tricks. You can get this for just three payments of $29.99 at www.RichardSimmonsHOPE.com.  If you’re one of the first 500 to call, they’ll make the first month’s payment for you (1-800-319-7600). You may be skeptical, but if you’re not satisfied you can return it for a 100% money back guarantee (and you get to keep the electronic food-mover guide).

On Bravo you can get a true beauty breakthrough by purchasing a tria New Laser 4x hair removal system (www.TRYTRIALLASER.COM). It’s a limited time offer but you get a 90-day money-back guarantee. If you have unwanted hair and you’re tired of shaving or waxing, you can call 1-800-301-9313. Best I can tell, the tria (yes…it’s lower cased to make is seem cooler) Laser 4X is like having a laser treatment right in your own home. Apparently you have to make multiple trips to the doctor if you do this the conventional and truly safe way…and it’s very costly. So, much like tria’s popular appendicitis home surgery product, the Laser 4X allows you to work like a doctor in the comfort of your own home without the hassle of completing medical school and serving an unneeded residency. As with tria’s home face-lift and triple bypass surgery kits, there are burning side effects that last for a couple of days. Thanfully, they fade over time, the product is “clinically proven” and you’re free of unwanted hair permanently.

On the WETA public television station there was a show entitled Great Performances at the Met. People were dressed up in elaborate period piece costumes and were singing some indecipherable language.  Zzzzzz……

Thankfully just one change up was an infomercial about the Worx GT2 garden tool. I didn’t watch long but best as I could tell, the cutting-edge landscape tool allows you to use a weed whacker as a walk-behind edger. Seeing the garden tool in action, I couldn’t help but thinking if you had the GT2, you really wouldn’t need the tria Laser 4x hair removal system. If you know anything about law-care, you are well aware that the difference between an freshly cut lawn and a truly manicured yard is a straight edge from a professional trimmer. Like a lot of infomercials, this one was filled with a host of very credible satisfied homeowners that were compensated by the company to brag about the best cordless trimmer ever made regardless of how well it actually works. You can say goodbye to frustrating pull-cord starts and bothersome trips to the gas station, or fighting with cumbersome and often tangled extension cords by using the Worx 2. It comes with a high-capacity lithium battery that will allow you to achieve a perfect cut every time (Sounds like the Flowbee). It’s made of aircraft aluminum and you can get it by calling 1-800-599-7137. It’s only 3 easy payments of $33.33 and it comes with a lifetime supply of cutting twine.

If you thought Montel Williams was washed up and doing increasingly bad infomercials, well, put this in your pipe and smoke it. If you watch Tommie Chopper TV, you can see Montel shilling for a pain product called Tommie Copper Compression Wear. You can get this product at www.tommiecopper.tv or call 1-800-650-3892. The compression wear will improve your flexibility and mobility too.

At 1-800-529-2147 or  www.FeedTheChirdren.org  you can help starving children with struggling parents that have lost their jobs by making a small payment. I know what you’re thinking...how does this help me? Where’s the clicker?

JNL Fusion has some gal named Jennifer (looks more fit than Jillian Michaels…and she’s tan as a berry) using short 30-second intervals (I might be able to do this) to get unbelievable results. All you need is a 5x5 space (but my body is almost a 5x5 space) and a DVD player (and a magic wand). Jennifer is known the world wide (well…except for me) for turning moms into fitness models. If you order you can get a free “Blast off the fat” guide by going to www.JNLFusion.com . Apparently it improves everything about your life, including sex and your relationship with your family (I know what you’re thinking if you live in Tennessee). I was skeptical but there were multiple people so moved by their body transformation that they were crying. You can call and begin your 90-day transformation by dialing 1-800-713-7936.

I switched back to another WETA station and there was a show about hot dogs (Public TV is getting better).  While I was watching,  they were focusing on a place called the Original Hot Dog Shop in Pittsburgh (Check it out here).  Best I could tell it was on (or near) the University of Pittsburgh and their large order of French fries alone made it look as though it’s worth the trip. I didn’t catch any of the prices, but you can check out the menu at the link above. If nothing else, the experience showed there is at least some hope for publicly funded programing.

You can Break the Drought by watching BET and catching sincere tele-evangelist Peter Popoff and his lovely charlatan wife Elizabeth. By calling 1-800-925-7785 you can break the drought in your life by getting a new miracle mixture (this appears to be an upgrade of his previous Miracle Spring Water). I was pretty skeptical but Peter and Elizabeth invited me closer to the TV to touch the screen (they were holding their hands up to the TV…and if you have no TV…well…the defense rests) and pray with them. He asked me to open up and receive the anointed word. Then, like a miracle, the screen was abundant with Popoff followers sharing testimonies about how their financial and health droughts were broken. Most of them received huge checks in the mail or experienced a medical miracle simply by sprinkling a little of the miracle mixture on their respective problems. Peter was interviewing a host of believers at a crusade in Arkansas (big surprise) that were healed of un-curable diseases by spreading the miracle mixture over their bodies.  One cat, totally disabled with back pain…got up and started running after Peter starting yelling “Jesus.” Peter claims god sent him the mixture (I’m sold), which is the same mixture god used to end the drought in Israel. You can end the drought in your body, your finances and your relationships by getting your free packet of miracle mixture at www.peterpopoff.org . One user got an 88K miracle. Another had a drought ended through 54K in debt cancelation. A watcher from Mesquite, Texas was sent a $2 million dollar check. Another viewer was completely cured of Hepatitis C. Another had a debt cancellation of 71K. Your drought is going to be broken in the name of Jesus. One forlorn couple spread the mixture in their home library and it was transformed into a state-of-the-art media/entertainment room (will three 54” flatscreens).

Have a great weekend. BTW…If you have a DVD player or Television that is internet, ready, you can listen to music in your home on Pandora through your TV. Doing so will allow you to hear music like this...
 
 
Sorry for all the typos, poor spelling and lousy grammar.

Friday, July 12, 2013

...so don't let the headwinds knock you down

If you’ve ever spent much time in Southern California in the Fall or Winter, you probably know the famed Santa Ana devil winds can be ferocious. Originating inland but affecting mostly coastal areas of Southern California, these down-slopping hot and dry gusts, often exceeding 50 mph, are notorious for fanning devastating wildfires and even blowing over eighteen-wheel semi-truck trailers on the San Bernardino Freeway. In some of the worst meteorological episodes, they are also well-known toppling the areas strongest trees…which are often no match for the formidable and sustained evil winds.

I remember sitting having lunch one hot October afternoon during one such Santa Ana event  with one of my early IBEW electrician mentors Joe Zamora. We were working  for a company called Amelco Electric on a historic construction project in the mid-Wilshire area of downtown Los Angeles. The all too rare restoration effort at an old-school open air market was unusual for a city that has a poor record maintaining its few architectural treasures, and this particular 6th Street gem just blocks from the iconic Ambassador Hotel (think Coconut Grove and RFK) and the original Brown Derby restaurant offered an interesting challenge for any construction electrician.

We were taking our collectively bargained 30-minute lunch time break, sitting on the curb with a couple of other union tradesmen after buying a couple of carnitas burritos from the roach coach (BTW…this is just a side note…but those trendy food trucks where you pay inflated prices for what you think is gourmet food aren’t new. Vendors have been poisoning construction workers with tasty food prepared in vermin infested mobile kitchens for decades. They just didn’t paint their trucks goofy colors, give them exotic names to lure white-collar workers or charge exorbitant  amounts for food laced with rat droppings). In typical fashion, I was sitting there bitching to my fellow brothers about everything that is wrong with job I had just finished running at Crocker Center (now Wells Fargo) and all the heartache I’d received from stubborn old electricians resistant to my more evolved way of electrical construction.

At that point in my mid-20s, I was a cocky, weight-trained greenhorn foreman and though my inaugural effort to run work had been a successful money maker for the contractor, there was no shortage of stress from my perspective. Mostly there was a general sense that things hadn’t gone nearly as smooth as they could or should have…especially if those working for me had only been more open-minded and reasonable.  In classic fashion, my mentor Joe was patiently listening to me bellyache. He was a seasoned veteran at running big electrical construction projects and a well-respected  instructor in the much heralded labor/management apprenticeship program. Those reasons alone were enough to seek  his advice, but he also had this great voice that was like listening to Cheech Marin. Every time he ever saw me he used to begin by enthusiastically asking “Hey homes…waz up?”
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
Shortly after I’d finished my whining about all the push back I’d gotten from dinosaur electricians resistant to doing things my new and improved way, I was curious what pearls of wisdom Joe would offer to help me deal with uncooperative crews. As I waited, Joe smiled and pointed across the streets lined with bungalows at the classic tall palm trees that line so many of LA’s older streets…particularly in the inner city. If you haven’t been there you’ve seen them in the movies…and given their towering height and their alarmingly small diameter trunks…it’s amazing that their able to stand at all.



 
 
 

The wind was howling hard that day, and as Joe motioned towards the trees bending in the force of the wind, we had an exchange that went something pretty much like this.

Joe: “Hey homes…did you notice all the downed trees driving into work this morning?”

Me: “Yeah…of course…it was hard not to. Heard it blew in some places close to 70mph for hours.”

Joe: “Yeah…there were down all around me too. Big sturdy oaks with rigid  trunks uprooted and pretty much toppled over.”

Me: “Yep”

Joe: “But homes…check out all those palm trees. Did you see any palm trees like them knocked down?”

Me: “Now that you mention it…no. But I’m unclear what this has to do with anything.”

Joe: “Do you ever see any of those flimsy palm trees down after a wind storm? I mean really…how is that possible, they don’t even look strong enough to stand when it’s still.”

Me: “Yeah…I guess I really never thought much about it. But again… what the hell does this have to do with my problems running the job?”

Joe: “Well don’t you even wonder why those skinny palm trees are still standing while all those much sturdier trees can’t withstand the wind?”

Me: “What?”

Joe: “Homes…look at those palm trees. The wind is blowing close to 40mph now and they’re almost bent in half. The rigid trees you saw laying down this morning stand strong but eventually break…but the much thinner palm trees sway back-n-forth and all they do is bend and bounce back. That’s how it ties to your work problems…if you’re going to survive in the big time construction industry over the long haul…you got to learn how to bend and sway.”

At the time I didn’t think much of Joe’s sage advice, however the older I get the more it seems to resonate. If I tried to stand strong in the face of the unyielding forces resistant to change, I’d burnout in almost no time. However on the days I’m flexible…and let myself bend when it’s blowing, somehow I seem better positioned to withstand the constant headwinds. It’s funny, in my early years I put so much value in being like an oak…now, as I get older, I see so much more virtue in being like a palm.

Have a fabulous weekend, and if you feel a variety of forces conspiring to take you down, don’t be afraid to be strong enough to bend.

Fresh scent of what???

Bonus track...We may lose and we may win...

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

...actually it's Wednesday...and tomorrow, it's already the Fourth of July!

This post first appeared here around July 4th 2011, and then again about the same time last year. It would probably be better to offer something fresh, but after reading it again this morning, it's unlikely I could come up with anything better...at least with respect to the Fourth of July. 
When I was a little kid, my Grandpa Nelson (my mother’s dad) would get up early every 4th (he’d get up early everyday) and go outside of his eastern North Dakota Red River farmhouse to set off one firecracker. After it exploded, he would scream in his thick Swedish accent…“hurrah for the Fourth of July!” That simple celebration was pretty much it for the holiday fireworks on the old Arthur T. Nelson farm…mostly because that’s all the struggling family could afford.

For some odd reason, that ritual was one my own father copied in my boyhood home in Los Angeles. It was simple, perhaps even a little corny, but for some reason my dad, the son of German and Russian immigrants, just felt compelled to make note of this special American holiday. Just like my Grandfather had done, I remember my dad going out on the morning of the 4th, lighting one firecracker and shouting “hurrah for the Fourth of July!” Later in the evening we would have more elaborate home firework shows, but that is usually how the holiday started. Now many decades later, thanks to the hard work and foundation laid by folks like my grandfather and dad, many in my family will celebrate tomorrow with lakeside fireworks shows that will make their ancestor's struggles no more than a faded memory.

Not sure how you’re spending your July 4th, but in the hustle-and-bustle of today’s crazy world, there are probably more than a few of us that will barely slow down long enough this weekend to really think about the fact that we are celebrating our independence. Some of us will attend BBQs, go for boat rides, go on hikes, head to the lakes, watch baseball, go camping, go to the mountains or take in elaborate pyrotechnic shows with so much on our minds that we’ll give little or no thought to the real significance of the holiday. Even today, on the threshold of this festive weekend, many of us will be so busy doing such important work that we won’t take any time to smell the roses…let alone take a few minutes to listen to the Friday (Wednesday) song.

 This is odd (at least it is to me), because so many of us have had a cavalcade of almost spiritually inspired signs lately literally screaming that life is way too short. For some, it’s come in the way of a challenging diagnosis, the illness of a friend or loved one, or the loss of a life that we know ended way, way too soon. For me, it is almost like some supernatural force is shaking a neon sign directly in front of my face that is literally pleading for me to slow down...and to actually acknowledge the things even I know will matter significantly more when the score is tallied at the end. For some set of reasons (none of which are flattering), I soon forget the messages…and almost within days…I allow the insanity of work and everyday life to erase any lesson offered by the otherwise crystal-clear warnings.

My Grandpa and Dad struggled in ways that I cannot even fathom, however despite their respective hardships, they genuinely loved this country at levels I don’t have the writing talent to covey. There is no doubt about the fact that we’ve got some work to do, but despite our nation’s relative young age and looming challenges…it's still a great place to call home. Let’s honor that fact by taking some time to appreciate all we have.

Whatever you’re doing this holiday weekend, I hope you put down the smartphone or shut off the iPad mini long enough to think about the 4th and the true significance of our young nation’s birthday. Above all else, I hope you’re able to do it with the people you truly love. 

2013 is flying by...and in the blink of an eye...we'll be decking the halls. Amidst the sweltering heat is hardly seems possible...but we all know it's true. Why not begin the day by closing your eyes and taking several minutes to listen to a song…you might just start the holiday with a smile. It's four minutes and thirty six seconds...

BTW…despite as mentioned above that this post first appeared about 730 days ago…I’ve neither slowed down, turned off the laptop or put down the smartphone.  I'm still ignoring the signposts. Are you?  

Never call retreat...