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03/11/23 09:21 AM #12291    

 

Michael McLeod

hey joe don't go out on a limb or anything lol.

It was Michigan State not Michigan but hell yes you are correct, as you astutely noted, we won - and that was indeed one of the greatest wins tosu bball has had in recent history

And Jim: that's just brilliantly done. It's a little late for you to embark on a second career -- but you could sign on as an assistant to one of the plumbers and see if you show any promise. 

And Mark: As you no doubt have discovered that's basically the gold a writer is always looking for - the little things that say a lot. I the instant when I saw the words "stuffed animals" and saw exactly where she was headed with that evocative, emotionally supercharged image of make-believe and youthful innocence to convey such a powerful point about the delicate framework of our lives, I thought: bien hecho, fellow writer: Well done.

I really don't speak spanish but I love saying "bien hecho."

That second word is pronounced A-cho. Say it out loud and it's almost like sneezing. First time I saw it and had to look it up it was in a Hemingway novel and it was a compliment to a bullfighter.

 


03/11/23 12:38 PM #12292    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

I agree with Mark that the Forum is in rare form today.

Mike, you and I have discussed how important Leonard Cohen is in our lives and that has long been one of my favorite songs. 

Reading the touching essay on the "stuffies" I immediately thought of sharing it with friends who have growing daughters and other friends who are grieving the loss of loved ones so thank you for that.

Jim, we knew you as an accomplished doctor and photographer and suddenly you reveal to us yet another talent. Your medical diagnosis and treatment report is one for the books.

This week I have finished my very last interior design project-a renovation project including a new kitchen and two bathrooms.  I have been working closely with a team which includes an excellent "lampista"(electrician-plumber). Oh, how I wish Diego understood English so that I could share your essay with him. He would love it.

As MMcL and Hemingway say, "Bien hecho".


03/11/23 02:33 PM #12293    

 

David Mitchell

Mike,

I don't mind if you "monopolate" this forum, but don't let me catch you "weaponizing" it!

If you do you might have Jim Jordan, that courageous champion of loud mouthed-ness (er sumpin'), calling you in to testify. After firing two duds last week, maybe he's ready for a third strikeout. (that first group of "experts" turned out to be almost funny)

But please wear a full suit and look dignified, we wouldn't want to confuse you with just anyboy off the street, like some wrestling coach, or even god forbid, another one of those English Majors.


03/11/23 02:59 PM #12294    

 

David Mitchell

Mike,

That story touched a nerve with me, as I have over the last few years, watched my beautiful 14 year-old grandaugter go from a happy, care free 10 year old, into the awkward stages of a teenager, and it's not going well.

p.s.  I owe you an apology. I swear I woud never confuse you with a wrestling coach.

-----------

 

Jim, 

I think we all see that you have missed your calling. But couldn't you have simply thrown two aspirins down the drain and told it to call you in the morning?


03/11/23 05:09 PM #12295    

 

Michael McLeod

bwaha good one dave

On another front, this is from an essay about the status of politics and public debate in our culture.

It's funny how sometimes the most legitimate explanation for a phenomenon is the simplest one.

The article takes no particular side; just points to how the flow and sources of information has changed over

the decades, and how it affects us as consumers.

In general I think reasonable debate has been overshadowed by what I'll call political stagecraft

 

Here is a section from the essay:

 

One of the most striking aspects of the modern information environment, as many people have observed, is the almost total collapse of local and even regional news outlets. Where once every town or city of even minor consequence had a newspaper — with reporters who helped the community understand itself through their work — now there are large parts of the country that exist in news deserts, where there is little coverage of anything, from local government to local events.

I think that this decline has played an important role in undermining America’s democratic institutions, as well as the public’s faith in democracy. It’s not just that the collapse of local news has made it harder to hold any number of public officials accountable — contributing to general cynicism about the ability of government to do anything constructive — but that Americans increasingly lack the information they need to participate in the political process in their communities.

“As Americans have shifted away from local news, turnout in state and local elections has fallen,” notes Brookings, “and communities that have lost reporters have seen fewer candidates run for local office.”

Americans have turned to national news and national news outlets to close the gap, but these larger institutions can’t replace what has been lost. By virtue of proximity, I can respond more easily when a local official is accused of wrongdoing. The same isn’t true of a member of Congress, especially if they aren’t my own. The information we get from national outlets is valuable, but it can also leave us feeling hopeless and impotent. And it can contribute to “political hobbyism,” a tendency to treat politics not as a cause for action and an essential part of citizenship, but as a game where the only goal — the only objective — is to somehow embarrass and humiliate our enemies.

There has always been an element of entertainment in politics — it’s part of living in a mass democracy — but the total devolution of politics into entertainment may have something to do with the absence of institutions that link our political awareness to something more local, something more concrete, than national political conflict.


03/11/23 09:52 PM #12296    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Good run Buckeyes......see you next season!!!  Rumor has it that Coach Holtman is at the top of the list to replace Notre Dame's coach who is retiring. 

 

 


03/11/23 11:49 PM #12297    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Thanks to Mark, Mike, Donna and Dave for your comments on my plumber story. I did not write it as an essay but rather to describe a trying day in a humorous manner.

But I will admit that I do have a liking for writing about certain things and, although I was one who was not too interested in studies other than science courses in college, I find it quite fun to pen things other than medical and life science topics as I grow older.

In fact, decades ago after we moved into our (then) new Evans Army Community Hospital building we had a periodic publication in which I used to write about life and patient care in the old WWII barracks (which was our old hospital) since many of the staff had never worked in those old buildings.

Certainly, my writings do not come close to people like Mark, Mike and others who are experts and pros on prose and others who have written books, but I do dabble in little snippets that I hope our classmates find enjoyable when I put them up on this Forum.

And yes, I have occasionally tried my hand at poetry. Below is a poem I wrote for a contest (which I did not win) that was in response to a contest sponsored by one of my medical groups. It seems that there are a lot of doctors out there who like to write things other than scientific papers.

This contest was asking docs to write a poem describing a photo that showed a large colony of Emperor Penguins in a group with two young penguin chicks outside of the huddled group looking worried that they could be in trouble for sneaking away from the flock and may face being scolded by their approaching mom. I apologize that I tossed the magazine and don't have that cute picture.

Anyway, here was my (losing) entry:

Jim


03/12/23 12:26 PM #12298    

 

Michael McLeod

Yep give yourself a little credit, Doc. There's a regular class clown hiding out in there. 


03/12/23 01:32 PM #12299    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

May be an image of 4 people and text that says 'cheer up, spring's around the corner I live in Ohio'


03/12/23 03:10 PM #12300    

 

Michael McLeod

mm:

if only you knew the tremendous self control it takes for me not to casually mention how pretty the blooming bouganvillas on the far side of the swimming pool in my sunny back yard look right now. 

oh did i say that out loud?


03/12/23 04:05 PM #12301    

 

Mark Schweickart

Hey, where are you two off to?


03/12/23 04:29 PM #12302    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mark,

That's a good mother- no scowl either! And a great photo from whomever braved the frozen landscape to capture it.

Jim


03/12/23 04:34 PM #12303    

 

Janie Albright (Blank)

Jim, I sent your cute plumbing story to a retired doctor friend and here is his comment: 

"Is ongoing pharmaceutical treatment required to prevent recurrence?"

 

Mike, thanks for passing along the story about the "stuffies". My grandkids sadly passing through that stage. 
 

 


03/12/23 05:30 PM #12304    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Janie,

No regular pharmaceuticals needed. Maintain liquid only diet and if symptoms of hypoperfusion or gurgling occur consider plunger compression/decompression therapy or another endoscopic evaluation with clot lysis or extraction. 

Jim

 


03/12/23 05:52 PM #12305    

 

Mark Schweickart

Some insults for your delectation.
1. George Bernard Shaw to Winston Churchill: "I am enclosing two tickets to the first night of my new play. Bring a friend, if you have one."
Churchill's response: "Cannot possibly attend first night, I will attend the second...If there is one."
2. A member of Parliament to Disraeli: "Sir, you will either die on the gallows, or of some unspeakable disease."
 "That depends, Sir," said Disraeli, "whether I embrace your policies or your mistress."
3. "He had delusions of adequacy." - Walter Kerr
4. "I have never killed a man, but I have read many obituaries with great pleasure."
- Clarence Darrow
5. William Faulkner (about Ernest Hemingway): "He has never been known to use a word that might send a reader to the dictionary."
6. Mark Twain: "I didn't attend the funeral, but I sent a nice letter saying I approved of it."
7. Oscar Wilde: "He has no enemies, but is intensely disliked by his friends.."
8. Stephen Bishop: "I feel so miserable without you; it's almost like having you here."
9. John Bright: "He is a self-made man and worships his creator."
10. Irvin S. Cobb: "I've just learned about his illness. Let's hope it's nothing trivial."
 11. Forrest Tucker: "He loves nature in spite of what it did to him."
12. Mae West: "His mother should have thrown him away and kept the stork."
13. Groucho Marx: "I've had a perfectly wonderful evening. But this wasn't it."
 


03/13/23 09:46 AM #12306    

 

Michael McLeod

so I believe it was Mary Margaret who said something about crime in clintonville recently. That boggles. What kind of crime? 


03/13/23 11:12 AM #12307    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike,

Several of my family members have been the victims of non-violent crime over the past 5 months. My brother had his locked Jeep stolen while he was staying at my sister's house (the Clark home on Oakland Pk) while recovering from surgery. It was parked on the street in front of her house and has never been recovered. My son-in-law had the window of his locked car smashed and his laptop stolen in front of their house in the Knolls. And just two nights ago my daughter had her locked car broken into while parked in front of my house and had her backpack stolen which contained two expensive stethescopes which she uses at the hospital.  Last month I apparently had forgotten to lock my car which was parked in my driveway and when I went to get in it the next morning, discovered that someone had rifled through my glove compartment and console and stolen my phone charger.  Lessons learned never keep anything of value in your car. 

https://www.10tv.com/video/news/crime-tracker/2-columbus-teens-charged-in-separate-fatal-shootings-in-last-30-days/530-dbc9e878-cdf1-4a8f-9c06-588c92045b12

https://www.10tv.com/video/news/crime-tracker/nearly-400-cars-stolen-in-central-ohio-since-new-year/530-75e9ecca-278f-4edd-8d9a-bbb6777768b1


03/13/23 01:23 PM #12308    

 

Michael McLeod

That's just terrible, mm.

I'm so sorry.

That sort of thing would have been unheard of years ago.

I hate hearing it about the old neighborhood.

It's methodical crime, too, from the examples you'v given me.

Systematic, from people who do it as a profession, if you want to call it that.  


03/13/23 01:38 PM #12309    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike....the chief cause IMHO is the continued break down of the family as these crimes are mostly committed by juveniles. It is also a result of alcohol and drug addiction and the need for quick money. Franklin County Children's Services is stretched to the max. My daughter was just called for the 4th time this year to foster another drug addicted infant and the previous 3 times they were unable. They practically begged her to take this little boy as the foster home situation has become dire, and so she and her husband decided they could manage at this time even though Joe was laid off from his job as a mortgage loan refinancer. Times are getting tougher for many people.


03/13/23 03:12 PM #12310    

 

Michael McLeod

mm

that's horrific.

in some ways it surprises me. in some ways it does not.


03/13/23 10:01 PM #12311    

 

David Mitchell

Mark,

Loved your list.  

"Delusions of adequacy" may be my favorite. 


03/13/23 11:36 PM #12312    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike...this was just reported tonight...https://www.10tv.com/article/news/crime/3-injured-clintonville-stabbing/530-b4961fd3-efdf-430c-8f5a-23bfb89a63ca

 


03/14/23 05:08 PM #12313    

 

Michael McLeod

Just seeing stabbing and Clintonville in a headline makes me think: all that's left of my old stomping grounds are my memories.

worst thing that ever happened to me was when i walked home from ic down the alley one afternoon and some big kids waylaid me and "crammed" me, which was the dreaded experience of having somebody grab the elastic of your whitie tighties from behind and yank them up into -- and here i apologize to mm and all the other ladies present - the crack of your ass.

 


03/14/23 10:51 PM #12314    

 

David Mitchell

Mark,

Someone else once said, "We are only immortal for a limited time."


03/15/23 10:46 AM #12315    

 

Michael McLeod

that's a great quote, dave. Meanwhile, class, our word for the day - dave, can you please write it on the blackboard for us? - is "fragility."

I saw it used in a quote from insiders discussing the troubled state of the stock market these days. 

 


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