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02/08/24 11:25 PM #13590    

 

Michael McLeod

Hey Jim: Care for a niggling correction?

I knew you'd appreciate it.

I just noticed this sentence from a post you made a while back:

"Like all technology it will effect our lives and that effect remains to be seen."

I think I know you well enough, even at this distance in time and space, that you'll take this late-breaking correction in good spirits: You've fallen prey to one of the nastiest bugaboos English grammar has to offer:

 

What to Know

Affect is usually a verb meaning "to produce an effect upon," as in "the weather affected his mood." Effect is usually a noun meaning "a change that results when something is done or happens," as in "computers have had a huge effect on our lives." There are exceptions, but if you think of affect as a verb and effect as a noun, you’ll be right most of the time.

 

In other words: You affect an effect. 

Hope you're all doing well. I'm embroiled in a new semester at the liberal arts college where I'm teaching a class in personal essay writing. And I have to say I'm noticing that my thinking and teaching doesn't come as readily as once it did. It reminds me, as long as we're on the subject, of the fuzziness and static of the music in the old, thick, vintage records my sisters and I used to play. They were  Guy Lombardo era records, and older still,  that my mom had, and they had been retired to the basement, along with a funky old record-player and radio the size and shape of a wooden box you'd find in an apple orchard, but of beautifully polished mahogany wood. Sure wish I still had it. 

Hello to all from the Sunshine State. Again, hope everybody up there -- and in parts elsewhere of the country - is doing well. Just now starting to warm up towards the Florida heat ahead - and trust me, you are lucky up north not having to deal with the swelter I see coming down here in Orlando. 

 

 

 


02/09/24 12:00 AM #13591    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike Mc L.,

I thank you for that tutorial in English - and I say that truly and not with any malace of forethought!

At least twice I reviewed my use of those words and scratched the (thinning) hair on my head as to which word to use where. I even changed it once, if I remember correctly.

So, professor, I bow to your expertise in the correct use of the English language. 

Please feel free to continue to correct me on any grammatical errors I make in future posts as I really try to be as erudite as possible in my public writings - even in my emails and texts I do not use the typical (millennial) abbreviations such as "where r u", "c u soon" etc.

The nuns would come back to haunt me if I did!

As for the Colorado weather, I shovelled 6 inches of wet, heavy snow two days ago and today it was essentially all gone. But, the worst is probably yet to come: on most years the snowiest months of the year are March and April. Snow on Easter is more likely to occur than on Christmas - and that is not an exaggeration. 

Jim


02/09/24 09:43 PM #13592    

 

Michael McLeod

Trust me Jim. I've made more grammatical errors - several of which got past editors and made it into print - than you'll ever make.

That one you made is just a particularly sneaky and infamous one. 


02/11/24 09:59 AM #13593    

 

Michael McLeod

A TOUCHING TRIBUTE I WANTED TO SHARE, THIS FROM RONALD REGAN'S DAUGHTER IN THE NYTIMES TODAY. 

 

The night before my father died, I listened to his breathing — ragged, thin. Nothing like that of the athletic man who rode horses, built fences at the ranch, constructed jumps from old phone poles, cut back shrubs along riding trails. Or of the man who lifted his voice to the overcast sky and said, “Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall.”

Time and history folded over themselves inside me, distant memories somersaulting with more recent realities — the 10 years of his journey into the murky world of Alzheimer’s and my determination to abandon the well-worn trail of childhood complaints and forge a new path. To be blunt, I had resolved to grow the hell up.

I can still remember how it felt to be his child, though, and how the attention he paid to America and its issues made me jealous.

Long before my father ran for office, politics sat between us at the dinner table. The conversations were predictable: Big government was the problem, the demon, the thing America had to be wary of. I hated those conversations. I wanted to talk about the boy who bullied me on the school bus, not government overreach.

In time I came to resent this country for claiming so much of him. Yet today, it’s his love for America that I miss most. His eyes often welled with tears when “America the Beautiful” was played, but it wasn’t just sentiment. He knew how fragile democracy is, how easily it can be destroyed. He used to tell me about how Germany slid into dictatorship, the biggest form of government of all.

I wish so deeply that I could ask him about the edge we are teetering on now, and how America might move out of its quagmire of anger, its explosions of hatred. How do we break the cycle of violence, both actual and verbal? How do we cross the muddy divides that separate us, overcome the partisan rancor that drives elected officials to heckle the president in his State of the Union address? When my father was shot, Tip O’Neill, then speaker of the House and always one of his most devoted political opponents, came into his hospital room and knelt down to pray with him, reciting the 23rd Psalm. Today a gesture like that seems impossible.

So what would my father say about the decline of civility and the ominous future of our democracy? I don’t think he would address his party’s front-runner at all. I think he would focus on the people who cheer at that candidate’s rallies. He would point out to them that dictatorships aren’t created by one person; they’re created by all the people who fall in line and say yes.

In 1967, after my father was sworn in as governor of California, we went to the governor’s mansion, a creaky old house on a busy street. I was 15, unhappy at being a governor’s daughter; I felt helpless and scared. So I sneaked away from everyone and climbed two flights of stairs to the building’s cupola, where I looked down from one of the windows at a crowd of people gathered on the sidewalk. They looked blessedly small from that distance. Suddenly one of them noticed me up there, and strangers started waving. I remember backing up quickly, sitting down on the dusty floor and crying my eyes out.

Thirty-seven years later, I watched another crowd of strangers pressed together along sidewalks and gathered on freeway overpasses as we drove by in the motorcade that carried my father’s coffin. This time I felt comforted by their presence. America and I have had a rocky relationship, but the way the country paused for those few days was a balm on the messiest parts of my grief.


02/11/24 10:35 AM #13594    

 

John Jackson

Last night Carol and I went to nearby New Hope (just across the river in Pennsylvania) to a small (150 seat?) venue to see Mary Fahl, former lead singer for October Project, an NYC band that was popular in the 90’s.  I discovered her music around that time and have been a fan ever since.  She’s been on her own for the last twenty or so years recording several solo albums and has even been featured on a PBS special “Live at the Mauch Chunk Opera House” which sounds to me like it ought to be in Germany but is actually in Jim Thorpe, PA.

She also shared a few funny memories about growing up in a (very) large Irish-German Catholic family.

To my ear at least, she has a freakishly good voice, still strong and powerful despite the fact that she’s 65 – should be an inspiration to us all.  We saw Judy Collins (over 80 now) a few years ago at the same venue and she also hadn’t lost a step.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdCQ1aoQtxg


02/11/24 01:20 PM #13595    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

Mike and John - Thanks for the P. Reagan article and for the link to Mary Fahl's music.  I really enjoyed both.


02/11/24 05:21 PM #13596    

Joseph Gentilini

I really liked the tribute from Reagan's daughter and also the music.  Thanks for sharing both.  joe


02/14/24 02:46 PM #13597    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

I I remember while we were at IC, we wrote AMDG on the top of every page and test, so I am happy to see Harrison showcasing that all we should be doing is for the honor and glory of God. 

🚨Catholic kicker for the Kansas City Chiefs Harrison Butker pulled up to the Super Bowl yesterday with a custom leather bag inscribed with the letters “AMDG”

This is short for the translated Latin phrase “for the greater glory of God.”

Earlier this week Butker said "being Catholic is central to everything I do and everything I am.”

Earlier this year, Butker TROLLED Joe Biden after winning the Super Bowl by photobombing him at the White House with a PRO-LIFE tie that read: “Vulnerari Praesidio,” Latin for “PROTECT THE MOST VULNERABLE.”

We need more committed and GOOD warriors bringing God’s light to a culture in need— without regard for the “mean words” some may say ✝️

 


02/14/24 04:39 PM #13598    

 

John Jackson

Wow, photobombing Biden on the abortion issue - that sounds really mature and thoughtful!

Butker is entitled to his own views on abortion and I respect them.  But he should also realize that other Catholics just as devout as he is have different views.  Polls show a large majority (around 70%) of Catholics don’t share his warrior mentality that abortion is always wrong – are all these Catholics part of a “culture in need” of some kind of salvation from the godlessness they presumably embrace?  


02/14/24 05:40 PM #13599    

Joseph Gentilini

I agree with you John J.  joe


02/15/24 11:29 AM #13600    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

John, my post was meant to simply showcase the AMDG on his bag as it called to mind a simple memory from my grade school days at IC. If you are interested I have posted a response on the User Forum.  


02/15/24 09:15 PM #13601    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Nostalgia Time

"Hey, batta batta, SWING batta batta!"

Wow, does that bring back memories.

As the sports pages of our local newspaper start to report on the soon-to-begin spring training for the (hapless) Colorado Rockies, my thoughts meander back to those halcyon spring and summer days of the late 1950's and early '60's in Whetstone Park playing baseball in the Clintonville Boy's Association (CBA) and Little League ("Junior Jet") and later the Warhawks (? Babe Ruth League) baseball teams. This was before I was old enough to play for IC's grade school team with all stars like Kevin Cull, Brad Nielson and a guy named Rick Angelo (who?) under our coach, Jim Lawson. Those IC games were played on a diamond downhill near the Park of Roses area of Whetstone close to where the open air building was that held some summer teen dances. (Remember how to do the "Mashed Potatoes"?)

​​​​​Seems like that was so long ago, like in the last century - Oh yeah, it was!

​​​​​​Jim

 

 

​​​​​​

​​​


02/16/24 04:00 PM #13602    

 

Michael McLeod

This NYC business-banishment multi million ruling against trump is just fascinating. I've never heard of anything like it. It's like some medieval "we cast you out" where somebody's tarred and feathered and banished and dumped on the outskirts of town and told never to return.

That's not an exagerration either. It's a pretty good parallel and approximation of the effects of that ruling, which just came down. I've simply never heard of such a thing. He is toast financially.

On another front I hadn't recalled those initials "amdg" for the longest time. And yes we printed those out on our papers at school if we wanted to. And I do remember it meant "All for the glory of God." And I cannot testify whether I put it on my papers in the true spirit of that sentiment or as just another way of sucking up to the nuns, crafty little bugger that I was.


02/16/24 05:19 PM #13603    

Joseph Gentilini

LIke Michael McL the verdict on trump is fascinating.  All I can say, however, is that if he did the crime (which seems pretty clear), then he gets what he deserves.  You do the crme, you do the time or, in this case, the fine.

 

At St. Agatha elementery school, we also were supposed to put AMDG in caps on all our papers.  I also thought it meant, All for the Glory of God.

 

 

 


02/16/24 05:22 PM #13604    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm too lazy to shuttle back and forth between forums.

It starts to feel like work. Plus mm is always right.


02/16/24 10:53 PM #13605    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Just  a thought.........

    We the unwilling 

        are doing the impossible

          for the ungrateful

 

    We have done so much for

        so long with so little

         we are now qualified

 

    To do anything with nothing

 


02/16/24 10:57 PM #13606    

 

John Jackson

Mike, as I’ve argued before, I’m not a believer in two forums for topics that should concern us all.  If your thing is cat videos or stamp collecting (apologies to all the philatelists out there), then maybe the other forum is the place to be.

But the state of our nation is something that should concern us all so I think there is a place for serious discussions on the main forum, as long as they aren’t the only topic.  And if some of our classmates find such topics objectionable (or tedious) it’s very easy to skip to the next post.                


02/17/24 08:55 AM #13607    

 

Michael McLeod

 

I am curious: Who else is getting fuzzy? I sure am. By fuzzy I mean forgetful, not as sharp in my thinking as I use to be, not that I was ever all that sharp to begin with. Plus for the past ten years I've been in a fabulous but humbling relationship with a brilliant montessori trained grade school teacher who calls my attention to all the forgetful things I do; otherwise I probably wouldn't even notice my life becoming a blurred watercolor affair more often than not. 

Anyway, though I still teach a writing class at a wonderful little liberal arts college in Winter Park and write for a couple of local magazines, I have this cartoon picture in my head of small, lazy little clouds of brain cells occasionally drifting out of my ears as I walk down the street. I just wondered if anybody else has that feeling. I know, I know: use it or lose it. I'm certainly still using my brain in the classroom, if only to try to keep up with my students.

 

 


02/17/24 12:13 PM #13608    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike McL,

I hear you regarding being "fuzzy". In fact, I would be surprised if any of us have not experienced similar things. 

I believe there is a fine line - maybe even a spectrum - between normal brain aging and early dementia. The brain is such a complex organ and memory function is dependent on so many different areas with their neurochemical connections to each other.

We all know of the major types of dementias such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's but others exist and treatments for those are often non-existent. 

I have trouble remembering names of (often famous) people from the past like actors and some singers. I am pretty good with events and places. We are blessed with technology today and a few taps on my cell phone searches allow me to quickly refresh my brain cells with such information.

As medical science evolves we will have better ways ( blood tests, etc.) to separate the normal from the disease states and perhaps treatments that help restore better brain function. 

I guess it all comes down to aging gracefully and accepting the abilities we retain. 

Jim

 

 


02/17/24 08:11 PM #13609    

 

David Mitchell

Did I hear someone use the term "fuzzy"?

I think the various layers of health care insurance - private plans vs. straight Medicare - are the definition of the word "fuzzy". I have just entered the fuzzy world of trying to figure this mess out - and I am failing miserably.

I just had my first visit with my VA primary care provider (since my return home) and he helped make things somewhat simpler. Here in a nutshell, is what I learned. 

"Doctor, what is the best coverage for someone in my situation?" 

Answer: "Anything BUT  Humana. (which is what I had)."

I cant imagine they could make this thing any more complicated. 


02/17/24 10:30 PM #13610    

 

Michael McLeod

Well all I can say is: I resent the hell out of that amdg dude. That is the ugliest suit I've seen in a long time. 


02/17/24 11:43 PM #13611    

 

Mark Schweickart

Fuzzy Wuzzy had a brain 
But Fuzzy’s brain was quite a pain.
It seems that Fuzzy’s thinking 
Was not just his brain a-blinking 
So much as being of an age when
Brains all wind up in the dustbin.

 

Which is just a way to say that I too definitely suffer from the fuzzies. It's too bad that at our age it seems Obi Wan Kenobi's adage has shifted to "May the fuzz be with you."


02/19/24 01:53 PM #13612    

 

John Maxwell

Having two siblings die from dementia, I believe that I too am a bit fuzzy at times. A condition I am somewhat familiar with. To change this feeling, I have increased my social and physical activities. I walk a lot changing my route each time. I am working part time and I make artist dates and go to a museum or gallery and spend houΕ₯rs discovering new things and people. I look for suitable volenteering opportunities where I don't have to use any skills I may possess. Physically I amaze myself at my endurance and ability to stay focused. There are times when I draw a blank amd then I stop, take a break and refresh my fluids and eat something, fruit or nuts amd veggies. After my mind calms I can proceed without worry that I'm losing my mind.
I try to get enough sleep, however I don't sleep so much as just rest. As I am usually a light sleeper being a night owl has its liabilities in the rest department. Most of my rem sleep is in the AM. I stopped alchohol but I indulge occasionally in smoking a puff of weed. I quit smoking tobacco, dispite learning the spiritual aspects of tobacco. From a Lakoda Indian I learned the tobacco ceremony. It reauires a single puff on the pipe, offering the smoke to your higher power, then passing it on to the next person. This is usually followed by a short time in the sweat lodge, where in the heat one can experience color shifts and visitations from ancestors. It can be very intense so its good to be in the right frame of mind. Then its just very interesting. It has changed me in ways I never expected.

02/19/24 05:37 PM #13613    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Jack,

The last few lines of your post sound a lot like a hallucinogenic experience what with the color changes and visitations from ancestors while in the sweat lodge. Makes me wonder what was in that pipe - perhaps peyote? Intense heat could also alter the brain.

Just thinkin',

​​​​​Jim


02/20/24 08:46 PM #13614    

 

David Mitchell

I meant to write this Yesterday - "Presidents Day".

I found myself listening to Chris Cuomo's comments on Washington's farewell address.

Washington made three main points in his famous farewell address. If I may summarize in very brief terms. It bears mentioning today.

 

First) We should avoid the two party system because it leads to a "zero sum game" that is, where one side must win and the other side must lose. Compromise becomes more difficult. The end of this seems to me to be a race to the bottom, where one side wins only by ventually destroying the other. Hmmmmm, I cannot disagree. Was he gazing into the future?

Second) We should avoid getting tangled up in other nations buisness. Far be it from me to disagree with his wisdom. But I submit that George Washington never met Vladimir Putin.

ThirdI cannot recall the third principle. My memory has gone "fuzzy".

 

(If I were permitted to add my own #4, it would be that no one could run for President, the Senate, the House of Representatives, or nomination to the Supreme Court after the age of 70, on account'a their brains become "fuzzy" too. 

 


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