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05/16/24 07:59 AM #13933    

 

Michael McLeod

yep that was a good one mm. sacriligeous, sure, but we'll let you slide just this once if you give us five our fathers and ten hail marys.


05/16/24 04:54 PM #13934    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Harrison Butker for the win. One doesn't have to buy into every single opinion another person holds, but they have a right to respectfully voice their personal views.


05/16/24 08:34 PM #13935    

 

Michael McLeod

Sure, mm. It's a story that will blow over.

I just feel sorry for any Catholic career women who were in the audience when Butler went on his rant. Same for any gays in the crowd.

I have no idea whether the faith itself has done much to embrace individuals who bypass the cookie cutter in favor of alternative lifestyles and choices, but I'd like to think that it has. I'm going to hope and believe that many catholics are not as rigid and judgmental in their thinking as football dude.

 


05/17/24 09:05 AM #13936    

 

Michael McLeod

Screw the rest of the world for sitting on their asses. I'm not the corny type but the humanitarian pier that took a thousand soldiers and sailors from our military to construct in order to bring in aid to the gaza strip makes me proud to be an American.


05/17/24 12:18 PM #13937    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike, Harrison Butker is not just a great football "dude", he is a principled, thoughtful, dedicated Catholic man who also happens to be a husband, father and football player. He was invited to speak at a Catholic college commencement and he shared his personal thoughts on life with the graduates. For this, he is being demonized in the MSM press and the NFL (and let us not forget that many NFL players have histories of domestic abuse, drug abuse, rape, etc.). Listen to the entirety of his address and then compare it with the myriad of social and mental health issues running rampant in society today. 

https://www.ncregister.com/news/harrison-butker-speech-at-benedictine   


05/17/24 01:53 PM #13938    

 

Michael McLeod

saved this.

I read it when I get down. Actually I'm reading it today because I'm going through my office shutting most of it down. I'm semi retiring at 75. Will teach one class per semester - that's what I've been doing the last few years - and cut way way back on writing assignments. Planning to Work on Myself. Maybe do some retreats. Get serious about meditation. Really I should have started with the Work On Myself part. And of course enjoy my garden, my swimming pool, my sweetheart and my children and become a better person rather than a better writer and a better teacher. Of course they are interrelated but the shift in priorities will, I hope, bring enlightenment and joy my way and bring me closer to the people I love.

Meanwhile - this where I started this message and what prompted it  -- I hope other students felt the same way this one did.

 

 

Hi (Mr McLeod), Michael.

You were my instructor when I attended the University of Central Florida way back in the 90’s.

I want to say that it was a pleasure having you as an instructor and I would like you to know that I still remember your class and the wonderful literature I was exposed to because of you. Thank you. I still remember reading a piece from Maya Angelou and feeling so very ignorant to the ways of the world after the reading. You introduced me to literature. 

I’m much older now, working as an art director in the film and television industry. My writing may not be to standards, but that would have more to do with the fact that I was probably too busy eating donuts and drinking coffee in your class.   It was so rude of me, but you still greeted me with a smile in the morning. I actually only remember two of my college professors and you are one of them. Don’t let the young ones get you down. We all come around eventually. 


05/17/24 09:41 PM #13939    

 

David Mitchell

Very nice Mike


05/17/24 09:55 PM #13940    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

What an uplifting letter to receive Mike, and I know it was very well deserved. It proves that we never know how impactful our words and actions can have in another person's life! 

Since this is National Foster Care Awareness Month, perhaps this would be a good time to share a very moving and insightful video of Tori and how children swept up in the state's foster care system can become happy, caring, giving, productive human beings through the loving care of foster parents. My daughter's fostering experience is also featured on this site, but Tori's Story is an especially moving and inspiring one. 

https://springsoflove.org/parish.../host-a-watch-party/


05/18/24 05:33 AM #13941    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

That´s a beautiful and obviously well-deserved tribute, Mike. Job well done, Prof!  Enjoy your extra free time now being dedicated to you and yours. You and they have earned that.

 

MM  The stories of the Foster Care website provide a positive and timely counterpart to those presented in an excellent book I am now reading, Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver. 


05/18/24 08:37 AM #13942    

 

Michael McLeod

Love the Tory story. And thanks for the lovely notes about that lovely note I mentioned below. It really does inspire me and keeps me going. Not all students give a ... about what I'm trying to engage them about and it's a battle to keep that from getting me down. 

I wanted to add something that may be of use to others in our age group. It more or less ties in with my own struggle to keep my head up and stay in the game as long as I can. I am no longer writing as much as I did but as I noted below I still teach a class at the lovely college, Rollins College, near my home and so I'm doing battle to stay intellectually acute. Towards that end I have an upcoming appointment with a neuropsychologist. I think that's the proper title. I've been plagued by encroaching forgetfullness and Denise, my fabulous Significant Other, has tracked down this specialist and I'm quite hopeful for myself and curious as to what my course of therapy will look like. Will keep you posted as I'm guessing I'm not the only one in the class of 66 with this issue.

Now if I can just remember when that appointment is......


05/18/24 08:54 AM #13943    

 

John Jackson

Fostering kids must be incredibly difficult.  I have nothing but respect and admiration for those who have the energy and generosity to do it well.

MM, I believe one or more of your daughters are nurses and the same comment applies to nursing and,  I’m sure, to them.

And, Mike, we should all be thankful for our teachers.  I’ve been impressed by and large with the teachers I have known (mine and my kids’) but it sounds like you went the extra mile.


05/18/24 10:44 AM #13944    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike,

A letter well deserved!

Those kind of comments, coming years after the fact, are indicative of what true effect you had on the students you taught and mentored.

Jim


05/18/24 11:39 AM #13945    

 

Michael McLeod

Thanks all. Glad it struck a note. I shouldn't be surprised. That individual will likely never know that whatever I gave her she gave me back in a different but equal measure. I'm a lot less likely to get a little ho-hum and take the opportunity to teach for granted now, seeing that it pays off in ways I tend to forget. I'm thinking - ok I am getting a little preachy here, I can feel it coming on....I'm remembering that saying: "Do the right thing. And if it doesn't work, do the right thing." 

Etc., etc, etc.

Yes it's great to be acknowledged for something good that you did. But you need to keep doing it whether or not that good is acknowledged; whether or not you get feedback about it. I know this is an oldie but a goodie but: Virtue really is its own reward. And yes, even as I write that I'm thinking: Sure, but it's awful nice to get a pat on the back. You just have to have the strength of character not to depend on it. Which isn't easy. But it works.

 


05/18/24 03:33 PM #13946    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike, I have shared with others some very similar advice I had once heard to keep life more simple, & that was, "just do the next right thing". 


05/18/24 03:59 PM #13947    

Joseph Gentilini

WOW!  What rich stories you have all written.  Michael, congratulations on how much you touched others through your teaching.  I am sure there are many more, but they didn't have the grace to thank you. It is well deserved. Thanks for sharing this.

MM, thanks for the Tory story.  Fostering children is a gift for them and even for those who take on  the task.  While a gift for others, it is also a serious responsibility that comes with many challenges.

There are several teachers that have touched my life, both at St. Agatha Elementary school, at Watterson, in college and graduate school. In my elementary school, the one who impacted me positively was Sister Anna Mary, my 7th grade teacher. What I most remember from those days was how kind she was. Many years later, I think after I graduated from Watterson I made contact with her again.  During the summer of 1966, I was a passenger in a Volkswagan Bug and we were hit by a 2 ton truck.  I had a traumatic brain injury and they didn't know if I would be able to study or learn, etc.  This was before any Traumatic Brain rehabilitation.  I wrote to Sister Anna Mary and she was so supportive.  I kept in touch with her until her death in 1991.  When I would visit the Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky for retreats, I would stop by the convent in Louisville and have breakfast with her.  When would introduce me to the other sisters, etc.  When she passed her congregation, the Sister of Charity of Nazareth, sent me her small scapular and her personal rosary.  I keep the rosary in my car and pray on it fairly often while driving.

Sister Raymunda is one at Watterson who taught English and Literature.  After I graduated and many years later, I made contact with her and once went to visit her in NYC where she was then stationed.  When she moved back to Columbus at the Dominican Sisters Motherhouse, Leo and I had her over for dinner a few times, etc.  At her wake, people could come up to the podium and recall memories of her. I was given the chance to do so myself and told the sisters how she had touched my life in a positive way.

When I went to college after my TBI (taking a lighter academic load the first semester to see if I would be able to study, etc.), I received my first D in my English Literature course with Sister Louise, OP.  I panicked and sat down with her.  She showed me a writing 'trick' that I used from then on to help me write a paragraph, a paper, and yes, even when I wrote my dissertation for my PhD years later.  She became a wonderful friend with whom I kept in contact until she passed.  She told me once that I was the first person outside her personal family that she had grown to love - I loved her also.

In my Doctoral studies, I was graced with a wonderful academic advisor, Mel Witmer, at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. I don't think without his guidance and wisdom I would have ever finished my course work or my dissertation.  He was also so kind and supporting.  One semester (or quarter - I can't remember), I was feeling down and struggling with some of the glasses - statistics for one!  I went to see him and told him that I just felt inadequate.  I had mentioned to a few other professors in the program that I just didn't feel I measured up, but using the words that I felt inadequate.  Dr. Witmer's comment to me at the time was, "Joe, the more you keep telling us that you are inadequate, the more you prove to all of us how adequate you are."  So positive and supportive.  To this day, I remain in touch with him and his wife, have visited with him in Hilton Head Island where he lives.

Your stories that you have written about in our Watterson66 group has caused me to have a wonderful trip on memory lane and how others have touched me positively in my life.  So thanks, Michael and MM and your stories.  Joe

 

 


05/18/24 04:29 PM #13948    

 

David Mitchell

 M/M

The very touching foster care videos remind me of a place just across he Ohio River from my daughter Megan. She lives in a southeastern part of Cincinnati and drives to work at a place called Holly Hill across the Ohio river in Kentucky They are involved in a sort of foster care, but with on campus housing for girls ages 8 to 18. I guess it has been there for over 100 years.

They take girls who have fallen out of the foster care system, or abused and abandoned, and some who have been trafficked. She has shared some amazing and tragic stories about these young girls. She tells me there is a lot of human trafficking in impoverised northern Kentucky. They get a lot of feedback from the girls they take in and she has shared some pretty awful stories.

 

---------------

 

Mike

I would blame memory loss on your being an English Major, but I don't think I could get away with that one any more.            I lose track of my wallet, my car keys, or any one of my many ball point pens so often that it drives me crazy!

NOTE: I now have a need to keep track of my car keys because - - wait for it - -  I just bought a car and am driving for the first time since a bad accident back in early November. You may think that is a hardship. The real hardship has been going these recent two months  at home without TV.  I have been trying to set up a new TV and cannot figure the darnn thing out - switching from cable to one of those digital antennas.  Either this stuff I ordered was junk, or my two younger friends are as confused as I am. I blame this on being born in the wrong century.

Thank God for Amazon Prime. I can return anything to a nearby Staples for free.

 

 


05/18/24 04:51 PM #13949    

 

David Mitchell

Joe,

I also loved Sister Raymunda. But I had forgotten her name until you just now mentioned her. I had a funny incident with her one day in the hallway of the senior wing. 

I was late for a class, fumbling around my locker (and probably making too much noise) when she came out of the nearest classroom to see what I was doing. She approaches me with a question; "What's your name?" 

I responded with a joke name that Tom Litzinger and I used on each other all the time; "My name is Icky ticky tambo no so limbo umma moochy cona stopppa nocka vicha papa stinga ritsky."

And she said "I see, and my name is Sister Kunygunda. Now I sugest you get in to your classrom."

We became sort of budies after that encounter.


05/18/24 06:20 PM #13950    

Joseph Gentilini

David, loved your encounter with Raymunda!  I remember getting into her class (after lunch) one day and we were noisy.  She stood in the doorway, crossed her arms over her chest, and looked like she was going to kill us.  We all shut up and she came in then and had class.  Funny the things we remember from those days.  joe


05/18/24 08:23 PM #13951    

 

David Mitchell

Joe,

As I recall, she could be quite funny, and in a sort of oddball way.


05/19/24 02:19 AM #13952    

 

Michael McLeod

 

well I may have to reconsider my opinion about him now that I have something in common with football dude: a knack for getting in trouble with nuns. One thing's for sure: You won't be seeing any nuns wearing his jersey around! The church has sold out to the libs! Even the benedictines are politically correct!

 

See below.

 

 

 

Benedictine Sisters denounce Harrison Butker’s speech as his jersey sales rise

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - FEBRUARY 11: Harrison Butker #7 of the Kansas City Chiefs arrives before Super Bowl LVIII at Allegiant Stadium on February 11, 2024 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Tim Nwachukwu/Getty Images)
By The Athletic Staff
May 18, 2024

1.6K


Inline Image Not Displayed

The Benedictine Sisters of Mount St. Scholastica spoke out against Harrison Butker’s controversial graduation speech at Benedictine College, saying they “reject a narrow definition of what it means to be Catholic” and “the assertion that being a homemaker is the highest calling for a woman.”

During the commencement speech at the Catholic school in Atchison, Kansas, the Kansas City Chiefs kicker addressed gender ideologies and said a woman’s most important title is “homemaker.” He also referred to Pride Month as an example of the “deadly sins,” and said he wanted the graduating class to prevent political leaders from interfering with social issues that impact their relationship with the church.

 

In a statement released Friday, the sisters of Mount St. Scholastica said they “do not believe that Harrison Butker’s comments in his 2024 Benedictine College commencement address represent the Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts college that our founders envisioned and in which we have been so invested.

“Instead of promoting unity in our church, our nation, and the world, his comments seem to have fostered division. … We sisters have dedicated our lives to God and God’s people, including the many women whom we have taught and influenced during the past 160 years. These women have made a tremendous difference in the world in their roles as wives and mothers and through their God-given gifts in leadership, scholarship, and their careers.”

The Benedictine Sisters are a founding institution and sponsor of Benedictine College, according to the Mount St. Scholastica website.

Butker’s jersey sales appear to be rising significantly since he delivered the 20-minute speech. The women’s jersey, which sells for $129.99, is out of stock on the official Chiefs Pro Shop. His men’s jersey is among the top sellers on NFLshop.com, listed as the “most popular in Kansas City Chiefs.”

The Chiefs declined to comment when reached Thursday by The Athletic, but Tavia Hunt, the wife of Chiefs owner Clark Hunt, posted pictures of herself with her daughters on Instagram on Friday. The post included a photo listing the pros and cons of stay-at-home parenting and a screenshot of the Institute for Family Studies website with the headline “Who is happiest? Married mothers and fathers, per the latest general social survey.”

In the post she said she “always encouraged my daughters to be highly educated and chase their dreams. … But I also want them to know that I believe finding a spouse who loves and honors you as or before himself and raising a family together is one of the greatest blessings this world has to offer.”

Hunt added: “I also caution against taking things out of context.”

 
Tavia Hunt, center, and Clark Hunt, right, at the 2023 Super Bowl. (Christian Petersen / Getty Images)

The NFL distanced itself from the ideas Butker expressed in his speech. NFL senior vice president and chief diversity and inclusion officer Jonathan Beane said in a statement to The Athletic that Butker gave the speech “in his personal capacity.”

“His views are not those of the NFL as an organization. The NFL is steadfast in our commitment to inclusion, which only makes our league stronger,” Beane said. His statement was first reported by People.

 

Legendary college football coach and TV analyst Lou Holtz took to X to thank Butker on Thursday “for standing strong in your faith values.”

“Your commencement speech at Benedictine College showed courage and conviction and I admire that,” Holtz wrote, later linking to a form from America First Works for people to sign and offer their thanks to Butker for his comments.

 

05/20/24 10:00 AM #13953    

 

Michael McLeod

Big spread on columbus in the ny times today.

not a pleasant one.

it's about a rise in gun violence in some cities

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/20/us/gun-violence-shootings-columbus-ohio.html

 

 


05/21/24 10:20 PM #13954    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

In The Year 2100....

Sometimes my mind just starts to wander. This seems to happen more often as I get older and I suspect most of you experience the same thing.

As we turn - or have turned - 76 this year, the generation who is born this year will turn our age in the year 2100. 

As we look back on our lives we have experienced and seen so many things that have changed life on this planet - some good, some bad and some that no one would have ever dreamt of in the year 1948: landing on the moon, cell phones, microwave ovens, televisions in just about every home,  robotic surgery, self driving cars, artificial meat, home computers, tubeless tires, digital film, and the list goes on. 

Without involving politics how do you see the world in 76 years? What technologies are awaiting discovery that could change human life on earth, especially here in America? Will the  buildings in which we live now still be standing as are some of the ones in which we spent our childhood are still there today? Will we still have monitary currency in our wallets and purses? What forms of transportation will be available? Will factories still need people to manufacture goods? Will we discover ways to control the weather (not climate) like making rain or stopping a tornado in its path? Will science be able to prevent aging? Will roads be made of something that are pothole proof? What is the next generation of communication devices? Again, the list goes on.

Just thinkin',

Jim

 

 

 


05/22/24 10:46 AM #13955    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Here you go Jim....Similar to the "15 minute city", but much,much larger in scope, is Saudi Arabia's answer to "sustainability" ....."The Line". Saudi Arabia is currently at work constructing a one building city stretching over 100 miles. Its aim is to house 9 million residents on a footprint of 13 square miles. What could possibly go wrong???

https://line-neom.com/

 


05/22/24 02:48 PM #13956    

 

David Mitchell

It would appear that "A I" will be instrumental in many of the changes that lie ahead. And, although it offers a lot of potential, there is also a potential for much harm.  

 

-----------------

 

On another topic, there is something controversial that has bothered me for some time. And I think its safe to put on this page instead of the "other" page. I have though of posting about this for some time now, and today it hits the news in USA Today. It is the problem of Mexican cartels buying tons of weapons - including fully automatic (.50 caliber) machine guns - from gun shops in Texas and Arizona - but also as far away as Racine Wisconsin.

They are using local "straw" buyers who have no police records to buy and transport the weapons to agents on the border. Ita all legal under current laws. 

We are sitting back, doing nothing to stop these powerful cartels from arming themselves to the teeth. I have also expresssed the opinion that we need to find a way to shut down these cartels who have enslaved many areas of Mexico and forced the people to head north to escape the danger.  

 

You can find stories documenting this in numerous news articles - USAToday, The Guardian, etc.

Imagine selling a .50 caliber machine gun to a private citizen. It is insanity - pure and simple!


05/23/24 09:44 AM #13957    

 

Michael McLeod

Jim: thanks for introducing quite the teaser. You're doing so at a very frightening time, what with the environment poised on the brink as never before - and that is not an exagerration - and the political situation on an equally dangerous brink.

This made me feel a bit better, though. Given that it's on the subject and only 8 minutes long I though I'd post it. Starts with a war but takes an optimistic tack from there.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/22/opinion/war-america-israel-gaza.html

 

 


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