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06/14/24 09:20 PM #14062    

 

Michael McLeod

From the way you talk about it, Dave, I assume it's your favorite musical.

I gotta go with Hamilton.

 


06/15/24 11:33 AM #14063    

 

Michael McLeod

interesting musings from the doctor in the house -- meaning the white one.

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/14/us/politics/fauci-trump-book-covid.html

 


06/16/24 03:36 PM #14064    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Mike,  Wondering how you have been affected by the "Non-Climate Change" rains Florida is being hit by.

Are you two safe?  Any problems obtaining supplie, food medicine etc.?

 


06/16/24 05:17 PM #14065    

 

Michael McLeod

Our governor says we're fine and that global warming isn't happening so that's good enough for me, Joe.

Actually I notice it's hot and rainy but I don't stay outside long enough to discover just how hot and rainy. 

And no I have not noticed a difference, so accustomed to extremes of rain and heat at this time of year that I am.There really isn't a lot of difference between 95 degrees and 100 degrees when you've been living with it long enough and you can afford good air conditioning.

Orlando is in Central Florida, which, unlike south florida, has drought conditions for much of the year -- dry, dry winters. So we welcome the  rainy season when it comes, though as for the heat that comes with it as our half-ass winter turns into a summer-like spring, not so much. 

Could be worse. We just have heat. California has wild fires.The planet is slowly smothering. Our generation will die off having failed to save the globe for those who follow us. We see species all around us going extinct. You'd think we would take that as a personal warning.

 


06/18/24 12:32 AM #14066    

 

Michael McLeod

 

I have a wart on my elbow. That's not exactly like a wart on the end of my nose but it is a pretty goofy place for a wart just the same. So I have been dabbing it with Compound W. At least I thought I was. I just looked at the vial that I had been taking out and using for the past several days and noticed that it said, quite clearly, on the label: "Ear wax softener."

I do not know how long I've been making that mistake but meanwhile the wart looks like it's been enjoying the attention. Now that I look at it I think it likes the ear wax softener treatment. It has developed a cheerful disposition, or at least a healthy little glow. It's probably thinking, "It's about time I get a little respect around here."  

There's a morale and a lesson in this story, and no, it isn't "Try being nice to your warts. They have feeling too, you know."

It's: "When was the last time you cleaned out your medicine cabinet?


06/18/24 03:26 PM #14067    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm going to keep on making these clever posts regardless of whether any of you respond to me. And then I am going to collect them and publish them as a book. And the book will become a best seller. And then you'll be sorry!!!!!! (runs away crying)


06/18/24 05:27 PM #14068    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Gosh darn, Mike I was seriously resisting the urge to respond to your posts, but I can hardly resist wanting to become a part of your "best seller"!  And so I will respond to Post #14063. Fauci is every bit as narcissistic as Trump and lies as well as any politician. Fauci covered up his agency's role in the financing of the Wuhan Institute and gain-of-function research, and then proceeded to lock us down, mask us up, shut us up, and inject us all with an experimental mRNA gene therapy as part of a worldwide agenda. I hope to see him imprisoned one day for his actions. However, I won't hold my breath.

https://youtu.be/2GgpKRoRYGE?si=6PbdSCmZc5fFxuui 

P.S. I hope your wart has softened up.smiley


06/18/24 09:44 PM #14069    

 

Michael McLeod

So long, "say hey."

Remembering Willie Mays as Both Untouchable and Human

Mays, who died on Tuesday at 93, had been perfect for so long that the shock of seeing baseball get the best of him was the shock of seeing a god become mortal.

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Willie Mays in 1954.Credit...Patrick A. Burns/The New York Times

Kurt Streeter

By Kurt Streeter

June 18, 2024, 9:14 p.m. ET

At the end, the Say Hey Kid looked nothing like the extraordinary force who had been at the center of the American imagination for much of the 20th century.

The Kid — Willie Mays — struggled at the plate and stumbled on the basepaths. A line drive arced his way, easily catchable for Mays during most of his career. But he fell. Another outfield mistake caused the game to be tied in the ninth inning.

He was a creaky-kneed 42 years old on that October afternoon, Game 2 of the 1973 World Series — Mays’s New York Mets in Oakland facing the A’s. On the grandest stage, the ravages of time had settled upon the game’s most gilded star.

That he would redeem himself at the plate three innings later is often forgotten. The unthinkable had happened. Mays had not only failed, he had appeared lost, clumsy and out of sorts.

The shock of seeing him that way would linger long past his playing days as a warning: Don’t be like Willie Mays, sticking around too long, stumbling in center field, a shadow of his former self. Such became the axiom, uttered in so many words by everyone from politicians to business leaders to commentators weighing in on great athletes who yearn to play into their twilight.

Quit before it is too late.

In retirement, Mays, who died on Tuesday at 93, did his best to ignore the game that would be his last. But there is another way to view its echoes.

The profound way that Mays’s struggles stirred powerful emotion is a testament to both his greatness and the grip this son of the Jim Crow South — the sixth Black player in the major leagues, after Jackie Robinson — once held on Americans of every color and creed.

He had been perfect for so long. The shock of seeing baseball get the best of Willie Howard Mays was the shock of seeing a god become mortal.

How great was he?

Six hundred sixty. That is how many home runs bolted off Mays’s bat during his career. When the Say Hey Kid retired, only Babe Ruth had more.

Mays ended 22 major league seasons with a total of 3,283 hits and held a .302 lifetime batting average, eye-popping for a player with such power. Twenty-four times, he was named to the All-Star team. Twelve times, he won the Gold Glove Award. Ten times, he drove in more than 100 runs.

How The Times decides who gets an obituary. There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary, please suggest it here.

Learn more about our process.

He was named the National League’s most valuable player twice. If it were not for a need to spread the award among players, some experts say, he could have been the M.V.P. seven more times.

Numbers and accolades tell only part of his story. For it was how Mays played — the way he bent the confines of baseball to his will with his smarts, his speed, his style and his power — that set him apart as the most deeply beloved of stars.

“I don’t know that Willie Mays ever got booed, even in the opposition ballpark,” said Bob Kendrick, president of the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum. “That is how loved he was. He was so likable and affable to people of all backgrounds. Every race.

 

“Every time he stepped on the field, you knew you would see something special that you likely had never seen before.”

His emergence four seasons after Robinson had broken the major league color barrier in 1947 was perfectly timed.

In 1951, just 10 percent of American homes had television sets. During Robinson’s prime years, only thin slices of the public could see him play — either from the stands or on TV.

But technology improved, and television sets became more affordable. By 1954, when Mays won his first National League M.V.P. Award, roughly half of American homes had TV sets — and baseball was televised nationally for the first time.

That fall, Mays and his Giants stunned Cleveland and won the World Series. Game 1 entered baseball lore because of a play that became known simply as the Catch.

The Catch began with a turbocharged center field sprint, the brown and burnt orange No. 24 on Mays’s back facing home plate as he turned and chased Vic Wertz’s scorching blast into the depths of center field.

How did Mays track the ball clearly enough to see it arc over his shoulder perfectly into his mitt?

How did he have the lucidity to remember that stopping base runners was paramount, or the ability to pirouette and fire a blistering strike to second base?

“This was the throw of a giant,” the sportswriter Arnold Hano wrote in his dispatch from the game. “The throw of a howitzer made human.”

Mays and the Giants moved west to San Francisco to begin the 1958 season. By then, national baseball broadcasts were commonplace, and almost every American household had a television. Mays seemed to be everywhere.

Unlike the outspoken, at times polarizing, Robinson and other Black stars of the day, Mays steered clear of weighing in on politics and civil rights. Staying above the fray had a benefit: White fans, never offended, idolized him with a fervor few, if any, Black athletes had ever felt.

So it became that his Giants led visiting National League teams in attendance for eight years during the 1960s. And so it became that Mays appeared on national TV talk shows, in comedies and on the covers of the most popular national magazines — Time, Life, Look, Collier’s and, naturally, Sports Illustrated.

Hollywood stars held Mays in awe and weren’t afraid to offer compliments. “If I played baseball like you,” Frank Sinatra gushed, “I’d be the happiest guy in the world.”

When Mays played, he was part of a triumvirate of center field greats. The others were Duke Snider, with the Dodgers, and Mickey Mantle, with the Yankees.

Snider and Mantle were part of the old guard: white players who represented major league baseball as it had been.

Mays was wholly different.

“He played in a way unheard-of at the time in the major leagues,” said Harry Edwards, professor emeritus of sociology at the University of California, Berkeley. “It would have been called showboating had Jackie done it.

“But by the time Willie came through, Jackie had cleared that space, and Larry Doby in Cleveland had cleared that space. There was room for the evolution of Black play consistent with the style and the culture within which those players emerged.”

Mays had polished that style as a teenager, barnstorming with the Birmingham Black Barons through the Negro Leagues — where showmanship was viewed as a must.

During his rookie season in the majors, he “would blurt, ‘Say who,’ ‘Say what,’ ‘Say where,’ ‘Say hey,’” said Barney Kremenko, a sportswriter for The New York Journal American. “In my paper, I tabbed him the Say Hey Kid. It stuck.”

“Say hey” was part of his style. So were his throws from every imaginable angle. His basket catches. His daring forays on the basepaths. And his hat, which fit just a little small so it would fly off with every sprint and highlight his speed.

Mays buffed his fingernails, always wanting to look good. And then there was his smooth, powerful, sweeping swing, worthy of Rembrandt.

A certain kind of grimness is common to modern athletes. But when Mays walked onto the field, it looked as though there was nowhere else he belonged, nowhere else he would rather be.

“You would stay on the bench during batting practice simply to watch him — and just watching him walk, even that was special,” said Cleon Jones, who grew up in Alabama idolizing Mays and ended up sharing the outfield with him when the Giants traded Mays to the Mets in 1972.

“I’m telling you, even his uniform seemed to fit better than everybody else’s uniform,” Jones said. “The players held him with a reverence that felt almost spiritual.”

Nobody wanted to see a god failing in twilight.

By then, the end loomed.

“He was badly injured,” recalled Jones, whose locker was next to Mays’s. “That knee looked like a watermelon. I would tell him, ‘Take a day off,’ but he wouldn’t. He didn’t want to let the team down. He couldn’t function, but he never said no.

“I could see he had no business being in that lineup, no business playing, but Willie went out there. He felt he owed so much to the fans.”

In that fateful second game of the 1973 World Series, in which the Mets played the A’s in Oakland, Willie Mays came off the bench to relieve Rusty Staub as a pinch-runner.

First he fell rounding second base.

Then came the outfield blunder, as he ran to catch the bullet line drive and fell again. And then another clumsy fielding mistake.

“This is the thing I think all sports fans in all areas hate to see,” intoned Tony Kubek, announcing the game on national television. “One of the greats, playing in his last years, having this kind of trouble, standing up and falling down.”

To all of us, it was a gut punch

But what is often forgotten — and what we should choose to remember — is that in this World Series game, Mays stood up one more time.

In the 12th inning, with the sun fading, with the score at 6-6 and with two men on base and two out, the A’s pitcher, Rollie Fingers, commanded the mound. Mays dug in at the plate.

The pitcher coiled. He kicked his left leg high and unfurled a fastball — stiff, straight and down the middle.

Mays swung and rapped the ball hard. It bounced over the mound, glanced past second base and caromed into the outfield.

That was the last hit in a career for all careers, and it put the Mets in front for good, though they would eventually lose the series in seven games.

Perched in the Oakland press box, Red Smith pounded out his column for The Times.

“Never another like him,” Smith wrote. “Never in this world.”

And never will there be.


06/18/24 10:03 PM #14070    

 

David Mitchell

Say Hey Kid!

My father took my best friend and I to visit friends in New York during the 1964 World's Fair. Right across a big pedestrian bridge from the fairgrounds was Shea Staduim, where the Mets played baseball.

My friend and I (both avid baseball fans at 15 and 16) went to a Mets game one night - a sort of special night for New York baseball fans. One of the most famous ball players of all time, who had started his career in New York with the Giants, then moved with the team to San Francisco, then finally requested to end his carreer in New York. He was playing that night for his "new" home team - the New York Mets. 

We got our wish to see Willy play in a 17 inning game - which caused us to miss our train connection in Jamica, Long Island to our friends house in Baldwin, Long Island at 3:00 a.m. 

He passed today and will always be remembered, not just for his 660 home runs, but for "the catch" - still regarded as the single most famous catch in the history oout 450 feet from teh platef the game. 

I forgot to point out that this catch was in the old Polo Grounds, which had a much, much deeper outfield than any other ballpark in the Majors. (the "polo grounds" had actually been a "polo ground" before, so the outfield corners were huge).

Running with his back to the plate, about 450 feet from the plate, over his head basket catch.

Ridiculous!




06/18/24 10:21 PM #14071    

 

David Mitchell

Weird!

I could swear I entered mine before Mike's  (must be because I kept revising it)

 

 

And I'm on Compound W too. Maybe there's a connection here. 


06/19/24 08:36 AM #14072    

 

Michael McLeod

Hey mm I did see your fauci post here's another one,

 

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-01657-6

 

 


06/19/24 08:39 AM #14073    

 

Michael McLeod

now if only there was a doctor among us who would like to weigh in on the accusation,which sounds like it would makea great sci fi story.


06/19/24 08:44 AM #14074    

 

John Jackson

I'm not a doctor but I’m extremely thankful Fauci did what he did.  The CDC and the health care establishment may not have gotten everything right – after all, this was an unprecedented situation, our first pandemic in a century.  But these attacks/conspiracy theories are part of a consistent war on science (and on people who know what they’re talking about) waged by the right.

Today, COVID looks like something more or less like the flu, but that’s because it has morphed into much milder forms. The Monday morning quarterbacks on the right forget that in the early days, hospitals were turning away ambulances and freezer trucks were needed to hold the dead in makeshift morgues.  More than a million people died terrible deaths, gasping for breath as they died alone in ICUs.  Watching people die this way took a huge emotional toll on doctors, and especially nurses, and many have left their professions or retired early.

I give Trump very little credit, but one of the few things he did right was to throw billions into vaccine development, essentially telling vaccine developers that they would be made whole for their efforts. 

And those vaccines saved countless lives while we waited for COVID to slowly morph into the much less serious variants we have today.


06/19/24 10:55 AM #14075    

 

Michael McLeod

Yes. This goes beyond politics, what Fauci has been subjected to. It's evil. History will sort it out but in the meantime a man whose actions saved hundreds of thousands of lives is in fear for his own.

 

 


06/19/24 11:31 AM #14076    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

Mike & John did you even listen to the doctor (who actually attempted to treat Covid patients) question Fauci during the Congressional hearings? I suspect not since you have not mentioned his line of questioning, but continue to pronounce the now proven false government narratives. 

 


06/19/24 12:49 PM #14077    

 

John Jackson

MM, I watched the video and what I saw was a veins-bulging grandstander who did all the talking and never gave Fauci a chance to respond – typical right wing blowhard tactics and hardly convincing.  

Statistics showed again and again that vaccines were overwhelmingly  effective in preventing Covid infections (and deaths)  from the initial and most severe variants.  At the time no one knew for sure what we were dealing with but ICU’s were overflowing and the bodies were piling up and I for one think it was entirely appropriate that those who ignored the science (and thereby put not only themselves but others at risk) were asked to stay home from  schools and workplaces.


06/19/24 01:43 PM #14078    

 

David Mitchell

Mary Margatet,

I'd be curious to know how we explain the ratio of deaths between vaccinated and unvacinnated. In every study one can find, the numbers are around 3 to 1 in the survival rates of those who were vaccinated.

 (okay, more like 2.6 to 1)

I'd be curious to know if you stood in line as a kid (as I did) at school to receive you polio shot? And that shot had a bad batch from one of the major supplying labs. Did your parents make you stand in that line? I didn't have any choice, as the physican giving the shots was my Dad. 


06/19/24 06:14 PM #14079    

 

Joseph D. McCarthy

Donna I just read a front page article, in the weekly newspaper, and thought it might interest you and your Ukranian friends.

"The Hubar family arrived in the United States December 2022 from Chernihiv, Ukraine."  And now to use Michael's poetic license to condensed the article.

BACKGROUND: The father is now a maintenance worker at a local winery, the mother is presently a housewife, the youngest son attrends grade school and the oldest son is a junior in high school.

Recently a gentleman (W) contacted John N., the one person who has been responible for bringing Ukrainian families to the United States.  His (W) son had a car that he no longer needed, which he had bought from an UKRAINIAN man several years ago.  His son wanted to donate it to an Ukrainian family.  John got together with the local Rotary Club and the owners of a local body shop to go over the auto.  When all was done they donated the car to the Hubar family, all body shop work was free and the Rotary Club added a generous donation.

Hope that lifts your spirits.

Joe    


06/19/24 07:08 PM #14080    

 

Mary Margaret Clark (Schultheis)

John, the Dr,/Congressman was expressing his frustration over being threatened to have his medical license taken away for the sin of merely questioning the Covid treatment protocols put in place by bureaucrats like Fauci and Birx who never had to treat a single Covid patient.

What happened during Covid was unprecedented censorship and harrasment of those who were finding that the patient/doctor relationship was being thrown out the window only to be replaced by a singular government dictated protocol. Doctors were forbidden by the medical industrial complex to use their own judgment in recommending treatment for the patients placed in their care. This was especially true of time tested and safe drugs such as hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin. These drugs have since been widely vindicated for their efficacy in treating Covid, but you don't see any public health official, the CDC, or the FDA offering an apology,  Yes people died, but many died needlessly as they were told to take nothing at all at the first signs of Covid and were told only to report to the ER if they had trouble breathing. Upon arrival at the hospital, the ONLY protocol hospitals followed was to give the patient an EUA  drug called Remdesivir, which had known side effects of kidney or liver failure. When these patients ended up in kidney failure, the next treatment scenario was to place the patient on a ventilator from which patients seldom recovered. Furthermore, due to the most restrictive hospital protocols the patients were not allowed to have family members with them to advocate for their well-being. Priests were prevented from entering the hospitals to give the Annointing of the Sick and comfort to dying patients.

You speak of hospitals being overrun, but other than the initial cases in New York where the Governor exacerbated the situation by placing ill patients in nursing homess, the situation was not as you say. Do you remember the 1,000 bed ship sent from Norfolk to aid the New York hospitals?  It left after 4 weeks having treated just 182 patients. In addition, the  Army Corps of Engineers was mobilized in the U.S. to hire private contractors to build emergency field hospitals around the country at a cost of $660 million. But four months into the pandemic, most of those facilities had not treated a single patient according to NPR. My daughters came home from their shifts at Riverside reporting that the Covid floors were practically empty. In fact, the Convention Center had been staged as a field hospital at a cost to Franklin County of $5 million dollars, but never used. 

We now know that  thousands of Covid reported deaths were actually deaths from other commorbidities, Hospitals were financilly incentivized to report Covid cases, and because they were actually losing money due to shutting down all of their routine surgeries, they would test all patients with a PCR test and those tests were more often than not run at high cycle threshoold to produce a false negative. I could go on and on about the deceit and lies and financial incentives that turned this nation upside down for over two years, but I doubt that will change a single opinion of those who continue to remain in the MSM bubble. 

P.S. No one seems to care that children were the least to be harmed in any way by contracting Covid and yet they suffered so much from the lies about the mask, social distance mitigations and experimental shots.. Those of us who objected to these harsh and unnecessary means were called anti-science and worse than that....a threat to others. Those measures have since been proven to be themselves "anti-science". Something Fauci has been forced to admit.

https://townhall.com/columnists/betsymccaughey/2024/06/12/time-for-the-truth-about-the-pandemic-n2640325

https://thecivilrightslawyer.com/2021/04/06/masks-do-nothing-to-stop-the-spread-of-covid-and-are-harming-children/ 

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2023/05/covid_hospital_protocols_destroyed_thousands_of_american_families.html


06/19/24 11:17 PM #14081    

 

David Mitchell

I forgot to wish you all a Happy Juneteenth. (easy for us to take for granted)

A day that none of us ever heard of growing up. 

A few years ago I met a new friend. We were both speakers at the Memorial Day Celebration for the town of Bluffton, and he left quite an impression on me. We met and became friends.

He grew up here in the south on the wrong side of the "color line", and now celebrates this as a milestone day in his (our) history. He is pastor of our local Campbell Chapel AME (African Methodist Epicopal). 

He is a small guy but looms large in my mind. He is a Lt. Commander in the Navy reserves. He once was the head chaplain at Walter Reed Hospital over 7 other chaplians. He has five degrees - two science degrees and three theological degrees. The guy is quite hip and funny. He gives some of the best emotionally charged sermons I have ever heard. And he is simply one of the most interesting guys I have ever met.

 

I had hoped to celebrate this day with him (or at least sometime this week) but I still don't have the use of my car.

 

Reverend Doctor Jon Black

 


06/20/24 08:54 AM #14082    

 

John Jackson

Dave, a very nice tribute to  the Reverend Black – he’s an impressive guy.

MM, the carnage wasn’t just happening in NYC - most ICUs in New Jersey were running at or near capacity in the early days and some were turning ambulances away.  It was bad here - NJ was in the first wave and had the distinction of leading the nation in deaths per capita for most of 2020 until more than a dozen states (mostly red) who didn’t take Covid seriously caught up and overtook us.  In 2021, the top five states in deaths per 100,000 were Oklahoma, Alabama, Texas, West Virginia and Mississippi, all with death rates more than twice NJ's.

But I will say that I agree with the right wing critique that local officials in many places made a mistake by not re-opening sooner (especially schools) as the variants got increasingly less deadly.  But this was an unprecedented situation and hindsight is 20-20.

More broadly, the differences in our views, not surprisingly, are based on the different news sources we consult.  You have said you’ve abandoned mainstream media because you say it has an “agenda”, but right wing media, starting with Fox News and moving further right, has an agenda on steroids. Two examples:

- The recent “cheapfake” clip, played endlessly on right wing media, of Biden at last week’s Group of Seven meeting seemingly wandering aimlessly off during a sky diving demonstration/photo op with the other leaders - it looked really bad.   But a different camera angle showed that Biden turned and took a few steps toward two parachutists who had landed nearby to give them a thumbs up: https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/misinformation/biden-g7-video-joe-cheapfake-kept-going-viral-rcna157591

- The second example is older but really damning - it concerns internal communications within Fox News which became public during discovery for Dominion Voting’s defamation suit against Fox (which resulted in Fox paying Dominion $780 million).  These emails and texts showed that top Fox executives and numerous prime time hosts knew that Trump's claims of election fraud were utterly false - Rupert Murdoch referred to them as “really crazy stuff” and Tucker Carlson confessed that he hated Trump “passionately”.  But Fox went along with and amplified Trump’s election fraud lies because they were worried about losing viewers to the even farther right networks Newsmax and OAN.

Since I’ve argued that political discussion should have a place on this Forum but should not dominate, I won’t respond further and will let others have the last word.


06/20/24 10:04 AM #14083    

 

Michael McLeod

I'm going to interrupt this debate with a quotidian question.

First of all I love the word "quotidian" because it sounds fancy as hell but as you may or may not know it just means "boring" or "common-place" or "run of the mill" or  - this is probably the best equivalent - "everyday."

Do you notice, as you age, that you can't taste things as well as you used to?

I just bought a cherry pie and I really can't taste it as I remember relishing it as a little boy.

Kinda sentimental and sad but I'm just curious as to why that is and if it's commonplace for it to happen over time. I think I read somewhere that that is the case - but I notice it most with cherry pie. :(

Oh and John, thanks for standing up for good journalism.

One thing I learned as a journalist and as a human being is not to simplify, over-generalize, and be dismissive, whole cloth, of people, places, schools of thought. I know I'm guilty of it even though as a professional I've been trained not to over generalize.

And so as not to generalize myself: Hell yes there are leanings, in general, of people in my profession. But we do, as a rule, adhere to a way of delivering information that curbs those tendencies. 

PS I notice that Jim is abstaining from the debate du jour. Let's see if he can weigh in on the less controversial issue of taste buds and cherry pie - let's see if he can, hahaha,  cherry-pick a subject to weigh in on.

 

 


06/20/24 11:43 AM #14084    

 

James Hamilton, M. D.

Mike et al,

I have been trying to avoid the political chatter on the Forum so I am happy the taste bud thing came up (again).

Yes, again, as I recall sometime a year or two ago we got on this for some reason. Anyway, as with all our other tissues and organs, our taste buds are subjects of the aging process. Some buds are less receptive to stimuli (sweet, sour, salty, bitter etc.) than others and so we taste things differently than when we were younger. All in all as we lose these taste sensations foods taste very differently. Often we compensate for these by adding more spices, salt, sugar to try to bring back our old taste preferences. This may not work and may even not be good for those on certain (salt, sugar) restricted diets. 

On a brighter note, my wife and I are in Columbus for a family visit and I was able to have my brother-in-law drive us through the Clintonville ravines where I got a few photos of the early summer foliage around Adena Brook. When I get home I'll post some for our "beauty is everywhere" thoughts on this Forum. Those ravines never cease to amaze me as you turn off busy North High Street and descend into a virtual forest of green with slate walls above the brook. 

Jim


06/20/24 12:25 PM #14085    

 

Donna Kelley (Velazquez)

Joe, thanks for sharing the story of the Hubar family.  I am sure that they are overwhelmed by the kindness that they have received from strangers. You´re right my spirits are lifted. :-)


06/20/24 12:32 PM #14086    

 

Michael McLeod

Nice to hear from you Jim. And the mere mention of those ravines brings a sentimental smile to my face. Of course there is nothing like them down here in Fla. 

I just got back from an mri, by the way. what a wonder of science that is. talked to the technician about it afterwards.

i am having memory issues and it has been suggested that I might benefit from meds. This is way simplistic I am sure but it sounds as though the blood circulation in my brain may profit from a prescription or two. That's as far as I can go into the science of it. 

I'm sure there is some good writing out there beyond newspaper articles about the science of covid and the incredibly complex and challenging response to it but I just....I don't have the appetite I once did for submerging myself in such things. And if I did, it wouldn't be about pointing fingers, it would be about the science and the heroism involved.

Still teach a writing class and still freelance with a couple of magazines but I love my garden, love my significant other more than I ever thought I could love anyone, love my children, love having yet another day of life to enjoy.

That takes up a lot of time and attention!

 


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