A Tale of Two Best Friends

Left to Right: Me, age 7  –  Jeff a.k.a. “Sunshine”  –  Rory-the-Dauntless  –  La Mirada, California

My Real Memoir

Hello Sunshine

This is a tale of two best friends, one full of sunshine, one full of clouds.

We’d moved to La Mirada a month into my 2nd grade year. And while our shiny new suburb might be “America’s Most Completely Planned,” my life was anything but. My only friend was a tiger-striped tabby. True, I had a goofy sense of humor and a wild imagination, but I mostly used them to amuse myself. Anyone who met me would have pegged me as an introvert. But at age seven, something instantly turned me into an extrovert. That something was Jeffrey (nickname “Sunshine”) Ward.

La Pluma Elementary school was full of strangers. Until class-clown extraordinaire Jeff, who’d never met a stranger and assumed everyone else felt the same, said, “Let’s be best friends!”

Not only did Jeff wipe away the last remaining cobwebs of my former shyness, he became my new template for how to do school. Both for good (other kids loved my stories and antics!) and for evil (the teacher didn’t). I spent a lot of time in the “learning not to interrupt” corner, and under the teacher’s desk (that was a thing in those days).

With Jeff, I acquired a second family: Paul, his jazz-loving optometrist dad; Roberta “Bert,” his suburban-bohemian mom, who treated us as intellectual equals (which I loved); and Jeff’s older brother and younger sister. Sleepovers and adventures ensued!

Hello Cloudy

A short time later, I met a boy at the other end of the block–and mood spectrum. Rory was frequently mistaken for Jerry Mathers (Leave It to Beaver). But in many ways, he was the opposite of the Beaver and Jeff. He could have been nicknamed “Cloudy.” Rory was good-hearted, but shy and hesitant. When he became flustered, he’d sometimes stutter and then become even more flustered (I based the young hero B’frona in The Wishing Map on him). But there was something in him that filled in the other missing part of me and so, along with Jeff, he completed our fearsome threesome.

But Rory’s family was a different story. His stepfather Donald rarely smiled and mysteriously came and went. And his mother Pat, although young and pretty, seemed perpetually anxious to please her husband. When I slept over at Rory’s house, she’d tuck us in wearing a low-cut negligee (my first lesson in female anatomy), but it was for Donald, not us. Still, she was kind and patient–unlike Rory’s father. Rory often couldn’t come out to play because, like Cinderella, he was cleaning his half-sisters’ room (sweet girls and not to be blamed). Yet, for all his labors Rory rarely received any allowance. Only years later did I learn that he’d been horribly abused by the man he now calls “the Monster,” a serial adulterer and narcissist.

So Thank You…

…Jeff and Rory, for the sunshine and the clouds. Jeff, you freed the daylight in me. And Rory, you taught me how to endure the darkness (we still had a good time, didn’t we?) and never give up. By the way, I’m ashamed to admit that, for a time, I called Rory my “second” best friend–juvenile thoughtlessness at its worst. I had two best friends, and loved them equally…

And I still do.

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Discovering the Beauty of the Unexpected

discovering the beauty of the unexpectedKiller Whale, Norway (buzzerilla.com)

Thought for the Week

We all appreciate classical beauty. But there’s an even greater in pleasure in discovering the beauty of the unexpected, the asymmetrically balanced, the imperfectly perfect that resonates more deeply with us. Perhaps it’s because we sense that, although very few of us are the former…

We are each capable of becoming the latter.

 “Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us, or we find it not.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

(There are more quotes below the picture gallery)

Click on any image to enlarge it, or to begin slide show.

“Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it.” ~Confucius

          “There is no exquisite beauty…without some strangeness in the proportion.”      ~Edgar Allan Poe

“Long live the rose that grew from concrete when no one else even cared.” ~Tupac Shakur

“Should you shield the canyons from the windstorms you would never see the true beauty of their carvings.” ~Elisabeth Kübler-Ross

“Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old.” ~Franz Kafka

      “You are imperfect, permanently and inevitably flawed. And you are beautiful.”      ~Amy Bloom

“He has made everything beautiful in its time.” ~Ecclesiastes 3:11

φ

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It’s Time to Share Your Story

It's Time to Share Your StoryActs 22:15-16

“You Will Be His Witness”

It’s time to share your story. Has Jesus changed your life? That’s the story he calls you to tell. You don’t have to know the Bible inside and out (although knowing it, really knowing it, will transform you), but you do need to tell your story. Because others desperately need to hear simple, real stories of how lives like ours have been changed by encounters with the living God.

“The world is not made of atoms. The world is made of stories.” ~Muriel Ruykeser

Share your story!

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 35 Comments

The 50 Cleverest Ads Ever!

The 50 Cleverest Ads Ever!Mondo Pasta – “So good you can’t let go!”

Stop Programming Me!

Why do I call these the 50 cleverest ads ever? Some years back I learned that advertisers don’t actually care what we think, only that we remember their product. Because, through sheer repetition, their ads program us to buy! So, I vowed then and there that before I’d buy “please-don’t-squeeze-the” Charmin toilet paper, I’d use old magazine pages (preferably the ones with Charmin ads). On the other hand, when an ad campaign is truly clever, it’s like finding fresh-baked cookies on your laptop. Therefore, to these 50 advertisers who respected us enough to treat us as though we actually had brains (and funny bones), “Thank you for the cookies!”

Click on any image to enlarge it, read caption, or begin slide show.

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The Amazon Van Is A-Comin’ Down the Street

The Amazon Van Is A-Coming Down the Street“The Wells-Fargo Wagon” song (see video below) from The Music Man is a classic tribute to a bygone era. But things don’t ever completely disappear, they changeHave you ever received something you never actually ordered? If so…

Here’s How the Song Might Go Today

Oho, the Amazon van is a-comin’ down the street
Oh, please let it be for me
Oho, the Amazon driver is a-comin’ to my door
I wish, I wish I knew what it could be
I got some toenail clippers that I never ordered
And once I got a big-screen TV
This could be just another set of earbuds
But it could be something I won’t have to pay for
Something special, like a Rolls-Royce with a hot tub
Just for me!

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A True Friend Is Always There

‘Boy in Field’ by Rachael Crowe   —   ‘Tabby Cat’ by Adél Grőber

My Real Memoir

We’d Moved…

…and I was alone again. Or so it seemed. But I was soon to learn that a true friend is always there. I missed my Downey friends. But I’d only spent a month in the 2nd grade there, and Stevie was the only kid my age I’d really bonded with. My classroom send-off, with cupcakes and a “Goodbye, Mitch!” sign, wasn’t exactly a tear-jerker. But, oh, how I would miss my wonderfully odd assortment of non-school friends: Weird Eddie, Crazy Old Alice, my daymom Frieda and her magical garden filled with all of my non-human-friends!

I didn’t know what to expect. I only knew that Mom was right: this was big.

The city of La Mirada was so new that, like the proverbial airplane being built as it flies, the neighborhood was still going up around us. The next block was nothing but wood frames—like giant Tinker Toys beckoning to be climbed on when the construction bosses weren’t looking! I played alone, but still had fun. Sort of.

The Bigger Adventure…

…was just out my bedroom window. The field across the street was a cluster of gently rolling hills, once covered with commercially-grown flowers, now chest-high with weeds, and dotted with scrub oaks and precariously leaning shacks. The latter had once been occupied by braceros, seasonal Mexican farmworkers who’d lived in them during the flower-picking season. The former overseer’s family were packing bags when I knocked on their rough-hewn door. “No, no, nos vamos” (“No, no, we’re leaving”), said the mama. But her two little kids Hugo and Manuela were starved for entertainment, so we played pantomime games until they left.

My real adventures in “The Field” were yet to come. Meanwhile, I’d have to resume 2nd grade in a brand-new city at a brand-new school full of brand-new kids. But before that, I met my first new friend.

I Heard a Raging Voice…

…near the end of my first week in La Mirada. I raced up the street to see what was happening, and found a man beating a skinny, terrified little cat with a broom. His daughter had trapped it in their garage in the hopes of keeping it. And so, with all the rationality of a devolving brute, the poor girl’s father was “teaching it a lesson!” He threatened to do the same for me if I didn’t leave instantly. I wanted to teach him a lesson, but elected instead to scoop up the cat and run away with it.

People say cats are loners, and sometimes mistake this for proof that they don’t care. False. I know this because I’m a loner, and one of my greatest lessons in caring came from a tiger-striped tabby named Zipper.

We would have nearly a dozen cats in the ensuing years, and most would distribute their affections equally. But not Zipper. I was Zipper’s hero. Period. And he was my BFF (best feline friend). He walked me to the corner when I headed for school and met me there when I came home. He listened attentively as I read aloud under the covers at night. And then put his head on the pillow beside mine and saw me off to other worlds. And when my first new human friends appeared, the lesson Zipper had taught me was clear:

A true friend is always there.

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Ideas Are Only Seeds

Farmer's hand watering a young plantImage courtesy of SnugHug&Co

Thought for the Week

“Like every book I never wrote, (this one) is by far the best book I have ever written.” ~G.K. Chesterton

Ideas are only seeds. What does that mean? In nature, 99% of seeds never germinate, and of those, owing to poor conditions, less than 1% survive. That means only about 1 in 10,000 seeds actually becomes a living plant, of which roughly 1 in 10 truly thrives. Result? Only 1 of every 100,000 seeds actually fulfills its purpose.

Ideas Are the Same

Only a tiny percentage of ideas are ever actually planted, watered, pruned, and patiently cared for long enough to bear a bumper crop of fruit.

Which means only about 1 in 100,000 of the world’s greatest masterpieces, scientific breakthroughs, and revolutionary inventions has ever actually seen the light of day. Will yours be that 1 in 100,000? Remember, ideas are only seeds.

Plant yours–and nurture them!

φ

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Be the Miracle Others Need

Be the Miracle Others NeedSource: From the Inside Out

Pray for Power to Equal Your Tasks

Be the miracle others need: Perhaps God’s most remarkable accomplishment is not that he can work miracles, but that he can work them through us.

If we are willing.

“And then Jesus looked at them and said, ‘Humanly speaking, this is impossible. But with God all things are possible.’” ~Matthew 19:26

ζ

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Accidentally Invisible!

Car-pet

Some People Lead Highly Visible Lives

Others prefer to gather secrets unseen, and then go off to write tell-all stories. Yet at one time or another, we’re all accidentally invisible. But enough of this metaphorical business (there’s more in the quotes after the pictures). Here are some people, objects, and animals that are (almost) literally invisible!

Click on any image to enlarge it, to read caption, or to begin slide show.

“Almost everything important in life is invisible.” ~Nadja Sam

“There’s an inherent pleasure in being unseen.” ~Emily St. John Mandel

“I don’t know why people are so keen to put the details of their private life in public; they forget that invisibility is a superpower.” ~Banksy

“Invisibility can be good as a superpower. But psychiatry reveals people don’t like it very much.” ~Joyce Rachelle

“This invisibility has its drawbacks after all. Otherwise, I suppose, I might have spent a warm and comfortable night in bed!” ~The Hobbit

“It’s amazing how much power a smile holds. It’s contagious…it’s also the most powerful camouflage. For that person who seems to have it all together is merely masking the pain of drowning tears. Don’t be so quick to assume.” ~Brittany Burgunder

“You see, the strangeness of my case is that now I no longer fear the invisible, I’m terrified by reality.” ~Jean Lorrain

“We think,” said Silverfish, leaning closer, “that he found a way of making himself invisible.” “Really?” “Because,” said Silverfish, nodding conspiratorially, “no-one has seen him.” ~Terry Pratchett

“You’re only as invisible as you feel.” ~Michelle Cuevas

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The Weekend Is Fast-Approaching!

The Weekend Is Fast-Approaching“Dragon Lizard Caught Playing Leaf Guitar” by Aditya Permana (not Photoshopped)

That’s Me Doing Spring Chores

Seriously though, the weekend is fast-approaching, and it’s important to have a plan. Therefore, here are some helpful tips you can use to plan your…

OK, so I lied. These aren’t helpful tips at all, they’re just funny comments. But then, funny comments make you smuckle (smile + chuckle). And that helps you get through the things you don’t want to do, right? So, I take it back–these are helpful tips!

You’re welcome.

“I’ve been looking over the list of spring chores I made up last fall, and darned if they aren’t fall chores, after all.” ~Robert Breault

“Normal Person’s Weekly Chore List:
1. Clean kitchen
2. Clean bathroom
3. Clean entire rest of domicile
Cleaning-Impaired Person’s Weekly Chore List:
1. Don’t get peanut butter on sheets”
~Dave Barry

“Cleanliness is not next to godliness. It isn’t even in the same neighborhood. No one has ever gotten a religious experience out of removing burned-on cheese from the grill of the toaster oven.” ~Erma Bombeck

“I fought the lawn and the lawn won.” ~Unknown

“My neighbor asked me if he could use my lawnmower.  I told him he could — as long as he didn’t take it out of my yard.” ~Unknown

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