Are These the Craziest Shoes Ever Made?

Love carnivals? Now you can wear one!

I’m Not a Big Shoes Guy

In fact, I own like five pair. But when I stumbled across these shoes (that’s a pun…sort of), I was genuinely agog. I had no idea there were so many bizarre forms of footwear in existence — now and throughout history! Are these the craziest shoes ever made? Maybe. Judge for yourself, and have fun. Which, in most cases, means not wearing shoes like these.

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

 “To understand a man, you’ve got to walk a mile in his shoes.” ~Old Proverb

“I had a dream that I was in someone else’s shoes…they were the wrong size.” ~Starley Ard

“I never wear flats. My shoes are so high that sometimes when I step out of them, people look around in confusion and ask, ‘Where’d she go?’ and I have to say, ‘I’m down here.’” ~Marian Keyes

   “He is an Italian, he doesn’t care if you break some law a little bit, as long as you wear beautiful shoes.” ~Anne Fortier

“Why you’ll never see a woman with a bomb in her shoe: We have too much respect for shoes.” ~Carolyn V. Hamilton

       “What would your shoes say about the things you do every day?” ~Sherley Mondesir-Prescott

“It doesn’t matter how great your shoes are if you don’t accomplish anything in them.” ~Martina Boone

“The job of feet is walking, but their hobby is dancing.” ~Amit Kalantri

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Every Day is Earth Day

Survival Chess

If the Earth Loses We All Lose

Yesterday was Earth Day. But in truth, every day is Earth Day. Amid escalating conflicts and nations warring against nations, there’s one thing we can–and must–all agree on: In the end, only one war matters — the war against our planet. Because if the earth loses, we all lose.

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

“The ultimate test of man’s conscience may be his willingness to sacrifice something today for future generations whose words of thanks will not be heard.” ~Gaylord Nelson

“If you watch the world in silence, you will have more chance to understand how the world is a miraculous ship! It is totally up to man that this blue ship continues its travel in the infinity of the universe together with all its passengers!” ~Mehmet Murat ildan

“Only the most arrogant, shortsighted, and spiritually bereft of our species would say that, at any cost to other species, we need only worry about our own.” ~Timothy Walker

“Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s needs, but not every man’s greed.” ~Mahatma Gandhi

“By day the banished sun circles the earth like a grieving mother with a lamp.” ~Cormac McCarthy

“If you want to be reminded of the love of the Lord, just watch the sunrise.” ~Jeannette Walls

“Away, away, from men and towns,

To the wild wood and the downs —

To the silent wilderness

Where the soul need not repress its music”

~Percy Bysshe Shelley

“Someday, I hope that we will all be patriots of our planet and not just of our respective nations.”

~Zoe Weil

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My Super-Secret Operation!

Leicester Hospital (leicestermercury.com.uk)Photo courtesy of Leicester Mercury

My Real Memoir

My Super-Secret Operation! I asked my wife whether I should publicly share this  confidential nugget from my childhood. Being pseudo-famous, I always find it wise to ask my very private wife when to share such paparazzi-fodder. Her reply? “Be delicate.”

At Age Six…

I had a “hernia” operation. Only it wasn’t really for a hernia. It was my first operation, apart from that rather messy little womb-extraction at age -1. So I was kinda nervous, but mostly excited. Because after they fixed my hernia, the doctor said I could have all the jello I wanted!

There were super-bright lights, and then they put a mask on my face, and then…

I woke up in a big bed with all kinds of neato buttons and handles, just like Captain Nemo’s submarine in my favorite movie and at Disneyland!

Nurse Sandy and Dr. Doctor visited me a lot. I was pretty sure Nurse Sandy loved me because she looked at me with big Bambi’s mom-eyes. Hospital-land was kinda like heaven. I got jello in every flavor–red, green, yellow–read kid’s books with Nurse Sandy, and walked around peeping into other people’s rooms. Only when I walked, it kinda hurt down there–where I’d had my hernia operation.

But mostly I felt super-happy. Especially when they hooked me back up to the big bag. They even set off fireworks to celebrate my going home! Well, that and the fact that it was the 4th of July. Nurse Sandy watched with me, and then tucked me in for the last time.

The Hernia Operation Was Sorta Goofy

It left a big scar down there and, this is the goofy part, a rubber band went right through one of my little hangy parts. They told me to be super-careful not to break the rubber band. But a week later…I did.

Mommandad were upset because they thought I was gonna have to have another hernia operation. But Dr. Doctor said, “No, he’ll be OK.” And I pretty much was. But…

Years Later, After I Got Married

Mom told me my “hernia operation” had actually been an orchioplexy, an operation that boys have when one of their, ahem, ball-bearings doesn’t “descend” into their hangy parts. It can lower their chance of having kids. But not me.

I had two super-duper ones!

And then I had a different kind of “hernia operation” on purpose. But this time there was no jello and no rubber band…

Just no more kids.

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Life Is a Daring Adventure

Life Is a Daring AdventureAngel’s Landing, Zion National Park (shaleewanders.com)

Thought for the Week

Security is an illusion. Life is an adventure. It’s not about avoiding risks, but about taking the right ones for the right reasons. 

“Why not go out on a limb?

That’s where the fruit is.”

~Mark Twain

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Carry One Another’s Burdens

Carry One Another's BurdensGalatians 6:2

Doing Life Together

Have you ever moved, almost without realizing it, from learning about another person’s burdens to helping carry them? Indeed, if we don’t carry one another’s burdens, are we even truly alive? It is possible, and all too common, to become less human, but never to become too human. Doing life together is the very definition of humanity.

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Bad Ideas!

Bad Ideas!Source: imgflip.com

Ooops!

Bad Ideas! Hey, we all make mistakes, and when we do it’s important to be able to laugh at them. Still, it’s more fun to laugh at other people’s, right? Enjoy!

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

“I never made a mistake in my life; at least, never one that I couldn’t explain away afterwards.” ~Rudyard Kipling

“I make mistakes; I’ll be the second to admit it.” ~Jean Kerr

“I have learned from my mistakes, and I am sure I can repeat them exactly” ~Peter Cook

“The 50-50-90 rule: anytime you have a 50-50 chance of getting something right, there’s a 90% probability you’ll get it wrong.” ~Andy Rooney

“Good judgment comes from experience, and experience comes from bad judgment.” ~Rita Mae Brown

“Have no fear of perfection – you’ll never reach it.” ~Salvador Dali

“Isn’t it nice to think that tomorrow is a new day with no mistakes in it yet?” ~L.M. Montgomery

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I Set a Monster Loose on the World!

Notzilla – Official Movie Trailer

Five Years Ago…

…I set a monster loose on the world! And I refuse to even apologize. To clarify, five years ago, after its exclusive run on Amazon Prime, Notzilla, the feature film comedy I wrote, directed and produced (an affectionate spoof of old monster movies) was released internationally. Since then, Notzilla’s reputation as a cult classic comedy has continued to grow. And so has the following for my graphic novel adaptation (I’m currently working on its sequel Notzilla vs….?). This family-friendly comedy (he’s more cute than scary) is now available via Amazon Prime, YouTube, AppleTV, Tubi, DVD, pay-per-view, and other streaming channels worldwide!

“This hilarious send-up of classic monster movies has won best comedy awards at multiple film festivals over the last year. It seems that audiences can’t get enough of a Japanese scientist accidentally releasing a giant beer-guzzling monster in the U.S., who must save it–and the city–before everything gets nuked. And who can blame them? We need all the laughs we can get at the moment, which means the world is totally ready for a Godzilla spoof with a hint of Gremlins. Notzilla looks like it could be a cult classic!” ~Kevin Burwick, MovieWeb

I Set a Monster Loose on the World!

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Life With a Capital L

My Real Memoir

Life With a Capital L: My first introduction to Life beyond my neighborhood came from a tiny black-and-white TV. And by “Life,” I mean storytelling–which virtually defines who I am–some subtly-inserted human values, and humor; if storytelling is my Lone Ranger, humor is my Tonto.

When I was around age six, two classic kid’s shows, The Mickey Mouse Club and Captain Kangaroo, made my world a little bigger. And funnier.

“Who’s the Leader of the Club…

…that’s made for you and me? M-I-C-K-E-Y  M-O-U-S-E. Mickey Mouse!” (Donald: “Donald Duck!”) From Mickey I learned kindness and humility (alright, I’m still working on those). And from Donald I got my first taste of funny. I’d shout, “Donald Duck!” in Quacklish and bust myself up. It was a while before I learned to bust anyone else up.

The Mouseketeers introduced me to:

  • Romance My first crush, along with every other kid in America, was an Italian-American girl named Annette Funicello, who, by the 60s, would look even hotter (but still virtuous) on a surfboard. I also had a thing for Betty Boop.
  • Entertainment Those kids had talent! (Did I?) Host Jimmy Dodd introduced me to the guitar, which would later become my instrument, and the Mouseketeers taught me to sing and dance! Years later, I would do my first post-high school musical under the direction of one of the original Mouseketeers, Dennis Day!

Captain Kangaroo Was…

…a lovable guy with a Beatles haircut before The Beatles had them, who taught me to accept everyone for who they were. I mean, the guy’s best friends were a Dancing Bear and a yokel named Mr. Greenjeans. But most of all, he taught me to be wonderfully, gloriously silly.

My First Effort…

…at public silliness, however, was problematic. I’d decided nonsense words were the funniest thing ever. So, on one of my earliest visits to a screen much, much larger than our TV (and in color!), I delivered my first official punchline!

The old Paramount Theater in Los Angeles was spectacular. Along with its classic movie palace architecture, it was landmarked by a giant neon “P.” Which stood for Paramount, of course, but I didn’t care about that. All I knew was that, amid a thick crowd of people, I’d just thought of a funny-sounding word. “What’s that stand for,” I shouted, so everyone could enjoy the quip, “Penis?”

After dragging me away, Mommandad quietly explained that the word I’d just “made-up” actually meant (quick glance downward) that.

“Oh!” I said. But honestly? I thought it was even funnier after that. So I giggled all the way through the movie. I was learning about life with a capital L and a capital P. But I still had a lot to learn about capital A — appropriateness. Come to think of it…

I still do.

To read My Real Memoir from the start, click hereTo read the next episode, click here.

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Slow-Growing Beauty

Thought for the Week

Slow-Growing Beauty. I captured this image of a budding magnolia tree on an early spring walk. It was the first time I’d ever bothered to photograph buds. In fact, I rarely even noticed them. Instead, early each spring I’d look at the “empty” tree limbs and wonder when they would “come to life.”

But of course, they already had.

Long Before Any Signs Appeared…

…life was at work within them. And then the first signs—tiny, nascent buds—would become visible. But only to those who, unlike me, looked closely enough.

When we moved to Ohio, I noticed that redbuds were among the first trees to blossom in the spring, and that, although their flowers were beautiful, they were pink, not red.

“So why are they called redbuds,” I wondered aloud.

“Well, duh,” my wife gently replied, “because their buds are red.”

Why hadn’t I noticed that? Because I’d never actually looked at their buds. Once I did, I realized they had a beauty of their own, a subtle slow-growing beauty.

How Many People are Like That?

Tragically, some never reach full flower at all. But others simply take a long, long time to get there. And so we fail see their sleepily developing promise of beauty. Instead, we see only their rough and scarred bark.

Maybe, if we look closer, we’ll learn to see the nascent good in others, to recognize their slow-growing beauty. And when we do…

Maybe they’ll even see it in us.

“How many thorns of human nature are bristling conceits, buds of promise grown sharp for want of a congenial climate?”

~John Burroughs

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A Complete Life

A Complete LifePhoto by Lauren Lulu Taylor

Nothing Else Matters

“A complete life is the life of a child. When I am fully conscious of my awareness of Christ, there is something wrong. It is the sick person who really knows what health is. A child of God is not aware of the will of God because he is the will of God.” ~Oswald Chambers

When we live in Him

we thrive in Him

and nothing else matters

~AΩ~

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