Don’t Let the Picture Fool You

Don't let the picture fool you

My Real Memoir: Don’t Let the Picture Fool You

I Was Alone From the Start

Look at that little guy, fearlessly facing the world before him. Knowing he’s adored by everyone, right? Don’t let the picture fool you. I spent my early years unsocialized and uncivilized, living in a world inhabited only by me, keeping myself company by telling myself stories. I lived in my head then, and still do. And although that sense of aloneness is clearly in my nature, nurture played a role as well. Or rather a certain lack of nurture.

Which is not to say that my parents were neglectful. Far from it. The connection between love and stories grew even stronger during those heavenly times when I would squeeze between them in bed (becoming the “&” in Mom & Dad) and hear fairytales from a magical, musty old hardbound volume. Oh, the wonderful smell of books!

Love and stories came to the rescue time and again. I wriggled in agony when my eardrum was attacked by an alien infection and medical soldiers had to be sent in one drop at a time to defeat it. Stories alone, as read by Mom, had the power to protect me until that horrendous war was won. But…

Life is Messy

My father’s truck-driving for the Herald-Express was what paid the mortgage on our little suburban dream-box. Until he lost his job, that is. Dad’s driving literally came to a halt when an old man stepped off a curb in front of him. Result? The man would spend the rest of his life in a wheelchair. The judge acknowledged that Dad wasn’t actually at fault, but revoked his driver’s license as a “symbol.” Dad’s loss of income, however, was anything but symbolic; the Herald offered him a loading dock position at half his previous pay.

So, Mom returned to work at a venerable leather goods company in downtown Los Angeles. And that, of course, meant I’d have to spend my days under someone else’s supervision. Grandma Teemley lived nearby, but Grandpa had died when I was two, and Grandma had also gone back to work.

Mom tried taking me with her a few times. But a creaky ten-storey factory wasn’t the ideal place to set a three-year-old amuck. And amuck I was, as my “Wild Indian” adventure had demonstrated. The law and common sense agreed that a kid my age—and with my imagination—needed close supervision or the human race as we know it would be doomed.

And So I Was Enrolled in Preschool

But six months and four warnings later, I was summarily expelled for continually correcting the teacher. I mean, how was she ever going learn if someone didn’t point out her mistakes? Like I said: unsocialized and uncivilized. Even when I wasn’t alone, I thought I was.

Enter Frieda and her Magical Garden, the most wonderful place in the history of, well, maybe not humankind, but Mitchkind anyway.

Posted in Books, Culture, Humor, Memoir | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 36 Comments

Truth Is a Hard Path

David John Terry (pinterest.com)Photo: David John Terry (pinterest.com)

Thought for the Week: Truth Is a Hard Path

Truth Is Not Comforting

It’s rocky and unpredictable, refusing to show us what we thought it would. Truth is a hard path to stay on: it takes us where it will, rather than where we want it to. Meanwhile, crowds gather on both sides, basking in the false light of being right right now, and vilifying those who refuse to join them. Why? Because, as Thomas Merton once said:

“We desire not the truth, but rather that our lie should be proved ‘right’ and our iniquity be vindicated as ‘just.’ This is what we have done to pervert our natural, instinctive appetite for truth. No wonder we hate. No wonder we are violent.”

But Keep Walking

Because it’s truth, not being “right,” that leads us home and sets us free.

Posted in Culture, Quips and Quotes | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 20 Comments

Choose the Right Travelling Companion

Choose the Right Travelling Companion

Choose the Right Travelling Companion

Do not fear, for I am with you. Do not anxiously look about. I will strengthen you and uphold you with My strong right hand.” ~Isaiah 41:10

“There is nothing we fear and desire in such equal measure as the unknown. Perhaps because we know that without it, life is merely survival.” ~The Wishing Map

So choose the right travelling Companion. And then hike up your courage and get on with it!

∼∼∼

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith, The Wishing Map | Tagged , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Future Movie Settings: Fascinating Buildings

Future Movie Settings: Fascinating Buildings

Future Movie Settings: Fascinating Buildings

Many of you know that I make movies. But five years ago, as a result of the Pandemic-That-Shall-Not-Be-Named, movie theatres were closed and film production stopped dead in it tracks. My wife Trudy and I (she co-produces with me) were tired of being shut inside (who wasn’t?). So we started taking location-scouting daytrips to snap pics of potential future film sites. We loved it, and have continued to do so ever since. Here are some images I’ve entitled Future Movie Settings: Fascinating Buildings.

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

Note: These photos may not be reproduced or used without written permission.

Posted in Culture, Movies, Popular Culture & Entertainment | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 48 Comments

Twenty-One Years Ago This Week

Twenty-One Years Ago This Week

The view from my office window before the snow got deep!

Twenty-One Years Ago This Week

My Family and I Moved…

…from sunny SoCal to not-so-sunny Cincinnati. It was one of the coldest, snowiest winters Ohio had ever experienced. Yet this year has surpassed it! Yesterday, I potty-walked my super-value-sized granddog Thea; she nearly disappeared as she paused to add her artful splash of yellow to the sea of white. The view from my window is positively Narnia-esque. So, Happy 21st Moving Day to us. Because, unlike Los Angeles…

They have winter here — every year!

As my old friend Allen put it, there are two seasons in Southern California: Summer and Not Summer. I used to winterize our apartment by closing the windows. My cold weather wardrobe consisted of: socks.

Right Before We Moved…

A new acquaintance in Cincinnati asked me if I’d ever seen snow. I laughed. “Of course! We go to the snow every year.” By which I meant we’d get in the car and drive up to the local mountains for the day. He laughed and said, “Ah, well, we don’t ‘go to’ the snow here. It comes to us.”

“How…convenient,” I thought.

I Honestly Like Snow

I love having four full seasons, even though each has its downside. (There’s a meaningful metaphor in there somewhere, but I’m too lazy to explore it.) Spring has weeds, plus grass, grass and more grass. Achoo! Summer has more weeds, and sweat, sweat, sweat. Autumn has endless raking. And Winter has driveway shoveling, and cars stuck in ditches.

Still, this winter has been particularly beautiful. And so, inspired by (and insulated from) the frozen scene beyond my office window, I’ll close with this frosty Robert Frostian ode:

Winter found a hoard of snow

still left in her bag, all ready to blow.

So here it is—quite swell, you know?

We’re digging hard for cars to tow.

Still, I can wait for grass to grow.

I don’t love shoveling, but, you know

I also really hate to mow.

Posted in Culture, Humor, Poetry | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 58 Comments

Two Lives: Real and Realer (Imaginary)

Two Lives: Real and Realer (Imagination)My first home (as I remember it)

My Real Memoir – Two Lives: Real and Realer (Imaginary)

From the Very Beginning…

I had two lives: real and realer (my imagination), probably because I was always alone. I was apparently daydreaming in the womb, staring at some pretty placental pictures, when the doctor announced, “He doesn’t want to come out. I’ll have to use force, er…forceps.” After he pried me out, he said, “Well, hope he’s a good’n, because you won’t have another.”

And so, you see it was my fault that I never acquired a sibling. Hence, my BFF was — and still is — my imagination. We gathered a lot of wool together, my imagination and I. Lying upside down on the old armchair in the garage. Traveling through Upsidedownland. Rappelling from the roof beams and soaring through the rafters. The latter, thanks to Grandpa, was because I could fly!

I Had Other Magical Powers Too

My tricycle made ice cream when I churned the pedals and chanted, “I scream, you scream, we all scream for ice cream.” Plus, I could transform my Radio Flyer wagon into anything I wanted: an airplane, a boat, a locomotive!

I was certain the neighbors watched in awe as I executed these amazing transformations. All except the Witch, the lady who’d had me arrested for turning myself into a Wild Indian. That happened so early on, I barely remembered it. Yet henceforth she forbade me to walk on “her” side of the street, under threat of having “Them” take me away “forever.” Result? The only time I was allowed to cross the street was when I passed the Witch’s house. In fact, my first two real friends Crazy Old Alice and Weird Eddie lived there in the land of TOSOTS (The Other Side of the Street).

Unfortunately, the Witch Also Had Powers

I found out when I was in Dreamland. Dreamland was my favorite place to visit. I could fly even better there than in Upsidedownland. But one night Dreamland felt scarier and less magical. The Hallway was wickedly dark and cold. Momandad’s room was dark and cold too, and empty, so I couldn’t run and hide under the covers between them!

Suddenly, the Witch was there in the Hallway with me! Only now she was ten feet tall and all see-through-y like a ghost! I tried to fly, but her powers were mightier than mine, and she stopped me! So I ran. But I could only run in place, and the Witch was getting nearer and nearer! Finally, she reached out and grabbed my shoulder with her monstrous, spindly fingers. They were the coldest thing I’d ever felt, and I was sure they’d turn me to ice! But they didn’t — they passed right through me. She couldn’t hold me!

And then, in a flash, Momandad were there. They could hold me! And they’d brought the light back with them. So you see, I was never really alone, I only thought I was. But thinking you’re alone…

Can be the scariest thing there is.

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

Posted in Culture, Humor, Memoir | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 43 Comments

Healthy Trees Never Stop Growing

Thought for the Week: Healthy Trees Never Stop Growing

“If a tree’s strength is judged while it is still a seed, it is mistaken as weak.”
~Idowu Koyenikan

“The media only writes about the sinners and the scandals. But that’s normal, because a tree that falls makes more noise than a forest that grows.”
~Pope Francis

“We are not yet what we shall be, but we are growing toward it, the process is not yet finished, but it is going on, this is not the end, but it is the road.”
~Martin Luther

“Why do you go away? So that you can come back. So that you can see the place you came from with new eyes and extra colors. And the people there see you differently, too. Coming back to where you started is not the same as never leaving.” ~Terry Pratchett

“(Growing up) is a terribly hard thing to do. It is much easier to skip it and go from one childhood to another.” ~F. Scott Fitzgerald

“We are products of our past, but we don’t have to be prisoners of it.”
~Rick Warren

“Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.”
~Viktor E. Frankl

“My destination is no longer a place, rather a new way of seeing.”
~Marcel Proust

“The only way that we can live, is if we grow. The only way that we can grow is if we change. The only way that we can change is if we learn. The only way we can learn is if we are exposed. And the only way that we can become exposed is if we throw ourselves out into the open. Do it. Throw yourself.”
~C. JoyBell C.

Healthy trees never stop growing.

Posted in Culture, Quips and Quotes | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 22 Comments

The Two-Way Power of Forgiveness

The Two-Way Power of ForgivenessBroken Stone, Abel Tasman National Park, New Zealand (photo by Victor Guntin)

The Two-Way Power of Forgiveness

David Seamands, author of the counseling classic Healing for Damaged Emotions, once told my friend, pastor Jerry Kirk, that half the people in mental hospitals could leave if they learned to forgive themselves. “Yes,” Jerry replied, “and most of the rest could leave if they learned to forgive everyone else.”

That’s the two-way power of forgiveness.

Φ

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 38 Comments

The View From My Bedroom Window

The View From My Bedroom Window

The View From My Bedroom Window

I’m Blessed to Have a Southeast-Facing Bedroom…

Hence, the view is a year-round show. And, since I’m equally blessed to be married to a woman who starts her day before dawn, I often take sunrise photos. As well as moon photos. And snowfall photos. And Mt. Airy Castle photos (that’s a nearby 90-year-old water tower). Some of these pictures were taken with an old low-rez phone (all are phonetographs), and have a soft, painterly quality. I also capture images from our other windows, and occasionally hotel room windows. Enjoy — and stay warm!

P.S. I just found out I’ve been Freshly Pressed by WordPress. “They like me, they really like me!”

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

All photos © Copywrite by Mitch Teemley, and may not be used without written permission.

Posted in Culture, Humor | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 109 Comments

How a Fake Christmas Tree Became Real

How a Fake Christmas Tree Became Real

Our Old Tree…

Came in a box. It was made in China from plastic and steel by people who may or may not have known what Christmas was about. It was shiny and new, with 600 pre-lit lights! But it wasn’t real. Still, all trees die in time. Even the fake ones.

For 25 Years…

It was a member of our family. And every year it held more and more memories (we humans called them ornaments). In its presence, we loved each other and loved the one whose birth we celebrated.

But It Was Eventually Rubbed Bare

Half its lights and more than half of its needles were gone. So it was time to put it in a box forever. Its work was done. After all, it was a fake tree. But by the end, it had become real. Because, to paraphrase the Velveteen Rabbit, When you’re around love for a long, long time, not just pretend-love but real love, all of your fake needles get loved away…

And you become Real.

Posted in Culture, Humor | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 46 Comments