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.

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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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Finding a Safe and Cozy Place

Safe in the City (today.com)

Six years ago this month, our sense of safety plummeted. Suddenly, in the midst of a worldwide pandemic, finding a safe and cozy place became everyone’s goal. A comfy nook to read or pray. A hideaway to think and hope and plan unmolested by fear. And now, in this era of instability and uncertainty? Well, finding a safe and cozy place still holds a lot of appeal.

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

“My safest of all places and my little paradise never has been an actual world; it’s the one I made up in my mind.” ~Samiha Totanji

“If you’ve got a cozy mystery, and a dog is introduced, the readers’ first question is, ‘Does the dog die?’ They never ask about a cat. They know that the first rule of cozies is: The Cat Never Dies.” ~K.B. Inglee

“Home is where the heart can be open and loving with a sense of security. It must not be a place of fear.” ~Marilyn Barnicke Belleghem

“I’m on Aslan’s side even if there isn’t any Aslan to lead it. I’m going to live as like a Narnian as I can even if there isn’t any Narnia.” ~C.S. Lewis

“The ache for home lives in all of us.” ~Maya Angelou

“To have our needs met, to love, to be loved, to feel safe in this world and to each know our purpose, is a simple matter of creating those blessings for others.” ~Bryant McGill

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Like Flakes of Snow…

Like Flakes of Snow

We don’t get a lot of snow in April. At least, not where I live. Yet flakes abound all the year ’round.

Like flakes of snow,
we’re each unique*
Trust me, I know,
I’ve met a lot
of flakes this week.

Flake (slang): a. One who is undependable, as in keeping social engagements. b. somewhat eccentric person; an oddball. ~The Free Dictionary

*I’m pretty good at avoiding the first definition. But, in truth, more than a few people picture me when they think of the second.

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My All-American Friend

My All-American FriendTV taught me that Ovaltine was the perfect food.

My Real Memoir

My First “Normal” Friend

I’ve never been normal in any rational sense of the word. But Stevie was. Heck, he had red hair and freckles. Which was as “All-American” as you could get back then. How Irish-Scottish-Viking ancestry came to be the quintessentially All-American look, I don’t know. But Stevie’s whole family had it. They were right out of an Ovaltine ad, and since Ovaltine (“fortified” chocolate milk) was the perfect food, I thought they were perfect.

Unlike my mom, Stevie’s mom stayed at home all day, gleefully mopping, dusting, making fudge and greeting her husband at the door with a martini and a tall glass of Ovaltine. And Stevie’s dad? He was a Cub Scout leader. I mean, heck, how All-American can you get?

When the fudge ran out, Stevie and I would circle the block looking for adventure. But adventure was in short supply on our block. Until one day we discovered a mysterious change at…

The House on the Corner

There were no cars, and the weeds had staged a major coup. There was a half-open window, so we peered inside. There, on the only remaining piece of furniture, a broken-down dinette table with a few rickety chairs, was a huge pile of wallets. This demanded investigation! So we climbed in through the window. Who would buy a hundred wallets, and then dump their innards on a dumpy dinette set? There were cards with the names of stores on them, and thousands of wallet photos. Mostly boring stuff. But the wallets were neato! Suddenly, we heard a car pulling up outside. So we grabbed as many billfolds as we could fold into our t-shirts, climbed out the window, and skedaddled! (Whatever happened to “skedaddling?”)

Back at Stevie’s house, we played pretend with the wallets — until Stevie’s mom spotted us. And then suddenly, just like that, we were in “so much trouble!” Why? Heck, nobody wanted them! Mommandad told me later that a group of “dangerous” crooks (as opposed to the milquetoast type) had been meeting at that house.

Stevie and I never told our parents about the car we’d heard pulling up.

After the Infamous Empty House Incident

…we were grounded. So we made up new games. Including one that Stevie invented, involving Stevie’s German Shepherd “Rinty” running full speed at me over-and-over again. Which was neato! Until the completely out-of-control Rinty collided with my face at 100 miles-per-hour, resulting in my first of several trips to the hospital.

Following the Infamous Dog Collision Incident, Mommandad refused to let me visit Stevie’s house anymore. We still spent school recesses together, but our best buddy status started to fade. Still, I’ll never forget…

My All-American friend.

 

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Live a Worthy Life

Photo by Christian Holzinger

Thought for the Week

Live a Worthy Life: No one who lived for riches or fame or power ever died satisfied. So live a life “that neither moth nor rust can destroy.” It may or may not make you wealthy, famous, or powerful, but it will feed your soul. And when you die, you will die satisfied and at peace.

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There Is Not Room for Death

There is no room for death.Risen! 

“There is not room for Death,
Nor atom that his might could render void:
Thou – Thou art Being and Breath,
And what Thou art may never be destroyed.”
~Emily Bronte

   “Easter says you can put truth in a grave, but it won’t stay there.” ~Clarence W. Hall

“A man who was completely innocent, offered himself as a sacrifice for the good of others, including his enemies, and became the ransom of the world. It was a perfect act.”  ~Mahatma Gandhi

He has risen!

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It’s Friday But Sunday’s Coming

It's Friday, But Sunday's ComingFrom Malcolm in the Middle

What Does the ‘T’ on the Wall Stand For?

It’s Friday, but Sunday’s coming.

That’s what it stands for.

“We are Easter people living in a Good Friday world.” ~Barbara Johnson

“The cross was heavy, but His love was heavier still.” ~Fritz Isaacs

“Unless there is a Good Friday in your life, there can be no Easter Sunday.” ~Fulton J. Sheen

“If you were the only person on earth, Christ would have still suffered and died for you.” ~St. Augustine

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Forty-Nine Years Ago This Week

On Easter Morning…

Forty-Nine Years Ago This WeekForty-nine years ago this week, for the first time in my life, I thought, Maybe I’ll go to church. There, for the first time, I heard the phrase “He is risen,” and the traditional response, “He is risen indeed!” And as I spoke those words aloud, I sensed that my life would change forever. Because, as the saying goes, “The two most important days of your life are the day you’re born and the day you find out why.” That was the day I found out why. Hence, the Easter story is my story.

Is the Easter story your story too? Faith, real faith, is not a spectator sport. It’s hands-on-the-ball, up-to-your-cleats-in-the-mud participation. Jesus’ prayer for his followers, the reason he died and rose again, was so that we “may be one,” just as he and the Father are one, “so that the world may know.”

So the World May Know

Do people see Jesus in you? Do they catch fire when they stand too close to you? If not, check to see if your Pilot light is out. 2 Corinthians 13:5 says, “Examine yourselves to see whether you are in the faith; test yourselves. Do you not realize that Christ is in you?”

glorioussunriseandmanworshiping1Every Easter for a decade, at a church where I served, I had the privilege of leading fellow believers in my favorite variation on the traditional Easter response:

“He is risen in me!”

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