Why You Need to Own Your Errors

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Thought for the Week

“Admit your mistakes,” is hardly the motto of our current culture. If anything, it’s the opposite. Being exposed for having ever been anything other than what one claims to be can mark the end of a career, or even, tragically, a life. Suicide, which is at an all-time high, is more-often-than-not, tied to having one’s carefully crafted public image shattered.

To be successful, politicians are expected to, 1) prove they don’t make mistakes, and, 2) prove their opponent does. If caught having ever done otherwise, the standard response is deny, deny, deny, along with a healthy dose of retaliatory image-assault.

And so we celebrate narcissists and liars, while secretly wondering why we aren’t as perfect as they are. The answer is simple: Because no one is.

Including them.

Refreshingly, the Apostle Paul advises his young mentee Timothy to be a model to others by diligently fulfilling his calling. “So that,” he adds, “your progress may be seen by all.” In other words: learn from your mistakes, make corrections, and grow stronger because of it…

In public!

Why? Because people desperately need true leaders—in politics, showbiz, sports, offices, factories and families. People who model not how to be perfect (i.e. lie), but how to own their errors and learn to do better, yes…

In front of God and everyone!

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Let Us Hold Fast to Hope

“Have courage for the great sorrows of life, and patience for the small ones. And when you have laboriously accomplished your daily task, go to sleep in peace. God is awake.”

~Victor Hugo

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God is awake.

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Too Beautiful for Just One Post!

Last week, I posted pictures Trudy and I took on our autumn getaway to Maine. I honestly thought I could finish today, but there are just too many wonderful sights to share with you! So, here’s Part Two–with Part Three yet to come! These photos were taken mostly in and around Rockland, Maine’s Breakwater Head and Owls Head lighthouses. But a few were also taken shortly after our arrival at the storied Acadia National Park.

Note: All photos are by Trudy and Mitch Teemley, and may not be used without written permission.
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Democracy: It’s the Opposite of Efficiency

Efficiency (noun) – Operating quickly and effectively in an organized way. Synonyms: Competence, expertise. Antonym: Democracy.

In the midst of a record-length government shutdown, my country held elections this week. None of us really knew what we were doing. But the important thing is that we exercised our right to do it!

“Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others that have been tried.”

~Winston Churchill

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Let’s Add Subtitles for the Truth-Impaired

Subtitles or closed-captions for the hearing-impaired: Most movies and TV shows have them. But what about subtexts? i.e. the underlying implications, or real meaning behind people’s words? Our world seems increasingly bent on implying subtexts that aren’t actually there. Why?

Think of it as opportunistic misinterpretation. In politics and social media these days, even in face-to-face communications, opportunistic misinterpretation has reached pandemic levels. Anything you say–or don’t say–can and will be used against you!

As a writer, blogger, social-networker, or even as a conversationalist, have you ever wished your words could have subtitles for the truth-impaired? I have. Oh, have I! Therefore…

I humbly propose that Apple or Samsung develop a brain-to-mouth (and screens) app that adds AIM (Actual Intended Meaning) subtitles to everything we communicate. From now on, all media, news, tweets, texts, status updates, dinner conversations, off-handed comments, and even pillow talk will be accompanied by communicator-approved…

Subtitles for the truth-impaired!

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When One Betrayal Leads to Another

Photo by Alexey Demidov

My Real Memoir

She’d given me no reason to think I could win her. Yet I’d pursued her anyway. Dinah was like an exiled queen, chary and aloof, trusting no one. And I was the bastard prince, castoff from another kingdom, who’d dared to enter her tower. But instead of taking something, I gave her something. I showed her my wounds, and coaxed her into revealing her own. I taught her to trust me.

And then I betrayed that trust. True, it had been unintentional. Nevertheless, it had happened. My former place-holder girlfriend Jelli counselled me to confess: “If she’s the one, Mitch, she’ll forgive you.”

So, that night, over pizza at Dinah’s studio apartment, I slid into a no-big-deal rendition of “I Massaged an Older Woman I Wasn’t Even Remotely Attracted To.” It had gone too far, I conceded (omitting the fact that “too far” meant all the way.) Dinah had had multiple lovers (as had I). So I hoped she’d respond with an unflappable “pfft.” She didn’t.

She hurled her dinner plate at me. “I trusted you,” she said, “and you’ve shattered that trust!” I looked down at the splinters of the glass the plate had struck, and then looked up and asked her to forgive me.

“Why should I?” she asked.

“So, are we over?”

“Probably. I don’t know. But right now we have to meet Ashley at the theatre.” Ashley Carr was co-founder of our university’s Drama program. We’d arranged to see a movie with him at the Wilshire Theatre in Fullerton.

The theatre was cold. Or maybe it was just me; my stomach wouldn’t stop quivering. We hadn’t spoken a word on the way there. Dinah got up and left halfway through the movie. Fifteen minutes later, I searched the lobby. Cracked the door to the Women’s room. Called her name. She wasn’t in the theatre.

I went outside and scanned the street in front. Nothing. Circled the block, and saw no one. Tried the next two blocks in either direction. Ducked into a bar, and described her to the bartender. “Yeah. Looker. Think she mighta left with someone.”

I tried to list her as a missing person at a nearby police station. “You married?” asked the baggy-eyed night-deskman. “No? Well, no offence, but if every girlfriend or boyfriend who disappears…you know what I mean?”

I drove back to Dinah’s apartment, expecting to find here there. Knocked. Silence. Pulled her spare key out from under the potted salvias, and let myself in. After anxiety-praying for hours, I finally fell asleep.

Well before sunrise, I heard a mechanical roar, jumped up and opened the door. A faceless motorcyclist rumbled away as Dinah walked past me into her apartment.

“What happened?”

“What do you think? I need a shower, and some sleep. Come back tonight if you want to talk.”

I did. It was dusk when I returned. Crossing the abyss of silence, I asked, “Are you going to see him again?”

“No,” Dinah grunted. “I don’t even know his name.”

“So, revenge sex?”

“Call it that, if you want. Anyway, now were even. I had to put myself down where you are if I was going to stay with you. And I want to. I think. Do you still want me?”

“Yes.”

“All right. Maybe we can climb out of this pit together.”

I followed Dinah into her walk-in closet. She hung up her coat, then turned and wept into my chest. She lowered herself to the floor in the semi-darkness, and I joined her there. We kissed as we never had before, vulnerably, desperately. Finally, she said, “I think we should stop having sex. Isn’t that what your new faith teaches? I mean, until we’re…”

“Married? Kind of, I think. But right after this.” She laughed. We talked about the possibility of getting married. And then we made love for what we knew…

Would be the last time.

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Is Halloween Really Evil?

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Thought for the Week

Evil lives in people, not in things. People are, to use the classical term, sinful. But it’s easier–and less convicting–to focus on things. The fact that we call the second day of the week Tuesday (Tiw’s Day), does not mean we’re worshiping the pagan god Tiw. Many of our names for things, even our number and alphabet systems, derive from pagan sources.

It’s what we do with them that matters.

Halloween actually derives its name from a medieval church event, All Hallows Eve, the night before All Hallows Day. As does the practice of children going door-to-door. Originally, they would go Hallow-ing, singing and offering prayers, and in return be given soul cakes (round shortbread-like biscuits). However, later, ancient pagan practices and symbols became conflated with All Hallows Eve. Has it thus been rendered evil? Not necessarily.

It’s what we do with it that matters.

The Apostle Paul acknowledged that meat sacrificed to idols wasn’t inherently evil–it was just meat. But if eating it caused a “weaker brother or sister” (someone who believed it was evil) to “stumble,” then, out of love, we should avoid doing so.

I once toured Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris and was astonished to see gargoyles (demons) all along the cathedral’s roofline. When I asked why they would include such symbols of evil, the translator replied, “Ho-ho, we do not embrace evil, monsieur, we mock it! You see, the demons are racing away!” (Each gargoyle is countered by an angel directly inside.) “And,” he added, “we humble them by making them serve as water spouts!”

It was what they did with them that mattered.

Gargoyles-at-Notre-Dame

So, if you celebrate Halloween next year, remember: it’s what you do with it that matters. Don’t celebrate evil, celebrate the overcoming of it. You might even want to practice saying, in your best faux-French accent,

“I do not embrace evil, monsieur, I mock it!”

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What If It’s Not What We Expected?

Rapture

Dear believers: What if God’s plans for the future don’t go the way we expect them to? (Has the present?) What if everything plays out in a way we could never have imagined? Does it matter? Has it ever? All that matters is that we can trust Him. Completely.

Because He loves us.

Completely.

“For no eye has seen and no ear has heard, it has not even entered into human hearts, what God has prepared for those who love Him.”

~1 Corinthians 2:9

 

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The Rain in Maine Falls Mainly…

Note: All photos are by Trudy and Mitch Teemley, and may not be used without written permission.

Heads Up: Daylight Savings Time ends tonight. So don’t forget to “fall back.”

Fortunately, the rain in Maine fell mainly on our plane. It ended by the time Trudy and I checked into our hotel room last week. Which was perfect. We bundled up and drove into quirky, freewheeling Portland. Had lobster rolls for lunch (hey, this is Maine). After which, we toured the home of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Portland’s most famous citizen. (At least until Stephen King came screaming into the picture).

We dinnered at a floating Portland Harbor restaurant, followed by a chilly shoreside stroll. But we were warmed by our meal of two Mainer classics, clam chowder and blueberry cobbler.

On day two, we visited one of Maine’s most iconic sights: the Portland Head Lighthouse. It was a blustery morning, but wonderfully so. Later, sans coats, we rambled through the Portland Museum of Art.

On day three, we headed up down east. Which is to say we drove north on Highway 1, visiting the Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens along the way. Our night three hotel room was meat-and-potatoes. But the view from our balcony was a visual banquet.

More pictures to come!

Mitch

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Best Family Comedy Movie Night Ever!

“Probably the best parody you’ll ever see! Similar to what you loved in Airplane, but better-paced. I am shocked that it was so entertaining and humorous while still being family-friendly!” (Amazon Prime reviews)

What? You’ve never seen Notzilla, the “cult classic comedy” (MovieWeb) that I wrote and directed? Or you’ve only seen it once? Inconceivable! Halloweekend is the perfect time to watch the least-scary (but possibly funniest) monster movie ever made! And if you haven’t read the graphic novel Notzilla, ask for it at your favorite comic book store, or order it here!

To watch the movie, click here!

To order the graphic novel, click here!

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

Posted in Humor, Movies, Popular Culture & Entertainment, Quips and Quotes, Videos | Tagged , , , , , , , | 11 Comments