Still More Amazing Street Art

Temporary, permanent, sweet, shocking, whimsical, thoughtful… Art can be anything, I think, except boring. And while a picture may be worth a thousand words, it is much more than mere information. It speaks to a different part of our selves. Art is more of a waking dream than a speech, and it should never be simply “understood.” It should be felt, intuited, in short: Art should be experienced.

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

“If I could say it in words there would be no reason to paint.” ~Edward Hopper

“Art is not what you see, but what you make others see.” ~Edgar Degas

“Life beats down and crushes the soul. Art reminds you that you have one.” ~Stella Adler

“It’s not what you look at that matters, it’s what you see.” ~Henry David Thoreau

“He has made everything beautiful in its time. He has set eternity in the human heart.” ~Ecclesiastes 3:12

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Church: No Luggage Required!

A Hilarious Message for Visitors and Churchgoers Alike

Welcome to Church (mitchteemley.com)Dear pastors, teachers, and church drama groups: When I first set foot inside a church, I wasn’t sure what I believed, or how to behave. Would I have the wrong views? The wrong version of the Bible? Would I use the wrong lingo? In other words, I was dragging a lot of “luggage” with me! So a few years back, I wrote a Saturday Night Live-style scene to put church visitors at ease, and encourage church members to bring their friends. Apparently it struck a chord, because it’s now regularly presented at churches all over North America! I also filmed a video version (below), and it too has been shown at churches everywhere!

Welcome to Church (mitchteemley.com)You can preview or order Welcome to Church: No Luggage Required from my script publisher SkitGuys.com by clicking here!

Or you can order the video from my church film distributor Sermon Central by clicking here!

P.S. Visit The Story Shop (above) to see my whole catalogue of movies, scripts, books, and teaching resources!

Posted in For Pastors and Teachers, Humor, Religion/Faith, Videos | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

42 Years Ago My Life Changed Forever

Marriage

halves our griefs,

doubles our joys,

and quadruples our expenses.

~G. K. Chesterton

Forty-two years ago this week, I met a woman who would change my life forever. Two years later, I asked her to marry me, and she said yes. And, while it’s true that before marriage I lived cheaply, I now live life far more richly.

I’ll love you forever, TrudyBlue.

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100 Years Ago (But It Could Have Been Today)

In 1925, Westminster Cathedral’s newly-established canon preached a message on contemporary sins. Reflecting on the traditional “7 deadlies” and upon his work among the poor, Canon Donaldson suggested these 7 Social Sins were the challenge of his time. They might have been forgotten if Mahatma Gandhi hadn’t heard them and had them published. 100 years later, they resonate as though they’d just been preached.

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Trapped in a Box of My Own Design

My Real Memoir

I’d built the cabin—and now I had cabin fever. This wasn’t the life I wanted. All I did, it seemed, was administrate my tiny-but-important-sounding Newport Institute of the Arts. I was doing the one thing I said I’d never do, running a business. True, I was planning on marrying Kat, and had even given her an engagement ring. My widowed mom knew I couldn’t afford one, so she’d bequeathed hers to us. But would we ever actually marry? We hadn’t even set a date.

Kat was just eighteen, and taking a full load of community college classes, while I was a geriatric 24-year-old putting in thirteen-hour days at his big little academy. We tussled for time, taking an early morning drive here, dozing through a “Tonight Show date” there.

I’d begun the year hosting our grand opening, rebooting my street theatre group, and directing my first full-length musical, The Fantasticks. I even managed to teach a free stage dialects class at a local high school, and direct a giggly children’s production of The Phantom Tollbooth for a nearby school district. All of which was a hoot, but produced little more than gas money, even at post-Oil Embargo prices. Only our jazz dance and ballet classes, with a little help from music tutorials, brought in enough to cover the school’s overhead.

I was treading water, and wanted more than to just stay afloat, but didn’t know what to do. I saw Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein three times that fall, and wanted to film spoofs! But I also wanted to do Shakespeare, to create stage musicals, to write novels, and—

The phone rang. It wasn’t Hollywood or Broadway. I was our landlord, the evil wizard (psychiatrist) Dr. Prodder. He called every month with a threat to increase our lease. This time he actually did it. “I’m increasing your payment from $750 to $1100 (about $8,000 now) at the end of December. Oh, and happy holidays, Mitch.”

That was it. We’d have to shut the school down. The coward that lived in my bowels, whimpered, “OK,” and was kind of relieved.  But the Viking that lived in my loins roared, “Man the longships!”

A week later, while mope-walking in my soon-to-be-ex village of Corona del Mar, I spotted a shut-down elementary school. “The district will take anything,” said the agent. “How about six hun….$450?” I said. We had a deal.

I instantly turned into Mickey Rooney. “We’re putting on a show, kids!” I told my instructors. Newport Beach’s The Daily Pilot ran a big story on us, resulting in a new wave of sign-ups. Kat and I floated on hope through Christmas into the New Year.

We did our mega-recital “The Winter Fayre” at our new digs, even though we hadn’t signed the papers yet. Our student’s family members attended en masse, and new sign-ups tripled! “Maybe I can afford to hire an administrator!” I told Kat.

The next day, Prodder called to prod. “We’re moving this week,” I told him, and was about to hang up. “Wait!” he said. “What are you paying?” Surprised, I answered, “$450.” “Stay, and I’ll make it $400,” he replied. I couldn’t believe it. I’d out-psyched the psychiatrist, called a bluff I didn’t even know he had!

And so we said, “Hello, old school,” and stayed where we were. But soon, too soon, I would experience…

Two very painful goodbyes.

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What Would Make America Truly Great Again?

Thought for the Week

Donald Trump is being inaugurated on Martin Luther King Jr. Day. This is weightier than it sounds. Why? Because, while Mr. Trump professes to “Make America Great Again” largely by protecting us against others, Dr. King strove to make America great by including others. Unity rather than division, inclusion rather than exclusion, was on my heart when I wrote An Open Letter to President Trump eight years ago. And it still is. So I’ve updated and reprinted it here:

Dear President Trump,

I’ve tried so hard to figure out what I believe the United States and the rest of the world needs from you. I can’t find the perfect words, but what I do know is this: It’s not about policies, it’s about, as Dr. King said, “the content of our character.” I won’t presume to judge what’s inside of you, but I believe that, in the long run, a leader’s, and indeed a nation’s, character are more important than their policies.

You rode to office on a tide of fear and anger, and these can serve a purpose when they’re directed toward things, rather than people. So, please, cease to ridicule and strive to listen. Find the humility to admit when you’re wrong. Seek counsel from those with other perspectives. Model in yourself what is so desperately lacking in our culture: civility.

When a young man saunters across the street in front of my car, forcing me to slam on my brakes, never deigning to even glance in my direction, I worry. Not about his hostility, but about his indifference. Because differences can be resolved, but indifference can’t. Indifference doesn’t care. It refuses to acknowledge the rights or even the existence of the other.

I beg you not to be that person, sir, but instead to find the root of civility within you that says to the other, “You matter too.” You’re famous for admiring winners. Well, real winners don’t climb over others, they pull others up with them.

I began by saying I didn’t know what we need from you. I now realize this letter should have been about what you need from us. And so, you have my pledge, sir, to pray daily for your success in modeling and drawing out of the American people not just greater material success, but greater civility, greater understanding, greater inclusion…

Greater character.

MT

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No Matter What Others May Intend

Joseph’s brothers sold him into slavery. He was tempted to give in to despair. (Who wouldn’t be?) But he chose instead to trust the God he knew would never abandon him.

Divine irony: Two decades later his brothers came to Egypt in the midst of famine to throw themselves at the mercy of the great Vizier–only to learn he was the brother they had betrayed! Emotionally shattered and fearing for their lives, they begged him for forgiveness. And Joseph replied:

Presentation1

Joseph looked past the duplicity of humans, and placed his trust in God alone. Do we? Do we forgive those who misunderstand us and attempt to harm us, “being fully persuaded that God is able to do what he has promised“? (Romans 4:21)  Do we trust that no matter what others may intend, God intends it for good?

“He will never leave you nor forsake you.”

~Deuteronomy 31:8

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , | 37 Comments

I Finally Found the Perfect Blog Name

Mitchellaneous

How to Choose a Blog Name

After abandoning the title Don’t Read This, You’ll Only Encourage Him! I did what any creative guy would do: polled my Facebook friends for steal-able ideas. “I need a name that represents more than just one aspect of my endlessly intriguing personality,” I humbly explained (you see how I am?).

The minute my friend Barb suggested Mitchellaneous (her long-time nickname for me), virtually all of my other friends agreed that it was perfect. I liked it too! However, Mitchellaneous wasn’t as thematically specific as, say, Kenny’s World of Ferrets. So I decided I’d also need a subtitle, one that would indicate the site featured stories with meaningful messages.

I happily began the process of acquiring my URL. But I was shocked to learn that the name “Mitchellaneous” had already been taken — by a blog site featuring graphic bestiality and child pornography! (Yes, I alerted WordPress, and it was eventually removed.) A number of other perfectly innocent people have also used the title, including a Canadian writer named Mitchell Toews. In fact, even though his name is not that similar to mine, it pops up every time I Google my name–which I now do every month or two for security reasons (and because I like to see my name in print).

So I abandoned Mitchellaneous as a site title, but as an homage re-labeled my Miscellaneous Category “Mitchellaneous.” Then, disappointed and a little daunted, I went back to the drawing board. What name could I give my blog that was completely unique, as well as—new concern—safe? One that no one else on earth was using?

Suddenly, there it was, staring me in the face. Every time I logged on to Facebook. Every time I handed my driver’s license to a policeman: “No, officer, I’m sure the light was just a very orangey yellow.” It was the name no one else in this version of the multiverse has. It was–drum roll, cymbal crash–

My name.

To be continued.

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Here They Are: My Biggest Hits of 2024!

Forget the Grammys and Academy Awards, here’s the award show everyone’s really been waiting for: My most popular blog posts of 2024! Things took a strange turn last year when a bunch of traffic-blocking glitches kicked-in. Result? My most-read blogs all happened earlier in the year. With one exception: My late year post Help, I’m Being WordPress Suppressed! instantly became #1 — you guys are awesome! Meanwhile, the most popular topic continues to be my memoirs, followed by animalswriting, and love. Oh, and photography — so please enjoy these images culled from last year’s biggest hits, followed by The List!

Click on any picture to enlarge it, or to begin the slide show (if you can — this is one of those recurring WordPress glitches).

Most Read (with 12 Most Liked in parentheses)

  1. Help, I’m Being WordPress Suppressed!
  2. The Lives of Trees (#1)
  3. Facing the Future (#2)
  4. It’s My Birthday! (sort of)
  5. Monogamy Is Not Natural (#3)
  6. The End of An Era
  7. Counting My Blessings (#10)
  8. How I Invented Coffee (#8 – tie)
  9. 55 Years Ago This Month (#6)
  10. Yay, I’m 10! (#4)
  11. Be Who You’re Called to Be (#5)
  12. The Long and Winding Road (#11)
  13. Rough Grace
  14. On My Wife’s Birthday (#8 – tie)
  15. Sixty Years Ago Today
  16. What’s Up, WordPress?
  17. Why Life Isn’t Fair (#8 – tie)
  18. Love. Before It’s Too Late
  19. Epic Design Fails (#8- tie)
  20. Weird Wonderful World
  21. Real Fatherhood (#9 -tie)
  22. How to Be Free
  23. Surprising Public Sculptures (#8 -tie)
  24. Shine! (#9 – tie)
  25. Why I Don’t Do Drugs
  26. Four Years Ago This Month
  27. Smile, It’s Friday!
  28. Let It Snow (#12)
  29. My First Comic Book Has Been Published!
  30. Thank You, God, for Not Making Me a Star
  31. A Quiet Spectacle
  32. I Was Attacked and Lived to Tell the Tail!
  33. Compassion (#7)
  34. Confession: I’m in Love With Another Woman
  35. Love and Stroganoff
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Building a Patchwork of Love

Dear preachers, teachers and group leaders: A new year has begun, and that means new opportunities to love and minister to others. Not just for you, but for everyone in your congregation, classroom, or group. If you’re looking for a great illustration to set up a talk on caring for others, my 2-minute video A Patchwork of Love (above) may be just the thing! It’s available from my church film distributor Sermon Central.

To learn more, or to download the video, click here!

P.S. Visit The Story Shop (above) to see my whole catalogue of movies, scripts, books, and teaching resources!

Posted in For Pastors and Teachers, Humor, Movies, Religion/Faith, Videos | Tagged , , , , , , , | 8 Comments