Signs of the Times

Signs of the TimesIt’s Important to Think Ahead

Signs of the Times

My favorite sign ever was painted on a shop window in Canterbury, England. It said, “Sex Aids for Ferrets!” Only upon drawing nearer did I see the small print beneath it that read, “Not really, but we do have some great deals on guitars.” I hurried in! Some signs inform us, some misinform us, but the best signs restore our faith in humanity by reminding us that as long as we have hope, love, and sarcasm we’ll get by.

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

Posted in Culture, Humor, Popular Culture & Entertainment, Quips and Quotes | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 18 Comments

Saying Goodbye to a Beloved Family Member

Saying Goodbye to a Beloved Family MemberMinuet – photo by our daughter Beth

Saying Goodbye to a Beloved Family Member

Does the fact that Minuet was a cat make this post seem any less sincere? It’s not. Anyone who’s adopted an animal knows that pets are family. And family means loving…

Unconditionally.

She Was Beautiful but Troubled

The moment our daughter Beth rescued her, we suspected this little cat had been mistreated, perhaps badly. But love was the cure. The more we held and stroked her, the more she relaxed, finally believing, it seemed, that she would never be abandoned again. She soon became affectionate and spritely, hence the name Minuet.

And then Misha arrived. If Minuet was the moody goth girl, we joked, Misha was the carefree cheerleader. And yet somehow these antithetical felines got along, even spooning together when they napped. That is, until Misha came of age.

Almost overnight, some insidious hormonal reaction occurred in Minuet. She seemed threatened by Misha’s very presence, repeatedly attempting to drive her away. And Misha, in-turn, defended herself; this was her home too—every inch of it. Claws were drawn again an again.

We finally had to permanently separate them, relegating Minuet to the place she felt safest, the basement. And so, for a year she lived in isolation. We visited her throughout the day, holding her and reminding her we loved her. But it was a band-aid, not a fix.

Our Daughter Rescued Her Again

Now out of college and living on her own, Beth came to visit. Her heart nearly broke when she saw Minuet alone in the basement. After holding and re-bonding with her Minuet, Beth insisted on taking her back with her to California.

To say that getting Minuet into a carrier and onto a plane was traumatic would be a gross understatement. She fought tooth and claws. Every fiber of trust we’d woven into her was shredded that day. Trudy and I cried as the plane departed, fearing our attempt at a solution had inflicted permanent damage.

But within a week, Beth reported, Minuet was exploring her new home and curling up next to her new hero at night. After all, Beth was the one who’d rescued her when we (in her perception) violently cast her out. It saddened us to be the enemy, but sometimes love makes you the bad guy. At any rate, it was a small price to pay to restore this beloved family member, who was now living happily with her true “mom.”

Minuet passed away five years ago this month, while looking quietly into her Beth’s eyes, knowing she was loved…

Unconditionally.

Posted in Culture, Memoir | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 63 Comments

The Day I Ran Away

The Day I Ran AwayPhoto source: Michal Bres

My Real Memoir

The day I ran away didn’t arrive unbidden. After all, I’d threatened before to leave once I’d had all I could take of unreasonable adult demands (brain-numbing homework and soul-sucking chores). But leave for where? Why, a raft on the Mississippi River, of course, where I’d live like Huckleberry Finn, free from all responsibilities! But the straw that broke this 7-year-old’s back was Mommandad’s increasing limits on my adventuring. Suddenly, I had to tell them, “Where I was going,” “When I’d be back,” and “Where I’d been!” Thus, on a cloudy Saturday morning, I informed Mom of my decision to leave and never return.

I must admit, the coolness of her reaction surprised me:

“Are you sure?”

“Yes!”

“OK.”

That was it. Just “OK.” And then she proceeded to pack my lunch. She was obviously anxious to get rid of me.

I Stomped About in My Bedroom…

…slamming necessities—my sacred texts (Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, The Call of the Wild) and leftover Halloween candy—into a manly rucksack (my pillowcase), then headed for the front door, shouting,

“I’m going now!”

Silence.

“Forever!”

“OK.”

Slam!

It Was Nearly Two Miles…

…to the end of The Field, the last vestige of rural life in our little suburb. I’d never been to the end, where the stately eucalyptus trees marched. Until now. As I trudged along, pillow case dangling from a broom handle, plastic pioneer canteen on my belt, I was ablaze with the spirit of adventure.

The only thing hampering my carefree spirit was the feeling I was being followed. Each time I’d reach the top of a hill I’d look back. Hadn’t I seen that car before? But then it would be gone. No, just my imagination.

Who knew a sack lunch could taste so good? I finished my PB&J, drained the last drop from my authentic Daniel Boone canteen, and headed toward the distant hills as the sun turned to burnt sienna (one of my favorite Crayola colors).

Three Hours Later…

…I was deep into uncharted territory. I was cold. And thirsty. Why had I decided to leave again? Reading a favorite chapter of Tom Sawyer would help, but that would require a bedside lamp. Or a flashlight and covers to read beneath.

I sat down on the hard alien soil, but I didn’t cry.

Much.

I’d almost reached the point of total despair when I heard wheels creeping up beside me. It wasn’t the sound of a car that had just arrived, it was the sound of a car that had been waiting, perhaps thirty or forty feet away, and then simply crept forward. Oh, great! I thought. And now I get kidnapped! Shlunka, shlunka, shlunk, the window rolled down.

“We’re having spaghetti for dinner. Want to come home?”

This time it was me who said,

“OK.”

Where can I flee from your presence?
If I go up to the heavens, you are there;
    if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.
If I rise on the wings of the dawn,
    if I settle on the far side of the sea,
even there your hand will guide me,
    your right hand will hold me fast.”

~Psalm 139:9-10

Posted in Culture, Humor, Memoir | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 55 Comments

Learn From the Past, Live in the Present

Learn from the past, live in the presentRoy T. Bennett

Thought for the Week

Learn from the past, live in the present: If we are wise (and if we are not, no advice will help), we will learn not to dwell in a place where change is impossible. Instead, we will draw lessons from there, and then return and apply them here where it is.

“Even a spineless anthropod sheds what’s no longer useful and leaves it behind them. Are you not greater than they?” ~Jason Versey

“Take care not to welcome today the terrors that will make yesterday’s demons look like angels.” ~Joyce Rachelle

“There’s no going back to erase the past… But if you look closer, you notice the ink never really dries on experiences. They can change their meaning the longer you look at them.” ~John Koenig

“Without experiencing pain from disconcerting periods of our lives, we would be a different person, perhaps a lesser person.” ~Kilroy J. Oldster

“Looking at the past to lament it is useless. Looking at the past to be proud of results is dangerous. Looking at the past to learn from it is wise.” ~Cardinal Văn Thuận

Δ

Posted in Culture, Quips and Quotes | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 38 Comments

Be Childlike, Not Childish

 Be childlike, not childishThe Right to Become Children of God

Be Childlike, Not Childish

Jesus calls his followers to grow spiritually, and yet at the same time to become more childlike. Isn’t that a contradiction? No, because being childish is trusting in something limited and flawed, like ourselves. But being childlike is trusting in something greater than ourselves. Hence, being childlike is the natural result of coming to know the One who is infinitely greater than us–and yet in whose image we are made.

~

“Never be afraid to trust an unknown future to a known God.”
~Corrie ten Boom

“Faith is the bird that feels the light and sings when the dawn is still dark.”
~Rabindranath Tagore

“The reason birds can fly and we can’t, is simply because they have perfect faith, for to have faith is to have wings.”
~J.M. Barrie

“All I have seen teaches me to trust the Creator for all I have not seen.”
~Ralph Waldo Emerson

“Faith does not eliminate questions. But faith knows where to take them.”
~Elisabeth Elliot

“Faith is not the belief that God will do what you want. It is the belief that God will do what is right.”
~Max Lucado

“Define yourself radically as one beloved by God. This is the true self. Every other identity is illusion.”
~Brennan Manning

“Gratitude takes nothing for granted, is never unresponsive, is constantly awakening to new wonder and to praise of the goodness of God. For the grateful person knows that God is good, not by hearsay but by experience. And that is what makes all the difference.”
~Thomas Merton

“I know now, Lord, why you utter no answer. You are yourself the answer.”
~C.S. Lewis

~

Posted in For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 39 Comments

50 Wildly Inventive Sculptures

Glass sulptures  by Rob Mulholland

It’s No Secret That I Love Art

But what I particularly love about these 50 wildly inventive sculptures is their use of unexpected media. Some artists, it must be admitted, are a little crazy, or at least willing to break “the rules” (see quotes by Lewis Carroll and others below). These sculptures, many made out of non-“art” materials, run the gamut from the sublimely subtle to the slightly absurd. Enjoy!

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

“Imagination is everything. It is the preview of life’s coming attractions.” ~Albert Einstein

“Others have seen what is and asked why. I have seen what could be and asked why not.” ~Pablo Picasso

“The question is not if we will be extremists, but what kind of extremists we will be. The nation and the world are in dire need of creative extremists.” ~Martin Luther King Jr.

“Without leaps of imagination or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all is a form of planning.” ~Gloria Steinem

                  “There are no rules of architecture for a castle in the clouds.”     ~G.K. Chesterton

“Let everyone else decide if it’s good or bad, whether they love it or hate it. While they are deciding, make even more art.” ~Andy Warhol

“Invention, it must be humbly admitted, does not consist in creating out of void but out of chaos.” ~Mary Shelly

“You’re mad, bonkers, completely off your head. But I’ll tell you a secret. All the best people are.” ~Lewis Carroll

                  “It’s delightful when your imaginations come true, isn’t it?”     ~L.M. Montgomery

Posted in Culture, Humor, Popular Culture & Entertainment | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 50 Comments

Always Tell the Truth, Even When You’re Lying

Photo by Thom Milkovic

Tips for Writers

Always tell the truth, even when you’re lying.

Um, what?

Most of us are familiar with the Blind Men and the Elephant story. Its point is twofold:

  • No one has a complete picture, even if they were “there in person,” but…
  • Everyone knows what they think happened, and what it meant to them

This is true in both fiction and non-fiction.

What About Journalists?

As non-fiction writers, they’re supposed to render facts as objectively as they can. But honest, objective fact-finders know that even after interviewing eyewitnesses (“blind men”) their summary will inevitably fall short of “complete.” Hence, “rioting occurred” is more accurate than “the protest turned into a riot” (did everyone riot? Were there no objectors?). And “many wept” is more accurate than “there wasn’t a dry eye in the audience” (did no one roll their eyes, and visit the loo?). There’s no such thing as a complete picture, and so, in essence, there’s no such thing as non-fiction — there are only degrees of fiction.

Make Your Readers Think

Even the best non-fiction contains lies (unavoidable fiction), and all good fiction contains truth (appropriated facts). This isn’t a weakness, it’s an invitation to present your readers with life in all its messy, intriguing glory, to make them think rather than do all the thinking for them. Don’t writersplain. Nuances, uncertainties, misunderstandings, conflicts, reconciliations and unresolved issues are all part of a good story—whether faithfully reported, or artfully invented.

If you report, tell us what each of the blind men “saw.” If you invent, show us what each of your characters believes, and then let the sparks fly when their perceptions rub up against one another. Allow your readers to agonize over the fact that, like the blind men in the old tale, each of the characters is a little bit right and a little bit (or a lot) wrong.

And most important of all, always tell the truth…

Even when you’re lying.

Posted in Books, Culture, Humor, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 26 Comments

The Day We Entered the Tunnel of Doom

Source: urbexiam.com

My Real Memoir

The Day We Entered the Tunnel of Doom: There are severe limits to how far you’re allowed to wander at age 7. Hence, to legendary adventurers like Rory, Jeff and me, “Don’t cross [insert name of familiar-as-a-freckle neighborhood street here]” was an annoying refrain. Still, we observed the rule (“observe” being a very malleable concept) in order to avoid that even more dreaded refrain, “Wait until your father comes home!”

But…

…our parents never said anything about how far we could travel underneath the streets. The most mysterious thing near us was The Tunnel of Doom (a segment of the massive L.A. storm drain system). But the entrance was covered by a big steel gate. So we could only shine our flashlights into it and imagine the Odyssean adventures beyond our reach.

But then, miraculously, some enterprising teenagers managed to pry up a corner of the gate–just enough for three 7-year-olds to squeeze through. And squeeze we did!

We Brought…

…flashlights, canteens, and homemade spears to defend ourselves against pet turtles that had been flushed down toilets and grown as big as Volkswagens. Being under 4′ tall, we didn’t have to bend over, but we did have to straddle the murky little creek that ebbed and flowed beneath us.

manhole-friendWe saw very few stalactites or stalagmites, and virtually no dinosaurs. But we did see scampering rats, picked-clean bones, and various things dropped through gutter grates (“No, honey, not Daddy’s watch!”). Oh, and it was a storm drain, not a sewer, so fortunately we didn’t encounter that kind of stuff.

We Got Lost

But only really scary-lost one time. On our way back, we’d come upon a cross-tunnel, and had no idea whether to go straight, left, or right. We tried climbing a ladder, and peering out through a gutter grate, but could only see blurring car tires and cat’s feet. Terrified, we vowed to never explore The Tunnel again! And then we sat down, visions of dying in this awful sunless tube flooding our eyes with tears. We finally decided one of us would stay here, and the other two would go left and right, and then report back.

Jeff returned half an hour later, shouting, “This is the way out!” And then he and I waited what seemed like days for Rory to return. We were afraid we’d have to abandon him, and confess what happened. Then there’d be a citywide search, and we’d be sentenced to Alkaseltzer! So Jeff and I took turns going to the exit to see if the sun had gone down yet.

Rory finally came back! We made another vow–tell no one what happened–and then hurried home for dinner.

We Broke Our First Vow

But with a caveat. Since The Tunnel was low on adventures anyway (there were almost no kid-eating monsters or lands that time forgot), we’d use it as a subway! We mapped every turn, and learned it by heart. There were only a few outlets we could actually exit through, and all were miles away. Our Secret Subway opened up whole new urban vistas to us — without crossing a single street, we increased our feral territory by tenfold! The Secret Subway lasted until some nosey grown-up said, “Wait, what the—?” and a bigger, heavier gate was installed.

Decades later, I taught at La Mirada’s Biola University, located near our old Secret Subway entrance. One day, I overheard two of my students talking about their latest “urban caving” expedition in The Tunnel of Doom. A rainstorm had struck while they were inside, and they’d nearly drowned! Apparently, there are quite a few 7-year-olds out there who never grew up!

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

Posted in Culture, Humor, Memoir | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 49 Comments

What Makes Us Civilized?

Photo by Biljana Martinic

Thought for the Week

What makes us civilized? Dictionary.com defines civilized as “having an advanced or humane culture.” One that responds collectively to the goodness that is intrinsic in each of us at birth. It’s what defines us as human (in the best sense of the word). It’s the impulse to bind together to love and protect what is innocent and pure in our world — children, animals, our environment, the oppressed or abandoned, and anyone in need.

“Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely…think on these things.” ~Philippians 4:8

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

Posted in Culture, Quips and Quotes | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 21 Comments

But What Is True Freedom?

What is true freedom?Photo by Mitch Teemley

Yesterday Was Independence Day in My Country…

…and I’m proud of the freedoms its founders proclaimed. But what is true freedom? I’m under no delusion that any country, culture or class can grant me the kind of freedom for which my soul hungers. Because that kind of freedom can only by granted by the author of freedom itself. And that kind of freedom comes not from independence but, ironically, from recognizing my profound dependence upon the One who both created me and “in whom I live and move and have my being.”

“For he has humbled you, and in your hunger given you manna to eat, which neither you nor your ancestors knew, so you might understand that you do not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of your Creator.” ~Deuteronomy 8:3

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 27 Comments