The Day I Discovered Girls

Photo by Gerrie Vernon

My Real Memoir

The He Man Woman Haters Club

The day I discovered girls came shortly after, inspired by the Little Rascals TV show, Jeff (of Jeff-and-Rory fame) and I formed a “He Man Woman Haters Club — No Girlz Allowd!” (Rory couldn’t attend because, in a stroke of vicious irony, he had to clean his kid sisters’ room.) We met two times in a “secret” clubhouse (Jeff’s garage), to talk about “man stuff.” It was profoundly…boring.

I resigned. Which left Jeff as the only remaining member, so he resigned too. The problem was, I liked girls. A lot. Liked talking to them. Liked looking at them. But the real deal-sealer came when I skinned my elbow on the school blacktop. A tender-hearted older woman, a 3rd grader, saw me crying, and rubbed my shoulders as she escorted me to the nurse’s office.

“That must have hurt,” the nurse observed. “No, it felt good!” I said. I was thinking about that life-altering shoulder-rub, not my elbow. Still, I had no future with older women.

And Then I Met Lisa

I’d already been in love with my 1st grade teacher Miss Peggy, and with Nurse Sandy at the hospital where I’d had my super-secret operation. But this was the first actual girl-girl I’d fallen for. Lisa was a tall, dark-haired beauty who loved reading as much as I did. It was like at first sight! I walked her home from school, and told her I couldn’t stay. But then we talked about our favorite books. Still, I had to go. But then she pointed at a chess board in her living room, and said, “I could teach you.”

So, you see it really was woman who first tempted man.

I don’t know how long I stayed, but when I left it was definitely on the nightly side of not-daytime. “I was worried sick about you!” Mom yelled when I walked in the front door. (“Sick”? Honestly, I never once saw her throw-up when I came home late.) Then I told her about Lisa. “I think she’s my girlfriend.”

Mom grinned. “Well, not until you buy her something.”

“What?”

“How about a ring?”

J.J. Newberry Was…

…the pre-curser of Walmart, the pinnacle of fashion, the most sophisticated store I could think of. After agonizing over the price, I spent all I had (35¢) on a handcrafted ring with an exquisite red gem I was pretty sure was a ruby.

Still, true love is elusive. Over time, Lisa and I drifted apart.

We lasted three days.

Adventure was calling, in the form of Jeff-and-Rory. And so I answered.

Years later, in high school, a short, platinum blonde would smile at me, and I would smile back. “Don’t you remember me?” she would ask. “I’m Lisa.” And I would be stunned. Alas, the magic of first-like would have faded.

But my love of girlkind would continue apace.

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When We Take Time, We Gain Time

Darren Tunnicliff (flickr.com)Artwork by Darren Tunnicliff

Thought for the Week

When we take time, we gain time. Say what? My old comedy partner Allen once wrote a scene about two teenage girls working at a fast food stand. The first, smart and ambitious, slaps at coins in an effort to make “quick” change. Increasingly annoyed customers watch as she drops their change on the floor and hurls their half-wrapped burgers into a bag. Result? She takes twice as long as the chatty airhead at the next register does. And yet the ambitious girl honestly believes she’s “saving time.”

I’m Well Beyond My Teens…

…and very much of the male persuasion, but I’m like that ambitious teenage girl. My hyperactive metabolism, coupled with years of diligent practice, have programmed me to race about bumping into things, trying to do two or three things at once, sloppily and badly, rather than one thing smoothly and well.

And so, as an experiment, I began forcing myself to stop and take long, deep breaths every time I caught myself hurrying. Only then, after thinking “what’s next?” would I allow myself to thoughtfully and intentionally resume my activity.

Finding the Spaces Between the Spaces

At first, these pauses seemed wasteful, extravagant, even if they did hold a certain indefinable peace. But oddly enough, I discovered that, in those “spaces-between-the-spaces,” time seemed to pause with me, and then resume when I resumed. I know this bends the laws of economics, but — it’s not time that’s wasteful, it’s hurry. Haste really does make waste.

Near the ending of The Time Machine, one of my favorite movies as a kid, the inventor of the titular device disappears into the future. His housekeeper asks where he’s gone, and his best friend replies, “I don’t know, but he has all the time in the world.”

Time doesn’t follow the laws of economics, it follows the same mysterious laws that made us, and occupies the same spaces we occupy. In fact, it’s a part of us. We are time machines. So when we take time, we gain time. Because…

Time has all the time in the world.

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Real Prayer Is Petition, Not Pretension

Source: Pexels

“Be anxious for nothing, but in all things, through prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God that transcends all understanding will guard your heart and mind in Christ Jesus.” ~Philippians 4:6-7

Real prayer is petition, not pretension. The first is the presentation of an urgently felt need. The second is the false assumption that one knows in advance what the outcome should be.

Sadly, many believe the latter equals true faith. Yet the Apostle Paul directs us to put our faith not in outcomes, but in God himself. That’s why the above passage ends with the promise that, when we do, our peace will “transcend all understanding.” That is, whether or not we understand the outcome, we’ll know we’ve placed it where it belongs, with the One who does.

Even Jesus, in intense anxiety over what lay ahead, petitioned his Father to, if possible, “let this cup (of suffering) pass from me.” But then, sensing the answer was “no,” Jesus replied, “Yet not as I will, but as You will” (Matthew 26:39).

The outcome, had it been what Jesus requested, would have been ultimately disastrous for all humankind. Instead, it brought a peace that transcends all understanding not only to Jesus himself…

But to all who’ve followed him ever since.

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Animals Have Attitudes Too!

Animals have attitudes too“Wait — dinner will be ‘late’? Not funny, Tiffany!” boredpanda.com

Humans Aren’t the Only Ones With a Point of View

Animals have attitudes too! Big time. I hope you enjoy these funny, unexpected pet moments (I had fun coming up with the captions). There are also a few accidentally scary ones, along with some just plain “Awww” moments. Because, well, animals!

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

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Is Your Computer Male or Female?

Source: blaugh.com

I didn’t write the following, but I do find it amusing. (I don’t know who wrote it.) Yes, it’s based on stereotypes, but there are some “gee, that kinda rings true” statements. And, yes, it’s not very of-our-time; I mean, are all computers necessarily cisgender? Well, apparently, yes. I checked and it turns out all computers use “binary code” (rim shot). For now, at least. ~Mitch

Is your computer male or female? Ships are characterized as female (“Steady as she goes”). What about computers? A group of computer scientists—both male and female—were asked. And they gave these hilarious conflicting replies.

Computers are Female (according to Males) – How You Can Tell:

  • No one but their Creator understands their internal logic.

  • The language they use to communicate with other computers is incomprehensible to anyone else.

  • “Bad command or file name” translates to “If you don’t know why I’m mad at you, then I’m certainly not going to tell you.”

  • Even your smallest mistakes are stored in long-term memory for later retrieval.

  • You can do the same thing for years, and then suddenly it’s wrong.

  • They make you take out the garbage.

  • As soon as you make a commitment to one, you never stop buying it accessories.

Computers are Male (according to Females) – How You Can Tell:

  • They have a lot of data, but are still clueless.

  • They’re supposed to help you solve problems, but half the time they are the problem.

  • A better model is always just around the corner.

  • They look nice and shiny until you bring them home.

  • It’s always necessary to have a backup.

  • In order to get their attention, you have to turn them on.

  • They’ll do whatever you say if you push the right buttons.

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A Tale of Two Best Friends

Left to Right: Me, age 7  –  Jeff a.k.a. “Sunshine”  –  Rory-the-Dauntless  –  La Mirada, California

My Real Memoir

Hello Sunshine

This is a tale of two best friends, one full of sunshine, one full of clouds.

We’d moved to La Mirada a month into my 2nd grade year. And while our shiny new suburb might be “America’s Most Completely Planned,” my life was anything but. My only friend was a tiger-striped tabby. True, I had a goofy sense of humor and a wild imagination, but I mostly used them to amuse myself. Anyone who met me would have pegged me as an introvert. But at age seven, something instantly turned me into an extrovert. That something was Jeffrey (nickname “Sunshine”) Ward.

La Pluma Elementary school was full of strangers. Until class-clown extraordinaire Jeff, who’d never met a stranger and assumed everyone else felt the same, said, “Let’s be best friends!”

Not only did Jeff wipe away the last remaining cobwebs of my former shyness, he became my new template for how to do school. Both for good (other kids loved my stories and antics!) and for evil (the teacher didn’t). I spent a lot of time in the “learning not to interrupt” corner, and under the teacher’s desk (that was a thing in those days).

With Jeff, I acquired a second family: Paul, his jazz-loving optometrist dad; Roberta “Bert,” his suburban-bohemian mom, who treated us as intellectual equals (which I loved); and Jeff’s older brother and younger sister. Sleepovers and adventures ensued!

Hello Cloudy

A short time later, I met a boy at the other end of the block–and mood spectrum. Rory was frequently mistaken for Jerry Mathers (Leave It to Beaver). But in many ways, he was the opposite of the Beaver and Jeff. He could have been nicknamed “Cloudy.” Rory was good-hearted, but shy and hesitant. When he became flustered, he’d sometimes stutter and then become even more flustered (I based the young hero B’frona in The Wishing Map on him). But there was something in him that filled in the other missing part of me and so, along with Jeff, he completed our fearsome threesome.

But Rory’s family was a different story. His stepfather Donald rarely smiled and mysteriously came and went. And his mother Pat, although young and pretty, seemed perpetually anxious to please her husband. When I slept over at Rory’s house, she’d tuck us in wearing a low-cut negligee (my first lesson in female anatomy), but it was for Donald, not us. Still, she was kind and patient–unlike Rory’s father. Rory often couldn’t come out to play because, like Cinderella, he was cleaning his half-sisters’ room (sweet girls and not to be blamed). Yet, for all his labors Rory rarely received any allowance. Only years later did I learn that he’d been horribly abused by the man he now calls “the Monster,” a serial adulterer and narcissist.

So Thank You…

…Jeff and Rory, for the sunshine and the clouds. Jeff, you freed the daylight in me. And Rory, you taught me how to endure the darkness (we still had a good time, didn’t we?) and never give up. By the way, I’m ashamed to admit that, for a time, I called Rory my “second” best friend–juvenile thoughtlessness at its worst. I had two best friends, and loved them equally…

And I still do.

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

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Discovering the Beauty of the Unexpected

discovering the beauty of the unexpectedKiller Whale, Norway (buzzerilla.com)

Thought for the Week

We all appreciate classical beauty. But there’s an even greater in pleasure in discovering the beauty of the unexpected, the asymmetrically balanced, the imperfectly perfect that resonates more deeply with us. Perhaps it’s because we sense that, although very few of us are the former…

We are each capable of becoming the latter.

 “Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, we must carry it with us, or we find it not.” ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

(There are more quotes below the picture gallery)

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

“Everything has beauty, but not everyone sees it.” ~Confucius

          “There is no exquisite beauty…without some strangeness in the proportion.”      ~Edgar Allan Poe

“Long live the rose that grew from concrete when no one else even cared.” ~Tupac Shakur

“Should you shield the canyons from the windstorms you would never see the true beauty of their carvings.” ~Elisabeth Kübler-Ross

“Anyone who keeps the ability to see beauty never grows old.” ~Franz Kafka

      “You are imperfect, permanently and inevitably flawed. And you are beautiful.”      ~Amy Bloom

“He has made everything beautiful in its time.” ~Ecclesiastes 3:11

φ

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It’s Time to Share Your Story

It's Time to Share Your StoryActs 22:15-16

“You Will Be His Witness”

It’s time to share your story. Has Jesus changed your life? That’s the story he calls you to tell. You don’t have to know the Bible inside and out (although knowing it, really knowing it, will transform you), but you do need to tell your story. Because others desperately need to hear simple, real stories of how lives like ours have been changed by encounters with the living God.

“The world is not made of atoms. The world is made of stories.” ~Muriel Ruykeser

Share your story!

Posted in Culture, For Pastors and Teachers, Quips and Quotes, Religion/Faith | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 42 Comments

The 50 Cleverest Ads Ever!

The 50 Cleverest Ads Ever!Mondo Pasta – “So good you can’t let go!”

Stop Programming Me!

Why do I call these the 50 cleverest ads ever? Some years back I learned that advertisers don’t actually care what we think, only that we remember their product. Because, through sheer repetition, their ads program us to buy! So, I vowed then and there that before I’d buy “please-don’t-squeeze-the” Charmin toilet paper, I’d use old magazine pages (preferably the ones with Charmin ads). On the other hand, when an ad campaign is truly clever, it’s like finding fresh-baked cookies on your laptop. Therefore, to these 50 advertisers who respected us enough to treat us as though we actually had brains (and funny bones), “Thank you for the cookies!”

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

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The Amazon Van Is A-Comin’ Down the Street

The Amazon Van Is A-Coming Down the Street“The Wells-Fargo Wagon” song (see video below) from The Music Man is a classic tribute to a bygone era. But things don’t ever completely disappear, they changeHave you ever received something you never actually ordered? If so…

Here’s How the Song Might Go Today

Oho, the Amazon van is a-comin’ down the street
Oh, please let it be for me
Oho, the Amazon driver is a-comin’ to my door
I wish, I wish I knew what it could be
I got some toenail clippers that I never ordered
And once I got a big-screen TV
This could be just another set of earbuds
But it could be something I won’t have to pay for
Something special, like a Rolls-Royce with a hot tub
Just for me!

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