My Life as a “Wild Indian”

Left to Right: Downey, California – Grandpa Teemley – Downey’s Apollo 11 builders – Flying toddler

My Real Memoir: My Life as a “Wild Indian”

First Off…

I apologize for the offensive stereotype in the title. It’s not a reference to Native Americans. It’s what Grandpa Teemley called me almost from the moment I was born. It was a common term of endearment back then for PETs (particularly excitable toddlers). And I’m told Grandpa claimed me as his own personal PET from the moment I was born. Which I barely was: apparently two sets of forceps (eight ceps!) were required to extract me from my first abode. But when I finally came out, I flew — and haven’t stopped flying since.

As I Said Previously…

I was born in Whittier, California, home decades earlier to Pres. Richard Milhous Nixon. The Milhous family had a long, if somewhat forgotten, history in Whittier. Later, in my teens, I would discover an overgrown lot there full of Milhous gravestones. The original cemetery was apparently now a fast-food franchise (which raises rather chilling questions regarding the content of their hamburgers). I considered snatching Nixon’s maternal grandfather’s grave marker as a unique memento. But one doesn’t simply “snatch” a granite headstone.

Welcome to Downey

I spent my early years, however, in nearby Downey, California. Downey began as a Spanish ranchero in 1777, while 3,000 miles away there was a PEH (particularly excitable hissy) between the east coast colonialists and Great Britain.

Downey later became famous as the birthplace of the Apollo Space program, and home of the oldest still-surviving McDonald’s. As well as the singing duo The Carpenters. And, most importantly, me. In fact, the Carpenters and I would later, briefly, attend college together when… But I’m getting ahead of myself. I do that a lot. In fact, I can see myself up ahead right now. No, wait, self, don’t step in that…too late.

While Saving Up for Their First Home…

My parents, better known as Mommandad, lived with Grandma and Grandpa Teemley. I’m told my husky German baker of a grandfather was the only one who could channel my “Wild Indian” antics. He did this by tossing me roughly halfway to the moon; I was the precursor to the Apollo Space program. I loved Grandpa’s rocket-Mitch launches more than anything else during those first two years of life. Which is probably why, for the next decade or so, most of my dreams were about flying straight up into the air.

Oh, and…

About That Wild Indian Thing…

One morning, right after we’d moved into our first little starter-outer home, I escaped from my crib and climbed out a window while my parents were still asleep. I was dressed, I’m told, in nothing but “warpaint” (Mom’s lipstick, plus—cringe—that-which-shall-not-be-named from my discarded diaper). A neighbor called the police, and they promptly returned me to our new home, holding me at arm’s length, I’m sure.

Dad reinforced my crib.

Twice.

But I kept flying out of it.

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

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Have You Discovered Your Superpowers Yet?

Thought for the Week: Have You Discovered Your Superpowers Yet?

The Term Superpower…

Often gets used tongue-in-cheek. I sometimes jokingly refer to my ability to burp-on-demand (despite frequent requests not to) as a superpower. But real superpowers exist. Seriously. Have you discovered yours yet? If not, there’s a way to do so.

It’s called the CliftonStrengths test. In case you’re not familiar with it, some decades ago, psychologist Don Clifton launched the strengths-assessment movement. His idea was simple: “What if we studied what’s right with people, instead of what’s wrong with them?” The result was a test that millions (including me) have taken in order to find out what their key, underlying strengths are. Not only to help them discover what careers they’re wired for, but where they’ll be most satisfied—and where they’re uniquely gifted to serve others.

For Example

If your strengths include Futuristic (one of mine), you can envision how things could be in a way few others can. That, according to Clifton, coupled with my Communication strength, means I’m wired to convey concepts and tell stories that inspire others to enact that vision. And, brother, I’ll take that superpower over invisibility–or even flying–any day! (In fact, it is a kind of flying.)

If your strengths combine Includer and Empathy (two of my wife’s superpowers), you have the unique ability notice people who are on the perimeter, to feel what they’re feeling, and to draw them in. That’s a million times better than melting steel with your eyes!

We All Have Superpowers

But, like comic book superheroes, we have to work through their downsides — they’re often the silver lining of what, until now, we’ve only viewed as problems. Like comic book superheroes, we have to recognize and train them. But when we do, we turn into the superheroes we were created to be!

Have you discovered your superpowers yet?

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Who Will Rejoice When You Die?

Who Will Rejoice When You Die?

Who Will Rejoice When You Die?

“For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.” ~Ephesians 6:12

Who misses you when you die says a lot.

But who rejoices says even more.

Who will rejoice when you die?

Ω

Note: Although the top quote is widely attributed to C.S. Lewis, one authority says he cannot find it in any of Lewis’s writings. Another source attributes it to the great missionary C.T. Studd, but I find no additional attributions to Studd or anyone other than Lewis, so I’ve let it stand. Certainly, both Lewis and Studd were worthy to have prayed it.
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Warning: This Isn’t a Blog Post!

Warning: This Isn't a Blog Post
Image by Caden Van Cleave

Warning: This Isn’t a Blog Post, Part Deux

This Is Only a Test

…of My Early Warning Blogger Burn-Out System. Were this an actual blog post, you would be instructed to take shelter in the nearest Comment box, and say wonderful things about me until the All Clear notice.

OK, so I lied. This is a blog post. And once again, it’s my oh-so-clever way of letting you know that, along with Wednesdays, I intend to work very hard henceforth at not publishing Saturday blog posts.

I Wrote Last Fall…

…that I’d become overwhelmed with daily email notifications. As a result, I stopped posting on Wednesdays. That helped a lot. So now I’m planning a second weekly breather. This will buy me time to respond to previous emails, work on my memoirs. And to not feel guilty about ignoring Saturday blog post comments on Sundays. I checked with God, btw, and God said, “Cool, but just remember this, Mitch:

“Don’t ignore My comments.”

ξ

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Fifty Most Unexpectedly Cool Things Ever

Fifty Most Unexpectly Cool Things Ever

Our world is full of strange, amusing, and even surprisingly beautiful things. It’s just that sometimes we need to take a closer look to appreciate what we’re seeing. (Make sure to read the captions!)

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

“Sometimes the most scenic roads in life are the detours you didn’t mean to take.” ~Angela N. Blount

“Almost everything strange washes up near Miami. ” ~Rick Riordan

“Not only is the Universe stranger than we think, it is stranger than we can think.” ~Werner Heisenberg

“I’m very polite by nature, even the voices in my head let each other finish their sentences.” ~Graham Parke

“The unexpected is what makes life possible” ~Ursula K. Le Guin

“I am in a ridiculous humour, I am a ridiculous fellow. Everything is ridiculous. Come along!” ~Charles Dickens

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I Honestly Had No Idea

I Honestly Had No Idea

Forty-Three Years Ago…

I met a woman who would change my life forever. And almost entirely for good. The “almost” being purely subjective, since those are the parts of each other we haven’t finished sculpting yet. I don’t know who I’d be today if I hadn’t met Trudy. But I’m certain I wouldn’t like him as much as I do the man she’s shaping me into.

I honestly had no idea what was to come when I spotted this remarkably pretty girl amidst the 200+ members of a mass church choir. All I knew was that I couldn’t stop sneaking glances at her. And then, when she showed up a few nights later at our church’s performing artist’s fellowship meeting, I thought, “She acts, she sings, she’s beautiful—what’s not to like?”

We Honestly Had No Idea…

When we went out for our first cuppa joe (we both loved coffee) that it was the beginning of a circuitous path that would lead to a lifetime together. Were we “soul mates”? Maybe from God’s perspective. But from our perspective, we were two very different people who would need to do a lot of rubbing and polishing before we “fit.” Maybe we made each other into soul mates (“as iron sharpens iron, so one person sharpens another”). But at any rate, fit we did. And fit we do.

Where Will the Path Lead From Here?

I don’t know, I only know that we’ll be on it together. And we wouldn’t have it any other way, even though the day we met…

I honestly had no idea.

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I’m Beginning at the Beginning…Again

My Real Memoir: I’m Beginning at the Beginning…Again

Five Years Ago…

I had an idea, and I hope to have another eventually. But meanwhile, that one was so good that I’ve decided to have it again. “Ahem, and what was your i…dea, Mitch?” you ask. Oh, yeah, it was to write a series of weekly memoir posts in chronological order. And stop rolling your i’s (I hate it when you do that), there’s more. Part two of my idea was that, when bundled together, these posts would serve as a first draft for what would eventually become a real memoir — an actual book. Or two. Or three. And now I’m beginning at the beginning…again.

“But Why?” You Ask

First, because many of my readers haven’t read those first My Real Memoir posts. And second, because our Italian programmer friend Algo Rithmo also had an idea. And, like many of Algo’s ideas, it scrambled a bunch of former ideas. Result: the links connecting five years of My Real Memoir posts have all been obliterated! So, not being one to cry over spilt syntax, I’m beginning at the beginning…again.

I’ll still continue to post the current episodes (My Real Memoir: A New Hope?), which follow my life as a young adult. But I haven’t decided yet whether to alternate them with these beginning-again episodes (My Real Memoir: The Phantom Menace), or to post them on separate days. At any rate…

Thus Beginneth (Again) My Real Memoir

“It was a dark and stormy night, it was the best of times, it was the worst of times…” No, wait, let’s go further back… “There was once a happy little zygote…” No, not there, here:

According to Ancestry.com, the first Teemley, Conrad, whose father was not named Teemley, came to America from Germany. He married a sweet German girl with the same first, last, and middle name as his mother. OK, that’s kinda creepy. Except that Conrad’s mother wasn’t his mother. Which is to say that, apparently Conrad was illegitimate (I’ve been called a bastard a few times, but never realized it was historical).

And his wife? No actual relation to Conrad’s same-named cheated-on non-mom, but a woman with a completely different set of parents (whew). Only, she didn’t have the same name as her father either. Sagen was? (Say what?)

And, adding to the mystery, according to ancestryDNA.com, I have no German blood! Because, even though Conrad and Eva were German-born, they weren’t actually Germans. The logical conclusion, therefore, is that they were international spies serving undercover as stodgy 19th century farmers. Or could it be that Ancestry.com is confused? Nein! This is going downhill fast. Let’s fast-forward a smidge.

Chapter One: The Pantom Menace

I was born in Whittier, California, the home of Richard M. Nixon, to whom I’m also not related (whew). “So you won’t have me to kick around anymore” (that’s funny if you’re old).

Oops, out of time.

Until next week, meine freunde, auf wiedersehen!

Said the maybe-not-so-German memoirist.

To read the next My Real Memoir: The Early Years, click here.

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Darkness Cannot Drive Out Darkness

Darkness Cannot Drive Out Darkness

Thought for the Week: Darkness Cannot Drive Out Darkness

“In the process of gaining our rightful place we must not be guilty of wrongful deeds. Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred. We must forever conduct our struggle on the high plane of dignity and discipline…we must rise to the majestic heights of meeting physical force with soul force.”

Today America Celebrates…

The life and legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.  Dr. King’s fame is tied, of course, to his leadership in producing positive change for Black Americans. But he is equally famous for insisting that darkness cannot drive out darkness. That real change can only be accomplished through peaceful, respectful means. Through loving rather than hating our enemies—who so often turn out to be our neighbors. Dr. King loved his friends. But he also loved his enemies.

Do we?

How Desperately…

We need his legacy today. True, many people told Dr. King (and Gandhi, and Mandela, and Jesus) that “only force and fear can produce change!” But the problem, Dr. King knew, was that after the smoke cleared, we would all have to face the future together—those who’d forced the change and those upon whom it was forced.

If change is not brought about peacefully, respectfully, it doesn’t last. Instead, it only lays the groundwork for the next act of violent, forceful change.

And on and on it goes.

So Let Us Refuse…

To drink from the cup of bitterness and hatred. Instead, let us “rise to the majestic heights of meeting physical force with soul force,” of driving out hatred…

With love.

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Created Through Him and For Him

Created Through Him and For Him

The Reason We Are Here

“For in him all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things have been created through him and for him.” ~Colossians 1:16

“Nothing teaches us about the preciousness of the Creator as much as when we learn the emptiness of everything else.”
 ~Charles Spurgeon

~AΩ~

 

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Five Things to Change in 2026

Five Things to Change in 2026

Change your look:

Five Things to Change in 2026

Change your outlook:

Change your habits:

Change your attitude:

Change your perspective:

Note: Thanks to Carolyn at Nuggets of Gold for suggesting several of these.
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