Making good Mondays is like making coffee -


The week is before us - like the coffee pot - waiting to brew. Making it good is a matter of choice, luck, creativity, patience and acceptance of the outcome.

Currently at Making Good Mondays

Active elements on this page: In the side bar you can find features of the day - a quote and NASA's image of the day. There are also active slide shows - Blogger Play, Life is Good and Spacey Shots. At the end of this column are a list of my regular Twitter updates and the current Reuters News In Pictures. Occasionally I will publish a new blog post, but I write mostly at other sites. Blogs where you can also find my writing:

Monday, September 28, 2009

When writing is tough

(Image credit: free-pictures-photos)

This is an experiment to see how well original composition works in RedGage.  It is an effort to work smarter, not harder.  It is also about what to do when writing does not happen as easily as you usually experience.

Occasionally I have confronted this state of being, I have done a little piece titled, "Why I can't write."  The purpose of it is to practice expressing feelings, the reality of the situation and possible solutions to the problem.  A subsequent piece might be called, "How it was back when I couldn't write."  Sometimes just a few sentences will get you unstuck.

Creativity is an elusive thing, here today and sometimes gone tomorrow.  Creativity is about tapping into your non rational, non linear capacity for thought and for expressing emotion.  It is also about breaking the rules, and about "thinking outside the box," to use a cliche.

Know that all writers experience feeling blocked.  And each of us has his or her own way of ending the dry spell.  This is mine for the day here.

Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Thursday, September 24, 2009

The Twitter news narrative brings light moments, along with the tough stuff.

GRAND JUNCTION, CO - AUGUST 15: Prostesters d...

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

The World gets together yet remains far apart -- Steve Clemons "Is at the United Nations watching the sun rise over the East River. Excited to see Obama Security Council session this morning," via Twitter.  "Obama repeatedly mentioned Pakistan's stability when asked about US interests in the region. Which means: India is the fulcrum," according to Marc Ambinder's tweet. PourMeCoffee tweets, "I recognize the UN General Assembly chairs from the Brady Bunch kitchen. Nice."

It's a secret --
The Washington Independent wrote Wednesday that, "State secrets critics slam new Obama policy."  John Dickerson reports, "Reading Light in the Attic with kids: when they laugh it's not just that they think something is funny; they think they've found a secret."

Health Care Reform's a hot item -- Read the Baucus health care bill, thanks to Open Congress.  Headlines from The Huffington Post: 1) "Dems ramp up push to block filibuster;" and 2) Christopher Hayes links, "Must read of the day: David Cay Johnston on the GOP's support for the Public Option...for property," The Hill reported on Sunday that "Amid health reform, Medicare agency is still headless: The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) will.. "mark its third anniversary next month since the massive agency had a Senate-confirmed leader," according to The Huffington Post.  A tweet from Karen Tumulty put it plainly: "My spy in Finance Cmte hearing room tells me Ensign's suit doesn't look bad in person, but on C-SPAN, he looks like a riverboat gambler."

Follow the money -- "Senator Dodd backs the banking super regulator," according to NPR via StumbleUpon.  And Chris Hayes has it figured out, when it comes to the White House plan for financial reform: "Sometimes I think it'd be more transparent to just give major banks permnt seats on the relevant legislative committees."

Has anything changed?  The New York Times is reporting that " Obama [has decided] to use current law to support detentions."  Glenn Greenwald summed it all up last week with this brilliant tweet: "In the Democratic Congress, MoveOn was condemned, ACORN defunded, telecoms immunized, Bush eavesdropping approved, Wall St. bailed out."

Related articles by Zemanta

Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Visitors bringing fun to our house

"Scrap Paper" was a small group of bloggers who compared notes on coffee for a time in years back.  We talked about a lot of things associated with coffee in one of our series of online conversations.  We named our favorite brands or flavors and we wrote about our memories of the occasions which brought each of us together with others for coffee. 

This image (via wordle.net) brought to my mind our current home circumstances which involve a series of visitors that we truly enjoy. Good friends, family and food are a foolproof combination for fun.  And coffee is so much a part of it, though some of our visitors do not drink coffee at all, preferring soft drinks or tea.  Most desserts are made better with coffee, though decaf coffee in the evening is the rule for most. 

What are the occasions for visitors these days?  We had friends for dinner and dominoes.  Our Dream Group got together at my house.  And our daughter and her family will be here for lunch today.  I find that a sparkling clean house is not something one wants to waste on just ourselves.  And the occasion of visitors is a good reason to cook specialty dishes that are our eating favorites, too.

All of this adds up to much fun, good conversation, lots of hugs, full tummies and feelings of satisfaction when things go well.  Lets do it again soon.


Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Texas rains energize plants and animals

Our Corgi wants to spend time outside in the fresh air.  Bushes in the yard have shiny leaves again, and fall flowers start to bud.  Lake levels rise and the city's usually smoggy atmosphere breathes clean.  Sidewalks and streets are slippery and windshield wipers tired.  Our cars need washing.

I am one of the animals energized when the clouds let loose.  Texas summer drought and heat exacts a toll on me, and I begin to wish for the cooler fall mornings long before they are due.  Labor Day is the clue to the change of seasons in the Southwest.  And before we know it Halloween and Thanksgiving are here and calling for kids and family, food and fun.

Thank goodness for this welcome weather.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Sunday, September 13, 2009

September 7-14, a very big news week, indeed . . .

It began with Labor Day. To be sure, the week felt markedly like a transitional one. During the week President Obama spent a great deal of time at the podium, making a number of very significant speeches. NASA watched over its STS-128 mission and released a number of spectacular images on Wednesday from the newly refurbished Hubble telescope. On Friday, the anniversary of 9/11/01, the President and First Lady spent time giving service to the community, as did thousands of people across the nation marking a National Day of Service. The week's news was full of stories about the politics of health care reform in a Congress now back to work, opinion about the growing divide amongst the electorate, and uneasy reports about the future of the war in Afghanistan, as well as the future of the U.S. space program.

What has changed, if anything? There is a bigger divide between members of the two major parties, evident in the behavior of Republicans during the President's speech Wednesday evening to a joint session of Congress. There seems to be growing opposition among many Americans, as well as rank and file Democrats, to the war in Afghanistan and its climbing casualty figures. This may have caused President Obama to say in his 9/11 speech at the Pentagon that he does not want Americans to forget the true nature of al-Qaeda, reports Scott Wilson of the Washington Post.

Opposition to health care reform has now grown to the point that organizers were able to stage a 9/12 march on Washington. Tens of thousands (according to the Washington Post estimate) of a loosely organized coalition of conservative "tea party" protesters marched on the nation's capitol Saturday. Jeff Zeleny of the NYT, summarized the tone:

Their anger stretched well beyond the health care legislation moving through Congress, with shouts of support for gun rights, lower taxes and a smaller government. But as they sang verse after verse of patriotic hymns like “God Bless America,” sharp words of profane and political criticism were aimed at Mr. Obama and Congress.

At the same time a crowd of over 10,000 people came to enthusiastically stand and cheer at President Obama's health care rally at Minneapolis' Target arena. The President told the crowd that now is the time for action and warned against the scare tactics being employed by the opposition, reports Reuters.

What has stayed the same? A year later, little has changed on Wall Street, according to the New York Times' Alex Berenson. Big banks have not really restructured, financial stocks are on the rise, complex derivatives remain in play, few hedge funds have closed and executives are still pulling down huge bonuses. For instance, "30,000 Goldman Sachs employees will earn an average of $70,000 this year." Worst of all the Obama administration's proposed regulatory changes have gone nowhere in Congress. And the passage of time decreases the chances of significant crisis-driven reform.

The space shuttle Discovery completed another highly successful mission to resupply the International Space Station Friday, landing safely at Edwards AFB in California after battling bad weather in Florida for a couple of days. To quote Reuters:

Discovery had carried more than 7.5 tons of food, laboratory equipment, science experiments, spare parts, a new treadmill and crew quarters for the space station. The outpost is a $100 billion project involving 16 nations, which is nearing completion after more than a decade of construction.

NASA is turning over crew transport to the station to Russia, at a cost of about $50 million per seat, as it begins phasing out the shuttle. The space agency is also considering hiring U.S. commercial firms to ferry its astronauts. . . NASA has six flights remaining to finish outfitting the station and then plans to move on with development of a capsule and rocket that could ferry crews to the moon. Barack Obama considers the results of a study that has determined NASA's lunar ambitions exceed its budget by about $3 billion a year.

What could change -- "Humans aren't going to Mars -- or anywhere else -- without more money," is the story from Wired-Science (9/8/09). Another headline, "Panel’s report threatens NASA’s mission," comes from The Hill (9/10/09) via Twitter. The article opens:

A report suggesting that NASA’s space travel goals are too ambitious for its budget is imperiling efforts by Florida and Texas lawmakers to win more money for the agency’s budget.

"The full Final Report is still being prepared and will be released when complete" is also via Twitter from NASA_HSF, the U.S Human Space Flight Committee. Look for it to be released in early October.

What will not change is the mainstream media's fascination with conflict, with who is winning or losing, or with the latest little dust up of the day. Too many have the mistaken idea that any old lie is merely the viewpoint of the opposition. So we get precious little journalistic analysis of the really important issues. The President seems to have regained his stride, but the right wing crazies are redoubling their efforts to keep him and the Democrats off stride. Congress has its hands full with health care reform and has no time for financial regulatory reform, nor perhaps the stomach for it.

What everybody needs is a day off to catch their breath. How about today? It has been a big week.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Friday, September 11, 2009

Update to "9/11/01 -- Is it really 8 years?"

"Don't Tell Me What 9/12 Means, Glenn Beck" is a post by James Poniewozik at Tuned In/Time Magazine (9/11/09).  Hap tip to Karen Tumulty for her Twitter link to this sobering piece:  Regarding my previous post, with its heart-rending illustration, if I offended anyone with my psychoanalysis of our nation as we continue to work through the grief of 9/11, that was not my intention.  Nor did I mean to politicize today's anniversary by psychoanalyzing Democrats and Republicans.  Just wanted to say. . . sorry for any pain I caused any reader.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Anniversary of 9/11/01 -- Is it really 8 years?

Hijacked airplanes 8 years ago set in motion a set of losses that many feel are still unresolved.  The nation, and many of us as individuals, still face a mourning process.   The subsequent years following the attacks produced a number of unforeseen consequences that still plague the nation. And actually many of the losses occurred after that singular day.  For example, a number of New York's firefighters died prematurely because of exposure to toxins at Ground Zero.  The two wars in the Middle East are still taking an awful toll on military and civilians alike.

For us as individuals, the grief work to process losses is highly personal, depending on the nature of our involvement in the actual events of 9/11. For us collectively, losses include the lives of thousands of people, our sense of geographical invulnerability, trust in the government --specifically the intelligence and military communities-- to keep us safe, and finally a great deal of the national "treasure."

In order to process loss we must go through certain stages of predominant feelings arising from grief.  Classic theory lists shock, denial, anger, bargaining, confusion, sadness and finally acceptance and moving on.  And an argument can be made that the country must pass through those same stages in order to heal.  We are not there yet.  And that is because we have experienced so many losses as citizens and groups along the way that we continue to cycle back through the grief stages with each new major loss.  And here we are left with unresolved losses that plague us.

Anniversaries associated with loss inevitably bring up other unresolved grief issues in each of us.  For me it is primarily the loss of my mom just prior to last Christmas.  But we also suffered losses as citizens: thousands of members of the military and civilians have given their lives these last 8 years.  As citizens we are enduring the loss of privacy and civil liberties protection,  the loss of billions of tax dollars, a recalcitrant recession, the loss of old alliances with other nations, and also the loss of bipartisanship within our own political system.

On this day, September 11, 2009, Democrats have yet to let go of certain losses and move on.  Those might include: the loss of the 2004 election, the loss of a budget surplus, and the loss of a predictable "loyal opposition."  Republicans have yet to let go of the loss of the 2006 and 2008 elections, the loss of their moderate wing, and the loss of control of Congress and the administration.  Democrats are in the bargaining stage regarding bipartisanship, and the denial stage regarding the budget and civil liberties.  In some ways Congressional leaders still seem to be in shock that  Democrats have the majority and the White House.  And now they mourn the loss of Senator Kennedy. Republicans are now stuck with recycling through denial and anger, with no wish to bargain with the opposition.  I see no signs of sadness and moving on to acceptance for any of them. except the almost entirely absent Moderates now trying to rebuild their lives .

What does this thesis have to do with 9/11?  The nation is in denial about Afghanistan, though that is changing.  The country is angry with Wall Street, who let us down, but not yet willing to get out of denial and pass new regulations or restore a fair tax level for the wealthiest citizens.  And leaders are confused about adhering to the rule of law and enforcing accountability for wrong doing.  We lost a lot these 8 years and we have not yet recovered.  But we all need to feel the sadness, get into acceptance, let go and move on.  It is the only path to national health.

 

Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Wednesday, September 09, 2009

Refurbished Hubble telescope yields spectacular images

It was worth the wait!  NASA has posted the first new images released by the Hubble ERO folks, following the refurbishment of the space telescope.  Senator Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) had the honor of presiding at this long awaited unveiling.  With the help of Digsby, Twitter and NASA's award winning website, I was able to grab one of several wonderful images for your viewing pleasure.  The image above is called "Stephan's Quintet - Galactic wreckage."

STS-128 has completed its mission to the International Space Station, exchanging members of the ISS Expedition 20 team, and resupplying the space station.  With good weather in Florida, the crew will land early Thursday evening.

Supplemental links -- Hat tip to my regular contributor, Jon, for the links marked with a (#):


Links in boldface are important new elements to the NASA stories
to be explored in a subsequent post.  The links indicate the Augustine Commission's recommendations to the Obama administration regarding the future of U.S. space flight, jeopardized by a lack of money.  I highly recommend the NPR article (in the Zemanta box below) as a first look at the panel's findings.  And here is the intro to the  Augustine Commission's Summary Report.  To quote:

Summary Report
 
A summary of the report from the Review of U.S. Human Space Flight Plans Committee was provided to the Director, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP), and NASA Administrator on Tuesday, September 8. The summary's text is consistent with presentations made during the committee's final public meeting on Aug. 12. The summary has been posted on this website for the public.

Transmittal Letter for Summary Report (pdf, 32K)

Download a copy of the Summary Report. (pdf, 152K)

For media questions regarding the Summary Report, contact Dr. Edward Crawley at MIT at 617-253-7510.

The full Final Report is still being prepared and will be released when complete. NASA is working with the Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) and other representatives of the Executive Office of the President to plan the next steps leading to a decision by the President about future U.S. human space flight policy."


Related articles by Zemanta
Zemanta helped me add links & pictures to this email. It can do it for you too.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Monday, September 07, 2009

Labor Day Long Ago

My first day of school occurred in 1944.  The day after Labor Day signaled the start of school when I was a child. To this day, Labor Day is the beginning of another year for me, though I am not in school and haven't sent my kids to school for decades.  These days, Labor Day carries very different cultural meanings. Most schools have already started and lots of people do not get the day off from work.

We lived on an alfalfa farm; my dad irrigated with water from Diversion Dam, pictured above. As the eldest of five children I was the first to go to school.  I entered the first grade; there was no kindergarten.  I rode a long way on a big yellow bus, walking out to the gate at the road to catch it.  I can't remember, but I'll bet my feet would not touch the floor for a few years.

My dad would have nothing of the labor movement.  He was one of those classic Wyoming men -- independent, Republican, very aware of national politics.  He was not a Roosevelt man, though I never heard him criticize the President or appear to be disrespectful of the office.  We listened to both national party conventions on the radio, and thought that surely Tom Dewey would beat Harry Truman in '48.

And now I have teen grandchildren in school in Texas, and a daughter who is a third grade teacher.  They are all out of school for Labor Day.  The third graders will not hear President Obama's speech to them, and the older kids will be allowed to listen to a taped delayed message with parental permission, I think.  This is to be sure that all indoctrination danger is avoided.  Yes, it is bad here.  Even their staunch Republican great-grandfather would not have thought all of that was necessary.  I am glad I am not a Republican in 2009.

So today I hearken back to better memories of a Labor Day long ago, and the beginning of a school year that my parents honored and that I loved for every one of my first 12 years.  I wish the same love of school and love of country for my grandchildren, as I had.  We shall see.


Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Saturday, September 05, 2009

It would be easier if we could see the humor here.

The Republican fringe elements latest and most cruel personal attacks on the President of the United States, Barack H. Obama, are reaching a new low point. I wish I could laugh at all this but it is very hard to glean anything the least bit funny in their protestations, though I must say that pourmecoffee's tweet comes the closest.

To say our president wants to do harm to the nation's children is just beyond anything remotely resembling mere politics. It shows a depth of unkindness that is quite stark and unsettling. And because I am old enough to be the President's parent, it brings out my protective instincts. Mr. Obama needs help and support, not lies, racism, hatred or cruelty. Before you sigh, just give me my Pollyanna moment.

Cruelty and bullying makes me sick to my stomach. Ignorance tries my tolerance. Purposeful insanity makes me crazy. And treasonous intentions make me anxious. We see too much of all of the above. For now I am putting my little criticisms of the Obama administration in the drawer. All of us who try to project good will must send it in the direction it needs to go. The opposition must learn that kindness is not weakness, that ignorance is not bliss and that patriotism is not to be feared. I am worried about our nation's future otherwise.

The depth of un-American and counterproductive political behavior this last month has been a surprise to many of us who would prefer bipartisanship. There is none to be found. Given all the messes this administration inherited, the ineptitudes of Congressional leadership, two wars and unemployment soon to hit double digits, any presidential failure would redound on Republicans, too. The level of the opposition's delusion seems profound. The nihilism being shown hints that they do not care. There seems no rational conclusion except one that the End-timer Movement is picking up a number of new adherents.

It would be easier if I could have more confidence, if I could see more of the positive. But I do not like the emerging dark trends; there are no joking matters here.

Posted via email from Southwest Postings

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Thoughts from the road: a south-north-south truck trip

More simply put, we went from Texas to Wyoming and back in a pick-up to be with my family of origin.  The directions could be confusing to anyone wanting to follow my route.  South began in North Central Texas.  The 8000+ feet high elevation's northern destination was near South Pass, not far from Atlantic City.  Being with one's family of origin can sometimes be as confusing.

Visiting family members' homes meant hearing a wide variety of types of news coverage of the memorializing of the late Senator Edward M. Kennedy.  Some are Fox News folks; some were watching CNN.  Some are in semi-permanent boycott of the news.  None of us could speak coherently about what would become of any health care reform legislation.  Polarization seems much worse

Along the road we saw signs that a recession has been in progress.  Many small towns had smaller populations and more empty buildings.  Some seemed to be surviving better because of good crops brought on by plentiful rain.  Plentiful grass tempted grazing cattle in New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming.  Not all oil wells are pumping, but all windmill farms had grown.  Fewer travel trailers and motor homes appeared until the Wyoming border.  Then it seemed the state was every traveler's destination.

Mile after mile after mile of road re-doing was our driving norm.  The federal stimulus money is flowing out across the land in the form of asphalt overcoats for interstate highways, and small town main streets.  Occasionally, some dollars went for curbs and sidewalks.  We can assume the projects were items that were "shovel ready."  Wyoming seems relatively unaffected by the recession.  Colorado homebuilding seemed to have slowed a bit.  Rural Texas has been hit hard, except for the big agribusiness acreages now planted largely to corn for fuel.  Cattle feed lots are largely empty, but bay calves abound in most pastures.  Wildlife was abundant: camels in the Panhandle, buffalo in Texas and Wyoming, prairie dog towns, healthy deer with big racks, antelope from Texas and New Mexico to Wyoming, and big fat Canadian geese cleaning seed from harvested grain fields. 

Our family is rather tame so we do not qualify as wildlife.  And now my siblings and I are the oldest members of our family.  Our parents are no longer with us.  My dad's birthday would have been today.  Natives of Wyoming and Nebraska, respectively, my dad and mom loved the wide open spaces of both Texas and Wyoming.  And now they are at rest on a hill that looks west to the Rockies.

.
 


Posted via email from Southwest Postings

AddThis

Bookmark and Share

Twitter Updates

References on Spirituality -- Favorites from my old collection

  • "A Return To Love: Reflections On the Principles Of a Course In Miracles" by Marianne Williamson. Harper Collins, 1992
  • "A World Waiting To Be Born: Civility Rediscovered" by M. Scott Peck. Simon and Schuster, 1993
  • "Chicken Soup For the Unsinkable Soul" by Canfield, Hansen and McNamara. Health Communications, 1999
  • "Compassion in Action: Setting Out On the Path of Service" by Ram Dass and Mirabai Bush. Bell Tower Pub., 1992
  • "Creative Visualization" by Shakti Gawain. MIF Books, 1978
  • "Finding Values That Work: The Search For Fulfillment" by Brian O'Connell. Walker & Co., 1978
  • "Fire in the Soul" by Joan Borysenko. Warner Books, 1993
  • "Further Along the Road Less Traveled" by M. Scott Peck. Simon and Schuster, 1993
  • "Guilt Is the Teacher, Love Is the Lesson" by Joan Borysenko. Warner Books, 1990
  • "Inner Simplicity: 100 Ways To Regain Peace and Nourish the Soul" by Elaine St. James. Hyperion, 1995
  • "Insearch:Psychology and Religion" by James Hillman. Spring Pub. 1994
  • "Man's Search For Himself" by Rollo May. Signet Books, 1953
  • "Mythologies" by William Butler Yeats. Macmillan, 1959
  • "Myths, Dreams and Religion" by Joseph Campbell. Spring Pub. 1988
  • "Passion for Life: Psychology and the Human Spirit" by John and Muriel James. Penguin Books, 1991
  • "Peace Is Every Step" by Thich Nhat Hahn. Bantam Books , 1991
  • "The Heroine's Journey" by Mureen Murdock. Random House, 1990
  • "The Hope For Healing Human Evil" by M. Scott Peck. Simon and Schuster, 1983
  • "The House of Belonging" poems by David Whyte. Many Rivers Press, 2004
  • "The Road Less Traveled: A New Psychology of Love, Traditional Values and Spiritual Growth" by M.Scott Peck. Simon and Schuster, 1978
  • "The Soul's Code: In Search Of Character and Calling" by James Hillman. Random House, 1996
  • "The World Treasury of Modern Religious Thought" by Jaroslav Pelikan. Little, Brown & Co., 1990
  • "Unconditional Life" by Deepak Chopra. Bantam Books, 1992
  • "Wherever You Go There You Are: Mindfulness Meditation" by Jon Kabat-Zinn. Hyperion, 1994
  • "Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice" by Thich Nhat Hahn. Doubleday Dell Pub. Group, 1974

About Me

My Photo
A retired counselor, I am equal parts Techie and Artist. I am a Democrat who came to the Southwest to attend college. I married, had kids and have lived here all my adult life.