Friday, December 31, 2021

Christmas in Pictures

We had the privilege of having all of our kids with us for four whole days over Christmas. This is a rarity since our life stories have placed us in three different cities. To prepare for this event took teamwork. I did my part, helping with some of the cleaning, wrapping most of the presents, and running errands. But Pam was the brains behind the project, and it was her attention to detail and eye for beauty that made the house look magical…







Once everyone arrived, the dogs took over. After the initial burst of energy and frenetic craziness, they all settled down and behaved themselves beautifully.




Jacko and Frisco love Pops the most.



A rare shot of all three of them in the same room.



My favorite picture of the Three Amigos.

So…what did we do with ourselves for four whole days? Lots of fun stuff.



We attempted to put together a puzzle.



We took in a show—It’s a Wonderful Life Radio Show. 



You’re never too old to decorate sugar cookies…


And, of course, what Christmas celebration would be complete without a fire out on the deck?



It’s not like Pam and I slaved away 24/7 waiting on our kids. Every once in a while we put them to work…



It was a magical few days, made so primarily by just being together. Now that they’re all gone the house seems excessively quiet. But, we’re not sad, just grateful. 

When it was time to take the obligatory family Christmas picture, Lucy wanted no part of the chaos, leaving a gaping hole in the finished product…



When Pam posted this on Facebook last night, many people noticed and wanted to know, Where’s Lucy?

Well, we did manage to get this one…



Merry Christmas, everyone!










Thursday, December 30, 2021

Dead Week

I simultaneously love and hate dead week. The seven days between Christmas and New Year’s Day serves the dual purpose of providing time to rest up for the new year while boring you to tears. Add to this the inevitable post Christmas letdown, the disturbing weight gain, and the physical exhaustion from two weeks of non-stop holiday hustle and you find yourself mostly sleepwalking through dead week. What snaps you out of the malaise is the eventual resolution list making. But before you can get there you must first endure a few days of reflection. What exactly happened in 2021?

For me, this is easier than for most people since I do not have to rely on my increasingly faulty memory. I have this blog, which conveniently keeps a tidy record. I can look back and see which posts were the most popular each month. I can then easily recall what we were all terrified by back in January or May or that weird week in August. Here are some observations:

Last January it was all about the events of the 6th—the (pick your preferred modifier), riot, insurrection, violent coup attempt, theatre of the absurd, storming of the capital, or glorious exercise of free speech. I wrote a piece entitled Character is Destiny and a bunch of you read it.

February lived up to its well earned reputation for dreariness. Nothing of consequence transpired, evidenced by the fact that my most popular post concerned my adorable next door neighbor kids showing up at my door to deliver the Girl Scout cookies I had bought back in the Fall. Entitled, The Garland Kids Strike Again, it once again reminded me that people love cute kids about as much as anything.

March featured a scary COVID outbreak at my office which shut us down for a week and sent us all scurrying to get tested. The post I wrote about it called, The Return of Covid, was my most read post of 2021. Nothing sells quite like bad news.

April, May and June all featured sentimental posts about nostalgic visits to places I used to live, trying to decide whether I was happy or sad about the disappearance of men’s suits from the modern wardrobe, and a collection of creepy photographs of weird evangelicals. Apparently there is no accounting for the tastes of the average Tempest reader.

Our time in Maine always leads to a pronounced reduction in readership. Although I post something nearly every day while I am up there, people don’t care to keep up with the Dunnevant’s while we are joyously frolicking away in our paradise. Maybe its because its 15 degrees cooler in Maine, and you guys resent being reminded of this unhappy fact. Or maybe, nobody wants to hear all my blubbering about how perfect it is to be living on a lake in Maine. I get it.

For the rest of 2021, my ego took quite a beating due to the fact that the three most popular posts were by guest bloggers!! First, my daughter blew me out of the water with the story of her slapstick accident at the lake, then my friend, Tom Allen, topped the charts not once but twice, with his two posts—Mistakes and Pumping the Brakes. The nerve of that guy!!

While reflecting on 2021 it occurs to me that it wasn’t an awful lot different than 2020. We were all expecting it to be the year when we all got over the COVID thing and got back to our lives. While much improvement was made, COVID is still very much with us, meaning that 2021 has been basically a big disappointment. But that doesn’t mean everything was bad. I made some money. Business was good. Many fun things happened. And best of all, I have not assumed room temperature.

Now, its time I got started on those resolutions. But that is a blogpost for another day.

Saturday, December 25, 2021

Merry Christmas From the Dunnevant’s

It is early morning, Christmas Day. The house is as silent as the tombs. Pam is asleep, curled up snug with Lucy. Kaitlin and Jon are sound asleep somehow despite sharing a Queen sized bed with Jacko. Patrick and Sarah just left Nashville for the 10 hour drive home with Frisco in the back seat. Soon this place will be buzzing with activity as we prepare for a house full of Pam’s family for dinner and presents late this afternoon and evening. Tomorrow, it will be a casual dinner and presents from my family at my sister Linda’s house. Last night there was a steak dinner at my sister Paula’s house. Not until Monday, the 27th will Christmas arrive here. These are the happy accommodations you make when you are fortunate enough to be a part of a large and far flung family who all want to be together for Christmas.

When I sat down at my morning spot to drink my coffee and catch up on the news, this is what greeted me…


Meet Giraffe Fren, Jacko’s toy de’jour. Not sure how he ended upright on my coffee table, but at least he had the good sense to blend in with the decor. As I look around the family room, the decorations tell the story of my family. There are six of us…


Along with three retrievers…


On Pam’s side of the family, there are eleven more. My extended family adds another twenty-one. There are newlyweds among us, a couple out in California, along with Fred the cat who somehow survived ten minutes inside a running dryer. One of us lives in New York City. We have someone from Scotland, another from the Philippines. There are conservatives and liberals. We have baseball fans and football fans. There are Baptists, Methodists and Presbyterians, and none of the above. We have southerners and yankees, republicans, democrats and a couple stubborn libertarians. We have nurses, teachers, and business owners. We have some who work for the government, some for non-profits and others who work in the corporate world. There are musicians everywhere. But everyone, all of us have a place. In this way we aren’t any different than any of your families, or the hundreds of millions of families gathering together to celebrate Christmas from all around the world.

But maybe we are different. Sometimes when I see us all together I can’t help feeling that there is something unique about us. What makes us so is where we came from. Emmett and Betty Dunnevant were different, by practically any measure—not perfect by any means—but different. The magical combination of their DNA running through all of our veins bequeathed to us something rare, I think. There is a devotion we feel for each other. Although we are all so different, the things that bind us together are so much more powerful than the things that would divide us. There are the strong opinions, the loud and boisterous talking at dinner which might seem to outsiders like arguing but to us is totally normal conversation. There are the conflicting memories from our childhoods where we have airbrushed the awful away. Just last night when I reminded my older sister Linda of what it was like to share an apartment in New Orleans with a hundred roaches, she claimed not to remember any of it. Then when I reminded her of how whenever we cut on the kitchen light first thing in the morning they would all scurry away across the walls, floor and ceiling—she hesitated, then closed her eyes in recognition of the long-suppressed horror! Then, of course, there are the noses, that inescapable physical trait that identifies us, setting us apart from the rest of the world. We got it from Mom, the prominent Dixon Nose.

But, despite the occasional horror show, most of our childhood memories consist of the certain and sure…that we were loved by our parents. And, if we knew what was good for us we better love each other or our Mother would wipe the floor up with us. Even now, nearly a decade after her passing, whenever I am uncharitable, rude or dismissive of someone, I am reminded of Mom and what she would say to me if she knew. Whenever I am too busy to be kind to someone, I think of my Dad and immediately am ashamed of myself. Their presence in my life is still very real. They have lived rent free in my head ever since they went to be with The Lord.

So, over the next few days as we gather and eat together, as the volume around the table begins to rise, I will think of them, the two people who started it all. I can only hope that my children will feel the same way about us when it is their turn to carry this torch.






Thursday, December 23, 2021

Start With the Kids

According to a new poll 53% of my fellow Americans feel that 2021 has been the worst year of their lives. This negative view exceeds the previous winner, 2020, by a remarkably wide margin. I don’t quite know what to make of this. The results varied by age group with the most negative attitudes towards 2021 coming from the youngest responders, and the most positive from the oldest. Perhaps this is the result of the fact that the older you are the more bad years you have endured and therefore the greater perspective you have. Or maybe the older you are the more financially and emotionally secure you are. Who knows? Regardless, it’s troubling news to learn that so many people seem to be struggling.

Much of it centers around the ongoing pandemic. Our lives have all been changed by COVID. It has altered our daily routines in ways large and small. We are divided over the best way to fight it. We disagree about masks, vaccines, lockdowns, quarantines. We all have different ideas about what government’s role should be. Most of us are confused over what the rules are for social gatherings. With Christmas just a couple days away, every Omicron headline brings with it even more confusion. “IT’S RAMPANT, SPREADING LIKE WILDFIRE!! OMICRON SYMPTOMS MUCH MILDER THAN EXPECTED!! SOUTH AFRICAN OUTBREAK DISAPPEARING AS FAST AS IT ARRIVED!!”  It’s practically impossible to know what to think. So, I guess the poll results aren’t really surprising, when you think about it.

But, I would like to make the case for optimism. Yes, there are many reasons to despair, but there have always been. Living conditions on this planet 100 years ago make today’s world feel like heaven. Compared to the physical hardships endured by America’s Pilgrims, 2021 would be the Garden of Eden. Of course, advances in living standards courtesy of 400 years of technological, scientific, and medical progress isn’t the only measure of the quality of life. Human behavior changes over time, crime rates wax and wane, public manners and civic virtue rise and fall, and most of us would have to admit that in our lifetimes, most of these measures have fallen. But even so, if you are willing to look, the exceptions are abundant and everywhere. For example:

Have you heard about the 15 year old kid working the drive thru at a McDonald’s in Minnesota? Seems that a woman in the car at the window was choking on a chicken nugget. This kid, yells to her manager to call 911, then jumps out of the drive thru window, drags the woman out of her car and starts doing the Heimlich maneuver, which she had learned how to do by taking a babysitter’s class put on by the local Red Cross. When she realizes that she isn’t strong enough to successful perform the Heimlich, she recruits another customer in the drive thru line who is, and soon the nugget was expelled and the woman’s life saved. This heroism from a 15 year old, minimum wage earning kid. 



When the cops arrived and realized what Sydney Raley had done, they handed her two $50 bills as part of the local police policy of awarding $50 to people for personal acts of heroism during the holidays.

While there has always been and will always be reasons for despair, I firmly believe that negative is always trumped by positive. It’s a matter of what you’re looking for. I chose to seek out heroes. They are everywhere. The best place to look? Start with the kids. Always start with the kids. The next time you hear someone prattling on and on about how the “new generation” is deficient in this or that…walk away. Mister Rogers’ advice is still the best advice—“Look for the helpers”

Start with the kids.

Sunday, December 19, 2021

Christmas Lights

In Richmond, we’re very into our tacky Christmas lights. We work for hours, stringing colorful bulbs in elaborate displays, both inside our homes and out, and then we drive around gawking at the work of our neighbors.

            In the annual battle I fight to overcome my resistance to the runaway commercialization of Christmas, I used to be very anti-tacky lights. They were gaudy, unnecessary and represented everything wrong about the way we celebrate the birth of Jesus. 

            But God, with his typically quirky sense of humor, has done something he seems to make a habit of doing. He’s taken something I didn’t like one bit and used it to pretty radically change my thinking. Today, I am very pro-tacky lights, and could probably even be talked into taking one of those limo or bus tours.

            The change in attitude began when the close relationship between light and the one whose birth we’re celebrating dawned on me. Light and Jesus are inextricably linked, and always have been. Writing of the events of Christmas years before the first one happened, the Biblical prophet Isaiah said, “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned.”

            Christmas is, indeed, the coming of the Light.

            Light is intertwined in the accounts of Jesus’ birth. When the angels appeared to the shepherds tending their flocks in the fields that night, “the glory of the Lord shone around them.” When Joseph and Mary took their eight-day-old son to the temple, they were greeted by Simeon, a wise, respected and elderly man, who declared the infant “a light to reveal God to the nations.”

            Not long after, the Three Magi followed the light of “his star in the east” to find their way to Jesus.

            For the rest of his time on this planet, Jesus shares and spreads light. Perhaps his closest disciple, John, wrote of Jesus, “His life brought light to everyone. The light shines in the darkness and the darkness can never extinguish it.” 

            Later, John added, “God is light; in him there is no darkness at all.”

            Jesus spoke of himself as “the light of the world,” and explained, “I have come as a light to shine in this dark world, so that all who put their trust in me will no longer remain in the dark.”

            The light that shone from that manger in Bethlehem some two thousand years ago continues to illuminate our path today, and will someday banish all that is dark, forever. As singer/songwriter Michael Card wrote, “Celebrate the child who is the light! Now the darkness is over.”

            So, let there be light! Even the tacky ones.


Tom Allen

                        




Thursday, December 16, 2021

The Christmas Spirit



Pam does this every year. She prints out this festive sign, making sure she includes every major delivery service at the top, then fills the box with bottled waters, nabs, and lots of candy bars. Since we get several deliveries a day for weeks, the box has to be replenished often. Yesterday, around 5:30, I heard Lucy barking her head off, looked up and saw a guy walking up with several boxes in his hands. I can’t recall if he was FedEx or UPS, but it doesn’t really matter, I suppose. Anyway, As he placed the boxes on the porch I saw him look down at the box, then gently open it. I opened the front door to get the boxes and thanked him for his hard work. He looks up at me and says, “Wow, this is really nice. I haven’t had anything to eat since 10:30, I’m starved!!” Then, I told him to take however much he wanted since we were going to have to refill it anyway. “Aww man, thanks.”

Then he started to dig through and found a Snicker’s bar and a Reese’s Peanut butter cup. “I love these,” he says, “You sure?”

“Absolutely!” I answered.

He took two of each, then hustled back to his truck and floored it on to the next stop.

Look, I know its a job, like any other. We all work hard. Nobody hands out candy bars to their mechanic or the cashier at the grocery store. They work hard every day too. But, I don’t know—there’s something about these delivery guys and girls at Christmas. Every time I see one of them they are busting it, hustling all over the place. We sit on our comfortable sofas in our pajamas, drinking hot chocolate ordering this and that on our laptops. Meanwhile in a distribution center a thousand miles away workers are flying around the warehouse in response to all of our clicking. Then, in what feels an awful lot like magic, our heart’s desire gets delivered on our doorstep 24 hours later. 

But, its not magic. It’s the result of a logistics operation unheard of in the 4000 year history of commerce on this planet, whereby invisible orders sent through the internet halfway around the world wind up under our tree with speed and efficiency impossible a decade ago. At the heart of this vast, delivery system juggernaut are the men and women who lay it at your door, working 12 hour days, seven days a week during the holidays. Yes, they are getting paid overtime, making more money than they will any other time during the year. But, it sure feels good to show them how grateful you are that they do what they do.

So, as we get swept up in the hustle and bustle, lets look around at the frantic people serving us. Smile, tell them what a great job they are doing, and tip them generously. There’s no better way to get in the Christmas Spirit.


Tuesday, December 14, 2021

A Culinary Triumph

Like 90% of all husbands, I feel a fair amount of guilt around Christmas. I watch my wife running around like a chicken with her head cut off, shopping, baking, planning for the thousand details involved with the season. Meanwhile, all I have to do is get the Christmas lights to come on without burning the house down. I spent maybe two hours today finishing up my shopping. So, for the next 10 days I will drift through the house trying to make myself useful while Pam worries herself to death sweating Christmas logistics. 

But tonight, I actually was useful. My wife had plans to meet the ladies of her family for a birthday dinner for her niece. That meant that I was on my own for dinner. She said I could either get takeout or make the chili she had planned to make before the birthday plans. I decided on making the chili…




Frankly, it was a triumph. I felt quite proud of myself. And now we have leftovers!








Monday, December 13, 2021

The Next BIG THING

Pam and I are in a show hole, that thoroughly modern affliction whereby out of the 365,981 shows offered by Netflix, Prime Video et al, you can find nothing to watch. The last couple of nights we have auditioned two shows, neither of which captured our imagination. Practically everyone we know has been telling us to watch Yellowstone, but we watched the first three or four shows of season one and could not find even one redeeming character to root for. We aren’t terribly picky entertainment consumers, but we do prefer characters with at least something that passes for likability. The person doesn’t have to be Mother Theresa or anything, just someone who we can pull for. This is why we don’t watch reality television which is nothing more than an orgy of narcissism. I would rather endure a root canal without anesthesia than watch a single episode of the Housewives of—-anywhere.

But, thanks to the indispensable Gary Larson, I have stumbled upon an idea for a television show that I would actually pay to see…



Imagine an hour of commercials written, directed, produced and acted by…DOGS!! Listen, this has already been done on a smaller scale and found to be wildly successful and popular. The best Instagram accounts are all about dogs, mostly Golden Retrievers since…well, since they are the most adorable and classic hams. So, this idea already has been proven and tested. Somebody needs to take the entrepreneurial risk and make this happen. Commercials for everything from soup to nuts brought to you by man’s best friend would be must-see TV.

Saturday, December 11, 2021

Let Me Tell You About…Jingle Jam

Today, Pam and I got absolutely nothing done. We didn’t do any shopping, and despite a growing pile of them in what used to be our dining room, wrapped not one single present. Instead, today was essentially Volunteer Day. The morning had us at our church’s big Christmas event put on by the Children’s department called Jingle Jam. We had heard about it over the past five years but had never gone. This year our niece Bernadette, one of the children’s pastors, roped us into working the event. We arrived a little after 9:00 and left three hours later. (More about this event later)

Then we grabbed some lunch and got back home in time to haul our solo stove out into the street and set up a s’mores making table in our culdesac for the neighborhood party which featured the official arrival of Santa…


Just about the time we got the fire good and hot we realized we were late for our afternoon shift at Hope Thrift. Friends promised to keep an eye on it so the entire neighborhood didn’t burn to the ground, and off we went to the store. By the time we got back home around 5:45, it was pouring down rain and we felt like we had both been run over by Santa’s reindeer. A crazy, wild, fun and joyful day.

But, lets get back to this Jingle Jam deal…

Pam took lots of pictures but none of them captured the magic of the thing. Every inch of the inside of our church looked like an explosion had gone off at the Christmas Mouse. I had never seen so many inflatables in one location in my life. The theme of this year’s Jingle Jam was the adventures of Bobby the Elf, the lessor known successor to this guy…


Did I mention the inflatables??




My favorite? This one, hands down!


Our job was to run a game called “Package Stackage”. The idea was to get kids/families to see who could stack a series of empty cardboard boxes up into the shape of a Christmas tree. That was fine. And it started out that way. But it didn’t take us long to realize that the kids were far more interested in seeing who could stack them all up in the highest tower and then send them all flying all over the place by crashing into them…sorta like life-sized JENGA. It was crazy fun, and we had the kids lined up to get in on the fun. When all of a sudden we looked up and these three beauties were standing there!!


These guys are our adorable next door neighbors and their sweet Mom had brought them to Jingle Jam. Later we all took a picture together…



Then it was time for the big show. We all went inside to where we normally have our worship services, only this time it had been transformed into the…



Lincoln Tunnel!! For the next hour, 600 people got to see the highest octane, most over the top energetic rendition of Bobby the Elf ever told. It featured an actual video trip to New York City, where we got to see our heroes visiting all the places that Buddy the Elf had been years earlier. It also featured a harrowing giant inflatable candy cane competition. But the highlight of the show was a 600 person recreation of the famous Buddy the Elf snowball fight in Central Park! Watching my sanctuary given over to this insanity of joyfullness did my heart so much good. At the end when Bobby learns the true meaning of Christmas, I was exhausted just having watched it. All the intrepid actors, singers and dancers had to do the same show two more times.

It’s hard to put into words how wonderful an experience it was. First of all, to everyone involved in the planning, organization and execution of Jingle Jam, I salute you all. I am told that it took over 175 volunteers to make it work. Pam and I feel lucky to have been among them. One more thing…I grew up in churches where sometimes the actual building was a thing held in high and reverent esteem. When entering the sanctuary, people talked in hushed tones. There isn’t anything wrong with that really. I mean, I get it. There certainly is a time for being reverent. But, one of the things I love about my church is that it doesn’t worship the building. It isn’t afraid to unleash a thousand cotton snowballs in the place and let kids and their parents have at it. And don’t think for a minute that I will soon forget which little kiddo from next door hit me right in the kisser with a fastball either!

So, hats off to everyone who worked and planned and worked some more to provide nearly 2000 people a wonderful way to get into the Christmas spirit by acknowledging the birth of our Lord and Savior. Can’t wait until next year!








Friday, December 10, 2021

Strong Women

I don’t remember the year and I can’t recall exactly what class it was, but I do remember one day back in college, I found myself in the midst of a spirited discussion about women in politics—in particular whether there would ever be a woman President of the United States. This was in the late 1970’s, at a time when there were far fewer women in any branch of the government than there are today. The consensus seemed to be that no, no woman would ever be President of these United States. Once this consensus was reached several people, all males, sought to explain the reasons why this was true, and I heard lots of comments about the fairer sex, even suggestions that women did not possess the necessary temperament to lead a nation. Being over 40 years ago, many of the things that were said in this discussion seemed rather mild and even mainstream. Back then, as now, I was a fairly conservative guy, but I remember distinctly being confused by the notion that women were somehow unfit by temperament to be President, so much so that I offered a vigorous objection in the form of a question—“What the hell is wrong with you people??”

Before anyone fits me for a halo, there is a simple explanation for my reaction to this conversation from 40 years ago. It’s not that I was then, am now, or ever have been a feminist. My views on this topic were simply a result of my life experiences. When you grew up in a household run by Betty Dunnevant, and populated with sisters like Paula Roop and Linda Schwartz, you are quickly disabused of the notion that women lack the necessary temperament to do anything. On the contrary, I was convinced that my mother could do literally anything she set her mind to. Although Mom never attended college, she was smart, quick-witted, and extraordinarily well read. To say that she was strong-willed or opinionated would be the understatement of the century. Then, there were my sisters, Linda the nurse who basically raised me the three years we lived in New Orleans while Mom and Dad worked and went to class. Linda—the woman who served as a nurse to expectant mothers in the charming neighborhood of Creighton Court in Richmond’s east end. Fearless is the word that comes to mind. Then there was Paula, my younger sister, who has managed to excel at every job she has had in education for 45 years, despite working under the tutelage of countless incompetent bosses, male and female. But, it gets even worse.

I married a woman who is smart, equipped with a perfectionist’s devotion to excellence, and the type of organizational skill set that would be the envy of any executive suite in the country. You give Pam enough Google Docs and she could split the atom. 

Then there’s my executive assistant, Kristin Reihl, a woman so headstrong and opinionated, half the time I feel like her employee.

Now, I watch my daughter killing it teaching 7th grade English, blowing the doors off anything she is asked to do. I notice that my son married yet another strong, confident, and incredibly capable woman. After a while it occurs to you that all of your life you have been surrounded by strong women, some by birth, but many others by choice. So, when you hear people spouting nonsense about women not being tough enough, strong enough or possessing the right temperament, you just shake your head and think, “What a bunch of morons! If my Mom was still alive, she would wipe the floor up with you!”

Sunday, December 5, 2021

It’s the Most ———— Time of the Year

Ok, so it’s Sunday night, the 5th of December, less than 3 weeks until Christmas. The Dunnevant’s have purchased exactly zero presents. Pam has done exactly zero Christmas baking. Since 2021 is the year that we will host her side of the family here on Christmas Day, not to mention the happy fact that all of our kids and their pups will also be here for the festivities, there is a to-do list a mile long and getting longer as the days slip away. But all is not lost. This weekend has produced tremendous progress on one front…Christmas decorating.

Here at Dunnevant Central, we thrive on the division of labor, never so clearly defined than it is where decking the halls is concerned. I’m the King of the outside and Pam is the Queen of the inside. It works quite well…




My area of responsibility was largely a fiasco of blown fuses and frayed nerves. But, despite repeated frustrations, I was finally able to get everything to light and stay lit.

Pam, on the other hand, basically decided to start from scratch this year. First she redecorated the entire family room last month, jettisoned the red, and brought in the blue. In addition, she decided that the theme this year was to be more sacred and less secular—meaning out with Santa and in with Jesus. This is no weirdo rejection of presents etc..just a momentary pivot toward the spiritual underpinnings of the season. Notice that when my wife does something, she goes all the way, even removing art from the walls to make room for seasonal paintings. Plus—everything has to match—because of that theme thing. Whatever she does, it always seems to work. The inside of our house looks more beautiful this time of year than it ever does. There’s much more than the one picture of our living room, but if I posted them it would be awfully close to prideful boasting, and I just heard a sermon about the dangers of that, so you’ll have to use your imagination.

On the personal fitness front, I accomplished something this morning I hadn’t done in probably five years…



That’s right, ladies and gentlemen, I ran a sub-eight minute mile and lived to tell about it. Of course, I was so gassed I had to walk the rest of the route. But, hey, I’m 63.

The Christmas train has left the station and its picking up steam. The next three weeks will be a manic succession of shopping, wrapping, baking, cleaning, parties, then more shopping, wrapping, baking, cleaning and parties. Somewhere during all of it I’ve got a tone of cases that need to be taken care of at work before year’s end. Meanwhile, poor Lucy stares at us blankly, wondering why on earth her humans bring whole trees inside the house but if she attempts to bring even one lousy stick through the door we have a fit!


Friday, December 3, 2021

End of the Line

For several days recently I have had a song stuck in my head. While usually this would be an occasion of great annoyance, since most of the time songs that get stuck in your head are of the Granda Got Run Over By a Reindeer variety. But the tune bouncing around inside my head at the moment brings nothing but warmth and happiness to me. It has been one of my favorite songs since it was released in 1988. The melody is endearing, the lyrics inspired, and the gentlemen who recorded it are all legends. The song is End of The Line by the Traveling Wilburys.

It was written almost exclusively by George Harrison, but in keeping with the spirit of the band, everyone received a song writing credit, making it perhaps the most credentialed single every released, it being very hard to go wrong with a song written by: George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Jeff Lynne, Roy Orbison, and Tom Petty.

The tune is joyful and optimistic. It skips along almost whimsically, dragging you kicking and screaming away from your foul mood. Its the kind of song I want played at my funeral, since it gives off a distinct and unmistakable vibe…look, I know life can be hard sometimes, but chill out man…

But, its the lyrics of this song that capture my imagination. With the repeated mantra, “well, it’s alright”, the song sets out to prove that it’s true.

Well, it’s alright, ridin’ around in the breeze
Well, it’s alright, if you live the live you please
Well, it’s alright, doin’ the best you can
Well, it’s alright, as long as you lend a hand

Nice to be reminded that part of the good life is helping others.

Don’t have to be ashamed of the car I drive (at the end of the line)
I’m happy to be here, happy to be alive (at the end of the line)
And it don’t matter if you’re by my side (at the end of the line)
I’m satisfied.

I’m just happy to be here, to be alive…a reminder of an eternal truth—being grateful leads to being happy.

Well, it’s alright, even if you’re old and grey
Well, it’s alright, you still got something to say
Well, it’s alright, remember to live and let live
Well, it’s alright, the best you can do is forgive

I think I might have just gone to church.



Wednesday, December 1, 2021

ACME Chem Well’s Candidate

Earl liked his job. Most of the time, being head of personnel for a medium sized pharmaceutical sales company, while not exactly every childhood dream come true, still offered many fine rewards. He was well compensated, respected by his colleagues and enjoyed relatively high job security. What the job might have lacked in status it made up for with dependability and a first rate benefits package. As it was Earl’s job to hire new salespeople for the company, these attributes of ACME Chem-Well Inc served as valuable enticements for prospective salesmen and women, making his job far easier than it would have been at a lesser firm.


But everyone eventually goes into a slump and Earl had been in one going on three weeks now. The task had been typical and straight forward—find a new salesperson for the Tidewater region of the State of Virginia, a very profitable territory that promised to be easy to fill. He had chosen the best resumes and scheduled one interview after another. The first two were unacceptably unkempt, another had a slight lisp, not necessarily a deal killer, but for a position like this, Earl knew that someone better would come along.


Then he hit pay dirt on two outstanding prospects, one man and one women, both newly graduated from college and both with striking physical features. It was an open secret in the pharmaceutical sales business that being young and attractive, while not guarantors of success, sure seemed to help. The positive connection between physical attractiveness and the ability to sell drugs had become an article of faith for not only Earl, but his contemporaries throughout the industry. So, both Barbee and Ken had been automatically called back for a second interview on looks alone. Unfortunately, it turned out that neither possessed a working command of the English language, spoken or written. 


Three more candidates had come and gone and now the heat was being transferred down the ladder of responsibility and Earl felt its intensity. This position needed to be filled and the longer  the process dragged on, the worse he looked and felt. 


Today, however, there was cause for optimism. A top shelf prospect had made it through multiple interviews and managed to impress enough people along the way to warrant renewed scrutiny. This would involve a criminal background check, extensive personality testing, and one final—more intense— interview which Earl himself would conduct. The candidate, George Mendenhall, 29 was scheduled to arrive at 10:00 am. Earl looked at his watch. It was 9:45 and as he skimmed through the file before him he could almost feel the relief on its way into the building. Once this hire was on board, the pressure that had been building would dissipate. He could once again get back to enjoying his job.


George Mendenhall walked in at exactly 10:00 am, extended a hand with exquisitely manicured fingernails across Earl’s desk, and flashed a winsome smile. He seemed positively delighted at the prospect of becoming ACME Chem Well’s newest superstar salesman.


“Great to see you again, George. Thanks for being so punctual—that’s an important quality in this business.”


George smiled and made no reply.


Earl continued, “I’m looking through the latest information in your file and am glad to report that you have no criminal record.” Earl always chuckled when sharing this information with a candidate, as if it would have been shocking to find some horrid legal skeleton in the closet of a 29 year old, when in point of fact it was always the background check that worried him the most. More than once a fine candidate had been undone by a drug arrest, a non-starter for someone asked to sell legal drugs to medical professionals. George chuckled along with Earl and offered the customary, “well, that’s a relief!”


Earl then offered an apology along with a summary of the various personality tests that George had endured. Earl had never been a huge fan of these tests, a staple of his business, since he wasn’t at all convinced of their usefulness. More than one clear introvert had come back as Type A go-getter, leading Earl to believe that the tests had become so well-known that people had learned to lie believably, rendering their results unreliable. “Both your Meyers-Briggs and your Enneagram line up perfectly with what we are looking for in our best people.”


“Thanks,” George answered. “I was a little worried about that. It’s been a long time since I took one of those tests. I’ve never really had much confidence in them anyway.”


This guy is perfect, Earl thought as a smile spread across his own face nearly as radiant as George’s. Now it was time for the last step of the process. Earl only ever got to this part with candidates who he had already decided to hire. So it was his favorite question since literally nothing hung in the balance. No one had ever failed in their answer. Some had done better than others but none had crashed and burned. Despite the question’s apparent gravity, it was essentially an empty question—“So, George—suppose that this decision has come down to you and another candidate. If I gave you five minutes, what would you say to convince me that I should hire you?” Then he closed the file, sat back in his chair, placed his hands in his lap and waited.


George hesitated for a moment, gathering his thoughts, then looked out the office window at the towering oak trees swaying in the breeze. After what seemed like an unnecessarily long pause, he began his answer.


“I’m sure that you have had many fine candidates for this job, each of whom brings their own strengths to the table, but I believe that what sets me apart from most of them is my capacity for independent thought. I think that too many people have fallen into a sort of group think, where they are too unwilling to challenge conventional thinking. It is this rigidity of thought, this lock-step conformity that is holding all of us back. As far as how this applies to this job, I will constantly be thinking outside of the box to figure out new and creative ways to present ideas to my customers. I will always be willing to experiment with the unconventional, to try something new, to attempt things that haven’t been tried before. Before just accepting traditional ways of thinking and doing, I am committed to doing my own research. Its what I call passionate skepticism, and it is the one quality that sets me apart and the essence of why you should offer me the job.”


Earl wasn’t sure that he had ever heard a better answer. This guy was intelligent, well-spoken and supremely confident. He checked off every box. He leaned forward, and dramatically placed his elbows on his desk, preparing to make George Mendenhall the newest member of the ACME Chem Well family when George leaned forward himself and added, “Here’s an example of what I mean about this group think conformity thing—you know the Earth is actually flat, right?”


Earl had learned many things in his twenty years in personnel, stumbled upon several rules of the road that had served him well, primary among them was to never engage a candidate on the subjects of politics or religion. These were areas fraught with passion and disagreement and Earl had learned the hard way to tread lightly. But, nothing had prepared him for what had just come forth out of the mouth of this Duke University graduate with the spotless resume and gushing references. The suggestion that the Earth was flat had sucked all of the atmosphere out of Earl’s corner office and suddenly an electric silence had descended. Earl’s facial expression had gone from exultant to stunned shock in a nanosecond. He opened his mouth to respond but instantly thought better of it, thinking it more prudent to get clarification first.


“…um…excuse me?”


“Look, I get it. We can agree to disagree,” George offered with a smile. “I would just say that you should do your own research.”


Earl could no longer hang on to the hope that he had misunderstood. Suddenly, a decision had to be made. Earl could let it go, adding rejection of 2000 year old scientific consensus to politics and religion as subjects not to be discussed, or he could engage the man across from him with probing questions in an attempt to discover where this potentially disqualifying notion came from. After all, for a job heavily reliant upon faith in modern science and chemical engineering, a rejection of the idea that human beings inhabit a globe shaped planet might be problematic. Still, Earl was hesitant. Did he really want to find out more about George Mendenhall’s scientific views? By every measure at his disposal, this man had proven to be the ideal candidate for a job that Earl was under terrific pressure to fill. At the end of the day, who cares if the guy holds a bizarre theory or two? Unfortunately, Earl was being driven by his own personal biases, he being a lifelong aficionado of the United States space program, to the point where his man cave at home was hung with one photograph after another of every Apollo liftoff along with portraits of every astronaut to ever have flown on a lunar mission. Against a host of instincts screaming in his ear to disengage and offer the man the job, he heard himself saying, “But George—what about the photographic evidence from space?”


At this point Earl had taken his elbows off the desk and slid back into his chair, taking on the appearance of a deeply concerned therapist, as the blood slowly drained from his face as George expounded on his ideas, “Yes, you mean the photographic evidence that comes to us through the filter of NASA, the same people who faked the moon landings? At some point you have to ask yourself what you choose to believe—the evidence you can freely observe with your own eyes or the testimony of the roughly 500 humans who have allegedly been in space?”


Earl sat in incredulous silence as this handsome, erudite man produced a laundry list of conventional thinking that he believed were in fact conspiracies against the American people and the spirit of free thought. Everything from gravity—a strong case could be made against it— to what really happened on 9/11. He ended his speech with a statement that was still ringing in Earl’s ears as the elevator doors closed behind him as he left—“Actually, if we really understood what is being sprayed on this planet from the chem trails of airplanes, we would probably never leave our homes.”





Earl had walked George to the elevator and assured him that a decision would be made in just a few days and he would be in touch. Then he disappeared into the bathroom, splashed cold water on his face and stared into the mirror for a full five minutes. Having adequately composed himself, he walked back to his office, stopping along the way at his assistant’s desk.


“Get that girl with the lisp back in here!”