Wednesday, February 28, 2018

My February 2018 Running Report

This past month I ran for a total of 73 miles...not much...but I did manage to scrape through a difficult half-marathon on the 18th.  That event, Gainesville's Five Points of Life Half-Marathon, took place under extraordinarily warm and muggy conditions that burdened me throughout...besides, I wasn't in top condition for it.  I skipped running on 4 days, all in the week after the race...my 61-year old body now feels pretty well recovered from it all and I'm training again.  That 13.1-mile half-marathon also happened to be my single longest run of February...

During the last few days I have been splitting up my daily training into two parts: morning at home and late night at my local 24-hour gym after work.  So far this change seems to be working well for me...if I run in any races in March, I'd like to be in better shape!  Speaking of March races, that Run for Haven 10K race that has been held in March in Tioga (a few miles west of Gainesville) hasn't been canceled as I feared: it's being rescheduled to take place in the fall...I guess they won't be going with the theme of St. Patrick's Day anymore.  There's a 10K race called Trail of Payne that I had been meaning to run for many years but never got around to...the title is self-explanatory: a trail race in Payne's Prairie...should be an adventure if I decide to run it.  And why not, now that I'm now accustomed to running a 10K race every March...

Weekly Short Story: They Don't Make Life Like They Used To by Alfred Bester

Back in October I discussed a short story of Alfred Bester titled Time is the Traitor...click on the title link to read it.  He also wrote a remarkable tale in 1963, They Don't Make Life Like They Used To, which appeared in the anthology Isaac Asimov Presents the Great SF Stories 25 (1963) (DAW Books)...

From 1963's vantage point it is eighteen years into the future, way off there in 1981.  The location is Midtown Manhattan, more on the East Side and Central Park area...but that's where any sense of reality quickly departs.  A young woman lives there and has been convinced for the last five years...following the worldwide nuclear holocaust...that she is the only remaining human alive.  She makes use of all the stores around and always leaves IOU notes whenever she takes something.  In spite of her isolation she seems to have survival down to an art...that is, until one day she runs into a man.  The two of them, both likeable folks, engage in a lot of sidebar banter that reminded me of Bogart and Hepburn in the movie The African Queen and is equally endearing.  In the background they hear buildings collapsing from time to time, and the birds seems to be mimicking in their songs something harsh and metallic sounding.  What this means comes down on them in a terrifying ending...one that might cause nightmares for the squeamish...

When I was a little kid I always equated science fiction with "scary movies"...yet I rarely come across a short story or novel from this genre that inspires any degree of fright.  Not so with They Don't Make Life Like They Used To: it jolted me, to say the least.  Oh, one other thing about this and many other apocalyptic stories from this time: there is a tendency, when people are wandering around in isolation like in this tale of Alfred Bester or in that Twilight Zone episode when Burgess Meredith stumbles around the ruins of the big city, to never run across any of the myriad dead bodies that in a real apocalypse would be lying around all over the place. It's as if in dying in such a catastrophe, your body simply vanishes...well, in a direct nuclear hit, it just might...

I looked around the Internet and couldn't find any public domain access to this story...but if you have the chance to read it, by all means do so.  Unless, that is, you're prone to nightmares...
     

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Tuesday's List: My Favorite Electric Light Orchestra Songs

Lately I have been listening to the thirteen studio albums (fourteen if you count the Xanadu soundtrack) of the great classical/rock fusion band Electric Light Orchestra.  Initially a creative collaboration of Roy Wood and Jeff Lynne out of Birmingham, England, Wood left following the first album and the music has pretty much been the work of Lynne ever since...along with the accompanying band that has tended to alternately swell and diminish in membership over the years.  Ever since I first heard Can't Get It Out of My Head in December 1974, I have followed their music...although their quality seemed to plummet a bit when they went "disco" in 1979.  My favorite album is A New World Record, which I played to death after I bought it late in 1976.  Jeff Lynne still has ELO as "his" band, goes on concert tours, and even recorded a short album in 2015.  Since it's one of my all-time favorite musical acts, I thought it was about time to compile a couple of lists, first of my overall top ten favorite Electric Light Orchestra songs and then an album-by-album listing of tracks I liked from each of them. Well, here goes...

1 LIVIN' THING..........................................A New World Record
2 CAN'T GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD.......Eldorado
3 SECRET MESSAGES..............................Secret Messages
4 TURN TO STONE....................................Out of the Blue
5 BOY BLUE...............................................Eldorado
6 MR. BLUE SKY.......................................Out of the Blue
7 TIGHTROPE.............................................A New World Record
8 DON'T BRING ME DOWN......................Discovery
9 ROLL OVER BEETHOVEN....................ELO 2
10 SO FINE...................................................A New World Record

And here are the songs I particularly liked from each album, listed of course in order of preference...

****No Answer (1972)****
QUEEN OF THE HOURS
LOOK AT ME NOW
10538 OVERTURE

****ELO 2 (1973)****
ROLL OVER BEETHOVEN
MOMMA

****On the Third Day (1973)****
SHOWDOWN
DAYBREAKER
OCEAN BREAKUP/KING OF THE UNIVERSE

****Eldorado (1974)****
CAN'T GET IT OUT OF MY HEAD
BOY BLUE

****Face the Music (1975)****
FIRE ON HIGH
STRANGE MAGIC
POKER
ONE SUMMER DREAM
EVIL WOMAN

****A New World Record (1976)****
LIVIN' THING
TIGHTROPE
SO FINE
DO YA
SHANGRILA
ROCKARIA!
MISSION (A WORLD RECORD)
ABOVE THE CLOUDS

****Out of the Blue (1977)****
TURN TO STONE
MR. BLUE SKY
BIRMINGHAM BLUES
STANDIN' IN THE RAIN
JUNGLE
NIGHT IN THE CITY
SWEET TALKIN' WOMAN
SUMMER AND LIGHTNING

****Discovery  (1979)****
DON'T BRING ME DOWN
SHINE A LITTLE LOVE
LAST TRAIN TO LONDON

****Xanadu Soundtrack (1980)****
XANADU (with Olivia Newton-John)
I'M ALIVE

****Time (1981)****
HANG ON TIGHT
ANOTHER HEART BREAKS
TWILIGHT
YOURS TRULY, 2095

****Secret Messages (1983)****
SECRET MESSAGES
BUILDINGS HAVE EYES
ROCK 'N ROLL IS KING
FOUR LITTLE DIAMONDS

****Balance of Power (1986)****
SECRET LIVES
SEND IT
SO SERIOUS

****Zoom (2001)****
STATE OF MIND

****Alone in the Universe (2015)****
AIN'T IT A DRAG
ONE STEP AT A TIME

Monday, February 26, 2018

About Robert Mueller's Investigation

I admit I don't know very much about the Robert Mueller investigation into the degree of how much Russia interfered with our 2016 presidential election and to what extent there may have been collusion on the part of any campaigns here, especially that of Donald Trump.  It does seem clear to me that Vladimir Putin wanted to avoid Hillary Clinton getting elected first and foremost...Donald Trump or Bernie Sanders would have been the preferred candidates for him.  Was Trump some kind of "Manchurian candidate" with secret, special obligations to the Russians?  I don't know.  Did he cooperate with Putin by enabling their propaganda machine to plant false news stories derogatory to Clinton?  I don't know, but Trump during the campaign was very vocal in promoting the WikiLeaks release of stolen emails from her campaign...something that has been tied to hackers working for the Russians.  Seeing how Mueller is keeping everything in his investigation close to the vest, it's hard to know exactly how much has been revealed and who all it is pointing to.  Yet the president keeps going on and on about how the inquiry into Russian meddling is all a big hoax...

I've tried to suspend any judgment of Trump and his campaign until substantial results from the investigation have been produced.  So far there are some indictments...they seem to be focusing on false statements and money laundering...and there are some guilty pleas, implying that these people are now cooperating with Mueller's probe.  Personally, I suspect that Donald Trump is involved with Russian election interference on some level, but that's just my unsubstantiated hunch...you're entitled to your own opinion about this.  I am hoping that Robert Mueller won't do what Kenneth Starr did during the Clinton administration in the 1990s when he was initially commissioned to look into any possible improprieties of the Clintons involving Whitewater...and then stuck around after that investigation was fruitless, trying to dig up anything to damage the president and finally hitting pay dirt with the Monica Lewinsky revelations on a completely different matter.  Trump was on the Clintons' side back then and obviously knows how independent special counsels can widely stray from the original missions they were assigned: to this extent I sympathize with Trump.  But then again, he has behaved in an arrogant, interfering, and obstructive manner with this investigation...I can't see how Nixon behaved much worse with Watergate in this regard.  The main difference is that during Watergate the opposition party controlled Congress: Trump has his own party in there, and they don't seem very enthusiastic about holding him an any way accountable for anything he might have done...

Until this Mueller investigation issues its final report...assuming the president doesn't fire him first...neither I nor others around me will really know what happened in 2016.  Those who have allowed themselves to become overly emotional about Donald Trump...both those who idolize and despise him...may have already formed their respective opinions about his connection to the Russians: just listen to their own narratives on this subject.  As for myself, I think the country would be better off if one of the houses of Congress...either the Senate or House of Representatives...were under Democratic control in order to better ensure to the public-at-large that the president's own party isn't complicit in obstructing the flow of the investigation...

Sunday, February 25, 2018

Will Colleges on the FBI List Play in the NCAA Basketball Tournament?

I was watching college basketball on TV for much of yesterday.  I saw teams like Duke, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisville, and Vanderbilt play...the first four are thick in the running for NCAA tournament spots.  All are among the many schools that the FBI had been investigating for paying out money to out-recruit star players over other institutions and have been put on the list of those suspected of this cheating.  And then there's Arizona, whose coach had reportedly been wiretapped as offering $100,000 to obtain a freshman standout.  The question I have is what will the NCAA do about this information as we approach the time when the NCAA championship tournament will be seeded and begin?  Will they say they need more time and let the tournament go on, even if many of the teams are tainted by scandal?  Or will they quickly act and, according to the case-by-case severity of the charges, hand out appropriate punishments even if they involve banning certain schools from post-season play?  I suspect that the first option is the one they'll take: the NCAA loves to rewrite their own history and if some of these teams are found culpable enough, they will simply go back and take away their tournament victories...as if they never happened...

I was listening to sports talk radio yesterday and heard the argument that college basketball players should be paid anyway.  But by violating the current rules, the cheating schools are gaining an unfair advantage over those who are following them...and that is unacceptable.  If they want to change the rules later to allow for paid athletes, then fine...but for now they should be punished if this is a part of their strategy to beat out other colleges when they are recruiting for the top talent...

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Just Finished Reading Intruder in the Dust by William Faulkner

I just finished reading William Faulkner's 1948 novel Intruder in the Dust.  It's a small town in Mississippi around that same time.  An elderly black man, Lucas Beauchamp, has been arrested for the murder of a white man...Lucas was discovered holding a smoking gun at the site of the killing.  He is in jail and there are fears of a lynching.  A white boy, Chick, who remembers (with resentment) how Lucas had once saved him from drowning in a creek after he had broken through the ice, wants to finally settle the score by saving him from this murder rap.  An elaborate plot ensues with Chick's uncle Gavin being hired by Lucas to legally represent him...and then Lucas hints to Chick that his gun wasn't the murder weapon.  But they'd have to go out in the country several miles in the dead of night to dig up the victim's body...Chick, a black teenager, and an elderly white woman make up the unlikely team for this adventure.  How does it all end? Will our heroes succeed or be thwarted along the way?  Or will the angry racist mob first lynch proud Lucas?  And what about Uncle Gavin, who possesses a fatalism about the racist attitudes in 1948 of too many Mississippi whites with regard to the blacks living among them...will he step out boldly and do what is right and just for Lucas Beauchamp?

In spite of the underlying racism depicted in Intruder in the Dust, it is also a pretty darn good mystery story...as well as containing many funny sections.  The dialogue reflected that used by the people back then, and as such would not withstand the scrutiny of the political correctness police of today's world as they self-righteously try to retroactively rewrite history.  In spite of this, the novel sounded a theme of hope and progress for the South and that whites and blacks could be eventually reconciled...without having that reconciliation imposed on them from the North.  This last hope didn't exactly turn out the way Faulkner wanted as the ensuing decades would show...

My biggest problem with this book was how the author would suddenly descend into long sections of intricate analysis that, to me, went way over the heads of its characters.  It was if there was an extra character in the story: the collective subconscious that defined this society, and it was making its own case as much as any of the individual people were.  I'm not sure that any writer other than one with the stature of William Faulkner could have gotten away with this technique: I'm sure I would have been laughed straight out of the editor's office had I used it.  Nevertheless, Intruder in the Dust is a good book that mixes well its characters, setting, mystery, and social commentary.  And no doubt it's waiting for you at your local public library!

Friday, February 23, 2018

Quote of the Week...from Dean Karnazes

Somewhere along the line we seem to have confused comfort with happiness.
                                                        ---Dean Karnazes

Dean Karnazes is one of the world's most renowned ultra-distance runners...a simple 26.2-mile marathon for him is just a warm-up to his kind of race, with 100 miles being a typical distance for him.  Well, not only don't I ever intend to run for 100 miles at a time, but I also doubt I'll be attempting a "simple" marathon anymore, either (I pulled off this feat a couple of times in 2011).  No, my kind of running has me trying to complete distances from the 10K (6.2 miles) to half-marathon (13.1 miles).  Last Sunday morning I somehow got through one of those half-marathons under very uncomfortably warm and humid conditions, and I'm happy I stuck it out and finished it.  But on a day-to-day basis, I have been allowing myself to yield to the desire for comfort over progress and haven't trained as well as I should...this doubtless contributed to my adversities during that race. Karnazes, informally called "Karno" by his friends, wasn't just narrowly referring to running with the above quote, though: it applies to just about anything we approach in our lives.  For me, it's important to discipline myself into daily routines which, while uncomfortable while performing them, together contribute to an overall happier existence.  It's important to always have personal goals to tackle, and tackling them should involve getting out of one's comfort zone.  If you're not growing, then you're stagnating or, worse, fading.  Not that rest and play aren't appropriate in their proper places...I have been working a lot of late on my job and plan to take the opportunity with this day off to rest...

Dean Karnazes' book Ultramarathon Man has been an inspiration to me for many years and helped me motivate myself to run long distances during the last eight years.  I feel that I'm at a place right now in which I need to decide what direction I want to take with this running activity.  My gut instinct says that a daily jog/run for about three miles through my neighborhood is a good goal (and definitely not comfortable), but those grueling longer distance races just might not be where I need to be going for the indefinite future.  Well, first some rest and then we'll see...

Thursday, February 22, 2018

2/18 Sermon on Philippians, Part 6

I missed church this past Sunday morning as I was running in the local half-marathon then and soon afterwards had to go to work.  No problem, I watched the sermon later on The Family Church YouTube video website...here's a link to it: [link].  The message was a continuation of senior pastor Philip Griffin's series about the New Testament book of Philippians, focusing on Chapter 2 Verses 19-30...you can read it for yourself through the following link via Bible Gateway: [link]...

In Sunday's message, Pastor Philip presented three choices that believers need to make in order achieve joy and majority in their lives as they reflect the light of Christ on a dark world: choosing service over self, growth over comfort, and sacrifice over security.  What defines us: our hurts and hurdles or our acceptance by Christ?  The passage referred to Timothy as someone who had proved himself...the Greek work for "proved" can also be read as "refined", such as gold being refined to a pure state with the impurities taken out...in Timothy's case, through his service.  As for growth, Philip listed three truths: (1) growth happens when we make maturity, not comfort, our goal, (2) growth never happens overnight: time plus discipline equals growth, and (3) growth happens through mentoring...both by others and to others.  Discussing sacrifice, our pastor gave as an example the brave, heroic high school coach in Parkland last week who sacrificed his own life by putting his own body between students and the murderous gunman.  God wants us to be living sacrifices as well, putting Christ ahead of all things...

Pastor Philip concluded this message by saying that each and every believer needs three special relationships in their walk with Christ: a mentor to speak truth to them, a brother or sister alongside them in the faith, and someone...like how Timothy was to Paul...to mentor and for whom to be a source of wisdom, knowledge, and encouragement...

The Family Church meets each Sunday at 9 and 10:30 for its services, which include praise music, the weekly message, prayer and discipleship opportunities, lots of friendly folks, and a hospitality center with coffee and other assorted goodies.  It's located at 2022 SW 122nd Street...I'm planning on being there this Sunday...

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Weekly Short Story: The Snowball Effect by Katherine MacLean

Why do some social and political movements snowball in their growth and effect over the population while others briefly sprout and then wither away?  Katherine MacLean, in her 1952 short story appropriately titled The Snowball Effect...from the anthology Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 14 (1952)...examined this question, with some implications for our present age...

A newly-hired dean at a university is visiting a sociology professor, skeptical that his department merits the funding that it claims to deserve...after all, the college needs money from businesses and what practical use is sociology, anyway? In response to the dean's questioning, the professor proposes a project: to demonstrate his mathematically-constructed theory of the snowball effect on society, they will arbitrarily take a small women's sewing club tucked away in a small town and start a snowballing movement within it, using the professor's principles.  The dean agrees, very conscious of higher applications (and more money for the university) should the experiment bear fruit.  And does it ever bear fruit...

In our present age of instant social media messages and images multiplied any number of times across the country and the world, the concept of something snowballing has been replaced by another designation: going viral.  Look at the movements Black Lives Matter and Me Too in the last two or three years...and then look at how the Russians under their pseudo-president Putin were able to easily plant false news stories into social media to influence the 2016 presidential election against Clinton and in favor of Trump.  There is one element of today's world that tends to retard the full fruition of a snowball effect, keeping it from taking over the entire society: people nowadays tend to be attention-deficit, holding to whatever happens to be in vogue at the time and then suddenly disposing of it in favor of the next "big thing".  On the other hand, our media sources...while I acknowledge that some actually try to be objective...tend to favor a particular political orientation, inducing people of that same philosophy to tune in to reinforce their already held views instead of actually learning the facts and trying to see things from the other side's perspective...this trend I believe contributes to the snowball effect.  Now the question is: can all of this be set up mathematically to the point where someone with the inside knowledge of the snowball effect can, behind the scenes, anonymously manipulate the world to make it to their own liking?  Don't you get the feeling at times that this is precisely what is going on now?  I know of someone who has already expressed exactly this sentiment to me...

The Snowball Effect is now in public domain...you can read it online via Gutenberg through the following link: [link]...

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Tuesday's List: 2018 Names for Atlantic Tropical Storms and Hurricanes

I know it's a little early in the year, but I might as well now list the names for the upcoming 2018  tropical storms and hurricanes that will either be dithering about aimlessly in the open Atlantic or hounding us and sending Weather Channel meteorologists scurrying about on various coastlines...unless they strike Mexico or Central America, in which case the media will mostly ignore them.  We all know how bad it was in 2017 with Harvey, Irma, and Maria strewing their mayhem across Texas, Louisiana, Florida, and the West Indies...the prediction is for a more active-than-usual season in 2018. But as much as I would like a welcome break from the tomfoolery going on in Washington with our national politics during this election year, I think I'll be very, very satisfied to see that kind of crap on television instead of around-the-clock coverage of the ongoing disastrous hurricane as I did last year (didn't I say something to that effect back then?)...

And here's the list, which incidentally is almost completely recycled from that of  2012.  I say "almost" because in that otherwise subdued hurricane season six years ago, Sandy caused a catastrophic level of damage in the Northeast, which caused the name to be retired...

ALBERTO
BERYL
CHRIS
DEBBY
ERNESTO
FLORENCE
GORDON
HELENE
ISAAC
JOYCE
KIRK
LESLIE
MICHAEL
NADINE
OSCAR
PATTY
RAFAEL
SARA
TONY
VALERIE
WILLIAM 

Monday, February 19, 2018

Just Finished Reading Watership Down by Richard Adams

For a long time I had heard of Watership Down, a 1972 children's story by Richard Adams about a group of rabbits in rural England looking for a homeland...but it wasn't until last week that I managed to check out a copy from my local public library. I also remember that they made it into an animated movie a few years later but never saw it, either.  Well, after just finishing the book, I was suitably impressed...

Wild rabbits are social creatures, forming societies called warrens.  The characters in Watership Down (a "down" is a hill...there is actually a place called Watership Down in Hampshire) speak a language called "lapine" and organize their society like humans.  Adams originally conceived of Watership Down as a story he told his two young daughters during a long trip.  After their prodding, he wrote it as a book and sought the input of an expert on rabbits as to how they behaved in the wild...the result was an interesting composite of rabbit and humanity.   Hazel and Fiver are two ordinary rabbits living in a warren when the latter, a small rabbit with the gift of intuition, one day suddenly implores the others to quickly leave the warren to avoid destruction.  The warren's leader rejects Fiver's plea, and he, along with Hazel and a few others, manage to escape from the other rabbits.  It is their quest for a new home and the adventures, new friends...as well as foes...that they experience along the way that comprise this compelling tale, along with their folklore exemplified by stories told about their mythical spiritual leader El-ahrairah...

There is a temptation, when reading Watership Down, to draw analogies from it with human society and history...I saw a couple: Britain and America with their traditions of freedom standing up to the militarist dictatorships in World War II, as well as a disparaging look at socialist societies.  But the author denied any attempt at analogy...he was simply telling a story.  And I believe him, although a good writer will often unconsciously reveal much of his or her beliefs through the characters and their behavior.  If you haven't yet read Watership Down, I urge you to do so.  On one level, it's a story for kids about rabbits.  But on another, the text is written in a language for more mature readers.  Makes me want to read some of Adams' other stories.  By the way, Richard Adams passed away very recently...in December 2016...at the age of 96...

Sunday, February 18, 2018

Ran Gainesville's Five Points of Life Half-Marathon Earlier Today


This morning I got up very early to get ready for my fifth Five Points of Life Half-Marathon race here in Gainesville...and my fourth one out of the past five years.  Last year's run for me was a comedy of errors...I had misjudged the starting time and had to sprint a half mile just to get to the starting line in time...and I was hampered by problems with gagging.  Not this time around, on both accounts.  I prepared myself well and was ready to go at 7:00 when the race began.  However, the temperature during the race was 64-67 degrees, not necessarily a problem until you realize that the humidity was an oppressive 90-96 %...not a good combination at all.  I felt as if a blanket were on me the whole race, dragging me down and interfering with my performance.  Still, I got through it all and managed to substantially improve on last year's finishing time: my unofficial time was 2 hours 19 minutes 37 seconds, far slower than my best. But considering the conditions...the worst weather I ever ran a half-marathon in...I was very satisfied with the result.  Still I didn't at all enjoy the race while it was going on...it was a struggle for me not to just give up and walk away.  I would have much rather shivered uncomfortably before the race with colder weather than deal with this unseasonably warm and extremely muggy morning...

So now that I'm done with that, I can relax for a few days and recover from the experience.  By the way, the above photo I took near the start of the race...I'm running north on SW 34th Street and just topped the hill where that graffiti wall is: you can see a tiny section of it on the right...

Oh, I'd also like to mention what a great job the police did patrolling the streets we ran down and regulating the traffic so skillfully.  Also the many volunteers...especially those handing out water and Gatorade...were wonderful.  In spite of the adverse weather, I came away from the race with an overall positive feeling, and these good people had a lot to do with that...

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Just Finished Rereading Final Two Books in Tad Williams' Otherland Series

Several years ago I went with my family to Walt Disney World near Orlando, specifically the Magic Kingdom.  One of the attractions there was a show called Carousel of Progress, which through their famous robotic doll/actors portrayed the advance of technology and living standards over the years...and a glimpse into the future.  That rosy future showed grandma sitting in the living room with the kids playing a virtual reality space video game...as she called out her increasing score the voice-sensitive oven in the kitchen kept heating up correspondingly, to a smoky ending...

The kind of virtual reality that causes its participants to react to what's going on in a manner that can be seen by outside observers is also exemplified by the commercial showing another VR video game player falling all over his furniture while getting caught up in the "action".  In Tad Williams' four-part science fiction Otherland series...for which I just finished rereading the final two books...you can't tell at all what's going on in virtual reality for their users (the story is set a hundred years into our future): the connection goes straight to their brains, bypassing their physical bodies.  I find this notion of such disconnectedness with the outside world more than a little problematic.  On the other hand, although I've not yet experienced virtual reality, I wonder whether it might be a bit hazardous should my own physical reactions to what's digitally going on, like with grandma or the stumbling young man, possibly result in damage or injury.  Well, I guess I'll never know until I try it out...

I liked Otherland, which is kind of like a "Jurassic Park" for virtual reality: there are many great wonders for the visitors, but they soon find that they are trapped in an artificial alternate reality that is ominously changing in a way that increasingly threatens their very existence.  My favorite book in the series was the first one, in which the novelty of the world of virtual reality is presented.  Too soon, though, I was getting tired of the characters traveling from one "world" to the next, each time having to get accustomed to each new setting with its rules and new characters.  There were several important mysteries that needed solving, and the author kept teasing me, the reader, with them until the very end of the final book...Sea of Silver Light...when one of the characters finally lays it all out for everyone to understand...

To Otherland's credit I do think that the characters in this series were memorable and thoughtfully crafted.  There's a lot of dialogue in here and you get to know each of them (and there are quite a few) very well...in a way that you might not know the "real" folks around you.  Ultimately, it was the novelty of the virtual reality experience at the beginning and then characters like Renie, !Xabbu, Long Joseph, Orlando, Fredericks, Olga, Mr. Sellars, Cristabel, Paul Jonas, "Dread", and Matrine...to name just some of the standouts...that sustained me through to the end.  I think there is a problem with all series in that they tend to be longer than necessary, with that final volume often loaded with explanations at the expense of action.  Otherland was like this, but I nevertheless highly recommend it as a peek into one of our many possible futures...

Here's a list of the Otherland books:

#1 City of Golden Shadow
#2 River of Blue Light
#3 Mountain of Black Glass
#4 Sea of Silver Light


Friday, February 16, 2018

Quote of the Week...from John Nash

The best result will come from everyone in the group doing what's best for themselves...AND the group.                                              ---John Nash.

One of my all-time favorite movies is A Beautiful Mind, directed by Ron Howard and starring Russell Crowe as the brilliant-but-troubled mathematician John Nash...it's a part of my DVD collection.  Although the cinematic version parallels the true life story of Nobel Prize winner Nash, Howard tended to sensationalize his mental illness (schizophrenia) in order to enhance the movie's visual effect and create more suspense.  The above quote is from the movie...I don't know whether the real John Nash ever spoke these words.  But I chose it because more and more I believe it has a nearly universal application in our lives...and especially when looking at those who seem disaffected and alienated within our society...

John Nash had just experienced a "eureka" moment when he suddenly understood the economic principle of duality, which is a refutation of Adam Smith's previously held tenet of "everyone out for themselves" being the optimal driving force for economic development.  But I believe there is a broader application of this duality sentiment, and it has a lot to do with how adjusted people can function around others.  If somebody has grown to feel that they belong nowhere and that the people in their lives care little about them, the notion can easily arise that they, likewise, are in no way accountable to others for their own outlook and behavior.  Alienation prevents the principle of duality...or as I call it, enlightened self-interest, from coming to fruition.  Instead, the isolated individual creates for himself a self-contained moral system that does not rely on anyone else...and consequently nothing he does to anyone else has any effect on his sense of guilt or conscience.  It's important for us as social creatures to feel a group connection...or as my pastor says, a sense of community.  Not having this connection, I have sadly noticed, seems to be a common characteristic of those involved in the too-many mass shootings we have been experiencing over the recent years...and the trend seems to be ominously accelerating...

Wednesday there was yet another school shooting massacre, this time at a high school in Parkland, Florida.  Almost instantly after the news first came out, the same old tired political talking point battle lines were being drawn with each side blaming the other.  I recognize that it's true that in many other countries with strict gun laws, the murder rate is much lower than here in the United States.  But I think that there may be another, possibly more important factor that inhibits this senseless violence: people in those other societies may be more closely-knit and inclusive than ours here in America, which can often be brutally cold about emphasizing individualism and independence as ideals.  When someone...especially when they are young...cannot find any sense of social orientation and already has a history of unchecked violent behavior, we're talking about a powder keg ready to go off.  Even the more reclusive of us can and should feel a sense of belonging to their community...but that community has a responsibility of outreach as well...and those on the social margins tend to be shunned, further aggravating matters.  In the meantime, we'd damned well better be willing to invest in providing better protection for our children in their schools...whatever it takes!


Thursday, February 15, 2018

2/11 Sermon on Philippians, Part 5

Last Sunday at The Family Church here in Gainesville, our senior pastor, Philip Griffin, continued his series about the book of Philippians with its fifth installment, titled Joy in Salvation. The Bible passage of focus was Chapter 2, Verses 12-18, which you can read through the following link to Bible Gateway: [link].  Contained within it is the admonition that Paul, its author, gives believers to work out their salvation with fear and trembling...something that is problematic with some readers.  But Pastor Philip pointed out that "working out" carries the meaning of "bringing out", as if from a mine: see this as an exhortation to bring out the gold God has already given us...

How does one find joy in salvation? Pastor Philip listed five facets: come under God's authority, rely on God's power, trust in God's plan, reflect God's light, and count on God's joy.  As for his authority, Bob Dylan once wrote "gotta serve somebody"...we will make something our authority regardless...choosing God builds a foundation that will never be washed away in storms.  Philip reiterated that we are powerless in of ourselves to even obey God...we must rely on his power to empower us.  Focusing on God to get us through difficult circumstances instead of grumbling about them will give us joy.  As our pastor continued, living with fellow believers united in Christ will be reflected to the world and to his glory instead of conforming ourselves to a warped and crooked generation.  And finally, God's joy will persevere with us through hard times if we stick with him (and remember to rely on him and not our own strength)...

It's all too easy for me to allow myself to be tripped up over the course of my day as little annoyances and setbacks present themselves as obstacles.  Seeing the bigger picture and God's role in my life forces me to step back and put things in perspective.  Pastor Philip's message was a timely one for this often hectic period in my life...

You can watch this message of Philip's on the church's YouTube video website...here's a link to it: [link]...The Family Church, at 2022 SW 122nd Street, holds its Sunday morning services at 9:30 and 11.  Along with the weekly message are praise and worship music, fellowship, and opportunities for prayer and discipleship.  The series continues next Sunday...

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Weekly Short Story: Hunting Machine by Carol Emshwiller

A while back I used to be strongly anti-hunting, but over the years as I discussed the activity with different friends who were enthusiasts, I came to respect their viewpoints without feeling the remotest desire to engage in it myself. When I first read Carol Emshiller's 1957 short, short story titled Hunting Machine...which appeared in the anthology Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 19 (1957) (DAW Books) more than 25 years ago, I saw it only in terms of condemning the sport.  Now upon rereading it, I see a much broader application to what I believe the author was trying to express...

Joe and Ruthie McAlister are city folks a little to the future of our time.  They're out in the country, determined to have a hunting adventure...but how much of an adventure can it really be with an advanced robotic hunting dog that far surpasses the sensory capabilities of the animals it is pursuing.  And the couple's guns are nearly self-operating, presupposing little to no skill on the part of their users.  They have taken the conveniences of home with them and are letting "Rover" find and chase down their final target: a 1,500 lb. bear.  As this short story approaches its ending, the author describes in gory, graphic detail what happens when they catch up with the bear...and then the reactions of Joe and Ruthie to it all afterwards...

Whether it's fishing or bicycling or bowling...or hunting, or any other activity, it seems that many of those engaging in them are being pressured to buy high-tech equipment to enhance their conquests or scores...doesn't that kind of defeat the whole point of "sport"?  I used to ride a bicycle around town...I made the 16-mile round trip to and from work on bikes that I picked up from Wal-Mart or Target for less than a hundred bucks...nothing special.  One morning I was riding home...almost there...from my graveyard shift when I stopped at a red light and three other bicyclists pulled up beside me.  Two were grown men and one was a teenage girl...they were all dressed up like bicycle club members and their bicycles looked like they'd invested an enormous amount of money to get them.  The girl looked over at me and derisively sneered, "Nice bike".  I answered, "Have a nice day" as the light changed and the three went off ahead of me, all most assuredly very self-satisfied with their bicycling superiority.  I thought that if this arrogant pride (or is it insecurity?) is what motivates people to spend so much money to enhance their activities and make them look better to others, then I want no part in it.  Joe and Ruthie McAlister seemed to have similar motivations in Carol Emshiller's brutal, eye-opening tale...

Happy Birthday, Melissa!

I'd like to take just a moment to wish my wonderful, beautiful wife Melissa the happiest birthday today...yes, it's St. Valentine's Day, too!

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

Tuesday's List: Upcoming Running Races in Gainesville Vicinity

Usually this is the time of year in which I am the most likely to enter a running race...or two...or three.  Seeing how I live in Gainesville, Florida, and how this community has embraced running over the years, there are plenty of racing events to participate in.  The following list goes through March, showing races in the Gainesville vicinity.  Notably absent is the Run for Haven 10K that has been held around St. Patrick's Day in Tioga and which I had run the past three years...sad if it's not being held anymore.  In any event, there are plenty of races to choose from.  All races listed are in Gainesville unless otherwise specified...

2/17 Sat   FIVE POINTS OF LIFE 5K & KIDS MARATHON
2/18 Sun  FIVE POINTS OF LIFE MARATHON & HALF-MARATHON
2/24 Sat   JOEY'S WINGS 5K
3/3   Sat   RACE THE TORTOISE 5K (in High Springs)
3/3   Sat   RUN AMUCK WITH THE DUCK 5K
3/10 Sat   ARES VENGEANCE TRAIL RACE: 6H, 13.1m, 5K (in Alachua)
3/17 Sat   CLINT LACINAK/ST. PATRICK'S SHAMROCK 5K
3/17 Sat   DOVES AND SNEAKS 5K
3/24 Sat   GREAT INFLATABLE RACE: 5K novelty run
3/24 Sat   TRAIL OF PAYNE 10K
3/25 Sun  EQUAL ACCESS CLINIC NETWORK 5K

The above list probably isn't comprehensive as there are usually lower-profile races also held in the area.  I'm also holding out hope...slim as it is...that the Run for Haven 10K will take place this year...

Monday, February 12, 2018

Just Finished Rereading the First Three Artemis Fowl Books by Eoin Colfer

A few years ago I began reading Eoin Colfer's Artemis Fowl series, which is composed of eight books and aimed at a younger reading audience...but that never stopped me.  Back then I got through the third book of the then-ongoing series and forgot about it...now that it's finished (the final book came out in 2012) I decided to revisit this often hilarious fantasy/sci-fi venture into human/fairy history and relations...

The star of Artemis Fowl is the title character, a precocious boy genius who not only follows in his father's unscrupulous ways but plans to become the greatest criminal mastermind the world has ever known.  Each book has him growing a bit older while hatching a new scheme.  Artemis lives on his family's estate in Ireland with his parents, his trusted bodyguard Butler, and Butler's young sister Juliet...who is also in training to become a bodyguard.  In the first book, simply titled Artemis Fowl, Artemis's father has been kidnapped in northern Russia.  Book number two, The Arctic Incident, our young hero's plot revolves around rescuing him.  Oh, before I go any further, I need to introduce a very crucial element of this series: the world of fairies and its most important characters...

Fairies, which call themselves simply "the people" and comprise all sorts of fantasy creatures while referring to us ordinary humans as "mud people", had been the original inhabitants of the world's surface land but were driven underground millennia ago by the humans.  They have a much more advanced society both technologically and magically, and they abide by a special book (which Artemis seeks in volume one) that lays out all of their laws and limitations.  The standout characters here are Holly Short and Foaly...the former is a daring, brave young female elf striving for advancement within that society's police force (the LEP) and...like us mud people...fighting against gender-based discrimination.  Foaly is a centaur who is a digital and technological super-genius...he and Artemis eventually grow a kind of mutual respect for each other's mental abilities.  Oh, and probably my favorite character is a dwarf by the name of Mulch Diggums, a petty criminal who gets around by burrowing underground at high speeds...how he manages this is pure comedy...

Book one, Artemis Fowl, has Artemis encountering fairies and how they respond to him.  Book two, The Arctic Incident, has Artemis on a voyage to rescue his father off the northern Siberian coast from the Russian mafia while a goblin rebellion seeks to overthrow the fairy society...with a couple from the latter manipulating the goblins (they also have criminal masterminds down there).  And book three, The Eternity Code, has Artemis dealing with an American crime boss who has stolen an invention of his...which he in turn had designed with stolen fairy technology.  The stakes are no less than the survival of the fairies.  No, I'm not going to tell what happens in these stories...besides, you'll enjoy reading them for yourself and the books are pretty short...

There is an enormous amount of humor in this series, but the storyline itself is serious as Artemis, who starts as a totally selfish, arrogant, and amoral eleven-year-old, grows through his two-year experiences in these first three books into someone who is more compassionate and humble.  Whether or not this positive development continues has a lot to do with what happens at the start of the next book, for The Eternity Code's ending...which I won't reveal...nevertheless hinted that Artemis may be due for a return to his old nefarious ways.  Well, since I plan to not stop until I finish all eight books this time around, I guess I'll discover the answer soon enough...

Sunday, February 11, 2018

Trump's State of the Union Address and Commentary

Over the span of this blog, I have laid out from time to time my political orientation, which is issues-specific but weighted by how I perceive those issues affect me and my family.  I also believe that the primary Constitutional duty of the president and the executive branch is to provide for the national defense.  Now I realize, both in social media, television, radio, and the print media, the political discussion tends to be binary in nature, with the same people generally going straight down the line on either the "conservative/Republican" side or that of the "liberal-progressive/Democratic".  With the election of the current occupant of the White House, the polarization has taken on a much more personal slant as this individual seems to welcome confrontation and offense while regularly dishing out insults to anyone wounding his hyper-inflated pride and then wondering why so many people hate him.  However, I must in all fairness rise to Donald Trump's defense...so if what I'm about to say offends your political sensibilities, you'd probably better just stick to the channel or website that preaches to your chorus...

I was at work recently when President Trump delivered his first State of the Union address before a joint session of Congress and the U.S. Supreme Court justices.  I listened to the whole thing on the radio...which in itself was a feat since it lasted so long.  A funny thing happened while I was listening to him: I found myself nodding my head in agreement.  On this issue and that...interspersed with call-outs to special audience guests Trump wanted to honor...I thought that the president was spot-on with his delivery and themes: yes, I thought he hit the proverbial ball out of the park.  And then I went home and watched replays and reactions on TV...

With the replays, I instantly became irritated with the smug, smirking Vice-President Pence and the even worse Speaker of the House Ryan sitting behind Trump...and then I looked at the president himself.  Donald Trump, while saying all the great things that I earlier had agreed with without seeing him, looked like he was seething with hostility and aggression, and he had all of those irritating mannerisms as well...especially his patronizing hand gestures.  I suddenly felt like hurling something into the TV to make it all go away...reason won out, though, and I switched the channel.  I also viewed how people on TV reacted to his speech and was flabbergasted to hear it depicted as racist...come again? 

Early in his address, the president had the apparent gall to say that "Americans are dreamers, too".  I didn't take it as refuting the case for the children of undocumented immigrants being given the chance to stay in the country and be able to work (which I and most Americans support), but rather to bring everyone together...to acknowledge that we all have our own aspirations and that he was working on behalf of all of us.  But apparently, some white supremacist had already used that line and so that, in the eyes of some on the left, made Trump's statement racist.  He was also trashed for upholding the virtues of standing for the pledge of allegiance to the flag...something that has been a long-standing tradition in this country.  His critics angrily took him to task for that comment as a backhanded criticism of some NFL players' protests against what they perceive to be racial profiling and brutality by police.  But regardless where one stands on the Dreamers and the NFL protests, the president's presentation in his speech was dignified and inclusive. These were just two instances where Trump was excoriated by his critics; there were more as well.  The problem, of course, is that our 45th president tends to make statements, both in extemporaneous speech and on Twitter, that give fuel to his political adversaries...as well as a couple of his executive orders that took effect immediately and gave those directly affected little to no time to adjust...

It's tough enough for someone like me who voted against Trump in 2016 to have him as my president.  It's even worse when I find myself agreeing with his stance on certain issues...especially those on national defense, border security, and immigration...and then get frustrated when he undermines his own positions by making asinine impromptu comments and pointless Twitter postings (e.g. ban on Muslims entering U.S., "s---hole" countries).  Well, maybe I'm not defending him quite as much as I though I would.  And I'm getting tired of hearing people like Democratic Senator Dick Durbin get up there and condescendingly equate illegal immigration with the legal process that he himself benefited from through his own family line coming here many years ago.  The president's proposal does not turn our country's back on immigration but rather returns it to the legitimate process and more in favor of the frustrated folks who obeyed the law and are stuck on those long waiting lists, as Republican Senator John Cornyn pointed out a few days ago in a rebuttal to Durbin's speech...

Saturday, February 10, 2018

Just Finished Reading The Pirate King by Laurie R. King

Laurie R. King's 2011 mystery novel The Pirate King...not to be confused with R.A. Salvatore's fantasy novel with the same title...is another one of those books I picked out nearly at random from my local public library's shelves.  It is part of the author's Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes series...yes, turns out that Holmes wasn't a fictional character after all and is married to protagonist Russell, whom he calls...Russell.  The setting is England in the 1920s as the two go around tackling different cases...personally, I wished that Doctor Watson was in it, too.  The installment I read involves Mary Russell taking on an undercover assignment in a pirate movie filming...a movie with a very convoluted plot that sees her and the crew on a treacherous sea voyage after a stop in Portugal to hire "authentic" looking actors to portray pirates...

The mysteries that Russell is hired to solve seemed to be nothing more than a minor afterthought on the author's part...the story's emphasis changes to the ongoing experiences of the actors, film crews, and "pirates"...and to the final destination of the sailing ship they are on.  I can't be more specific without giving away the story, so I'll just enter in some general reactions.  One, the story gave a glimpse at the fledgling movie industry and Britain's attempts to "catch up" with American films produced in Hollywood. Their strategy in this regard was to make blockbuster adventure movies, filmed not in studios but on location instead...hence the convoluted trip out of England to Portugal...and points south.  Two, the Sherlock Holmes of this series...if this book is to serve as a good example...seemed weaker and less defined.  Of course, it's a bit of a mind game to claim within a fictional series that one of its characters was actually "real"!  Three, in spite of the various flaws I saw in the story line, I did very much like the main protagonist, Mary Russell, an Oxford educated woman fluent in several languages.  Her capacity in Arabic was integral in resolving the crisis at book's end...

So although I thought that The Pirate King drifted too much for much of the novel, I think I'll give Laurie R. King a second chance and read another Mary Russell and Sherlock Holmes book...maybe one of the earlier ones (the series began in 1994).  After all, I didn't like all of the late Sue Grafton's Kinsey Millhone mysteries, either.  Oh, by the way, it's not just Sherlock in this series: his competitive brother Mycroft...with whom Russell has an antagonistic relationship...is there as well...

Friday, February 9, 2018

Quote of the Week...from Elon Musk

It can launch things direct to Pluto and beyond. Don't even need gravity assist or anything.
                                                                     ---Elon Musk.

With the successful launch of Tuesday's Falcon Heavy rocket and the soft landing of two of its three booster rockets, SpaceX founder Elon Musk delivered the above reaction in a matter-of-fact manner, making me wonder whether his feet may be planted in 2018 but his mind is somehow off in the more distant future.  Musk picked as the rocket's payload his own private Tesla Roadster car, which will eventually settle into an orbit around the sun near Mars's orbit while playing endless loops (soundless in space) of David Bowie's space songs Space Oddity and Life on Mars.  Kind of reminds me of the dude in that Star Trek: First Contact movie who first develops and tests the warp drive...while loudly playing hard rock.  While the launch of Falcon Heavy marked a much-anticipated milestone within the space community, folks at large may at first have paid it passing attention but quickly put it far at the bottom of their collective priority list, below reality TV and Trump's tweets.  But that's people for you.  After all...

When you consider how different technological advances over the past couple of centuries have dramatically transformed the human condition, you'll notice that with each innovation it quickly gets adapted into society and is soon treated as if it had always existed, be it railroads, electric power, automobiles, airplanes, movies, radio & later television, computers, the internet, smart phones, etcetera.  And speaking of space travel, on only the third manned mission to the moon in 1970, television dropped live coverage for lack of viewer interest...that is, until Apollo 13 developed life-threatening problems creating a dramatic emergency ride back home.  During the next few years, if the launches generally go well as planned, we will witness another major change: people routinely traveling into space and to other worlds.  Initially it will be novel, but I predict (and will probably point back to this very blog article) that before hardly any time at all most people will treat it all as nothing much to get excited about.  That to me is one of the weirdest things about us humans...

Thursday, February 8, 2018

2/4 Sermon on Philippians, Part 4

Last Sunday at The Family Church here in Gainesville, senior pastor Philip Griffin delivered Part Four of his sermon series on the New Testament book of Philippians, this particular message titled Joy Through Humility. Tbe Bible passage of focus was Philippians 2:1-11. which you can read by clicking on it.  It all concerns putting aside one's own pride and imitating Christ's humility by putting on the role of a servant, tending to others' interests over one's own...

In opening his message, Pastor Philip brought up an incident a few years ago in the Black Sea when two Russian ships collided head-on after neither's captain would yield to the other.  That epitomizes the problem with pride, he pointed out: contentiousness not only can lead to disaster, but it also steals our joy.  The opposite of this stubborn pride is the humility that Christ practiced and which he exhorts us to adopt...as servant believers.  What is the mind of Christ in this regard? Philip listed three aspects: (1) in order to have a relationship with us, Christ put aside his divine rights and privileges as God's son, (2) in order to lead us he took on the role of a servant to show that true power and true position are to be used in serving others...we as his followers should do the same, and (3) in order to love us, he died the death he did not deserve, motivated by his selflessness...calling us in turn to live sacrificial lives on behalf of others.  In a nutshell, as our pastor stressed, the mind of Christ is about "giving", not "getting".  But all of this requires setting aside one's pride...

Looking at this "pride" issue personally, I find it much easier to notice when someone else is letting their pride get out of hand when they act unreasonably and stubbornly toward others, often with the excuse that they are "proudly" defending the rights of whatever group they identify with, be it an association or some demographic group that emphasizes pride for its members.  I understand the need for each of us to feel a sense of worth and that the sad truth is that, for many of us, the outside world can unfairly put us down because we are perceived to belong to the "wrong" group...in this light, it's important to have a positive sense of self, which can be translated as "pride".  Also, if I am to seek to value the interests of others...and they presumably mine...then we should all be honest with ourselves and others about what exactly constitutes our own interests and not be ashamed of it...that to me is false humility.  After all, if everyone is humbly yielding to each other for who's first in the food line, then none of us are ever going to get around to eating...

You can watch Pastor Philip's message by going to the church's YouTube video website...here's a link to it: [link].  The Family Church is located in far western Gainesville at 2022 SW 122nd Street and holds its weekly services on Sunday morning at 9 and 10:30.  I'm looking forward to another installment in the Philippians series, as well as the great music...and that good coffee.  Prayer, learning, discipleship, friendly folks...all in all a good place to hang out on a Sunday morning...

Wednesday, February 7, 2018

Weekly Short Story: Cold Spell by Donna Andrews

Departing a bit from my pattern of reviewing mainly older short stories from many decades ago, I picked the 2004 tale Cold Spell, written by Donna Andrews and appearing in the anthology Powers of Detection: Stories of Mystery & Fantasy (Ace Books).  The setting is in imaginary fantasy land ruled by a duke who has a murder mystery to solve.  Already predisposed to suspicion about the magicians under his domain, he is on the verge of banning all magicians after a prisoner of his dies of a stabbing wound that seems completely inexplicable other than from magic.  Master Justinian, the most powerful mage known, is summoned to the duke by means of an bluntly disrespectful character named Reg...Justinian takes along his spunky apprentice Gwynn as he travels to the castle.  While the magician tries to figure out what happened, he sends his aide with Reg to tend to a different problem elsewhere in the castle.  Gwynn then pieces together all of the phenomena they had been experiencing and solves the puzzle...

I really enjoyed Cold Spell, especially the humor spread throughout it.  It has to be tough to develop characters' personalities in such a short span (it's only 21 pages), but I got to like both Justinian and Gwynn (and even Reg to a degree).  The only problem I have with it has to do with the combination of three factors: the story's brevity, the magic and the rules the author assigns it in the story, and that it is in the final analysis a mystery narrative...

One of the cardinal rules of mystery fiction is to present information early enough in the story that can at least give the reader some substantial clues to solve it.  In stories about magic, each author brings to their work their own rules by which it is governed.  But because Cold Spell was so short, Donna Andrews would have had to spell out one of her rules that was crucial to explaining the mystery: had she done that, it might have been too easy to solve.  But by presenting her rule at the end, it came close to violating that earlier-stated principle of letting the reader in on trying to solve it.  Oh well, maybe this means that the best mysteries should be based on real-life situations, and if there is one in a fantasy world with magic, then the story might just need to be a little longer.  That having been said, I still recommend Cold Spell...

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Tuesday's List: Aggregrate Mexican Liga MX Standings Since 2014

I've been following Mexican premier league professional soccer (Liga MX) since 2014, watching games on Spanish-language television channels.  Unless my favorite team, UANL (Universidad Autonomo de Nuevo Leon) "Tigres", is playing, I usually just sit back and observe the matches dispassionately but interested.  This league plays two seasons per year: the late calendar year "Apertura" and the early calendar year "Clausura", each one with its own championship playoff series called "Liguilla" comprising the top eight finishers from the league's eighteen teams...Tigres have made the Liguilla playoffs in all seven seasons I've followed them, won the championship in three of them and finished runner-up in two.  Below I've listed the aggregrate standings combining the Apertura and Clausura regular seasons for each year, which goes in a hyphenated manner like our basketball and hockey seasons.  Apertura champions are in capitals and in red, Clausura champions are capitalized and in blue...the team promoted up from the lower Ascenso League is in green, and the team demoted (relegated down) to Ascenso is denoted with "-R"...Thanks to Wikipedia for giving me the info...this is probably one blog entry that is going to be useful primarily just for me...

******2014-15******
1 UANL Tigres
2 CLUB AMERICA
3 Atlas
4 Toluca
5 Monterrey
6 Pachuca
7 SANTOS LAGUNA
8 Chiapas Jaguares
9 Queretaro
10 Cruz Azul
11 UNAM Pumas
12 Tijuana
13 Veracruz
14 Guadalajara Chivas
15 Leon
16 Puebla
17 Universidad de Guadalajara Leones Negros-R
18 Morelia

******2015-16******
1 Monterrey
2 Leon
3 Club America
4 UNAM Pumas
5 Toluca
6 UANL TIGRES
7 PACHUCA
8 Morelia
9 Guadalajara Chivas
10 Puebla
11 Santos Laguna
12 Cruz Azul
13 Queretaro
14 Chiapas Jaguares
15 Veracruz
16 Tijuana
17 Atlas
18 Sinaloa-R

******2016-17******
1 Tijuana
2 UANL TIGRES
3 Pachuca
4 GUADALAJARA CHIVAS
5 Monterrey
6 Club America
7 Toluca
8 Necaxa
9 Leon
10 Atlas
11 UNAM Pumas
12 Morelia
13 Santos Laguna
14 Cruz Azul
15 Queretaro
16 Puebla
17 Vercruz
18 Chiapas Jaguares-R

***2017-18 (SO FAR)***
1 Monterrey
2 Club America
3 UANL TIGRES
4 Morelia
5 Toluca
6 Cruz Azul
7 Leon
8 Tijuana
9 Necaxa
10 Atlas
11 Puebla
12 Santos Laguna
13 UNAM Pumas
14 BUAP Lobos
15 Pachuca
16 Guadalajara
17 Queretaro
18 Veracruz-last in regulation table so far

Monday, February 5, 2018

Some Musings on Commonality of Outlook and Interests

Sometimes when reading a book certain insights float up to my conscious mind a few days later. This just happened to me after recently reading Ayn Rand’s Atlas Shrugged. In her novel, a fellowship forms between people who share a philosophy of realism combined with rationalism. They are judges, artists, musicians, engineers, and industrialists, among other professions. Their mutual association is based on their common approach to life...not necessarily on others within their own specialties or who share their specific interests. Although Atlas Shrugged contains some aspects with which I disagree, I feel that it revealed something to me that I should have figured out for myself long, long ago...

The idea of seeking others with my common interests makes sense, at least on the surface. I’m a runner, so why not enter races and hobnob around with fellow runners...we’ve all got that particular interest in common, right? Or if I’m a writer, hang out with other writers. Or since I like to read, go join a book reading group in town. Like playing chess? Then join the chess club. Studying one or more foreign languages? Seek out those with the same linguistic interest. I did something like this in high school when I joined their astronomy club, only to discover that I had absolutely nothing in common with anyone else there. The fact is that my way of viewing life and conceptualizing things can diverge from others to the point where being around them drains me of energy and causes within me feelings of alienation and/or oppression...even if we supposedly like the same things. The immediate impulse I feel in reaction is to just seek solitude and become a recluse. Now I believe there is a better alternative...but it’s a bit more difficult and involves more of a social outreach on my part...


How does one find like-minded people to associate with? First of all, I need to be sure of my own beliefs and orientations. Then I can observe others who, at least outwardly, may display the same general way of looking at things as myself. But only time and continual, proactive and honest engagement on my part will ultimately determine whether they are truly who I think they are or instead just mimicking what they think I may be expecting from them. But I’m certain that I’d feel more commonality with others, even if our respective interests were vastly different, if their basic approach to living resonated with mine...

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Patriots' Super Bowl Loss to Eagles Highly Satisfying

Hooray, I have an entire year ahead of me knowing that the New England Patriots are NOT Super Bowl champions, thanks to the Philadelphia Eagles...who produced an impressive team effort tonight in knocking off the evil defending champions, 41-33.  Before the playoffs, I had unjustly written off the National Football Conference's number one seed because of the season-ending injury of their starting quarterback Carson Wentz.  Instead, backup Nick Foles stepped in and had a historic playoff run with a career performance against the hated Patriots, earning the game's MVP award.  Tom Brady can go around smirking all he wants now, I don't care...someone ELSE is the champion.  And don't think I don't appreciate what the Eagles did...I became a strong New York Giants fan purely out of gratitude after they ruined the Cheatriots' "perfect" 2007 season when they beat them 17-14 in that year's Super Bowl...

It's too bad that the team I follow the most in the National Football League, the Miami Dolphins, have basically stagnated over the same years that the Patriots have prospered under Belichick, Brady, and company.  It's also a shame that the Dolphins have been trapped in the same division as the league's most successful franchise of this century.  But they could have been a lot more competitive had they managed their franchise better.  With their mediocre head coach returning next year, I have little hope of success with them.  But for now, GO EAGLES!!!

Saturday, February 3, 2018

Just Finished Reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

I had already long heard of writer Ayn Rand's Objectivism movement, portrayed in novels like Anthem, The Fountainhead, and Atlas Shrugged, but had never gotten around to reading anything of hers.  I heard that folks like former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, Speaker of the House Paul Ryan, Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, right-wing radio host Rush Limbaugh, former Congressman Ron Paul, and Rush drummer Neil Peart had each at some point in their lives been followers of Rand's...but it wasn't until I saw an episode of the satirical cartoon series South Park of all things that I finally relented and read her so-called "masterpiece", the gargantuan 1957 Atlas Shrugged...

It was the episode in which police officer Barbrady comes out and admits that he can't read...he then goes back to elementary school to catch up.  At the end, he's literate and is given a copy of Atlas Shrugged.  His reaction? In Barbrady's words, "Yes, at first I was happy to be learning how to read.  It seemed exciting and magical, but then I read this: Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.  I read every last word of this garbage and because of this piece of s--t, I am never reading again."  My reaction upon finishing it was a little more positive, but I have my own criticisms...

The setting of Atlas Shrugged...at least at its beginning...is an America of the mid-twentieth century that initially, at least on the surface, roughly corresponds to what it was really like.  The protagonists are visionary industrialists steel producer Hank Rearden and railway magnate Dagny Taggart. They exemplify the author's ideology of realism and objective reasoning as opposed to the social engineers and mystics around them who try to sabotage their efforts at success.  The political tide turns against "creators" like Rearden and Taggart as "second-handers" and "looters"...neither of which contribute anything real to the economy...take over.  While this is all going on, innovators, rationalist thinkers, and industrial leaders are subtly disappearing...where are they all going?  And who is this John Galt we keep hearing about throughout the narrative?  Mr. Galt finally makes his appearance late in the story...and delivers a monstrously long televised discourse explaining his worldview and why the moochers are doomed to failure...

I'm going to stick to my general pattern of book reviews and avoid telling how it all ends.  I will say, though, that unlike the fictional and hysterically funny Officer Barbrady from South Park, I knew in advance to read Atlas Shrugged more as a treatise of Ayn Rand's ideology than as a traditional novel.  That's a good thing, because the characters came across more as stick figures, with the "good guys" all sounding pretty much like the same person and the villains so similar to each other that they were often only distinguishable by name...and the dialogue was so contrived and unnatural that I found myself laughing at it.  The bottom line is this: Rand believed that pursuing one's own self-interests, especially economic self-interests, is the highest form of morality and that an unrestricted and unregulated economy...based on the gold standard...is the greatest social system ever devised.  Conversely, those who seek to use taxation to fund the government, form labor unions to collectively bargain working conditions and wages, spread any religious or ethical doctrine promoting altruism or social justice, or impose any sort of government regulation are operating from a moral framework of evil...in the author's clearly enounced opinion.  Yeah, I've got lots of problems with the message in this book.  Yet...

I did pick up on a couple of important points that I think Ayn Rand was trying to convey.  There is a blatant degree of hypocrisy in our society as so many openly criticize materialism and those who enjoy the material fruits of their labor while expecting to be handed those same material benefits without having played any substantial role in bringing them about.  Also, on a more personal level, from childhood I have often felt isolated and even shunned whenever I demonstrated special skill, intelligence, and accomplishments in a social setting...the default attitude in this society that outwardly pretends to reward initiative and success but vilifies those responsible for it seems to be that it's okay to achieve or be smart as long as you keep it hidden from others.  That folks would rather seek to be seen as one of the "people" instead of rising above others is a surefire sign of a stagnant, if not sinking, society that exalts mediocrity and conformity over excellence and ambition...

Friday, February 2, 2018

Quote of the Week...from Bessie Coleman



I refused to take no for an answer.             ---Bessie Coleman.

In the employees' entrance hallway where I work (the Gainesville Post Office) is framed a large reproduction of a 1995 postage stamp featuring aviation pioneer Bessie Coleman.  Born in a large family of cotton sharecroppers in Texas in 1892, she later moved to Chicago and became enamored with flying...but couldn't find anyone in this racially hung-up country to teach her how to pilot a plane.  Strongly determined not to take "no" for an answer, she undertook to travel across the Atlantic and received her training, first in France and later in Germany. Returning to the United States with her international license, the first African-American woman to receive a pilot's license (and to our shame she had to leave the country to do it), Bessie starred in a flying circus stunt plane act traveling across America in the early-to-mid 1920s.  Tragically, she died falling from a defective plane that she was trying out on the outskirts of Jacksonville, Florida in 1926...at the way-too-early age of 34...

Let's face it: no matter who you are or where you came from, there are always going to be people in your pathway determined to prevent you from progressing with your dreams...I don't get it, but that's the sad truth.  Maybe they're jealous of your talents and feel threatened and challenged by your drive...or maybe they're just trying to test you to see how badly you want what you're seeking.  I don't care what the reasons are...I'm a lot older in my life than Bessie Coleman was when she left this Earth and I'll never fully understand the pervasiveness of hatred and discrimination she faced as she led her own life as she saw fit, but I'd be grateful to have as much as a tenth of the gumption that she displayed as she didn't just throw her hands up and give in just because some jerks said she "couldn't"...

Thursday, February 1, 2018

1/28 Sermon on Philippians, Part 3

At The Family Church here in Gainesville, senior pastor Philip Griffin continued his series Finding Joy, based on a study of the New Testament book of Philippians.  Last Sunday's sermon was titled Joy in Gospel-Living and was based on Philippians 1:27-30...you can read it by clicking on it and going to the Bible Gateway website...

In developing this message, Pastor Philip laid out a four-part contrast between the meanings of religion and the Gospel: (1) Religion is all about what we can do for God, the Gospel is all about what Christ has done for us; (2) Religion is all about obeying so that God will love and save us, the Gospel is all about God loving and saving us so that we obey; (3) Religion leads us to believe God owes us for what we have done, the Gospel compels us to surrender to God for what Christ has done; and (4) Religion leads us to believe our religious actions make us better than others, the Gospel shows us that Jesus's action on the cross makes us equal to others...

The core of Philip's message is that we should live representing the Gospel that has transformed us so that we might experience true unity, Godly teamwork, and confident assurance. Accept the Gospel message of Christ goes diametrically against religious notions of rituals and behavior that cause us to think we're better than others and sow the seeds of division.  Philip also observed how fundamentally divided the church in America is on many levels, not the least of which is how racially segregated too many fellowships still are...this is not a good reflection on the Gospel, by which we should stand together firm in the one Spirit.  Fighting the spirit of teamwork are two worldly, fleshy attitudes: consumerism and egotism.  And finally, our pastor emphasized that the closer we grow to God through the Gospel, the more distant we will grow from the world's value system...

Whew, that was a longer than usual summary...but it was a great sermon, thanks Pastor Philip!  The bottom line comes down to what comes first and then what follows: first good behavior and then a supposedly earned relationship with God (religion) or first a relationship with God through Christ and then good behavior (the Gospel).  I'm opting with the latter...

The Family Church, located at 2022 SW 122nd Street (most easily accessible via SW 24th Avenue or Newberry Road), holds its weekly services on Sunday morning at 9 and 10:30.  There is beautiful praise and worship music, a message full of insight and wisdom, prayer and learning opportunities, a hospitality room before and between services, and loads of friendly people.  Next week we'll start looking at Philippians Chapter 2...

By the way, you can view Pastor Philip's message through the church's YouTube video site...just click on the following link: [link]...