The Wisdom of Southern Football

Well, what do we have here today, young’ns, to stick between our teeth and gums, salivating over a big wad of molasses-soaked tobacco chaw, counting back the days of our youth when life was simple again?

Seems like only yesterday I was working amongst the wee people of the Emerald Isle, they being mostly Catholic in the southern part of the country.

And there I was, standing tall in their misty midst, wearing a shirt that proudly proclaimed the colours of [one of] my alma mater(s).

The University of Tennessee in Knoxville.

Not far from Pigeon Forge, near to the place where adults and children alike enjoy the entertainment of Dollywood, named after Dolly Parton, who has one of the straightest, flattest roads in the county named after her, not to mention the cloned sheep, Dolly, also named in her honour but not for her road-worthiness.

‘Twas my boss, a fine fellow of the name of John Curran, if my memory serves me correctly (and after many a tiny sip of poteen, I can’t say my memory is what it was or or will be), who pointed at my shirt and asked what I was trying to provoke.

Were there rivals of the SEC (Southeastern Conference) there in our Shannon office I didn’t know about?

“Provoke?”

“Yes,” he said, half-angry, half-mockingly, “that jersey of yours is worse than anything you could put on to rile up the Munster or Leinster fans…you know that, don’t you?”

“I can’t say that I do. Is there something I’m missing here?”

“Missing? Yes! Eight hundred years of oppression! Have you not heard of the Orange marching down our streets, looking for trouble? Do you not know you’re working in Catholic country?”

I looked at my orange-and-white striped shirt, with a emblem showing an overlapped U and T. “It’s the colours of the University of Tennessee.”

“Not around here, it’s not. You might as well say you don’t want to work here. If you wear that shirt again, I’ll have to fire you. I’d suggest you go back to the hotel and change. Otherwise, I can’t promise what some of the guys here’ll do to you when no one’s looking!”

At least that explained why it appeared the waiter had spit into my Irish breakfast that morning.

So, you see, that’s the way it goes. We never know what kind of cud others are chewing on and mulling over.

A few days ago, I stopped at a petrol station to fuel my car and put food in my belly.

I parked next to a caravan full of young women who looked like they were on their way to a rally of some sort.

Pasted across parts of their vehicle were stickers that looked like a curly, capital letter – “A”.

Figuring them to be members of a sports team associated with the University of Alabama, I asked if they were fans of the Crimson Tide.

“Huh?” the leader asked me.

I pointed at the stickers on the caravan.

“Oh, those!” She and the other women laughed. “No, we’re not fans of the Crimson Tide. You see, it’s our symbol.”

I nodded, my turn to look confused.

“You know,” she said, and planted a big kiss on the lips of the woman next to her.

I might be dense at times but I can see Lilith Fair groupies when they spell it out for me. “But…”

“Yes, we know what you’re thinking. We were tired of the same old stickers that implied our gender preference. We heard that gay men now put Auburn stickers on their cars and wear Auburn colours to indicate their preference. We figured that we’d wear the colours of the rival to Auburn — the University of Alabama — to indicate ours.”

And I thought my orange jersey stirred up controversy.

Oh well, next thing I know, it’ll be the Manchester United scarf that represents the whole LGBT community.

Or that the 2012 London Olympics symbology is a cover for British members of al Qaeda, Red Guard and other gangs vying for “baddest of the bad” designation in mass media portrayals.

BTW, according to a journalist friend of mine, the government’s royal guard is secretly training an elite corps of prostitutes to act as supplemental entertainment for the Inner Circle and an outer line of protection against prying journalists and indiscreet hotel employees.

Happiness, Amalgamated

Soon enough, while Mr. Gibbs stomachs colorectal cancer, I return to the imaginary future.

All the time, my father spends his days and nights in unknown cognitive condition.

The EU squanders. Or flounders.

Useful youthful years are spent away from dedication to full employment by/for the global economy.

Whose vision is here for me?

I write here, right here, where goals and victories are created by us for us.

Subcategories of subcutaneous subcultural attributes gain strength in building buildings, gilded, geldings waiting by the bay.

This moment is my future. Was. Will be.

I compete with/against my former dreams.

Listening to the likes of Claire Lynch, Ben Bosco, April Taylor and the Lunabelles; pump/reed organs; piano; mobile phone ringtones in sync with automobile brakes and squeaking steering wheels.

Thanks to Robert, Tracy, Kelly, Jody, Eloise, Rick, and Wendy today at the VA. [Yes, it was windy today, too.]

I write as if the future already happened [it did].

That’s the way it was.

Doesn’t matter who, when or where.

The future has a way of controlling its destiny [in retrospect, of course].

A class of ’82 SCHS graduate behind the counter at DQ.

Leaving the farm at 18 only to return and buy the one next door.

Do you know who’s going to Germany?

Who’s been to Myrtle Beach?

Whose father owned a TR3 and then a Porsche?

Who knows the best SNFs in town?

Does anyone want my father for a guinea pig for ALS/dementia/depression brain enhancement research, getting his professorial input via scribbled one-word responses to start with?

How will we deal with autism/dementia in solar system colonies not equipped for nonessential task assignments?

How far do I stretch my thought set to truly take in all seven billion of us, completely attached to the global economic employment model or not?

Every one of us is a data point in the scheme of turning carbon-based lifeform equivalents back out into the galaxy.

Your future has been plotted and trended.

Time to tell you what you’ll be thinking/doing next.

The reluctant leaders plods on in his clodhoppers…

Family Member Legacy

Do you keep up with technology news?

How about privacy laws?

Well, if you haven’t, I’ll summarise a bit of the clash between technology and privacy laws.

You see, many of us have online personalities — that is, we conduct business and personal transactions through the exchanges of electronic bits in place of face-to-face discussions, handshakes and pen-to-paper contractual agreements.

For instance, if a person had once handwritten (or typed) letters of correspondence, leaving the proverbial/ubiquitous/superfluous/euphemistic/cliched paper trail, a researcher or law enforcement person could request or confiscate the pages for historical purposes.

It’s not like one could go to the post office and request a copy of the information that was sent from one person/entity to another.

Enter the information age! [imagine supersonic jets swooping past and videophones embedded in everyone’s eyes, with some sort of thumping soundtrack]

Now, much of our online equivalent of letters and parcels is stored on computing devices somewhere out there.

Call it the cloud or server farms or data centers or Joe Bob’s Internet Service Shoppe.

Regardless of where, your former/current online life lives on in perpetuity, whether intentionally or accidentally.

For instance, as many of you know, my father is working his way through the stages of ALS bulbar option, with an added task of encephalopathy/dementia, meaning he has little to no clue about accessing his former online life.

Which brings us to the bottom line.

I am not a government.  I am not an academic researcher.  I am not a novelist looking for an interesting person to chronicle and fictionalise (well, maybe I am some of that but not in this moment).

I am my father’s son.

I want to carry on my father’s legacy, including online correspondence as well as making sure any outstanding electronic monetary transactions are concluded successfully.

I simply want to give my mother access to her husband’s (my father’s) email account with Yahoo!.

The employees at Yahoo! Customer Care have been kind enough to tell me that they take my father’s email account seriously and will not just give out his access information to any Jane, Jill or Joe Bob.

The very bottom line?  If you have an online presence and lose your cognitive ability, make sure ahead of time that someone you know/love/trust has your account access information readily available.  Otherwise, it takes a court order to gain access.

That’s a legacy I’m chasing today, through legal channel surfing.

I’ll leave you with Ode to Joy (Joyful, Joyful We Adore Thee) to close out this romp through the hoops of the online world.

bargain shopping

Today, my father sat in front of the desktop PC in the patient lounge of the Mountain Home VA CLC, spending nearly 1.5 hours trying to correctly spell the word “computer.”

That is an accomplishment worth mentioning and celebrating.

Not only that but he still remembers how to use a computer mouse with a scroll wheel and can move cards in a computer Solitaire card game (although red and black colours are a problem for him).

In Microsoft WordPad he knew most of the major functions, including font size/colour, bold/underline features and highlight/copy/paste.

That is what ALS, bulbar option, gives us — a man who cannot walk, speak or write well but who can still operate a decent HID/UI combination with which he was familiar as professor and retired emailer/surfer/Solitaire player.

I thank Frank and his EMT driver at Johnson City/Washington County EMS for transporting my father back-and-forth from/to the VA CLC to/from the JCMC. Also, Lavonna, Tanya, April and Dr. Reddi (sp?); Jay, Pat, Amanda, Patty and others at the VA CLC; Pal’s in Colonial Heights; Hannah at Krispy Kreme in Johnson City; Home Depot in Kingsport; Evelyn and David Carpenter in Rogersville (and their great crew); Dawson Fields and Debbie at Martin’s Greenhouse; Patricia Rhoton; Tuesday Morning.

Speaking of Tuesday Morning, I picked up a Sena ZipBook iPad black classic leather case, MSRP at $99, for $14.99 this afternoon. I thank the cow(s) and bovine processors for the privilege of using this handcrafted genuine leather stand/cover to protect my overpriced 10-inch tablet PC (a/k/a iPad 2).

More to thank later. The medical staff at the VA CLC are a great understanding bunch, letting my father explore the hallways in his wheelchair in order to familiarise himself with his surroundings and hopefully get to know his hallmates, fellow military veterans that they are.

His current roommate, nicknamed Moses, is a Korean War veteran who served two years of active duty as a Marine helicopter mechanic, aged 81 and 98 pounds (half of it in his beard and long hair). Couldn’t ask for a friendlier man to share a room with my father.

Time for dinner with my mother — fresh vegetables from the fine folks at the Market in Rogersville — green beans, corn, sweet potatoes and ham.

Time to compute trajectories in the evening hours while connected to clandestine supercomputer networks hiding in plain view (do you know how much data storage we keep in the power lines outside your home?!).

Another gem in the rough

Sophomoric humour of the day — reminds me of an advert for 7 Up cola — see highlighted paragraph below:

A T-shirt advert a few years ago was split across front and back.  Front of the T-shirt stated “Make 7”.  The back of the T-shirt stated “Up Yours!”

Congrats to “Lucky” for her years of dedicated service.  Congrats to the local newspaper for making her commendation announcement memorable!

Parting Shots – “Gone crazy. Back soon.”

A CIA employee quit to become a bishop.  Now all his files are marked “Sacred” and “Top Sacred.” — The American Legion magazine, May 2012

Reminds me of an insight that occurs and re-occurs in me with occasional irregularity.

Do you ever wonder why people and organisations make and keep secrets?

Well, for starters, if they fail at a secret task, only those in on the know will know what they know about what failed and why it failed.

In addition, they can [somewhat] control the perception of the failure.

That’s why I operate on a species-level scale.  I want our failures out in the open as much as possible so we can learn from our mistakes and get out of the perception-is-reality business.

To be sure, we’re an unusual species, in that our disguises are meant for each other as well as for predators/prey.

But many species play bluffing games with each other, having larger antlers, bigger nests, brighter plumage and flashier courting rituals.

We are, supposedly, smarter than all that.

We can — again, supposedly — see through our limited attempts of increasing our chances for reproduction and resource access.

Supposedly.

That’s the key word here, isn’t it?

Perhaps I put too much thought into our abilities to rise above our past.

We all make mistakes.  Me, especially.

Mine, as thinker, writer, and tinkerer, are here as much as possible for you to peruse and ponder in making decisions about yourself and ourselves together as one superset of states of energy (i.e., one species).

Enough pondering. pompous pontification for today.  Time for action.

A Universe of Symbols to Choose From

Leaning back in my father’s chair, typing on a Bluetooth keyboard, the iPad in a landscape position, my mother reviewing my sister’s handwritten notes from visits with medical personnel in hospital, rehab and at the VAMC, deciphering the need to set up a heal-the-vet (no, I mean Health-e-Vet) online account, I wonder about the [conscious] thoughts, if any, flowing through my father’s body.

After all, he’s not the sound mind and body man he was this time last year.

We can thank the vast wonders of the universe — the interplay of sets and nonsets of states of energy — for that.

Meanwhile, the scenic suburban setting out the dining room window calls attention to itself and its property definitions divided by manufactured/commercialised/grown chainlink, PVC, wood and shrub fencelines.

Toward what are we setting goals and attaining them?

I thank many of you and your ready participation in our globally-connected society, creating the opportunity for me to be here wondering about the longterm costs to, and benefits for, our health of y/our ready participation in all that we do.

We can see poisoned water or burning rivers and say, “A-ha! Factory pollution and sub/urban waste!”

But what about what we cannot see? What is the what we don’t know how to ask for?

The luxury of being here, watching an American eastern robin bob through mown grass for insects to eat is hard to fathom today. My father’s ability to comprehend why the image in front of him changes — a red-and-black blob [bird] bouncing across green [grass] in many [tree] shades of an [sunlit] afternoon — is harder to imagine. Being mute makes it so.

Birds don’t have health clinics or physical therapy rooms.

Fortunately, we do.

Instead of pondering further, I personally thank some of you [again] — Jennifer, Mary, Sue, Tina, Ethan, Michael, Benjamin, Amanda, Dr. Little, Barbara, Heather, Robin, Heidi, Dr. Province, Dr. May, Dept. of VA, Heather, Leigh Ann, Kristine…