Man’s Best Friend

Whenever someone says something about “Man’s Best Friend,” you immediately conjure up an image of your immediate canine companion or perhaps a childhood buddy never forgotten, or there’s a multitude of other reasons that my cause you to pause and form some mental picture of an animal with paws.

Depending how you search the interweb, you might find that dogs were domesticated around 33,000 years ago, or domesticated in two different geographic locations (Europe & Asia), or they domesticated themselves (wolves were the first table beggars).  Independent of the history, the present canine condition is that dogs are everywhere.  Now more so than ever, since mankind has seen fit to ‘play God’ with their DNA and created ‘hybrid animals;’ e.g., a “Morkie” (Maltese + Yorkshire Terrier).  Supposedly there are 340 breeds, but the American Kennel Club only recognizes 167.  No wonder that the beloved animals now come in almost every conceivable color, size, shape.

I saw an interesting news piece the other night regarding dogs and cancer research.  Evidently dogs & humans have a 95% match in DNA, especially with regard to the immune system.  What’s bad for the dogs but good for us is that when a dog gets cancer, the disease manifests itself just as it would in a human.  No surprise then that dogs are prime candidates for cancer research for potential cures especially for melanoma, and breast & prostate cancers.

It’s hard to believe that those noble researchers are not only trying to find cures for our cancer, but trying to cure the disease in dogs.  Especially when you read about that PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) has been trying to stop what goes on in our nation’s laboratories and universities.  PETA estimates approximately 60,000 a year are used for research with the priority being ‘toxicology.’  What this equates to is the injection of dogs with toxic substances to determine how much it takes to make them sick.  A certain university was caught buying homeless animals from shelters in the areas for their research; supposedly that practice has ended.

So at this point (like me) you’re probably a combination of being sickened and angry.  How could ‘our researchers’ stoop to such vile practices against helpless animals?  Just look around you as you drive about, putz around your yard or see it on social media; at some time you’re likely to see an animal that’s either homeless or improperly cared for.  People seem incredibly capable of rationalizing why it makes sense to just kick a dog (or cat) out on the side of the road, leave them in a house when they move, or literally kick them out of the house and repeat the abuse if the animal dares to come back.  Maybe these are the lucky ones when compared to the ones that are never let out of cages, forced to live in their own excrement, and maybe even eat it as they starve.

In true human fashion, we can swing from one extreme to another, and how we treat our best friend is no different.  On the positive side, dogs become part of our family – nothing is too good for them. They’re lavished with love and ashamedly get better care than homeless people.  Dogs are trained to walk into danger along our side in law enforcement and the military.  They offer their guidance to the blind and solace to those of us that suffer from PTSD.

In summary dogs see humanity in every light and in darkness. They hear our love and hate; not just what’s directed to them, but what we say and do to one another. Just like God.

Isn’t it ironic that Dog is God spelled backwards?

Shush, Listen, Love

I have been thinking about pursuing a path in pastoral counseling, with a specialty in addiction counseling.  I keep wondering if it’s the right way to go.  If it’s what I’m being called to do.  If I can truly help anyone.  The urge is driven from the CRAP.  It is a worthy cause, since crap is the code word my wife & I refer to for the event that almost destroyed our marriage.  The  current plan is to do a reader’s digest condensed testimony at the local life line recovery group in hopes that there are people in the group that would feel comfortable to approach my wife and I about their issues.  My wife needs to be a part of this, just as much as shes a part of me.  Both stories need to be heard; the example has to be there to be seen.  But I’m wandering a bit, I woke up the other morning with the realization that I have a big disconnect in practicing what I preach.  I’ve met a few people recently that I turn away from.  I don’t want to hear their story of them.  I feel like I’m  short changed because they don’t want to hear about me; gee, do I sound like counselor material?  I have been a good listener.  I can be a good listener.  I just cant be a selective listener.  Jesus wasn’t, Jesus didn’t.  If I truly want to help people, then I need to work through that it’s not about me (although it is); it’s about them.  I need to shush…listen…love.

Tears, Coincidentally

Fast forward again to present day…

My wife and I are reading a book together in the evenings. It’s a about whether you’re a fan or follower of Jesus, and the ramifications thereof.  It started off pretty good, but tends to get repetitious – a lot of dead horses gave up their lives for the beating they took in the writing of the book.  The point that the author is trying to make, is that you have to give yourself to Him; lock, stock and barrel – no Kings-X, no holding back.

So the following morning, I do my usual prep before driving to work. An important part of this is connecting the iPod to the car’s audio system and ensuring that the Christian music playlist is set on random.

Maybe 10 minutes into the drive, Casting Crowns’ “What If I Gave Everything” comes on. I go into sing-along mode and barely make it to the chorus before the tears are rolling.  Please see lyrics below:

All my life I longed to be a hero
My sword raised high, running to the battle
I was going to take giants down
Be a man you would write about
Deep in my chest is the heart of a warrior
So why am I still standing here
Why am I still holding back from You
I hear You call me out into deeper waters
But I settle on the shallow end
So why am I still standing here
So afraid what it might cost to follow You
I’d walk by faith if I could get these feet to move
But I don’t want to live that way
I don’t want to look back someday
On a life that never stepped across the line
So why am I still standing here
Why am I still holding back from You
You’ve given me a faith that can move a mountain
But I’m still playing in the sand
Building little kingdoms that’ll never stand
I hear You call me out into deeper waters
But I settle on the shallow end
I’m so tired of standing here
What if I gave everything to You
What if I gave everything
What if I stopped holding back from You
Starting now I’m stepping out onto deeper waters
What if I gave everything
What if I stopped holding back from You
Starting now I’m stepping out onto deeper waters
I want to see some mountains move
Ready to give everything
Say goodbye to standing here

The immediate next song is The Newsboys playing “Live With Abandon.”  It’s a bit more upbeat, but does nothing to stop the flow; please see lyrics below:

Chasing after this world makes me tired
Praisin’ my own name leaves me dry
There’s gotta be so much more to life than this
A higher calling that I missed
I want my life to count, every breath
I wanna live with abandon
Give you all that I am
Every part of my heart Jesus
I place in your hands
I wanna live with abandon
Give you all that I am
Every part of my heart Jesus
I place in your hands
I wanna live with abandon
Drop everything and follow you
It’s only your hands I hold onto
There’s gotta be so much more to life than this
A higher calling that I missed
I want my life to count, every breath
I wanna live with abandon
Give you all that I am
Every part of my heart Jesus
I place in your hands
I wanna live with abandon
Give you all that I am
Every part of my heart Jesus
I place in your hands
I wanna live with abandon
I’m not looking back
I’m done with that
Wanna give you all I have
I’m not looking back
I’m done with that
Wanna give you all I have
I wanna live with abandon
I wanna live with abondon
Give you all that I am
Every part of my heart Jesus
I place in your hands
I wanna live with abandon
I wanna live with abandon
Wanna live with abandon

Coincidence? Don’t think so.  Nope, not even a nefarious plot by Kleenex to keep their stock up.

I’m being told something and it seems God has chosen music to reach me (again).

 

No More Tears

Back in my mother’s day – you didn’t cry.  You sucked it up and carried on.  It was a sign of weakness to cry.  To this day (she’s in her 80’s) she still subscribes to that belief.  Kind of epitomized  from the music from her era; i.e., Big Girls Don’t Cry – 1962 – The Four Seasons (among others).

Being exposed to that mentality, both hers and the macho stupidity in general, I also would avoid crying at any cost. An example of which from music in my era; i.e., Harden My Heart – 1981 – Quarterflash.  I’ve included a snippet of lyrics:
I’m gonna harden my heart
I’m gonna swallow my tears

Fast forward to the divorce from the long term marriage that yielded my three children and my heart has surprisingly softened.  I cry at anything, just because I seem to be more sensitive to the moment.  Silly as it sounds, I’m getting weepy eyed writing this – just…one…of…those…things.

I guess in 1981 there was a slight shift in the musical world with the advent of the group “Tears for Fears.” Formerly called ‘History of Headaches’, they made the change due to an inspiration related to primal therapy.  Courtesy of Wikipedia:

“Primal therapy was developed as a means of eliciting the repressed pain; the term Pain is capitalized in discussions of primal therapy when referring to any repressed emotional distress and its purported long-lasting psychological effects.”

Essentially you scream like a maniac to release all of those tears you had to swallow after hardening your heart.

Long Playing

Life is like a record. A record like vinyl that DJs used to use for scratching before they got high tech and started using CDs.

On the record players of yore you had to select the rotational speed; i.e. 16, 33 1/3, 45, or 78.  I never had a 16 speed record. Had a few 78s, but the sound quality was pretty sorry – but I digress.

My analogy of life to a vinyl record is that both have a beginning and end. A record has one continuous groove that the needle/stylus has to follow. Within that groove are little peaks and dips; like life’s ups and downs. And just like that little needle, we soldier along from the start to finish.

The record has various songs or tracks. Some so mellow that it’ll make your skin crawl, sad to the point of tears, filled with rhythm to where you just gotta get up and dance. Life is like that, filled with emotion – some desired, some not so much, but there nevertheless.

Once in awhile, if you don’t take good care of your record playing system and keep everything clean that needle will get stuck in one place. When that happens you get to hear the same 7 second (or so) piece play over and over again. Until you get off your butt and do something about it.  Sound familiar?  Ever get in a rut?

Back to speed. Get wild and put an LP on the 45 setting and it sounds like a bunch of chipmunks.  Like life, if we try to go too fast we lose our connection.  Set it on 16 and you’re in quaalude land, depressing to say the least.

Turn Over a New Leaf

Picture a crisp fall morning, it has a cool nip in the air, things have their own unique scent.  You can even smell the sunshine cause its so bright.  Under the old tree in the yard you see that it has lost a good bit of its leaves and you get a bit introspective.  Thinking about the phrase or cliche of “turning over a new leaf,”  you stoop over to pick one of the leaves and think about what you’d like to change about yourself.  You think about it…You ponder… Then you recognize the fundamental thing you need to change and then lay the leaf back down on its other side.  A symbolic gesture of change and apparently a fleeting one as an errant breeze zips through to carry your leaf away.  However now you’re hooked in this little game because – of course – you just didn’t think of just one point of imperfection.  Unfortunately it was a virtual smorgasbord of things you’d like to change in you.  So you find a wind sheltered little nook and begin again; no need to redo the first one – what’s done is done.  You get a few more leave flipped and here comes Mr. Breeze to put things in perspective.  The key is not the physical act.  It’s the knowing of what needs done, and doing the deed.  Who will know what you’ve changed that day?  Everyone will know, and God knows.

High School – Land of Enchantment

Ah high school…the final four (years) and an enchanting land of cheerleaders, pom-pom girls, and well…just girls (older).  Evidently the interest in the opposite sex from 1st grade was just smoldering during the middle ages, but came into full bloom as a lowly freshman.

I was weird in school, no big surprise there.  I loved math and science and took every class that my little farm town school had to offer.  This put me in the classroom with the honor rollers and the prep-college types, which translated into kids that came from families with money so they dressed accordingly (keeping in vogue with what the current style was).  Style translated into mini-skirts and tight sweaters; I can’t even pretend to remember how many pencils “I dropped.” I was Jekyll & Hyde in high school, scholar by day and obnoxious teenage drunk at night.  In honesty, the drinking didn’t start until I was 15, reefer madness occurred a year later.  I ran with the boys that dressed in jean jackets, engineer boots, and bell-bottomed jeans with the leg hems frayed.

So you’d think with all of that good book learning that I also became a honor roll student; not hardly.  My mom worked nights at a restaurant and was gone by the time I got out of school.  Being a small town, I could ride the entire width of our berg in a couple of hours so transportation was never an issue.  Being that Mr. Bunghole was a construction worker, he showed up on Friday evening and was gone by Sunday night – thankfully.  Obviously I had a lot of time on my hands in the evening and I had better things to do than study.  Homework did get done and I floated through high school with an occasional A, but mostly Bs & Cs. I was definitely not college bound.

Around 10th grade was my first step into the abyss. The step-father and my mom used to play cards with another couple and they had a couple/few  kids.  One was a son about a year older than I and a daughter about 2-3 years older.  One day he & I were goofing around in a pup tent in the backyard of the house and he introduced me to masturbation.  I’ll spare you the graphic description.  Needless to say at my sage age I thought it was better than sliced bread and had no problem taking matters into my own hand. Not to say that I never had a pleasurable experience in mishandling my appendage; I just naively didn’t know that it was like a loaded gun; i.e., play with it too much and it would go off in your hand.  Some weeks later after the pup tent experience, we [the kids] were playing some bizarre game of hide-n-seek.  I found myself hiding under the covers with the daughter and she had me put my hand where it didn’t belong.  I was never more glad to hear the call to come wash our hands cause it was time for dinner.

Yin & Yang does exist and as such, a good thing also happened during the 10th grade – my mother divorced the Nimrod; of course she already had a boy friend lined up on the side. He was a good guy – from my perspective anyway. He was my father figure for as long as I was home; taught me to drive, work on my car, and he always had an easy laugh. The layout of my ma’s new rental provided the setup for an embarrassing moment. I had to walk through her bedroom from the garage to my bedroom. One late night (out past curfew no doubt), I sauntered through in my normal inebriated state and caught the two of them making tricycle motors, or at least really practicing, really hard.  I think he was more embarrassed than I since my mother couldn’t resist in gleefully telling me later that his rigid member went to something less than al dente.

I can’t pin this on my new father figure, but it just seemed unnatural for my mom to have what I found one day.  Now of course, what was I doing snooping in my mother’s drawers?  I have no idea what inspired me to do so, but I did find 3 books of pornography.  Of all of things that I can’t remember, I can recall 2 of the 3 titles.  Needless to say I had read each book more than once, and had ‘favorite passages’ that I could turn to for a quick bout of self passion. The combination of ogling the senior ladies and porn just set the baseline for my addiction to come.

Dragging main street, burning rubber, being escorted out of town by the local cops, and listening to the rock music of the day – that was a glimpse of how I spent my evenings on school nights. To keep the record straight, I did work; otherwise I would have never earned enough money to buy my first car off the show room floor (around $3k – good old days). I mowed lawns, worked in restaurants, hauled garbage, pumped gas, and spent lots of hours as a farm hand. Oh, and one 8-10 hour stint as a severely hung over oil rig worker; good money, but too much like really hard work.

Music became a refuge, just as sci-fi books were an escape.  There was always a song to be played to match the moment of my mood.  Whether it be just simple head banging rock, acid rock for the chemical days, or boo-hoo nobody loves me (let’s go eat worms), I could lose myself in the lyrics as I sang along.  Just keep in mind that these were the days of the 8-track tapes, and I had 5 cases that held about 30 each – yes, I did love music and still do today.

Restaurant work had an interesting ‘side benefit,’ just depends on your personal perspective and glimpse into history.  As mentioned before, this was the era of the mini-skirts and the waitresses behaved as if the kitchen area was a ‘safe zone’ to talk raunchy and adjust their uniforms.  Replete with views of garters, pantyhose, and low cut tops with everything spilling out. Just the fuel any self-pleasuring adolescent needs in his formative years.

With the masturbation education, the genie was out of the bottle and for some reason I struck out 90% of the time when I asked girls out for a date (I’m pretty sure that hair was growing on my palms). But I lived in a target rich environment and there was no shortage of visual stimulation to fuel the imagination for ardent vegetable polishing.  After getting my driver’s license I was literally hell on wheels.  A car gave me the ability to increase my roaming range for work and play. It was also instrumental in my losing my virginity to an older woman. So if masturbation was the genie, sex was the opening of Pandora’s Box (no pun intended). Weekends were made for finding keg parties, aka ‘keggers.’ And here is where I showed no shame in preying on drunk girls for sex.  I had no remorse. The youngest was 15 and the oldest was 24. I betrayed the trust of a man that mentored me at the gas station by seducing his niece that was engaged to a guy in the air force. If you couldn’t tell it before – I like music, and after writing this certain song lyrics by Casting Crowns come to mind from the song – Does Anybody Hear Her?

“She is searching
For a hero to ride in
To ride in and save the day
And in walks her prince charming
And he knows just what to say
Momentary lapse of reason
And she gives herself away”

More times than I want to admit, I was that ‘prince’, or that ‘prince of expletive’, or let’s just call a spade, a spade. I was a garden variety asshole.

Somewhere amidst all of this drunken debauchery, I had the presence of mind to see a glimpse of my potential future if I stayed in my home town after graduation.  This glimpse came in the form of seeing my buddy’s older brothers coming to our keggers and hitting on our female classmates.  Of course my vision was not 20-20, otherwise I would have done better in school to work for that scholarship. My options were either stay in Stupidville or research the military since there was no way that my mother could have afforded to put me through a semester of college.  Luckily I still had enough active brain cells to score high enough for a critical job in the Navy. With the pre-papers signed, it was just a matter of getting through graduation and the summer following to make it to boot camp.

With the deadline looming of leaving home I felt it only fitting that I had to have sex with 10 girls before going to the navy.  Luckily I didn’t start from scratch and to make it easier, I counted previous engagements.  I used to be pretty proud of that ‘accomplishment.’  However now it remains one of the many things that I am so utterly ashamed of.  How could I treat girls or young women in such a fashion?

A prenaval adventure occurred on a fine fall night while my friend and I were out-and-about doing the usual which equated to drinking and burning rubber in front of his current girl friend’s house.  There was intermittent racial tension in our metropolis and it manifested itself that night in the form of eggs being mashed into my friend’s face while he was stopped at an intersection.  Long story short, we got my shotgun, found our ‘new friends,’ I became possessed by the spirit of John Wayne and it resulted in me shooting my friend in the foot and one of the instigators in his shoulder (but I aimed for someone else – I was drunk).  In hindsight, I’m beginning to believe that God’s hand nudged that barrel just a little that night. Enough for it to become a learning experience versus a vacation in the cross bar hotel just 2 months before going to boot camp.

As evidenced by my previous ramblings, a lot of teenage experiences have shaped my behavior as I entered adulthood. Some good, some bad, but we are all a collage of what we’ve seen, heard, and done.  Done to ourselves and done to others. Years later I  regret so deeply what I have done and although scripture tells you that there’s no condemnation in Christ, and I certainly didn’t kill anyone (came close) – I still have an issue with feeling forgiven.

On to Anchors Aweigh.

Or back to the previous blog Formative Years – Getting Schooled

Formative Years – Getting Schooled

Elementary Watson

My first year in school was 1st grade, for some reason I skipped kinder garden; it sure wasn’t because I was academically advanced.  Got my first spanking for crawling under a table to look under girls’ dresses.  Why?  I have no idea, you’d think after growing up with two women in a small house that some knowledge would have been acquired.  And yes, they spanked kids in school back in those days (and I’m still alive).

In 2nd grade there was the kissing tree located at the further most corner of the playground. It was Y-shaped and various young couples would kiss in the nook of the Y. Why?  Can’t remember what the driver was; perhaps curiosity about the opposite sex.  There sure were a bunch of us 2nd graders that were curious (maybe it was in the water).  Of course I was very knowledgeable about the opposite sex since I knew that babies came from the sewer system.

The 3rd grade brought fist fights which resulted in talks with mom & the principal; accompanied by a little time off from school. It didn’t matter if I started the fight – which I didn’t. Or if I lost – which I did, although it was a small victory to bleed all over the guy cause I had a glass nose. Also had a bout of the dreaded Black X disease courtesy the teacher’s magic marker on the back of my hands for forcing my hand to flip the bird with a pencil.  My interest in language expanded to sign language as I learned how to conjugate the F word and other words in the blue language.

Midgard

Subsequent years through middle school brought more fights, but the frequency did diminish for two reasons. I couldn’t fight to save my tail and I learned that if you were funny, you were useful.  Make them laugh and you don’t get hit.

Being an only child you learn to amuse yourself, so I became an ardent reader of science fiction. Joined the sci-fi book of the month club and I usually had the current book read well before the next one came. While waiting for the next book installment, I whetted my appetite on good ole comic books; e.g., Silver Surfer, Thor, Fantastic Four, etc. etc. Not only did reading provide entertainment in my middle through high school years (and adult life), it also fit well with being invisible from the knuckle dragging step-father. In addition, it was a great form of escape and the genre contributed to my eventual love of science & math

Somewhere in middle school I was exposed to Roman & Greek mythology and found it interesting how closely they paralleled another. Given my interest in Thor comic books and because of my (real) last name/heritage, I expanded my quest for knowledge into Norse mythology.  Much to my delight, this parallelism was prevalent in Egyptian, as well the folk of Norsemen.  I have very faint recollections of attending Sunday school as a child; according to my mother, I had the freedom to attend or not – I chose not.  Reading about various religions I made the leap of non-faith and formed my own opinion about religion.  Specifically since “man” has an opposable thumb it makes him a “tool maker.” And just like Tim the Tool-man, you make things, so mankind has reasoned (paraphrase) “…that if I make, therefore I’ve been made…”.  Furthermore religion and drugs/alcohol are the same; just crutches for people that are weak and can’t handle life.  I now find it so absurd that my middle school rationalization was my mantra for so many years.

 

On to High School – Land of Enchantment

Or go back to the previous blog Genesis

Genesis

I’m guessing it was sometime in January of 1955, in the steamy backseat of a Cadillac that I was conceived. Sometime later when my mother informed Mr. Sterile of my presence, he flew the coop and his Adventist mother denied that her little angel could do such a thing.

It was just my mom and her mother living in a small house in the sticks, replete with the finest outhouse and outdoor laundry.  Her father had passed away years before, and her two brothers were wrapped up in their own lives.

Don’t recall if it was before or after my birth that Mr. Second Thoughts returned and a sketchy plan of marriage began to form.  It was all for naught due to his early death in a car accident while he and his brother were out celebrating – about what, I have no idea.  As such I never knew my earthly father which – according to my first wife and her mother – bothered me greatly.

I have a very foggy memory of just beating the absolute stuffing out of a very large (in comparison to me at the time) red teddy bear.  I wasn’t being violent. I was grooving on my mother’s love of rock-n-roll; like the Drifter’s, The Big Bopper, and yes…Elvis the Pelvis.  Evidently my love for music began while I was in my crib, and I would bounce up & down to the beat one of her many 45s.

My grandmother worked as a cook at the local hospital and my mom was a waitress for a fine 35 cents an hour; plus tips.  The culture of the day strongly suggested that single mothers should give their children up for adoption. My mom wasn’t playing that game and had me anyway. Constant exposure to estrogen during my early formed the foundation of how I interacted with women.  Soft tones, lots of hugs; none of that macho crap – however – mom was a tomboy thanks to her two brothers so I wasn’t completely ‘feminized.’

Sometime before I entered school she met Mr. Fake Nice (aka “The Pig”) and they got married. My mother’s rationale was that I needed a father; undoubtedly she needed a husband because it was hard raising me given the conditions.  My only recollection of him prior to their marriage was throwing a fit because he didn’t cut my pancakes right. That should have been a clue for him to bolt, but he married my mom nonetheless – much to our later dismay.

We moved a couple of times to follow his work, then returned to the homeland before I entered school.  His life was hunting, fishing, working, and drinking in some disorder or combination. It wasn’t until I was older that I started to see his dark side in the form of a backhand or leather belt, although there was no shortage of negative praise. I had to have been a preteen when I was told that it was a good thing that I was smart cause I couldn’t do anything right, and would never amount to ___.  I was painting a picket fence white at the time; still can’t figure how much talent it takes to paint an old outside fence.

I learned very quickly the importance of ‘the quiet inner voice,’ to become, and stay as invisible as possible. I followed the doctrine that I should not be seen or heard; you can’t hit or yell at what you can’t see. He and I would go on outings to fish (which I detest to this day) and hunting (which also sucks).  I have to admit that I did enjoy skeet shooting, or what was referred to back then as ‘blue rock’ or ‘clay pigeons.’ My mother told me years later that she was afraid that I would go step-father hunting some day and that was her primary reason for her divorcing him.

I would have been happy if she would have left him before getting blistered for walking home instead of riding the bus (got home just as bus drove by).  Or before the two of them went out to celebrate New Year’s Eve which resulted in my mom getting a black eye and the car plowing into garage. Enough of him…how about some elementary romance?

Please continue to the Formative Years – Getting Schooled or intermediate Reflections – Genesis.

Or go back to the home page Who Am I.