Saturday, October 10, 2020

10 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 212

Micah 6:8
Numbers 11:7-9
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

This is World Mental Health Day. I'm pretty sure the tagline is: "Stop being mental and get healthy." That sounds more easily said than done, no? (On a more serious note, check the bottom of this post for something important.)

Shockingly, this is a day where we might actually have dessert after dinner. Why? Well simply because it's National Angel Food Cake Day, and angel food cake on the grill is probably the best dessert known to man (or woman). 


A further note - tomorrow GPUMC finally meets for worship in our sanctuary for the first time since March. It's going to be great to hear the organ and see the windows from the inside again. Sadly, we'll be limiting our attendance, so I can't make a blanket invitation as I generally do. Check tomorrow's post for the streaming information.

Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.




Friday, October 09, 2020

09 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 211

Micah 6:8
Hebrews 9
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

Today is Leif Erikson Day, (more properly Leifr Eriksson) meant to celebrate the discovery of North America by the vikings. To me, this celebration means it's time for more shameless self-promotion. Here's an excerpt from my second novel, "A Rune With a View," wherein our protagonist, Jerry Lombard, is reading from a book documenting the involvement of a group of vikings in securing the safety of the Holy Grail. Enjoy this brief excerpt, but if you want to read the whole thing, I won't object to your purchasing it in print or kindle format at this link.

 [Jerry] settled into the seat, as much as he could, leaned it back on the two back legs, and dove back in to Chapter Eleven.

 Leifr Ericksson looked around the circle of his Anir comrades, hoping to descry one with a spark, or something to indicate that inspiration lay within.
 “So, my brothers, is there none with another thought? Are we all at wit’s end?”
 Einar Bjornsson met Leifr’s gaze. “I would not state it so, Leifr. While none here has found another option for our Service, the plan we spoke of last evening remains to be enacted.
 “I know you like it little – or not at all – but it seems more than clear enough to me – and, belike, to all of us here – that the Relics must move from Vinland.”
 Hjalti spoke up, “I agree with Einar, Leifr, though with a heavy heart. With the worshipers of the Æsir already here in Vinland, what other choice have we?”
 A cloud upon his brow, Leifr set his shoulders. “Aye. I long knew that this day would come. I’ll admit to you here that I had hoped it would not come in my day.”
 The cloud lifted, or was thrust away, and Leifr, now looking younger than he had in the fortnight since word of the Æsir’s arrival had reached the Anir, smiled.
 “Then it is decided. Our Vinland home will be left behind in two directions. The most of us will fare back to Greenland, while the few of us will move on to the West with the Cup and the Spear.”

 Mere days later, the Anir who were to take charge of the Relics had been chosen, and they were nearly ready to depart with the Cup and the Spear, along with their full households, for the unknown country which lay West of Vinland.
 “Now, my brothers and sisters, we come to that parting which we have all dreaded.” Leifr Ericksson was speaking to the whole of the Anir camp. The bright early-Winter sun shone on them, but gave scant warmth – not enough to thaw the pain felt in the hearts of all at the coming departure.
 “As we fare in our two directions, we shall have to take comfort in knowing that the God watches over His servants, and His servants we all have been, are now, and shall be while He grants us the grace and breath.”

 The dogs joined the Relics and the men aboard the smaller craft which had been readied for the Westward trip, while those few cattle and sheep which remained to the Anir were loaded aboard the longboats which stood ready for the return to Greenland – or to Iceland should they find no greeting at the first.

 The sun shone also on the small group of Æsir who had found the settlement only the night before. They took counsel as to which party to waylay first, and it was decide that the longboats would be first. That party would make much better time, and might well be beyond catching should they attack the smaller boats first, tackling them second would likely mean their escape.  The smaller boats of the lesser troupe would easily be caught, and thus could be addressed after the longboats.
 It was by the God’s grace that the Æsir knew nothing of the canoes of which the Anir had learned from the native Vinlanders. Further, the dogs were no longer simply hunting and feasting companions, but on the snow and ice which was beginning to accumulate, and which already lay heavily on the land to the North, they were the means of transportation, hitching them to the sleds which the Vinlanders had also shown to the Anir.

 Jerry wondered at the thought of Vikings in Indian canoes and Eskimo dogsleds. It made sense that they would have learned those skills – and maybe even in Greenland, before getting to Newfoundland in the first place – but it hadn’t occurred to him before he read it in the Book.
I hope you enjoyed that enough to want to know what the book's really about.


Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.

Thursday, October 08, 2020

08 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 210

Micah 6:8
Matthew 20:25-26
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

Those of you who know me are likely aware that I am a nearly-rabid C.S. Lewis fan. I've read nearly everything he ever wrote (even his narrative poetry and sometimes-bizarre myth-based novels), and find a great deal of wisdom in his essays and fiction.
The other day I came across this quote (originally from an essay titled "Willing Slaves of the Welfare State" first published in 1958, later included in his collection of essays, "God in the Dock") which I remembered having read, and which connects beautifully with his third SF novel, "That Hideous Strength." It also comments on many of today's political screeds.
"Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It may be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. The robber baron's cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. They may be more likely to go to Heaven yet at the same time likelier to make a Hell of Earth. This very kindness stings with intolerable insult. To be "cured" against one's will and cured of states which we may not regard as disease is to be put on a level of those who have not yet reached the age of reason or those who never will; to be classed with infants, imbeciles, and domestic animals." - C.S. Lews, "Willing Slaves of the Welfare State" in "God in the Dock"
Yep. That's a pretty good capsulation of why we can't allow government to tell us what to think, what to believe, how to behave. (I grant that there are very legitimate areas of governmental power, generally concerned with but not limited to the prevention of injury to its constituents.) This site (Libertarian Christians) looks interesting, but I warn you that I haven't read much there yet, so I may have to comment further in a future post.

Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.

Wednesday, October 07, 2020

07 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 209

Micah 6:8
Colossians 3:16
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

Today is my sister Jacki's birthday. It's also Wednesday, so she'll be hosting her weekly live stream hymn sing from College Grove UMC in Tennessee. The hour-long hymn sing starts at 6PM Central time (7PM Eastern, 8:30PM in Newfoundland). Why not tune in and Stump the Rumpp with a Hymn request (or any John Denver song you'd like to request). Today is also cellist Yo Yo Ma's birthday. Who knows? Might he drop in for a quick birthday duet with Jacki? There's only one way to know for sure.

   

In unrelated news, today is Random Acts Of Poetry Day. Clearly we all need to jot down a quatrain or two today. Perhaps you'll find this inspiring; it's a haiku I composed for the recent "Poem In Your Pocket" day:

Write a poem for
Poem in your pocket day
You can sit on it

Today is also National Pumpkin Seed Day. It seems a bit early for that to me. If we were to carve our pumpkins to harvest and roast the seeds, the squirrels would almost certainly destroy the design of said squash on the porch long before Hallowe'en. Still, that's what the calendar says.
Speaking of pumpkin seeds, I always wanted to build this boat, and even thought it would make a nice car body. Wooden cars sound like a bad idea now, but it sounded cool in 1972.

Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.

(note - I just discovered that I've been misnumbering the Plague Journal Days for a long time now (since some time in August) so I've skipped number 208 and jumped ahead to 209 which is the correct number for today. Sorry about that.)

Tuesday, October 06, 2020

06 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 207

Micah 6:8
Proverbs 30:25-27
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?


Today is National Badger Day - something perhaps celebrated more in Wisconsin than elsewhere. Of course, Badger is a fairly major character in The Wind in the Willows (please see my earlier post on children's books here), a book that takes place in England, so apparently badgers are not at all confined to Madison, WI. In fact, on a trip to England, we were in our hotel room (the Oxford, hard by the Earl's Court tube station) when we saw the fabulous film, UHF, for the first time. It included this intense, badger-themed scene.
It was a bit of serendipity, really. We were sitting in the room, looking for something to watch on television when we heard peals of laughter floating down from the room above. It was others of our party we heard, so we yelled up to them, asking what was so funny. "Turn on BBC3," we were told, so we did, and there was UHF in all its Weird Al magnificence. Why one should have to go to England to watch a Weird Al movie about a local television station in the US is a question that will probably never be answered satisfactorily. Nonetheless, that's my story and I'm happy to share it with you.

Enjoy!

Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.

Monday, October 05, 2020

05 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 206
Micah 6:8

Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

Today is National Storytelling Day. What a great idea for a celebration. After all, everyone has a story to tell, whether it's one they make up or a true story.
Let me share a couple brief storytelling memories with you.

This was many years ago on a snowy winter Saturday evening. I had never heard "A Prairie Home Companion" before, but we somehow landed on it as we drove through the snow and heard Garrison Keillor telling a story about driving through the snow. (The gist was that it was snowing so hard that he opened his car door so he could see the tire tracks of the car ahead of him. Just as he realized that what he was seeing was his own front tire's track, into the ditch he went.) Well, I was entranced. I had always liked radio and stories, but this was total confirmation that radio really is the theater of the mind.

For many years I was a dedicated listener to the CBC Radio programme, The Vinyl Café, hosted by Stuart McLean. This was originally a music and story show that eventually moved into being live shows that were recorded all around the country (Canada, that is) and edited for broadcast. Frankly, Stuart's stories were even more entrancing to me, and I have many recordings of Vinyl Café broadcasts that are almost hard to listen to since Stuart's passing. I think his storytelling was part of what really encouraged me to go ahead and get some of my stories down on paper (or bits if you prefer the e-book mode of reading). I miss him and the whole Vinyl Café family.

Speaking of family, I think today is probably a day that my daughter-in-law-to-be will want to celebrate. It's National Kiss A Wrestler Day. Enjoy, kids!



Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.


Sunday, October 04, 2020

04 October 2020 - Plague Journal Day 205

Micah 6:8
Psalm 19:1-4
Yes, your life matters.

We all are still sheltering in place, but I'm here to keep you sane and entertained.
One could hardly ask for much more than that, now could one?

It's Sunday, in fact it's World Communion Sunday, why not join us for worship at Grosse Pointe United Methodist Church? (211 Moross, Grosse Pointe Farms)
We meet on the lawn around the Memorial Garden, weather permitting, and worship starts at 9:30AM.




If you can't be there in person, join our YouTube live stream here.
This and past worship services can be found on our YouTube channel.

Keep Calm and Stay Away.
I'll be back tomorrow.
The mental health issues related to our lockdown and the pandemic are especially hard for people with depression. NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, has a 24 hour helpline: 800-950-6264.