Saturday, September 26, 2020

26 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 197

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?

No doubt many of you have made or are planning to make at trip to one of our many Cider Mills here in Michigan. The pandemic has reduced some of them to curbside delivery of donuts (doughnuts?) and cider to your car, but there are some where one can still actually see the orchards where the apples grew that were used to make that delicious cider. We can be thankful for that, no?
And where might that thanks best be directed? Well first to God who created and sustains this wonderful world in which we live; but on a more Earthly level, we ought to thank John Chapman. You might know him better as Johnny Appleseed, and today is Johnny Appleseed Day.
Should you wish to do something special to celebrate, why not make a quick trip down I-69 to Fort Wayne, Indiana? There you will find his gravesite


For another kind of celebration altogether, we note that today is the European Day Of Languages. As a self-proclaimed soi-disant and multi-lingual polyglot myself, I plan to celebrate this day by muttering to myself in all the European languages I can muster. Currently I have at least a few words in the following (pretty much in order of the number of words): English, French, Russian, Icelandic, Dutch, German, Latin, and Finnish. I'm happy to admit I know very little of the last few of those, and that I know words from other languages as well (Spanish and Italian, for example) but largely from menus, but that seems like a reasonable list. So, enjoy the day in whatever tongue you choose!

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, September 25, 2020

25 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 196

Micah 6:8
1 Kings 22:29-35
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Today seems to be a day to share some of my fiction writing, both published and unpublished. 

First off, today is Math Storytelling Day. What a great concept! I'd like to acknowledge a couple great Math Fiction pieces to start - Robert Heinlein wrote a really great story called "And He Built A Crooked House," that is basically a geometry story (multi-dimensional, but geometry none the less). 

In a perpendicular vein to that, I have a brief piece remembering my years at Princeton working with Einstein, Pauli, et al.

Springtime in New Jersey, 19xx
Being the true and amazing remembrances of days gone by and nearly forgotten

    Thinking back on our time together, I realize that I should have anticipated the course of his life and career.  After all, Gödel was always interrupting everyone.  He wouldn't let anyone complete a sentence, let alone a thought.
    Einstein, on the other hand, had no such conversational trouble; his main social faux pas revealed itself in other ways.  He had, as most of you probably know, an abiding, consuming hatred for all things associated with quantum physics.  In fact, many were the children who bore the undeserved brunt of the wrath of Einstein (in fact, some of them called him Dr. Frank Einstein – even, upon occasion, to his face!) simply because they were found to be playing board games in his presence.
    "Ach," he would declaim, "God does not play dice with the Universe!"  Then he would take their dice and fling them into the fireplace, the grass, the waste basket, even the toilet; then he would stomp away, muttering just under his breath, "I must finish my unified field equations soon ...."
    It is a little known fact that this behaviour caused Einstein to be barred from entering the city of Las Vegas, as well as being declared persona non grata in Monte Carlo by the Prince of Monaco himself.
    Somewhat better known, although not universally acknowledged, were the personal hygiene habits (or the lack of said habits) of Prof Pauli.  A brilliant man - none could dispute that - but his olfactory sense must have been defective.  Pauli could go many months without bathing.
    In fact, there was the occasional "office pool" where we would wager on the date of his next bath or shower.  I never won this pool.  (Einstein was not allowed to participate - it seemed to us to be too close to a game of chance, and we didn't want him ruining the new chalk boards on which we kept track of the wagers!)
    Again, I suppose I should have anticipated some of his discoveries, just from having ridden public transport with him.  His personal "aura" tended to get him exclusive seating on the bus - in any case until all the other seats were at least partially occupied.  It's not that we were out to exclude Pauli, but he tended to rule his own bus seat for longer periods than the rest of us (he was especially more successful than was I!).
    Those were happy, nearly-idyllic times!

On to the next reason to share. On a This Day In History site I found this notice:

Deaths On This Day –
September 25, 1066 Harald Hardrada, Norwegian king, at the Battle of Stamford Bridge.

As many of you likely know, my second novel, "A Rune With A View," incorporates many Viking and other Scandinavian personage - including King Harald Hardrada (properly Harðráði). Here's a very brief excerpt from the Prologue:

Jerry started, seeing that one of his ersatz Vikings had entered the shop, and was looking at him expectantly.

“I'm sorry,” Jerry said, “did you ask me something?”

“No, sir. I was just hoping there was more to that poem. You've got the gift, I'd say, a regular skald, don't you know.”

Jerry hadn't realized he had been reading the poem aloud. (Had he?) Somewhat embarrassed, as well as pleased at the praise he had received (never mind whether the fellow knew anything about poetry or not, praise is praise), he finally managed to say, “I'm not quite sure if it's finished myself. I'm kind of waiting to see if there's more that wants to get put there on the page.”

After some time spent conversing, Jerry and Karl knew each other's names, ages, places of birth and schooling, musical tastes, and favorite colors Still, Jerry had no idea why Karl was decked out like an 11th century raider – a reject from Stamford Bridge or something.

Somehow, he got the feeling that it wouldn't be quite proper to ask – not that Karl would be offended, really, just that it's not something one asks, as it were. “Maybe it's just a bit too personal – as if someone were to ask me why I keep a shop as soon as he walked in the door,” Jerry thought. “If it were a friend asking, that would be one thing. Of course, by the time we were friendly enough for that to be a reasonable question, it probably wouldn't need asking any more, would it? Maybe that's what will happen with the Viking get-up.”
If any of you are interested in reading more, I have absolutely no objection to your purchasing the book (or any of my others) on Amazon. Surf on over to https://www.amazon.com/author/cvb and see what you like best.


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, September 24, 2020

24 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 195

Micah 6:8
Romans 16:16-17
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 the Festival Of Latest Novelties! I can't imagine a better way to celebrate this joyous occasion than a visit to the website (or the physical store) of Archie McPhee. There's a ton of fun stuff there, and to top it off, they're slightly less disappointing than other stores. What could go wrong?

In addition to that, today is National Punctuation Day, and as the T-Shirt says, punctuation saves lives! Let's all try to punctuate properly today - and every day. I feel certain that your mother will thank you.

Now, in addition to that syntactico-grammatic celebration, today is also Kiss Day. Can you imagine a better way to end a sentence (or to begin one, for that matter) than with a kiss? I can't, and I'm even a fan of the interrobang‽ (No, it's not about the band. Sorry, Frank Fritz.)

Bonus material:
On This Day in History
1992 – The Sci-Fi Channel launched with a broadcast of Star Wars. (The network is now called SyFy, and as far as I can tell they have little or no actual Science Fiction content these days. It's kind of sad.)
1993 – Myst is released. (This remains a watershed game in the history of computer gaming. Thinking about its targeted equipment - and the hardware and software they used to create it - this is an amazing feat that still holds up pretty well today. Brilliant, really.)

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, September 23, 2020

23 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 194

Micah 6:8
1 Samuel 17:42-44
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?

I'm thinking today of Rufus T. "Boom-Boom" Herzberger. You may well wonder why? (and who? for that matter) so I'll let  you in on the fact that today is National Dogs In Politics Day. Back when I was in university (that was in the latter half of the previous century!), there was an election for the student government (such as it was). I, being essentially asocial and uninvolved at the time took very little notice of such things. However, my attention was caught by a singular campaign poster for the aforementioned Rufus T. "Boom-Boom" Herzberger. As it turned out, Rufus was a dog - yes, an actual Canine American - whose campaign manager ("owner" seems too politically charged here) decided to run Rufus for the student assembly. I was - as, no doubt were many others - enchanted. I was not, however, adequately enchanted to vote, nor do I recall ever hearing the results of said election. Nonetheless, the effort to elect Rufus lives in my memory as one of the great political campaigns of all time. Rufus, Snoopy, and Pat Paulsen - there were some inspired runs for office!



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.



Tuesday, September 22, 2020

22 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 193

Micah 6:8
Psalm 104:16-23
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?

As you know, yesterday marked the 83rd anniversary of the publication of JRR Tolkien's "The Hobbit." Oddly, today we celebrate National Hobbit Day. Perhaps that's because the book came out a day later in these United States than it had back in the United Kingdom? I don't know, and it's not worth researching, as we may as well simply celebrate Hobbits today as we celebrated the book yesterday.

Additionally, today is Chainmail Day, and that links with Hobbit day nicely (see what I did there?), as both Bilbo and Frodo wore mithril chainmail. I don't actually own any chainmail, but I have seen the rule book for chainmail, which was part of the basis for the original combat system in Dungeons and Dragons. If you search for images of chainmail clothing, you should probably keep your safe search turned on. Just a word to the wise - there's a lot of NSFW chainmail out there. Who knew? (I do now.)


As nearly everyone knows, today is the Autumnal Equinox (one assumes it's the Vernal Equinox in the Southern hemisphere), so we have equal amounts of day and night as we move from Summer to Autumn. In defiance of the calendar and the stars and planets, today is also National Ice Cream Cone Day, so why not indulge in a micro-retro-revolt and have an ice cream cone today? That sounds good to me, and I don't even like sweets much.

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, September 21, 2020

21 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 192

Micah 6:8
Genesis 41:39-45
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 the 83rd anniversary of the first publication of JRR Tolkien's "The Hobbit." It's a fun book to read, and doesn't take nearly as long to read as it does to watch the bloated trilogy that was created from the book (along with extra story lines to help fill the extra time), and who knows? you may even discover parts the movies missed.
I highly recommend reading the book if you have a chance (and I'm pretty sure it won't be hard to find).


A quick closing political aside: Early voting. That sounds like a convenience, but is it? Suppose something happens after your early vote to make you want to change your mind. That shouldn't be inconceivable, right? I mean, if there's nothing that can make you change your mind, you probably are just voting out of reflex rather than reflection.
Voting before the candidates even meet for a debate? That sounds downright insane. Please think before you vote, and vote responsibly.


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, September 20, 2020

20 September 2020 - Plague Journal Day 191

Micah 6:8
Psalm 105:1-5
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, 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.