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Categories
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Category Archives: Family History
Facial Profiling?
When I was in junior high school in the 1960s chains were really cool. All the tough guys liked to wear leather and have some type of silver chain hanging down out of their jeans pocket; you know, like the … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 1960s, 1970s, 3:00 AM, being cool, Charlotte, Dallas, deadly force, facial profiling, Ferguson, Ford Mustang, gangstas, Happy Days, hoax, Jim Croce, misunderstood, police brutality, portrayal, profiled, prostitutes, racial profiling, suspicison, The Fonz, thug, tough guys, TPD, Tucson Police Department, tude, unjust
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9 Comments
“May I Please Use the Rest Room?”
“May I please use the rest room?” Oh, the countless times I heard this request as a school teacher in decades gone by. I’m certain I uttered it myself as a student on many occasions, too, my bladder yearning for … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged bestiality, boys, branding, Brock Turner, Constitution, core values, counterfeit, female, gender identity, girls, Gordian Knot, imaginary, male, moral resolve, mystery, natural, North Carolina, NPR, privacy, private parts, rape, restroom, sex, sexual assault, sexual identity, sexual intercourse, sexuality, sociopolitical, South Carolina, surprise, transgender, unnatural
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5 Comments
Flounder, anyone?
As a young boy growing up in Chattanooga, I was not particularly fond of fish. My father seemed to be enthralled with eating trout, flounder, and other fish wherein navigating fish bones was an accepted part of the process. I … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Fathers, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged $15 minimum wage, 1215 A.D., 1950s, 1989, academic, chattanooga, Constitution, discrimination, diversity, divine revelation, economic, flounder, founder, gender, Honey I Shrunk the kids, immoral, King John, LGBTQ, Magna Carta, melting point, melting pot, minimum wage, Panama Papers, Presidential candidates, public governance, race, religious, sex, sexual orientation, social service, South Carolina, Wall Street
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12 Comments
What’s Trump?
When I was a boy we played games in my family; it was one of our main sources of entertainment. My father was eager to teach my brother and I how to play chess, and we actually became pretty good, … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Fathers, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged Donald Trump, election, November 2016, Parker Brothers, presidential, Rook, Rook card, Shakespeare, trump card
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2 Comments
Leap Year 2016
Well, it sneaked up on me several weeks ago. How about you? The desk calendar I use for work had a Monday, February 29 on it. And of course, my initial reaction to that is always . . . disbelief. … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Fathers, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 1970, 1976, 2016, Arizona, calendar, change, cigarettes, February 29, Frodo, Gandalf, Gregorian, Julian, Leap Year, Love Story, Mark Twain, pharengo laryngotracheitis, rhinosinusitis, risk, social security, solar calendar, Surgeon General, The Fellowship of the Ring, Tolkien, Tucson, www.heartdepot.org
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10 Comments
Merry Xmas from Georgia, 2015
We have been bemoaning our fate these past few days, grumbling over the fact that on Christmas Day the temperature might be 77ºF (a possible new record will be set), and there will likely be thunderstorms. And we’ve been asking … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 1887-1888, 1935-1936, 2015, Chattanooga Tennessee, Christmas story, Dancing at the Rascal Fair, El Nino, flood of 1937, Ivan Doig, Little Ice Age, Portsmouth Ohio, predictable, premature birth, rose in winter, topsy turvy, Tucson Arizona, winter of 2015, Xmas in Georgia
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2 Comments
Ganesh in Georgia
Ganesh is the Hindu god responsible for controlling life obstacles and providing wisdom. His image, popular and unmistakable, is characterized by the head of an elephant. The annual celebration, featuring brightly colored figurines of this god (ranging in size from … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 2013, 2015, Chik-fil-a, Coast Guard, elephant god, fragile, Ganesh, Ganesh Mahotsav, Ganesha, Hindu, India, intersection, iPhone, lifeguard, Little Tybee, New Delhi, resilient, rip current, rip tide, Sept. 27, South Tybee Beach, Yamuna River
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2 Comments
Truth, or Falsies?
It was just a few days ago that I heard it for the first time: the word “falsies.” Actually, it wasn’t the very first time I’d heard the word; rather, it was the first time I had heard it used … Continue reading →
Posted in Comedy, Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged bosom pads, breast enhancement, deceitful, dental appliance, dentist, endodontist, fake, False, false tooth, Falsies, image management, implant, internal resorption, mascara, Maybelline, metaphysics, True, True/False, truth, X-ray
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5 Comments
It’s a Small World
Richard and Robert Sherman penned these words for the 1964 New York World’s Fair. The song, which arguably is the most translated and performed song in history, was written by the most prolific motion-picture musical songwriting duo of all time. … Continue reading →
Posted in Aging Parents, Assisted Living, Family History, Nursing Homes, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 1929, 1964, 1990, alone, death, Disney, Frigyes Karinthy, global, Hungarian, it's a small world, John Guare, mortality, New York World's Fair, Richard Sherman, Robert Sherman, six degrees of separation, universal, world
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4 Comments
Anatomy of a Writer
What makes someone a writer? My mother was a great writer. I could say she “had a way with words,” but that might not tell you very much. I can say that whenever I read something she wrote I find … Continue reading →
Posted in Family History, Stories, Uncategorized
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Tagged 12 Step Meeting, Achilles' heel, allusion, anatomy, Archie Bunker, clever, Frederick Buechner, magical, pronunciation, wordaholic, writer
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3 Comments