Blogging 10 miles a week just to stay in shape

Author: Big Joe (Page 4 of 4)

Flatten The Tax

The stock market began gangbusters this morning. 

Professional Wall Street reporters attribute the large gains to Pfizer’s positive Covid vaccine announcement.  They also believe a republican U.S. Senate majority will disallow a democratic led White House from raising taxes.  Kind of an upbeat double whammy to begin the week. 

Pfizer touts 90% effectiveness for their Covid vaccine.  That’s impressive, especially after Fauci previously stated 50%-60% would be acceptable.  Seasonal influenza vaccines only reduce the chance of catching the virus by 40%-60%.  Academically speaking, if we scored that low on a non-curved exam, we’d fail.  However, a ninety percent is an A!  That places Pfizer and their vaccine on the public health honor roll.

But the U.S. Senate will remain undetermined until Georgia releases results from their run-off elections in early January.  So tax hikes are, technically, still on the table.  This is significant because the Biden tax plan will raise taxes by 3.3 trillion dollars over the next 10 years.  Check it out – https://taxfoundation.org/joe-biden-tax-plan-2020/That’s a lot of bread.    

So if the vaccine can help flatten the curve, why can’t we flatten the tax?

People gripe incessantly about the rich not paying their fair share.  Donald Trump said he paid little to no taxes because he’s smart.  Bernie Sanders rails against the wealthiest families in the U.S., who he claims pay little to no taxes.

The current tax code is progressive, meaning the more you make, the more taxes you pay.  Theoretically. 

Seven tax brackets exist.  They range from 10% to 37%.  In 2020, those earning over $518,400 as a single filer or $622,050 as a married filer will allegedly pay 37% of their gross income in taxes because they’re in the highest tax bracket.

If a single or married filer earned one million dollars annually, in theory they would owe the U.S. government $370,000 in federal taxes.  That’s a lot of lettuce.  If a 20% (easier calculations for me) flat tax existed, that same wealthy individual or family would only pay $200,000 in federal taxes.  That’s 46% less!

So, naturally, the wealthy are screaming for a flat tax.

Hello?  Anyone?  That’s weird.  I’m not hearing anything from the obscenely rich.  It doesn’t make sense.  Are these men and women willingly to pay more in taxes without raising a single voice of dissent?  Don’t they want to shave off 46% from their tax bill?

We’ll assume from their collective silence that the answer is no.

You bet they don’t want a flat tax.  These wealthy individuals and families never come close to paying 37% of their gross income in taxes.  At least not the smart ones, according to Donald Trump.  Crazy Bernie says they virtually pay nothing at all.

The tax code is so complicated and convoluted, even the sharpest accountant works long, diligent hours to find the legal loopholes and shelters to provided their wealthy clientele with the smallest tax payout possible.  Their Enron-esque balance sheets may look like they’re paying their progressive tax plan share, but I doubt it.  The rich just get richer, baby.

These financially elite support congressional and senatorial races.  They fund presidential candidates, regardless of party affiliation.  With their monetary influence on political campaigns and election outcomes, they would have pushed for tax reform years ago.  But it’s exactly these representatives, senators, and presidents that refuse to push the issue.

Why?  Because they’re part of the wealthy and have equally as much to lose in yearly tax payouts.  Joe Biden and Donald Trump are millionaires, along with many other democratic and republican politicians.  And we wonder why they don’t enact tax reform that would hurt their personal bank accounts?

I don’t care if you’re democrat or republican.  I really want to know if I’m off base with the flat tax, because I don’t see how everybody paying the same percentage is not fair.  You make $500K, you pay $100K.  You make $20K, you pay $4K.  And we actually get to collect from the rich.  We’re talking about a lot of cheddar.  What an idea!

If we sandwich all that bread, lettuce, and cheddar together, I believe we’ve got an easy to collect tax revenue base that we can sink our teeth into.  What do you think? 

Shy High

And the 46th president of the United States is…

A toss-up.  Undecided.  Too close to call.  Red.  No, blue.  Purple?  Well gee, what do the pollsters say?

The one thing we can all count on is the inability of any mainstream media to provide an accurate prediction.  Many polls foresaw a blue wave in 2020.  However, the U.S. Senate will likely remain red.  The House of Representatives will remain blue, but the GOP added seats. The presidential race looks to be one of the tightest elections of my lifetime.

Blue wave?

We all thought that 2016 was an anomaly.  The polls predicted Clinton would easily defeat Trump.  Wrong!  Biden went into the election with a seemingly insurmountable lead, according to the polls.  Even if Biden wins, the polls were woefully inaccurate, once again.  How do the prognosticators get it so wrong in consecutive presidential elections?  Why are all media outlets so flawed in their ability to correct these apparent errors and learn from their electoral coverage mistakes?

Oh, wait.  It’s those darn shy voters, isn’t it?

Of course that must be the answer.  People were just too shy to admit a Trump preference.  They would rather have dodged the question or outwardly lied when queried concerning their political preference.  They probably feared open, free speech would result in a backlash of anger, ridicule, and attack.  In other words, shyness repressed their capacity to exercise their 1st amendment rights.

Shyness can be weird.  I knew a guy who once told me that he had a shy bladder.  As his personal confession concluded, I anxiously awaited the punch line.  Alas, there was not a drop of laughter to share.  He was as serious as a full bladder on a 500-mile road trip. 

He urinated without issue when completely alone.  But place him in the company of another human being, and he couldn’t eke out a teeny drip of pee.  More than once I witnessed this phenomenon.  I’d stroll into a public restroom while he stood inside a bathroom stall.

“Oh, I can’t go now,” he’d stammer, while quickly departing the toilet and heading back into the hallway.

If you were in eyesight, his bladder refused to function, no matter how high the urinary levels.  That damn organ was just “too shy” to perform if there was an audience.  A psychosomatic reaction I’m sure, but the physical results, or lack thereof, were indisputable.  Truth be told, he couldn’t piss on his feet if they were on fire when somebody stood next to him.

The truth and the media are on divergent paths.

When I was a kid, there were only a few media outlets, with finite broadcast times.  These journalists and reporters delivered news stories while the audience determined how they felt about the facts.  This was mostly an evening event.

Now multitudes of media outlets pump out news stories 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  Today’s audience is told how to feel about the reports and later must determine if it’s the truth.

Truth be told again, the American people don’t know what to believe from the media during election seasons.  The media has clearly lost their ability or desire to report unbiased, non-sensationalized journalistic reports.  There’s little credibility left.  They’d rather piss on us and tell us it’s raining than focus on truth in reporting.

This is real.  This is not some hypothetical theory conjured from the deep psychological recesses of the mind.  There’s an incessant, flowing stream of propaganda that the American voters must wade through each election in an ever increasingly frustrating attempt to glean the truth from the money machines and the media. 

Does anybody want to fix it?

Doubtful.  With social media, 24/7 news coverage, etc., the switch never gets flipped off.  Everybody has an opinion and nobody seems too shy to share his or her viewpoint once the soapbox is presented, no matter how many times we say piss-off.  

In Transit

Nothing is perfect

Not you, not me, and definitely nothing spawned from human invention or intervention.  The United States Postal Service is no exception.

The USPS handles 472.1 million individual pieces of mail, daily!  That’s on a normal, non-election, non-pandemic kinda day.  I’m sure with mail in ballots, things are a bit hairier than normal this particular Tuesday.

The Washington, D.C. federal judiciary is so concerned, U.S. District Judge Emmett Sullivan ordered the USPS to sweep their facilities, ensuring no ballots are held up in areas that have been slow to process them.  Those less than stellar USPS facilities have a 3pm deadline.  I want everyone willing to vote to have that vote counted, so OK. 

But if you refused to use local ballot boxes or refused to use standard polling sites, why didn’t you mail your damn ballot earlier?  The U.S. Postal Service has enough issues on a good day, let alone during one of our history’s most contentious presidential elections.  Now maybe you did.  Maybe your freaking ballot is sitting on a truck in a USPS parking lot, waiting for somebody to bring it inside the facility.

Trust me, I feel your pain.

My wife 2-day mailed a care package to our collegiate freshman daughter on October 26th.  Inside the box, neatly and securely packed, sat:

  • Some food items
  • Some fun items
  • Some practical items
  • And, oh yeah, her Colorado ballot!

According to the USPS tracking number, the package departed Denver, CO on October 27th.  To date, that package has not been processed inside any USPS facility.  The tracking number provides an ambiguous “in transit” status. 

A USPS representative spoke with my wife Tuesday morning.  The rep informed her that there’s this thing out there called COVID.  No shit.  Thanks for filling us in.  She also said there was a hurricane in New Orleans.  No shit.  Our daughter lives there.  We keep track of important stuff like that.

The gulf coast has been inundated with hurricanes this fall, but all of her other packages arrived in a timely fashion.  Hurricane Zeta blew through town, caused power outages for a day, and the USPS continued delivering mail to campus without any apparent issues… unless your package originated in Colorado.

We visited the post office where the package delivery originated.  An even-keeled, well-informed USPS employee did his research, but unfortunately came back with the same answers.  “In transit” means

  • It’s sitting outside a USPS facility, waiting to brought inside and sorted
  • It was sent to another processing site that was better able to process it (HA!)
  • It’s on a whirlwind postal tour of the U.S. mainland, ETA unknown
  • It left Denver via airplane and is likely somewhere on the planet
  • It fell into a USPS black hole and may be recovered by Christmas

Basically, if it doesn’t show up by Thursday file a claim and feel good that some USPS employee enjoyed the brownies and trashed the ballot.

Do you think the Honorable Emmett could lend a federal hand?

Unfortunately the ballot is inside a care package, unseen by the naked eye.  Who knows, maybe Judge Sullivan’s order will fire into motion one of those inept postal facilities that just might have our care package wallowing under a heap of governmental apathy and bureaucracy. 

I’ve lost a few things over the years, received Xmas cards six weeks late, and had mail returned that was sent to perfectly valid addresses.

Not to belittle the USPS, though.  For what it costs to mail a letter anywhere in this great country of ours, you probably couldn’t pay a kid that much just to lick the stamp.  Maybe the box will show up.  Maybe.

Of course, it’s all for naught when factoring in the ballot.  Her first vote cast in her first election will forever be dubbed “in transit” – neither here nor there, yet everywhere.

Why Would Plywood Be Good

There’s plywood on city streets

When I initially scanned the stories, I thought that it was in response to some civil unrest that I was unaware of.  As the days went by, I noticed these articles began increasing, not only in Denver, but also around the country.  Plywood stacked on downtown sidewalks was becoming a common occurrence. 

Why? 

Business owners said they couldn’t take another economic hit like they did during this past summer’s riots and looting.  Storefront windows smashed, merchandise stolen, commercial properties in ruin – a lifetime of hard work and sacrifice obliterated in the span of a few minutes by an angry mob. 

The palpable fear is this: Tuesday’s election will surely bring about another round of violence and unrest to our urban business corridors.   Based on events across the nation this summer, I can’t blame the storeowners – small, medium, or large.

No other time in my life would I have thought this probable. 

  • That’s why we have police officers 
  • That’s why we have laws 
  • That’s why we have judicial systems 
  • That’s why we have penitentiaries

I don’t care whom you voted for

I don’t care what you believe in.  I don’t care what you’ve been through.  Anybody who thinks it’s OK to set ablaze some local mom & pop eatery because his or her candidate didn’t get elected is an incorrigible, self-indulgent a__hole!  You’re just another pile of excrement that deeply deserves a little old school social justice.

Of course our law enforcement officers have been largely neutered by the media message that they’re a mindless mass of marauding murderers.  The “freedom fighters” storm police precincts with the intent to burn them to the ground.  Marked patrol cars are flipped over and torched.  Officers are injured and killed.

And the police flee? 

There was a day, not so long ago, actions such as these earned you a free butt whopping by the men and women in blue, at the least.  At the most, you earned the posthumous respect from like-minded miscreants. 

And we expect the police to protect us when we send the clear message they’re not allowed to defend themselves, their buildings, or their vehicles?

In no way would I deter speaking out, the right to assembly, or any other peaceful protests

  • That’s our constitutional right 
  • That’s what we’re afforded as Americans 
  • That’s what our veterans served, fought, and died for
  • That’s what the Supreme Court has upheld time and again, regardless of the president that nominated them 

And guess who’s on the streets making sure we’re allowed to lawfully voice our opinions? 

THE POLICE.  And that’s whether they agree with us or not.

Our responsibility and duty as Americans is to encourage people’s voices to be heard, as well as championing our own viewpoints.  What if you disagree with another’s perspective? 

  • Debate it 
  • Write about it 
  • Passionately challenge them
  • Run for office
  • Get off your ass and do something productive

Break into a business, trash it, loot it, and burn it to the ground?  If that’s your answer, you are just another small-time crook with little ability to effectuate any real change in the world other than inflict misery on undeserving people.

To be blunt, when I hear “no justice, no peace”, I think “FU”!  Do you really believe burning down a restaurant promotes meaningful reform?  You’re best result will be a political knee-jerk reaction to garner a politician poll points.  You’re as dumb as that brick you just threw into the window. 

It’s OK to disagree with me

You’re not going to hurt my feelings.  I welcome dissenting opinions.  Who knows, we may even discover common ground.

I sincerely hope that all of the plywood going up across our nation will end up as useless as Y2K ration storage twenty years ago.

Jesus Christ said love your enemies.  MLK, Jr. said violence was impractical and immoral.  John Lennon sang “Give Peace A Chance”.  No justice, no peace?  Have you really given peace a chance?

A Cursive Curse

It’s late November 2018.  I sit inside the Denver International Airport terminal with my wife and two children, waiting to board our flight to Cancun, Mexico for a much anticipated vacation.  I peruse our documentation and realize that neither teenage child signed their respective passports.  I don’t want anything slowing us down when we pass through Mexican Customs, so I find a pen and instruct them both to write their signatures on the passports. 

To my horror, I watch them scrawl their names on the signature lines like a pair of kindergarteners slowly pushing a crayon across a piece of manila paper. 

I immediately ask why it looks like they’ve never written their signatures before this precise moment.  My 18 year-old-son responded with an answer that left my mouth agape.  He informed me that almost nowhere in his educational journey did any teacher worked on cursive penmanship.  My daughter vouches for her brother and makes the same claim.  

I’m dumbfounded.  I spent the better part of my elementary years learning handwriting, first print, and then cursive.  We received letter grades for penmanship.  How did I not know the public education system ignored this highly regarded skillset while it was a crucial part of my schooling?

I can still remember the lined paper where we painstakingly practiced our cursive writing.  Letters needed to be exact heights, the correct distance from the bottom of a line and the correct distance to the top.  The letters required a specific cant in their appearance.  Everything necessitated uniformity, completely legible to any reader.  Seasoned handwriting was an art form that we would carry with us throughout our lives. 

The teachers so stressed its significance we students believed it a pre-indicator for later life success.  Certainly no astronaut, engineer, or scientist wrote jumbled, misshapen letters.  Literary giants, teachers, lawyers, and the like were most likely first recognized for their penmanship. 

And all of the doctors…well, I suppose there are exceptions to any rule.

Like a mother bear protecting her cubs, my wife came to our teenager’s defense.  She quickly pointed out that my handwriting was anything, but neat and orderly.  I countered by explaining writing in a hurry precludes the ability to always pen legible words.  I could write properly if I chose to take the time. 

I wasn’t certain our children could make that argument.  Watching them sign their passports was like witnessing a caveman first discover the wheel.  It rolled slowly, often times appearing to trail off course or come to a complete halt.  They basically sucked at handwriting. 

I, however, chose to suck at handwriting.  There is a difference.

My son and daughter wisely retorted that they spent hours in computer labs, typing documents on keyboards and learning computer programs like Word, PowerPoint, and Excel.  Technology for me was moving forward from manual typewriters to electric machines. 

In high school I was overjoyed to have correction ribbon instead of Liquid Wite-Out.  By the time our kids reached fifth grade, they individually knew more about Microsoft computer applications and their constructive uses than I did.  When it came to Apple and Iphone technology, I routinely went to them for advice.  I still do that to this day.

I can recall one typed, research paper submitted in high school.  I submitted all other assignments handwritten, typically double-spaced.  I vaguely remember my kids submitting some handwritten documents, but I recollect most assignments getting typed on a laptop or a PC. 

By the time they both hit high school most assignments were delivered online.  Now that they’re in college during Covid, the whole process is online.  Their technological understanding and its seamless flow from year to year appears unencumbered by their diminished handwriting prowess.

My son compiled straight A’s in his last three university semesters, while his sister finished her first collegiate semester with all A’s.  Cursive writing does not appear to be slowing down their academic achievements, nor is it propelling me further up the career ladder. 

What was once deemed an absolute necessity has gone the way of the dinosaurs. 

Outside of penning high school graduation thank you cards and endorsing the backs of gift checks, handwriting for my kids doesn’t seem so essential anymore.  I admit, most of my signatures these days are in a digital format anyhow.  Apparently good penmanship is about as useful as speaking fluent Latin.  

The Difference

Have you ever poured hours of time and energy into a person or group, but then questioned whether your efforts made a discernable difference?  Did you leave an indelible mark on another’s life, or simply get lost going through the motions? 

These questions lingered inside my head after completing a mission trip to Kenya and Uganda in October 2008.  I traveled halfway around the world for almost two weeks, but returned wondering if all that time and miles were for naught.

The African missionary seed got planted one Sunday morning in church. The message focused on Peter being the only disciple who ever dared to walk on water.  He saw Jesus walking on the lake, mustered his courage, got out of his boat, and went to him.  Peter didn’t make it too far, but he still walked on water, if only for a step or two before his faith began to falter. 

Fortunately, Jesus rescued him before he dipped under the waves.  Toward the end of that service my wife leaned over and whispered in my ear.  She said that I needed to “get out of the boat” and go to Africa on this mission trip.  I think she wanted me to make a move toward God and allow myself to be saved.

Our neighbor, Mike, was a professional missionary and leading this trip.  Later that same Sunday afternoon, he mowed his grass, headphones buried in his ears, while he pondered how to influence my next-door neighbor to partake in the Kenya/Uganda journey.  Deep in prayer, out of the corner of his eye he caught my wife marching across the cul-de-sac on a beeline to him. 

Mike said she had her “big girl walk on” and thought for sure he was in trouble. 

He slowly removed his earbuds, waiting for a tongue lashing for some unwitting infraction.  My wife looked him dead in the eye and said, “you need to ask Joe to go on the mission trip.”  No sooner than the words rolled off her lips, she turned around and went back to our house.  Dumbfounded, Mike decided he’d been praying for the wrong guy and adopted her advice.

Mike took me under his wing, logistically and otherwise.  I received anti-malarial medications and necessary immunizations from the local health department.  Mike also insisted that I pen letters seeking support and donations.  I balked at this, explaining that I had enough money.  He smiled and told me that wasn’t the point, because God already knew I had the money. 

I was lost, so Mike elaborated. 

By sharing my plans I allowed those who received the letters to make a choice.  He said that people want to be part of something bigger than themselves, but not everybody will travel overseas.  By giving their prayers, kind words, and/or money, they invest themselves in the cause.  I reluctantly agreed and wrote letters to my closest friends and family.

The whole time we prepared, I questioned whether this trip was a right fit for me.

“You’re the last person that I thought would go on a mission trip,” was the typical response I heard when people learned of my involvement.

Not exactly encouraging words, but honest I suppose. 

The entire mission group was deeply rooted in their faith.  One lived overseas with his family and whole-heartedly dedicated life to missionary work while serving in an inhospitable social environment.  Some led churches or worked full time ministries in their respective communities. I was relatively new to my faith and a total novice to missionary work. 

I clearly represented the weak spiritual link in the chain. 

We departed Denver on a redeye to London, followed by a daylong layover, and another redeye to Nairobi.  After roughly 36 hours of travel I saw the Kenyan sunrise peak through my airplane’s lowered window visor.  We gathered luggage and loaded onto chartered buses.  As we drove, I saw a man standing on a street corner holding a machete.   Kenyans walked by him without giving him a second glance. 

Apparently brandishing a large, sharp-edged weapon on a sidewalk during rush hour was normal Nairobi behavior.

Traffic lights were virtually non-existent and the streets were jammed with automobiles, motorcycles, scooters, bikes, wooden carts, and livestock.  Diesel fumes clouded the air, accompanied by the unmistakable scent of kerosene.  It was pure chaos mixed with sleep deprivation.

While in Kenya, we divided our time between running Christian sport camps and visits to the Mathare slum.  Organizing Swahili-speaking orphans to perform sport related activities proved trying.  However the true challenge occurred in the slums.  I’ve been in some bad neighborhoods in the U.S., but nothing here compares to the abject poverty of Mathare. 

Half a million people are crammed into about half a square mile of tin shanties, dysentery, polluted water, AIDS, and scattered refuse.  It’s really indescribable.  I’ve never seen so many people packed together in such an unsanitary state.

Despite the horrific living conditions, the children that overpopulate Mathare smile continuously.  I

t’s like they don’t know any other kind of living, so they assume there’s no reason not to be happy.  Many school-aged kids lucky enough to be inside a classroom, donned in British-style plaid uniforms, rushed out to greet us, repeatedly chanting, “hello, how are you?” 

They quickly answered themselves with, “I am fine”.  And nothing seemed to make them happier than taking their picture and then showing them the digital photograph on the camera’s screen.  I’m certain I could have done this for hours without losing an ounce of enthusiasm and joy from these children.

Gideon was our guide through Mathare.  Gideon refused the armed Kenyan police officers, which escorted our other groups.  Aptly named, his physical appearance was not imposing.  Nevertheless, he said we were safer with just him. 

Gideon spent years walking Mathare and meeting parents who were dying from AIDS that were without extended family to take care of their children once they passed away.  Gideon arranged for the subsequent care of these kids in the orphanage where he worked.  The people of Mathare knew him and his mission well.  He was almost untouchable within this Kenyan slum.  

No one disturbed him or those that walked with him.

After five days we made our way west to Uganda.  Although we stayed in a relatively nice hotel in Nairobi, our Ugandan adventure would require us to live inside the walled orphanage grounds.  We woke every dawn to the crowing of roosters and the smell of smoke from cooking preparations.  It felt like camping, but with fifteen men crammed into two rooms of bunk beds, one bathroom, one sink, and no mirror. 

Some days we’d eat beans and rice.  Other days, we eat rice and beans, just to mix it up.  There was an occasional egg and we cooked a goat on our stay, but rice and beans were pretty much our staple, go to meal.

The orphanage held a faith rally outside of its walls on the last night.  One of the fellow missionaries informed me that they expected an extremely large crowd of Christians and Muslims, alike.  They did not anticipate any confrontations or violence, but it always felt like society could unravel in the blink of an eye in Africa. 

He further emphasized that we stood the likelihood of engaging in spiritual warfare this evening.  I told him if that was the case, I was going into battle unarmed.  He laughed and said he’d back me up, if needed.  Fortunately, my role for the evening was to keep a close eye on some of the female missionaries.  Things went off without a hitch, and it was as lively of a church function I’d ever attended.  

Our final destination was a hotel in Jinja, Uganda.  As I walked into the lobby, I saw my reflection in a large mirror that hung on the wall.  I was shocked at how I looked, especially after realizing this was the first time I’d seen myself in a week. 

In the U.S., we catch our reflection constantly in mirrors, windows, etc. and take it for granted.  In many parts of Africa, seeing your reflection was somewhat of a rarity.  I immediately understood why the children loved getting photographed and seeing their picture.

Those kids probably seldom saw how they appeared to others.

After a day of downtime in Jinja and a fantastic hotel dinner that did not consist of rice and beans, we made our way back to the Entebbe airport that following morning.  The distance was not great, but travel through these parts of Africa remained slow and tedious. 

While bouncing along in my bus seat by myself and reflecting on the entire trip, I cried. 

I don’t know why.  I don’t know if it was out of happiness, sadness, relief, or a culmination of bottled up emotions.  Nobody ever knew, and I never shared this with anyone until now.  Perhaps I felt the pang of remorse at not making a difference in a place that cried out for so much more.

Upon returning, I shared my story several times with friends and family.  I wrote thank you notes and follow up letters to all those that Mike insisted I contact in the beginning.  I even spoke during one Sunday church service with a couple of other “missionaries.” 

However, time rolled on, and I gradually fell back into the routines of work and family life.  Pushed out by the here and now, Africa began to fade from my memory banks.  I’d heard people say that mission work changed their lives, but I didn’t feel that I fell into this category.

About a year after returning from Africa, I met up with an old high school friend, Dean, who was in town on an extended work assignment.  As we got caught up with the past, Dean shared that he volunteered as a Big Brother in Phoenix, AZ. 

I was surprised. 

Dean never expressed a desire to work with at-risk kids, nor had he ever done any volunteer work that I was aware of.  I probed further and asked him what motivated him to do that.  He told me that if I could travel halfway around the world to work with orphans in Africa, he could do something in his own backyard. 

That comment hit me like a ton of bricks.  I left Africa exactly like I’d found it, never feeling like I made a dent.  Now it felt like some kind of epiphany.  I’d been looking at the wrong continent, just as Mike looked at the wrong neighbor.  My unexpected and personally unprecedented mission work morphed into something I never saw coming. 

Funny thing is, when Dean told me about his service I almost said, “Wow, you’re the last guy that I thought would work with Big Brothers.”  

Fortunately, I bit my hypocritical tongue.  You can’t count out that “last” guy.  They might just get out of the boat and make a difference to somebody they never expected to reach.

Pool Hopping

Buried in the cobwebs of my mind rest memories from late adolescence, tangled in a hodgepodge of fond recollections woven together with old friends, empty beer cans, and an unlit, small body of water. 

It was summer 1985 and we called it pool hopping. 

It was an innocent act void of vandalism or any other fineable offenses, outside of trespassing in community pool space.  We seized the night, if only for a brief moment on select summer evenings, all under the cover of darkness, near the midnight hour.

Our numbers varied.  It was not uncommon to have upwards of ten guys and girls awkwardly scaling chain link, yelling at each other to shut up before some neighbor called the cops.  Those were raucous events, for sure.  However, this particular Saturday night, there were only three of us – Lori, Kenny, and me.  Now I’m not a math guy, but even I know those numbers don’t add up.  

Somebody’s getting third wheel status. 

We didn’t bring beer with us, besides what was already gurgling inside of our stomachs.  However, these abdominal contents revealed two truths.  One, inebriated persons practice awful noise discipline.  Two, alcohol lowers one’s inhibitions. 

Both were important this night, but the second loomed larger in significance.  Tonight’s foray was an impromptu.  We did not come prepared.  Rather than wearing swimsuits, tonight’s water escapades at the Stratford Landing Recreational Center were to be au naturel.

The three of us were part of a larger friend group, equally comprised of guys and girls. We’d spent substantial time together, thereby building a strong comfort level with each other.  Kenny and Lori had known each other since grade school.  I didn’t join into their mix until high school, but we were still a tight knit group.

Tonight, we would further test the boundaries of our friendships.

Kenny truly believed we would both get laid.  He was exuberant with the possibility of imminent sex lingering in the air, his and Lori’s familiarity with each other only heightening the suspense.  He insisted that I was an integral part of this, so as a dutiful wingman, I tagged along. 

His positivity was infectious, even though I didn’t believe Lori thought of me that way.  However, she was attractive and maybe, just maybe, Kenny was right.  My curiosity and libido delivered a clear message – it is time to rise to the occasion!

Our point of entry sat directly beneath a mercury vapor lamp, illuminating us for anyone within eyeshot.  More discrete spots existed, but this was the easiest climb and we were ultimately too lazy to bother scoping out a better option.  It was also the noisiest part of the chain link to scale.  The gate latch clanged against the steel post and the chain and lock rattled against the metal fence.  

However Kenny and I rapidly scrambled over, no doubt fueled by the excitement of impending nudity with a hot chick.  I had no idea what motivated Lori and I could have cared less.  Skinny-dipping has a profound ability to mitigate rational thought.

The pool sat in the middle of a wide-open expanse, but completely secluded from the outside by plentiful trees in full July foliage, which surrounded the entire property.  The moonless sky provided next to no illumination, even for our keen teenage eyes. 

Lori went to one side of the pool while Kenny and I stayed on the opposite deck, per her direction.  It was so dark we could barely see each other, even from just across the water.  The excitement mounted as Lori undressed, even though it was like ogling shadows.

Kenny stripped down buck naked and jumped into the pool first.  I followed suit and jumped into the cool water.  Having effectively called her bluff and heading to her side of the pool, Lori knew she’d be plainly visible in a matter of seconds.  She doffed what little clothing remained and leapt into the water, obscuring her body under the ripples. 

Kenny was a sage.

I was about to get lucky in a pool.  I just hoped it was with the girl.

As expected from their years together, Kenny was far more comfortable with approaching Lori than I was.  She held Kenny off by splashing him in the face and screaming at him to keep his junk away.  As the wingman I occasionally joined him, but Lori’s splashes, raised voice, and constant threats of genital damage kept us at bay.  The sexual crescendo waned into playful banter and laughter.

It was quickly obvious that nothing of a carnal nature would occur.  We gradually fell back into our friendship roles, albeit naked.  This was all for the best.  Kenny’s and Lori’s relationship was more akin to brother and sister than one night stand, what with their sibling-like bickering, and constant rivalry. 

If Kenny had been right, his fornication prediction would have possessed a nauseating, incestuous-like edge.  Knowing I could have be a part of that would have left me feeling shameful, at best.

I’m sure Lori knew exactly what she was doing, though

She likely filed that experience in her brain under “how to manipulate idiot teenage boys.”  I’d like to proudly proclaim I never again let the possibility of sex put me in a potentially compromising position, but the flesh can be weak, especially back then.  

This incident was a proverbial and literal testing of the waters.  The pilot and the wingman crashed and burned while Lori gained insightful knowledge into moronic male behavior. 

Despite all the sexual tension dangling in the air that night, Kenny and I were the ones left dangling, mentally and physically.  It’s amazing what you don’t see when all you’re trying to see is a naked girl.

The Incomprehensible Act of Kissing Ass

It’s mid-September of my son’s freshman year of high school.  I’m standing outside of the football stadium at the University of Northern Colorado on a Saturday morning.  Our entire high school football program is there to watch the game between Northern Colorado and Houston Baptist University.

It’s the perfect day for a tailgate, with clear skies and lots of sunshine.  Upper classmen’s parents towed grills to the parking lot, set up tables loaded with meat, buns, side dishes, chips, desserts, and drinks.  

Our family’s new to the high school area, and we only know one other freshman family, and nobody from any of the other grades.  Therefore, this a great way for me to meet the other football families, and not just from my kid’s team, but also the sophomore through senior classes, as well. 

Now I’m not a total introvert, but probably a bit socially awkward when I first meet new people. 

Not to mention, freshman parents are at the bottom of the social pecking order here.  Nobody of significance knows me, and nobody really cares who I am.  I’m too new to the scene to score more than a firm handshake or a “welcome to the program” slap on the shoulder.  Basically, I’m lower than whale dung at the bottom of the ocean.

However, I do deem myself a good judge of character.  Not that I was born with this skillset.  I honed it over the years, and it grew into that inner voice, that quickly registers a thumb up or a thumb down on somebody. 

Bottom line, that inner voice is never, ever wrong.

So I meet the other parents and forget their names within 9 seconds of introductions because this is an unheralded skillset that, apparently, I also possess.  But I muster through it and keep going when I see Jeff, a dad whose son plays freshman football with my kid.  We share a brief moment of cordial conversation before he works his way back through the crowd.  

As my eyes follow him, I notice that he seems to know everybody there.  And I don’t mean he’s better at remembering names. He’s shaking hands and hugging these people.  He’s deep in conversations that are full of smiles and laughter.  But then I see it.  He hugs a senior’s mom and proceeds to give her a kiss on the cheek, which, amazingly, she reciprocates. 

Jeff is kissing a senior varsity football player’s mom like they’re old family friends.

He’s new to school just like me.  He’s part of the whale dung crowd, but he’s fraternizing with established families like he’s been part of the school since its doors first opened.  It is precisely at this exact moment that my inner voice fires out a clear and concise message – kiss-ass.  He’s schmoozing the crowd trying to get himself a little something extra.     

A little over 5 years pass from witnessing this infamous kiss. It’s mid-November of my daughter’s high school senior year. I’m standing outside of the high school stadium watching her volleyball team load onto a bus.  They’re heading to the Colorado State Championship Tournament.  It is the last time most of these girls will ever play together. 

As the girls board the bus, a janitor named Joe walks out of the stadium toward them.  Joe’s a constant at the school, although he’s likely one of the least appreciated people on campus.  You see him here day and night and you got to love his positivity.  Today is no different.  He claps his hands and pumps his fists in the air, shouting out a few encouraging words to the girls as they climb into the bus.  

My daughter stands on the curb, close to her best friend, “G”.  Their proximity to each other symbolizes the relationship.  They’ve been virtually inseparable the past two years.  When I’ve asked about the friendship, my daughter says,  “G accepts me for who I am and I never have to fake it with her.” 

Bottom line, the relationship is genuine and real, nothing phony, neither one using the other for some ulterior motive.

A cold breeze blows through the parking lot, while an ultimate irony also whirls inside my head.  Jeff, the man my inner voice labeled a kiss-ass, is G’s dad and he’s standing a few feet from me.  The girls are completely on the bus by now and I catch Jeff in the corner of my eye, but he’s not alone.  He and Joe are embraced in a full-on hug.  They release, Joe looks Jeff in the eye, thanks him, and tells him that he loves him.  Jeff says, “I love you too, brother.” 

Thankfully they do not kiss.   

But kiss or no kiss, I now fully realize how big of an idiot I am.  Over the past two years as our daughters built their friendship, I also got to know Jeff.  He became a friend I could be real with.  We share a comfortable honesty, nothing fake. He was never a kiss ass.  He was just far better than me when it came to social interactions and I was just jealous of how easily he could do something that I struggled to do.

My inner voice that was never, ever wrong was wrong. 

For the past two years I already knew this to be true, but specifically today the enormity of this character miscalculation hits home.  It hits home, partly, because a kiss-ass doesn’t hug a janitor. 

Let’s be real, a kiss-ass doesn’t even associate with a janitor.  But more importantly, a kiss-ass never, ever hears, I love you from a janitor, and a kiss-ass most certainly never ever tells a janitor, “I love you too, bother”.      

The 50 Dilemma

Turning 50 blows.  This was purely speculative, self-loathing conjecture on my part just over two years ago.  I sat on 50’s precipice, barley clinging to 49, but a few days removed from this fateful drop into a new era.  Not that I foresaw a cataclysmic descent into a dank, muted abyss of failed body parts, although I must confess this seemed more real than surreal as the hours ticked down. 

I’ve accepted that my elbows, knees, hips, and back will always ache.  I acknowledge my feet, even though somewhat deadened by the burden of carrying my carcass for five decades, throb incessantly by day’s end, if not well before.  I’d piss and moan about carrying a few unwanted pounds, but that’s been a constant all these years. 

Good to know some things never change.

I mean, what was there really to celebrate?  It’s not like I finally reached the legal age to drink.  Ah, 21 was a good year, wasn’t it?  Sweet does not precede 50, as if I could somehow recapture that 16 year-old adolescent thrill and jerk off five times a day.  To put it plainly, 50’s the end of youth, a shocking revelation that there’s clearly more road behind me than in front of me. 

And it’s in my face.  No, I mean it’s literally in my face, what with the gray beard stubble overcrowding the few holdouts.  It’s like the dark hairs missed last call and are standing dumbfounded at closing time, squinting against the bar room lights that had mercifully remained dimmed, not wanting to leave, but knowing the gig is up.   

Feeling older might sting less if I believed the years culminated in producing a sager, more astute man than what sits before this keyboard, hunting and pecking my way through banality.  I’m pretty darn sure I make the same silly mistakes I committed in my younger years. 

Although I don’t eat five Big Macs in a single sitting after a night of binge drinking, I’m not sure I wouldn’t revert to this previous behavioral pattern if I didn’t have a wife and kids at home.  They’ve been masterful at redirecting misguided youthful antics into societally accepted paternal and spousal actions. Apparently I still require proper adult supervision from the “old lady” and the fear of becoming a poor role model for the youngins.

The maxim, “I’m too old for this shit”, rings true in my ears.  Maybe if I’m lucky enough to hit 60 I’ll whimsically look back on this and realize I had no idea what old felt like.  Quite frankly, that scares the hell out of me.  I don’t want to feel any older than I do at this exact moment. 

I can still vividly recall the ache of a youthful me, yearning to get older, time holding me hostage as each new day drew out like a blade.  Now each day flies by at warp speed.  It seems like yesterday I turned 30, and oddly enough held some similar beliefs and fears as I did at 50. 

I’m so cyclical. 

The decades beginning with even numbers never bothered me, but the ones starting with odd numbers engulfed my soul with unbridled anxiety.  Except for 10.  I don’t recall any real personal angst at turning 10. 

30 was another story.  Exiting my 20’s terminated a reckless, carefree youth.  By 30 I was married, there was talk of children, career aspirations, all of those adult responsibilities we carry through life.  My 20’s spawned what are now some of my funniest and fondest memories.  It was the first exploration of adult life beyond parental interference.  I was living in my own place, with my own car, spending my own money, and making my own choices.  Everything espoused endless possibilities. I was bound by nothing. 

30 changed that.  30 was kind of a bummer.

But I assimilated with these changes.  There was no bump in road when I turned 40.  I set life on cruise control and enjoyed the ride.  The same commitments weighed on me, and I traveled the same life paths.  However, I occasionally thought I could still blend with the younger crowd. 

I might have fooled myself for the first few years of my 40’s, but that delusion was short lived.  I was the old guy in the room, but I didn’t want to face the music, which for me was mostly 1980’s pop crap.  By the end of the decade I was stuck in perpetual manic Mondays, wondering if the Bangles were still hot, or had gray hair like me.  The 50’s loomed dangerously close.

AARP sent me a membership application when I turned 50. 

I’m mandatory retirement in 5 years, which in old man time will feel like 11 months.  In 5 years my kids will, hopefully, have graduated from college, which works out nicely.  But what the hell will I do with myself after that?  I’ll be stuck with that same question I faced in my late teens and early twenties.  So, what do you want to do with your life?  Hopefully the job market will be ripe for 57 year-old men who worked the same career field for the past 3½ decades.

Or maybe, I get to partake in the next great gray haired renaissance.  Perhaps this 10-year stretch will become the reinvention decade.  The question may be more aptly asked, “what do you want to do with the rest of your life”, because I can only sit around and watch so many reruns of Law & Order, and daytime talk shows.  But who doesn’t like Ed Green and Lenny Briscoe?  Oprah and Rachel Ray, eh. 

I like to imagine myself doing something completely different, workwise.  Maybe I’ll land an intern job.  No, that would be stupid.  Who wants to be that old weird guy?  Quite frankly, I’m already that guy, so why exasperate the issue.

No, I’ll need to jump head first into something fresh and original to me.

This could be a repeat of the 20’s without the exuberant boundary testing.  Now I know where the guardrails are located and why they exist.  Damn you, McDonalds and your tasty special sauce. 

The trick will lie in discovering that new, unique calling.  Will it have capitalistic constraints or will generating an income not factor into the decision?  Yeah, that sounds nice, doesn’t it?  No thanks, I have all of the money I need.  Sounds cool, but not particularly pragmatic, and old age oozes pragmatism.

I suppose I’ll keep plugging away until this 50’s thing all makes sense or dementia sets in and none of this matters anymore.  Both outcomes have their own specific merits, although the mental incapacity will weigh heavily of those closest to me.  Of course, I wont know about, so there’s that. 

At least at this moment I think I’ve written myself off the ledge and I’ll effectively cope with the jagged outcroppings and loose rocks that threaten to drop me into an epic free fall.  For now, I’ve given myself a personal consent to the ascent.  We’ll see what this half-century mark and beyond really looks like, besides a little old and worn.

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