It’s the holiday season again which means a lot of people
going through depression. While it’s not
exactly true that there is a huge spike in suicides around this time of year it
is certainly true that there are more deaths due to cold and hunger. I’m not
sure why Christmas and Hanukah fall in the most depressing time of year. Maybe it was just a little piece of genius to
try and cheer everyone up? This year is
going to be especially sad for Newtown, CT and to make matters worse, we as a
society have become such a conglomerated group of insensitive politicians that
the bodies of those children had not even been removed from the school and
people were debating gun laws. I found
it pretty disgusting on both sides; though I’m a pretty down the middle kind of
person I found the liberal tactics to be a little more evil. The conservative
arguments were predictable and straight forward, the liberal side made it a
point to both chide conservatives for using the incident and in the same
statement say that we need to start removing firearms from people. My own personal view is that no one should
have even mentioned these things until at least the children were buried. This is a time to support, help, console, and
aid that town and those people. I have
grown so tired of seeing the mad man’s face plastered all over the news. The media has in my opinion been fairly
irresponsible in the manner in which they have been putting out information. The public has been jumping to conclusions and
ultimately just using this as a way to push their own opinions on people. Before you speak think about this, a gun ban
won’t take one weapon off the streets, it will only change what is produced in
the future. There will still be
literally millions of these weapons out there.
I want to know why no one in the media has mentioned how stupid and
irresponsible that man’s mother was.
Call me insensitive but I’m just gonna call a spade a spade. That idiot of a woman had a son with serious
mental issues and she chose to take him to the gun range on a regular basis,
she chose to have several unsecured weapons in her home, she chose to leave him
alone quite often while she went to the bar (where she was described as “very
popular”), she chose to let him know she was going to have him committed, and
she chose to allow him to have a .22 rifle of his own. This woman was stupid. I want to know why people’s first reaction is
to push an agenda. I’m a Christian but I
don’t feel like you have to be a Christian, or even religious, to be a good
person. I’m already tired of seeing Christians
telling everyone that the only thing that could have prevented tragedy is
belief in a Christian god. I’m not aware
of very many shootings in Madrasas or Mesivtas.
I really wish that as a society our first reaction would have been to
push an agenda of sending help. I really
wish that I hadn't seen a political statement within the first 10 minutes after
the news broke. Lisa Ling’s first tweet,
minutes after the news, was “Why are we still not seriously talking about gun
control?” then a few minutes later she mentioned the families. I think that’s a pretty good representation
of both sides’ insensitivity. I just don’t
understand how or why we have become so self-centered as a society, maybe I’ll
address that in the next writing.
Wednesday, December 19, 2012
Monday, November 19, 2012
The Only Father I'll Ever Have
The most memorable person in my
life is my father; his actions shaped the path of my life. My life has taken its
course due to his stories and guidance. I grew up all over the world because he
was in the army. My father spent two and a half years fighting in Vietnam. He
had many emotional scars I didn't understand myself until much later on. The
only thing I knew as a kid was that when I ran into his bedroom in the middle
of the night with a fruit basket on my head yelling words like “Di di moa!” he
would roll onto the floor and I would just laugh! He never got upset about it,
my mom on the other hand always got fairly mad, partly because she knew how
this messed with my father and partly because I kept waking her up.
Whenever
I had questions he had answers or sage advice at the ready. It was April 15th
1985 when we had the sex talk; our neighbors had little girls, just old enough
to walk, outside naked. I ran back inside confused, I had no idea what was
going on over there so I asked my dad why they didn't have what I did have. The
reason I remember the date so well is because of his answer, he was always
doing things at the last minute. He answered simply, “Your thing goes in it but
not until you’re married now leave me alone, I’m doing taxes.”
There
were many other things about my father that leave me laughing and many things
that make me proud. After he retired from the military in 1988 we didn't have
very much money. My mother, father, brother, myself, and a German Shepherd all
lived in a Winnebago for 4 months before moving into a motel room and then
finally renting a house. My dad made $9000 that year. His dream was to teach at
MTSU but the Aerospace department wasn't very big and had all the faculty they
needed. He was a pretty tenacious dude
when it came to his dreams though. He wound up writing a couple new courses and
they eventually got approved, he was hired on as an adjunct to teach them. It had been a very long year of scraping by
but we weren't done yet.
My father toiled in factories and
warehouses making what he could to support his family while he waited to get on
full time. Eventually he was hired on full time with the university and then
tenured and is still living his dream to this day. That was a powerful lesson I've always remembered throughout my life, try hard, work hard, don’t take no as
long as there’s still a yes out there. Later on after my many years of poor
choices (which he always stood by me and suffered with me) I decided to join
the military and when I joined the National Guard he not only supported me, he
swore me into service. When my brother joined the military and graduated basic
training, my father was there to pin his blue cord on his shoulder showing he
had joined the fraternity of infantrymen. Later on down the road my brother
advanced his career and became an officer, again my father was there to
commission him into the officer corps.
Throughout mine and all my brothers’ lives he
has always been supportive in all our endeavors, even if he didn't completely
agree. Throughout mine and my brother’s multiple deployments he has been a
constant support for my mother and our families. I honestly don’t know how they
would have fared without him. He tells some of the corniest jokes known to man
but he’s smiling and laughing while he tells them so you wind up laughing whether
you want to or not. He has always loved us so much it was sometimes embarrassing.
He always supported us growing up and he always supports us now, no matter what
we do. He doesn't have an ounce of hate in his heart and he’s never met a
stranger. He has four semi-screwed up sons that he thinks are absolutely
perfect and we have a semi-screwed up dad that we know is absolutely perfect.
Monday, November 12, 2012
Who Are You?
When we were growing up we all wondered what kind of person
we would become. We all had dreams of
what we wanted to be. Do you still think
about it today? I think for most of us,
we have regrets. At some point, we stop wondering who we are going to be and
start wondering why we aren't who we thought we would be. I get stuck in ruts every once in a while and
look back at where I turned left and a right would have been better. I try not think back and have regrets, which
is almost impossible considering the choices I've made. I sat down today and thought about who I want
to be, it was kind of refreshing. I
realize I am in a unique position where I am starting over and I get to focus
on who I’m going to become. I still
think it’s a good idea for everyone to once a month, take a look around you and
decide where you want to be next month, next year, next decade. My current journey has made it impossible to
live the life I had before both due to time constraints and much less money,
but I believe in the end that where I want to be will be worth the
sacrifice. I hadn't thought about it in
such a long time, I had spent so much time trying to navigate the future
according to the past that I forgot how easy it is to look forward and make a
plan. Even if the plan doesn't work out
it’s a road map. If something happens
that changes the direction you’re going, don’t look back right away. Stop and take a look at how it affects where
you want to be and who you want to be.
It wasn't until about 9 months ago that I decided I wanted to be a
college professor and I have been working hard to get there. I have opportunities ahead of me that will
give me a great shot at it. I have
things in my past that will make it difficult but I refuse to look at those or
worry about those. If something happens
and I have done everything I can to get where I want to be and external forces
prevail, I will still have a bachelor’s degree from a good university and
hopefully a master’s degree from a private university. At the very least I will wind up with a
master’s degree and the ability to find a good job even if it’s not the one I
thought I would have. At this point I
have done nothing in my life that I planned on as a kid and it’s been a great
life. I have had a life full of
surprises, disappointments, wonderful friends, excellent adventures, world
travels, extreme ups and downs, magnificent times, and great and wonderful
experiences. I wouldn't trade one
mistake for a hundred right turns when I was younger. I just wish everyone could take a minute and
look forward, evaluate who you want to be when you grow up. I promise you’re not done yet and you always
have time to change the world.
Friday, October 26, 2012
Depression
Life sucks. Life is
difficult and unfair, day in and day out we struggle. We all have good days and bad days and we
hope on hope on hope that our good days always outnumber the bad ones. The only way to get through is by trying, it’s
not something to be done alone. You have
to be open, to help, to change, and always understanding that nothing is
permanent. It’s important to have
friends to go through things with. There
have been a lot of military suicides lately and I’ve known a few of them. It may be scary to the average American that
we soldiers, the ones who are supposed to be tough, can have a moment of so
much weakness. It is infinitely scarier
for us. You have lifted us up and put us
on a pedestal and we relished in the idea so much so that when we have a moment
of weakness we have no idea how to handle it.
We lose our friends in combat and we understand it. It’s a death we know how to handle. When we lose them at home we don’t have any
way to deal with it, we don’t know how to understand it. We grieve for them but also wonder how they
got to a point so low that they saw no way out.
We wonder if it’s something that could happen to us. Some of us may even get to a point where our
thoughts are dark and our emotions are untethered and we’re frightened and
alone. We may be surrounded by people
but like a wounded animal, we will hide and seek solitude. We may make it through that rough night to
the morning but it drains us. It leaves
us mentally, physically, and emotionally exhausted. It’s not something you can do over and over
by yourself but even surrounded by people we still feel completely alone. This is when we have to make a decision, a
decision to reach out. Just like the
wounded animal, we heal much faster with help.
How can we convince ourselves to do this? We have a belief that the people who would
care would never understand and the people who would understand would never care. Sometimes we do things in our line of work
that are not in our nature as human beings.
That’s where we get the idea that people won’t understand, how could
they? We have to retrain ourselves to
know what the truth is and to believe it.
Those that understand will care greatly, because at some point they
reached out to someone too. I’ve had so
many highs and lows that I clearly see that no matter how trivial you may think
it is, there is someone out there who is concerned for your well-being. We suffer in silence and it’s a disservice to
the people who care about us. I struggle
with being an open enough person as well.
I am plenty open with the trivial things in my life until my low points
and then I don’t want to bother people with my problems. I realize it’s wrong but it’s what we all
do.
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
The Manly Arts
So I was drinking pink lemonade today and I got to thinking
about some things. What’s more manly,
the fact that I can kill and clean an animal and take it from woods to the table
or that I love drinking pink lemonade? I
have in the past mentioned how important I believe the manly arts are. In fact, I believe they are slowly
disappearing and should be saved with all expedience! I would almost be willing to start a summer
camp and charge metros a very large fee to wear plaid and learn how to chop
wood and gut animals, how to properly handle rifles and pistols, the correct
methods for grilling meat, and a myriad of other endangered arts. I also believe that pink lemonade is one of
America’s greatest inventions right beside the ice cream cone and movies. I have heard way too many men refuse to drink
pink lemonade because of its color and that’s fine, it leaves more for me! Perhaps a man who refuses to drink pink
lemonade is in fact no man at all, most men who I know that do enjoy a nice
glass of pink lemonade also hunt, fish, and hold the door open for ladies. I would say that if you want to judge a man
you should ask him his feelings on this fine beverage. If he is highly offended that you would
suggest such a thing then perhaps he needs to own more plaid shirts or blue
jeans. I am announcing to the whole
world that the art of manliness begins and ends with the willingness to choose
a drink for its taste, not its color! I
think a manly man would be more than secure enough to say there’s a great many
refreshments available but the pink ones are usually tasty and delicious! Before anyone decides to judge me too harshly
let’s remember a few things. I can ride
a horse or a motorcycle. I can drive the
heck out of just about anything with tracks or tires. I am a highly proficient marksman with American
and foreign weapons. I can kill, cook,
and eat just about anything with legs (you can’t spell meat without eat). I would be willing to teach these things to “men”
who don’t know how for an outrageous fee as well. I’m just saying that when it comes to
drinking on a weekday after 10am and before 5pm then there is no way you can go
wrong with pink lemonade guys!!!!
Monday, May 7, 2012
Update
It has been several months since I have put anything on
here. I could make all kinds of excuses as to how busy I have been but the
truth is I could always find five minutes to write down my thoughts, I just
didn’t. To make up for my laziness I
have over compensated in other aspects by signing up to do my first triathlon
this summer. Also since my last post was about me coming home to start over I
should probably say a little bit about how that is going. I have adjusted well to life in the country,
I do miss being in such a large community sometimes but when I get bored I have
a pool, gym, four wheeler, trails to run on, and many other things accessible
to me. Being in the National Guard it is
very difficult to qualify for 100% of the GI Bill but I have finally done so
and decided that if I’m truly going to start over then why not do it by going
back to school. I have enrolled in
school full time but I am more than a little nervous. My last attempt didn’t go so well because I
always worked full time while trying to go to school full time so my GPA is
slightly lower than I would like but now that I won’t have to work while going
to school I will have no excuses. It’s
also more than a little nerve wracking to be going to school in my (mid) 30’s. I would much rather be seen as the
unbelievably extremely attractive super awesome mature guy but I’m afraid it’s
probably going to be more like the creepy old dude. Oh well, if my biggest complaints in life are
that the other kids at school don’t think I’m cool then I don’t guess I’m doing
too badly. There are many people in this
world with real problems; I’ve seen many first hand who don’t even know they
have it bad. I have a lot of things I’m
nervous about right now (I refuse to say afraid) but I believe I can do
well. I have a couple of triathlons this
summer (itty bitty short ones!) and I’m going to try my first half-marathon
this fall. I will gain strength from my
community of friends who always believe I can do anything and I will continue
to wake up every day with a smile and hope for a happy ending (not the dirty
kind). I will be busy but I will make
time to do the things that keep me happy and sane. I will do my best to be a little better about
my writing, perhaps it will coincide with some English assignments. While I am nervous about the future I am also
excited; I have realized that starting over just means I get to hit the reset
button and do this whole thing with the experience to make the decisions that
will keep my future awesome!
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