Category: Life

  • OMG – I Forgot to Send in My Memorable Quote for the Contest


    Greetings, cyberspace followers: Some of my people have neglected to send in their quotes for the Second Annual Cyberspace Memorable Quotes contest!

    Deadline is today June 30th at midnight – whenever midnight is for you!!

    Remember to send to my secret email address: smortex@aol.com.

    Hurry, hurry, hurry…I am waiting for your quotes!!

    Second category added: Favorite Tombstone Sayings

     

  • Cross Over the Bridge


    Traveling to East Tennessee last week, Teresa and I listened to a collection of Patti Page hits. One of the songs she sang in this album which was recorded at Carnegie Hall in 1997 was Cross Over the Bridge – a song I hadn’t heard since 1954 when Patti originally recorded it –  but one I remembered singing while my mother played the yellow piano keys of the ancient upright piano in our living room in the tiny town of Richards in rural Grimes County, Texas. My mom bought sheet music like some people bought cigarettes back then…she was addicted to it. One of her favorites was Cross Over the Bridge so naturally eight-year-old me learned the lyrics as my mother sang and played which meant I was able to sing along with Patti in the car while T and I rode through the gorgeous vistas of the Upstate of South Carolina toward the incredible views of the mountains in East Tennessee. Mine eyes did see the glory.

    Cross over the bridge, cross over the bridge…

    Change your reckless way of living, cross over the bridge…

    Leave your fickle past behind you, and true romance will find you,

     Brother, cross over the bridge.

    Admittedly this is a love song in the tradition of the 1950s favorite sentiments, but as I was trying to digest and cope with the overwhelming seesaws of emotion I felt yesterday, crossing bridges came to mind.

    Yesterday morning I woke up in a new world…truly a new world for me and my family. The Supreme Court of the United States lifted my status as a citizen. I was no longer “lesser than.” I was a person who mattered. By recognizing the fundamental right to marry for all same-sex couples in every state in the nation, SCOTUS recognized me as a person who was entitled to my own pursuit of happiness with life and liberty guaranteed as a bonus.

    Two years to the day after the favorable ruling in the Edie Windsor case that gave equal federal treatment to the same-sex marriages recognized in twelve states and the District of Columbia at the time, the Supremes crossed a bridge to leave a fickle past of outright discrimination behind all of us and yes, to allow true romance for whoever we love to find each of us. We crossed a bridge to walk a path toward full equality for the entire LGBT community, and the efforts of millions of its members and allies for the past fifty years were validated and rewarded.

    It was a day of rejoicing for Teresa and me in our home; we were beside ourselves with an emotional high as the breaking news unfolded on the television before our very eyes. To hear a Gay Men’s Chorus sing our national anthem outside the building in Washington, D.C. where history was being made brought chills and tears to our eyes. We savored the moment together.

    But the celebration was cut short by the next four hours of the television coverage of the funeral of the Reverend Clementa Pinckney, one of the Emanuel Nine slain in his church in Charleston, South Carolina the week before when he was leading a Bible Study group at the church. The celebration of his life was a long one for a man who had lived the relatively short life of only forty-one years. But this man’s life had counted for more than his years.

    He began preaching at the age of thirteen and was a pastor at eighteen years of age. The men and women who reflected on Reverend Pinckney’s life did so with exuberance and humor as they told their personal stories of interacting with him as friends, family and co-workers. The picture that emerged was that of a good man who loved his family and his church and his state with its flawed history of mistreatment to the black community. He was a man on a mission to make life better for those who felt they had no voice to speak about their basic needs of food and shelter. He was a man who cared and strived to make a difference.

    He was murdered by a man who had a reckless way of living and a disregard for the sanctity of human life. He was murdered by a man who was taught to hate the color black as a skin color in a society too often divided by colors and creeds and labels. We need to change our reckless way of living as a people.

    We need to open our eyes and our hearts to see glimpses of truth, as the old hymn admonishes. Open our eyes that I may see glimpses of truth thou hast for me. And may we not just see the truth, but may we speak and act as though the truth is important because it is. When our eyes are opened, for example, to the pain the Confederate Flag flying on the public state house grounds inflicts on a daily basis to many of our citizens, we must make every effort to take it down. We must speak up and act out.

    President Obama spoke in his eulogy about the grace that each of us has from God, but that none of us earned. Regardless of our concept of God, we know grace is unmerited favor. We live in a country of contrasts and  sometimes conflicts, but for those of us to whom grace has been given, we are compelled to share this bounty with everyone we encounter – whether they agree or disagree with us in our political ideals. This is harder to practice than preach. Reverend Clementa Pinckney both preached and practiced grace  in his life as he crossed another kind of bridge – a bridge that we will all cross at some point.

    The tragedy of his untimely crossing took Teresa and me on a roller coaster of emotion as we watched the funeral yesterday. From the euphoria of the Supreme Court ruling early in the morning to the depths of despair as we remembered the losses of the Emanuel Nine during the funeral of Reverend Pinckney to the stirring tribute filled with hope by President Barak Obama that raised our spirits once again to believe in the possibility of grace; we crossed over two bridges in one day that we will never forget. Patti Page had none of this in mind when she sang her love song in 1954, but I’d like to  think my mother would be happy to know her music inspired more than a little girl’s learning to carry a tune.

     

     

  • The Charleston Massacre


    The Sandy Hook Elementary School, Newtown, Connecticut. An army training center in Fort Hood, Texas.  The Washington, DC Navy Yard. A movie theater in Aurora, Colorado.  The Sikh Temple in Oak Creek, Wisconsin. Tucson, Arizona and the resilience of Rep. Gabby Giffords. An immigration center in Binghamton, New York. Geneva County, Alabama. Seal Beach in Orange County, California.  Mother Emanuel AME Church, Charleston, South Carolina.

    Massacre. Mass slaughter, indiscriminate killing, mass murder, mass execution – all of these are words that define massacre according to the Oxford American Thesaurus.

    Today as President Barak Obama addressed the country on national television, he did so for the fourteenth time in his presidency to try to offer words of comfort to a bereaved community and a bewildered country in the midst of the horrors of massacres within our own borders. To borrow a phrase from a former American President, Franklin D. Roosevelt who was speaking one day after the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1945, today is a “date which will live in infamy.” Yesterday in a sister city in the lowcountry of our state, the unspeakable happened; and we joined the names that will live in infamy in this country and around the world for years to come.

    I have watched President Obama in these televised messages to the nation on too many occasions, and I was usually struck by the powerful personal images of hope and comfort that he offered. Today, however, I witnessed an additional layer of anger and frustration as he once again spoke about our lack of ability as a nation to give up our guns. I saw a President whose hair is almost totally snow-white and a man whose face looks much older than his years. I wondered if this president’s legacy was going to be Paul Newman’s Cool Hand Luke’s character’s classic lines: What we have here is a failure to communicate.

    We have a President who rode into town as a new sheriff committed to compromise who found a posse determined to derail him. They just never mixed. And gun control? Well, that has always been just some people talking.

    We grieved for the massacres in the east and the west and states in-between. We truly grieved for these losses and for the families and friends that lost people they loved…people they never even had an opportunity to say goodbye to. But the closer the tragedies are – and this one couldn’t be much closer since the suspect is from the greater Columbia metropolitan area – the deeper the anguish and the anger.

    The world continues to rotate on its axis, but it seems slightly tilted to me. We are off track somehow. We have taught falsehoods to our children through our messages at home in the words we speak and the silences we allow. For example, it’s okay to hate people who are different from us. Nelson Mandela said we are not born hating, and he was right. We learn to hate as surely as we learn to ride a tricycle. Our parents teach us to hate. Our friends encourage us to be bullies. Our heroes send us conflicting images of who the good guys and bad guys are. We have national leaders in highly visible positions who don’t play well together in their houses of Congress. Shame on you. Shame on me for re-electing you year after year to continue cycles of contention and confrontation.

    And so tonight I am in mourning for the survivors of The Charleston Massacre, and I find no words to adequately express my sorrow for them, for their church family, for the city of Charleston, for my state and for my nation.

    Like my President, I fear for our future.

     

  • Call for Submissions: Second Annual Cyberspace Awards for Memorable Quotes


    Well, it’s that time of the year again – time flies when you’re having fun – a penny saved is a penny earned.

    Aha! We are off and running for the Second Annual Cyberspace Awards for Memorable Quotes. Who can ever forget the excitement of last year’s contest with its fabulous quotes that became internationally applauded through the power of  infinite cyberspace…

    I have made a slight change this year – we now have TWO Categories of Awards. In addition to our Most Memorable Quotes Category, I have added Most Memorable Quotes on Tombstones as a result of Jim Blanton’s infamous hilarious tombstone supplemental sayings in last year’s contest.

    Rule Review: Sorry to say but there will be no Cash Awards again this year. Unfortunately, the cash designated for the awards this year has been paid to a variety of special causes which include me, Teresa and our three needy dogs. There’s always next year.

    Deadline: June 30th. And I see I am giving an additional ten days notice for everyone to be putting on their thinking caps since some criticism arose over last year’s short notice.

    Please send your submissions to my very secret email address: smortex@aol.com.

    If you are submitting to both categories, please designate which is which.

    The top ten Quotes in each category will be selected by the same judge as our previous contest – that would be me. I will publish the Top 10 winners in this blog within a very respectable time frame.

    To get everyone started, I will share a couple of quotes I read recently in a little book of quotes entitled Reflections on Life and Living by James A. Williamson.

    There is more to life than increasing its speed.  (Gandhi)

    It is not wise to underestimate a so-called heathen.

    It is never too late to begin.

    And with that thought, I urge you to get those Quotes coming in!!

    PS. No repeats from the previous year, please.

     

     

  • Knock Knock – who’s there? The Irish, that’s who


    Irish Senator David Norris is a controversial politician who is often called the father of Ireland’s gay rights campaign spanning the past forty years. He is seventy years old and yesterday he lived long enough to see his nation become the first country to vote in a national referendum to support legalizing same-sex marriage. 1.2 million people voted yes with fewer  than 750,000 voting no. That officially makes it a landslide of 62.1%.  Senator Norris had a few words for us while he celebrated:

    “The people in this small island off the western coast of Europe

    have said to the rest of the world: 

    This is what it is to be decent, to be civilized,

    and to be tolerant!

    And let the rest of the world catch up!”

    In 1993 Ireland was the last European Union country to remove the laws that made homosexual activities illegal, but in what is now being called a social revolution, it is the first to take a stand on the right side of history for fairness and equal treatment of all of its citizens. To put this in religious context, “The last shall be first, and the first shall be last.”

    I am a negative nabob about cyberspace, or as my friend Curtis told me he heard an older woman call it the “interweb,” but I have to say I much prefer a revolution fueled by social media like texting and tweeting to one achieved by guns and drones.

    Knock knock, who’s there?

    I’m hoping it’s the Supremes in a few weeks on this side of the pond.

    Tomorrow is Memorial Day for us in the United States. It ‘s a time when we remember the sacrifices made by so many in our military families to preserve not only our own freedom and borders but to also defend the rights of freedom lovers around the world. I doubt there is a family in America that hasn’t been touched by military service.

    I know my father believed he fought in WWII for those he loved – and for values that included guarantees of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.  We are a nation that struggles to define and implement those values, but we have an opportunity to make a major statement that will open doors very soon as our Supreme Court renders an opinion that will affect equal treatment for all citizens in who we love and choose to marry.

    Ireland has set the example – now is the time for America to catch up.