Looking Back: The Past Decade

Looking Back: The Past Decade

I’ve decided over the remaining days of 2019 to share some of my posts from the past decade.

It’s kind of interesting to look back in the archives at what was written and when.

In January 2010 Haiti experienced a devastating earthquake which affected lives forever.  In February we experienced the Olympics and on February 14, 2010 I blogged the following brief ditty in referencing both the Olympics and the earthquake.

 

The Olympics have begun…

and does anyone really care?  Especially when lives are lost…

In March of the same year I blogged:

 

The House Makes History

and the Health Care Reform Bill has been passed.  The motion to kill the bill was not passed and they are currently voting on changes to the bill.

It’s too bad this bill won’t do anything about all the quacky doctors practicing out there…

And ten years later Republicans are still trying to take our healthcare away from us.  This is as far as we’ve gotten in ten years?

In the sports world….

On July 9, 2010 I wrote:

And “King” James Goes To

Miami.  Whoop-dee-doo.  And he needed an hour show to reveal that?  Let’s not think of ourselves as greater than thou now…

Surprising in a way, considering Miami won’t be “his” team.  Sad in a way considering it all comes down to money, money, money instead of being the leader of an up-and-coming team.  

Oh well.  “The King” can go bask in the Miami limelight and walk behind Wade all the way..

And after winning two championships there and then one back in Cleveland, he currently suffers in LA…

And on August 4, 2010 I wrote:

The “Best” is Coming to Boston

I never thought I’d see the day…Shaq wearing the green?  Well, he is Irish so he’ll fit in just fine…

Ah, the Shaq days were brief but fun…I actually like him better in all the commercials he does.

More to come….

 

 

You Can’t Just Switch Christmas Off

You Can’t Just Switch Christmas Off

For many, once December 26 hits, it’s lights out for Christmas.

No sooner is the last present opened, the last carol sung and the last Christmas movie is watched and it’s back to the old hum-drum “normalcy” of pre-Christmas days.  As if Christmas never even happened.

Not for me.  I try to make it last as long as I can.  I actually make it last all year long.  Because every single day throughout the year I listen to some Christmas music.  It may not be directly on the radio, but there are several year-long Christmas channels on IHeartRadio that I listen to.  YouTube is also a good place for year-round Christmas.  I also have Spotify, Pandora, Radio.com, to name a few.  I also try to watch a different Christmas movie once a month, I stay in touch with members of various Christmas groups that I belong to and I shop for Christmas gifts year-round.

For me it’s depressing to just stop celebrating Christmas.  I can’t just switch it off until next year.  I have to gradually withdraw from it, but never fully do.  And that’s how I like it.

Christmas Memories

Christmas Memories

One event from my past that still rings clear to me today is from my junior year in high school.  I had a friend whom I will call “Cathy” (not her real name).  Cathy was a year older than me and was in the senior class.  She was also from a family much more poor than my own, which was pretty poor, since my family itself was at poverty level.

It was a few days before Christmas break and Cathy and I were sitting in the cafeteria having lunch.  The conversation turned towards Christmas.

“So, what do you think you’re getting?” I asked Cathy, knowing she probably wasn’t going to be getting much.

“Well, I did ask my folks for some oil paints and new brushes.”

Cathy was an untrained artist.  She had never had an art lesson in her life, yet she could draw just about anything freehand.

The next thing I knew I was asking her about her four brothers and what she thought they may get for Christmas.  I made a mental note of everything she told me and jotted it down in my notebook.

When I got home from school that day I was telling my mother about the conversation I had with Cathy and how I felt bad that she and her brothers probably wouldn’t be getting much.

“I’d like to do something for her,” I told my mother.

So off we went to Ames (which was my favorite department store at the time–this was LONG before my area had Walmarts!).  It’s funny because all I can remember purchasing is a bottle of Charlie perfume for Cathy’s mother and some paint brushes for Cathy.  I know we got Cathy’s father and brothers items also but I cannot recall what they were.

Then we set our plan in motion.  All the gifts were wrapped and put into trash bags and decorated the bags with bows.  We threw in some unopened boxes of Kix cereal which we had coming out of our ears, since my mother was a WIC recipient and that was the one cereal WIC recipients were able to get.

My step-father drove me out to Cathy’s house and parked about 1000 feet away from her house.  I lugged the two trash bags up Cathy’s icy driveway.  A dog barked in the distance.  Or maybe it was Roman, their black lab.  I reached the side door of their house and the outside light popped on.  My heart raced as I dropped the bags and booked it out of there, somehow managing to not fall on my ass.

On Christmas morning I got a call from Cathy.  This was not unusual, as we chatted just about every day on the phone.

“Guess what Santa brought?” she said excitedly.

I smiled.  “What?”

“Garbage bags!”

“Huh?”

She then started to laugh.  “Last night I was sitting in my room when all of a sudden Roman started barking his head off.  I looked out the window and saw the light was on near the side door.  So I went to investigate.  And there were these two trash bags.  So I yelled up the stairs ‘Okay, who’s the goober who forgot to go to the dump’?  And then I saw the bows on the trash bags.”

Thank God for the bows!

Cathy then proceeded to tell me about all the gifts that were in the bags.  She then started to cry when she mentioned getting her oil paints and brushes.

“We think it was a good Samaritan from our church,” Cathy said, in trying to guess who the do-gooder was.

“Maybe you’re just not meant to know, Cathy,” I replied.

That June Cathy graduated leaving me behind for one more year of high school.  She went on to attend college at BYU.  We kept in touch for several years but when I graduated and began working and going to college, we eventually lost touch.

But every Christmas I always think of Cathy, the friendship we had and the joy my family and I brought to her and her family one Christmas.