Friday, January 31, 2014

Singing a different tune

They do it every year.

I'm talking about the birds.  As I've mentioned before, around the first two weeks of February, the birds begin singing a different song. For years, I thought I was hearing the birds that were vacationing in Florida coming back.

But I discovered that I was listening to my same old winter bird mates...only they had changed their tune.
Because they had noticed that it was getting warmer?

Nope.

It's because DAYLIGHT is beginning to get LONGER.

At least, that's what it said when I googled the internet. And that must be right because our temperatures here in Virginia (and North Carolina) have been in the single digits for at least a week. So forget the "warmer weather" theory.

The only mystery left as far as I'm concerned is WHY this happened at least a week earlier than usual this year.

Must be global warming.


-Ed

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Change of Residence

Death is simply the soul's change of residence.
-ELIZA COOK, Diamond Dust  

I found this article from  Townhall.com  (January 19, 2014) very interesting.
Being 77 years old (with a bad cold) is no doubt one of the reasons.  -Ed

And When I Die

Bruce Bialosky | Jan 19, 2014  TownHall.com

There is a subject that I don’t really think about and don’t really want to – dying. But I recently turned 60 years old and know that, not being 18 years old, dying is sooner for me than for someone that age. So I spent some time struggling with the issue.
Part of the reason I have not focused much on the subject of death is because of my religion. Sure I have had my losses -- grandparents, mother, father, brother and friends -- and as a Jew we honor our deceased loved ones with a prayer near the end of every religious service – The Kaddish. But I am thinking more about what happens to me. After all, I only know being alive in this world. Even though I am quite happy with my life and all the joys I have had, my question became: “Is this all there is?”
I spoke to a favorite Rabbi about the subject. He educated me as to why we as Jews don’t focus on an afterlife. He said many people believe that Judaism does not believe in the afterlife, but he stated they were not accurate. He said while some might believe otherwise, Judaism does believe in the afterlife though the religion focuses on life on earth and what you do while you are here. That is where the emphasis has been placed.But the Talmud speaks of “The world to come.” In essence there is a hereafter and your soul returns to God.
But that is a belief and the problem is what do we really know? I first spoke to Betty Ferrell, the author of ten books, who has been doing palliative care (in short, taking care of very sick people) for 30 years. She stated she has spent time with about 1,000 different people at or near death. Ms. Ferrell spoke of how often those people were communicating with someone from the past who had died. She had witnessed hundreds of apparent communications with people in the afterlife.
Dr. Eben Alexander
Yet that has its limited value to skeptics and gave me only marginal comfort. There are countless books about near-death experiences and people coming back from beyond describing their personal connection with the hereafter, but one has grabbed people more than anyone else – written by Dr. Eben Alexander.
Dr. Alexander has been a noted neurosurgeon for over 25 years. He was truly a man of science and not much of a religiously observant person until he had his own near-death experience which he details in his book, Proof of Heaven.
Out of nowhere Alexander contracted a rare illness. He was in a coma for a week and his loving family was being advised by his medical team (as you can imagine he had the best care one could get) that it was time to pull the plug. The part of his brain that controls his thought and emotions was gone. Then out of the blue he awoke. Over an extended period of time his full memory returned and he became fully cognizant in all aspects and has returned to his prior life.
In his book Dr. Alexander vividly describes his near-death experience and his life in the world beyond. His retention of his cross over into the afterlife is quite detailed. But the more important part of the book is what this previously non-believer did after reawakening from his coma to confirm to himself that what he remembered was not just a dream or in some other form non-real. He did a complete medical analysis and consulted with multiple experts on brain activity.He concluded that his brain was completely shut down; and, therefore, he had to be in the afterlife.
I interviewed Dr. Alexander.When asked what has changed for him since his book was published, he told me he now participates in organized religion. The heart of the interview focused on the naysayers about his account since his experience has become well-known and his book a bestseller. He stated “Critics don’t seem to have read the book.” They apparently are not citing what medical evidence Alexander presents in the book. He revisited with me his scientific efforts to disprove that he had visited the afterlife and he still concludes he cannot disprove it.
Dr. Alexander described such a wonderful existence in the hereafter I had to ask him why he came back and whether he has thought about going back to the other side. He told me that he came back and remains here because of his family and particularly his young son (he has an older son becoming a doctor) who he feels still need him.
All this has led me to examine my own thinking about what will happen to me. I know that I am healthy and look forward to many years on this planet. I have had a wonderful life and remain confident I will have many years of that same wonderful life or even better. But back to where I started -- all I know is this world and it seems such a shame that I will only have another 15, 20, or 30 years to enjoy the beauty of being – to share time with my wonderful wife, children and friends, to read books or to listen to music, to go to a Broadway musical or see a baseball game.
I don’t know if there is an afterlife, but I sure hope there is and I hope it as wonderful as what was described by Dr. Alexander. I do know that I don’t plan on finding out for a long, long while. And when I do, Laura Nyro will be my guiding light:
I'm not scared of dying,
And I don't really care.
If it's peace you find in dying,
Well then let the time be near.
If it's peace you find in dying,
And if dying time is near,
Just bundle up my coffin
'Cause it's cold way down there.
I hear that its cold way down there.
Yeah, crazy cold way down there.

Chorus:

And when I die, and when I'm gone,
There'll be one child born
In this world to carry on,
to carry on.

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Right on, Right on!

As usual, it takes the foreign press to reveal the truth!
This is from the British TELEGRAPH:

Older people do not decline mentally with age, it just takes them longer to recall facts because they have more information in their brains, scientists believe.
Much like a computer struggles as the hard drive gets full up, so to do humans take longer to access information, it has been suggested.
Researchers say this slowing down it is not the same as cognitive decline.
“The human brain works slower in old age,” said Dr. Michael Ramscar, “but only because we have stored more information over time
“The brains of older people do not get weak. On the contrary, they simply know more.”

Imagine someone who knows two people’s birthdays and can recall them almost perfectly.
“Would you really want to say that person has a better memory than a person who knows the birthdays of 2000 people, but can ‘only’ match the right person to the right birthday nine times out of ten?” said Dr Ramscar.
The study provides more than an explanation of why, in the light of all the extra information they have to process, we might expect older brains to seem slower and more forgetful than younger brains.
And researchers say some cognitive tests which are used to study mental capacity may inadvertently favour young people.
A cognitive test called ‘paired associated learning’ invites people to remember a pair of words that are unrelated like ‘necktie’ and ‘cracker.’
Studies have shown that young people are better at this test, but scientists think that older people struggle to remember nonsense pairs – like ‘necktie’ and ‘cracker’ – because they have learned that they never go together.
Prof. Harald Baayen, who heads the Alexander von Humboldt Quantitative Linguistics research group where the work was carried out said: “The fact that older adults find nonsense pairs harder to learn than young adults simply demonstrates older adults’ much better understanding of language.
“They have to make more of an effort to learn unrelated word pairs because, unlike the youngsters, they know a lot about which words don’t belong together.”
Scientists say this could explain why older people struggle to remember unusual first names.

Take THAT, young whippersnappers!  -Ed

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Long Sam


Kays Gary
Kays Gary was probably the best columnist the Charlotte Observer ever had. His columns appeared  from 1956 until he retired in 1986.One of his stories that I remember best is the one about the "nature girl" that  Tom McKnight and photographer Fletcher Davis of the Mooresville Tribune found drawing water from a well next to her family's two room cabin.  She was 16 years old, barefoot, wearing a cotton shirt tied at the waist and her father's cutoff jeans. 

 Gary picked up the story and ran with it.  The legend of "Long Sam" was born.
Long Sam


That was in 1957 and I've wondered from time to time...how Dorothy Brown's (her real name)  life turned out.

I recently found this January 2013 article by Sam Boykin published in the Lake Norman Magazine:

The first issue of Lake Norman Magazine featured a two-page spread about Mooresville resident Dorothy Brown. The 16-year-old high school dropout was propelled to instant fame in 1957 after the Mooresville Tribune ran a picture of her standing next to her family’s small shack along the Catawba River wearing a cotton shirt tied at the waist and a pair of black cutoff jeans.
Brown family 1957
The accompanying story described Brown, who was one of 10 kids, as “tall and lithe and willowy and very beautiful.” Shortly after the story appeared, Kays Gary, a columnist for The Charlotte Observer, wrote about Brown, comparing her to “Long Sam,” a comic strip character who, like Brown, was beautiful, raised in the country and wore black shorts.
The Associated Press picked up Gary’s column, and the national media was instantly smitten with the small-town “Backwoods Beauty.” She was inundated with offers from everyone from modeling agencies and clothing manufacturers to TV producers. A few weeks after the original Mooresville Tribune story, Brown traveled to New York and appeared on the “The Ed Sullivan Show.” National publications including Newsweek, Los Angeles Times and Life did stories about her.
But Brown, as the 1983 Lake Norman Magazine story recounts, didn’t care for
Ed Sullivan and Dorothy
the spotlight—she turned down requests to appear on the “Steve Allen Show” and to play a role in the Broadway musical “Li’l Abner”—and returned to Mooresville. She lived with Mooresville Tribune editor Tom McNight and his family until shecompleted high school. Charlotte businessman Ross Pruette paid for Brown to attend the Women’s College of Greensboro. After graduation she went on to teach at Idlewild Elementary in Charlotte and eventually married.
While Brown’s time in the spotlight was short-lived, both the local and national media occasionally did “Where are they now” stories about her, including The Charlotte Observer in 2003 and The Los Angeles Times in 2007. Today, Brown is 72, retired, and lives in a small house in northwest Mecklenburg County with her Chihuahua “Suzy.”
Dorothy Brown 2013


Brown says she rarely thinks about her brief flirtation with fame, but that it was a special time in her life that she will always remember. “I met some wonderful people and had some wonderful experiences,” she says. “But I like my life now. I still have some good friends left and there’s nothing more important than that.”

 I like happy endings!  -Old Ed



Read more here: http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/01/30/3822934_lake-normans-original-reality.html#storylink=cpy

Monday, January 13, 2014

Wisdom From the Web

My old friend Richard Ratcliffe  from Piedmont Junior High (he went on to Tech) sent this internet goodie:


ADULT TRUTHS

1.. Sometimes I’ll look down at my watch 3 consecutive times and still not know what time it is. 
     
2.. Nothing sucks more than that moment during an argument when you realize you’re wrong.

3.. I totally take back all those times I didn’t want to nap when I was younger.

4.. There is great need for a sarcasm font.

5.. How the hell are you supposed to fold a fitted sheet?

6.. Map Quest really needs to start their directions on # 5. I’m pretty sure I know how to get out of my neighborhood.

7.. Obituaries would be a lot more interesting if they told you how the person died.

8. I can’t remember the last time I wasn’t at least kind-of tired.

9. Bad decisions make good stories.

10. You never know when it will strike, but there comes a moment when you know that you just aren’t going to do anything productive for the rest of the day.

11. Can we all just agree to ignore whatever comes after Blu-ray? I don’t want to have to restart my collection…again.

12. I’m always slightly terrified when I exit out of Word and it asks me if I want to save any changes to my ten-page technical report that I swear I did not make any changes to.

13. I keep some people’s phone numbers in my phone just so I know not to answer! when they call.

14. I think the freezer deserves a light as well.

15. I disagree with Kay Jewelers. I would bet on any given Friday orSaturday night more kisses begin with Miller Light than Kay.

16. I wish ! Google Maps had an “Avoid Ghetto” routing option.

17. I have a hard time deciphering the fine line between boredom and hunger.

18. How many times is it appropriate to say “What?” before you just nod and smile because you still didn’t hear or understand a word they said?

19. I love the sense of camaraderie when an entire line of cars team up to prevent a jerk from cutting in at the front.

      Stay strong, brothers and sisters!


Sunday, January 12, 2014

January LDL Tuesday


Jerry Gaudet reminds us that:


In keeping with our established tradition, we will continue celebrating CHS'54 with luncheons on the second Tuesday of each month.  Here we are in the brand new year of 2014, sixty years removed from that grand time of life.  Where does the time go?
*** 
This month's "LDL" (Let's do lunch) will be held on
Tuesday, January 14, 2014, 11:30 AM
at "Jimmies" in Mint Hill.
It's important that you help spread word! Invite other classmates to come!
Even better, bring someone with you! Be sure YOU, come!

Friday, January 03, 2014

Jay Summey Passes

John O. Summey Jr.

Obituary
Be the first to share your memories or express your condolences in the Guest Book for John O. Summey Jr..

John O. Summey, Jr. CHARLOTTE - John O. Summey, Jr. passed away on December 28th in Vicksburg, MS. He was born in Asheville, NC on March 29, 1936. He graduated from Pfeiffer College with a bachelor's degree in accounting and was a CPA in the banking industry for most of his career. He is survived by his wife, Minta Summey of Charlotte, NC; daughter, J. Kipp (Tim) Parrish of Charlotte, NC; son, John G. Summey of Charlotte, NC; brother, Dan (Denise) Summey of Richmond, VA; sister, Anita Summey of Saluda, NC; and three grandchildren. A small service will be held at Saluda United Methodist Church at 132 Greenville St., Saluda, NC on Saturday, January 4th, at 12 noon. After the service, his ashes will be scattered by his family at his grandparent's burial site in Saluda, NC.
- See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charlotte/obituary.aspx?n=john-o-summey&pid=168876829&eid=sp_shareobit#sthash.n3wlpwT4.dpuf

John O. Summey Jr.

Obituary
Be the first to share your memories or express your condolences in the Guest Book for John O. Summey Jr..

John O. Summey, Jr. CHARLOTTE - John O. Summey, Jr. passed away on December 28th in Vicksburg, MS. He was born in Asheville, NC on March 29, 1936. He graduated from Pfeiffer College with a bachelor's degree in accounting and was a CPA in the banking industry for most of his career. He is survived by his wife, Minta Summey of Charlotte, NC; daughter, J. Kipp (Tim) Parrish of Charlotte, NC; son, John G. Summey of Charlotte, NC; brother, Dan (Denise) Summey of Richmond, VA; sister, Anita Summey of Saluda, NC; and three grandchildren. A small service will be held at Saluda United Methodist Church at 132 Greenville St., Saluda, NC on Saturday, January 4th, at 12 noon. After the service, his ashes will be scattered by his family at his grandparent's burial site in Saluda, NC.
- See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charlotte/obituary.aspx?n=john-o-summey&pid=168876829&eid=sp_shareobit#sthash.IKEhHbqQ.dpuf

John O. Summey Jr.

Obituary
Be the first to share your memories or express your condolences in the Guest Book for John O. Summey Jr..

John O. Summey, Jr. CHARLOTTE - John O. Summey, Jr. passed away on December 28th in Vicksburg, MS. He was born in Asheville, NC on March 29, 1936. He graduated from Pfeiffer College with a bachelor's degree in accounting and was a CPA in the banking industry for most of his career. He is survived by his wife, Minta Summey of Charlotte, NC; daughter, J. Kipp (Tim) Parrish of Charlotte, NC; son, John G. Summey of Charlotte, NC; brother, Dan (Denise) Summey of Richmond, VA; sister, Anita Summey of Saluda, NC; and three grandchildren. A small service will be held at Saluda United Methodist Church at 132 Greenville St., Saluda, NC on Saturday, January 4th, at 12 noon. After the service, his ashes will be scattered by his family at his grandparent's burial site in Saluda, NC.
- See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charlotte/obituary.aspx?n=john-o-summey&pid=168876829&eid=sp_shareobit#sthash.IKEhHbqQ.dpuf

John O. Summey, Jr. CHARLOTTE - John O. Summey, Jr. passed away on December 28th in Vicksburg, MS. He was born in Asheville, NC on March 29, 1936. He graduated from Pfeiffer College with a bachelor's degree in accounting and was a CPA in the banking industry for most of his career. He is survived by his wife, Minta Summey of Charlotte, NC; daughter, J. Kipp (Tim) Parrish of Charlotte, NC; son, John G. Summey of Charlotte, NC; brother, Dan (Denise) Summey of Richmond, VA; sister, Anita Summey of Saluda, NC; and three grandchildren. A small service will be held at Saluda United Methodist Church at 132 Greenville St., Saluda, NC on Saturday, January 4th, at 12 noon. After the service, his ashes will be scattered by his family at his grandparent's burial site in Saluda, NC.
(Charlotte Observer January 3, 2014)

John O. Summey Jr.

Obituary
Be the first to share your memories or express your condolences in the Guest Book for John O. Summey Jr..

John O. Summey, Jr. CHARLOTTE - John O. Summey, Jr. passed away on December 28th in Vicksburg, MS. He was born in Asheville, NC on March 29, 1936. He graduated from Pfeiffer College with a bachelor's degree in accounting and was a CPA in the banking industry for most of his career. He is survived by his wife, Minta Summey of Charlotte, NC; daughter, J. Kipp (Tim) Parrish of Charlotte, NC; son, John G. Summey of Charlotte, NC; brother, Dan (Denise) Summey of Richmond, VA; sister, Anita Summey of Saluda, NC; and three grandchildren. A small service will be held at Saluda United Methodist Church at 132 Greenville St., Saluda, NC on Saturday, January 4th, at 12 noon. After the service, his ashes will be scattered by his family at his grandparent's burial site in Saluda, NC.
- See more at: http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/charlotte/obituary.aspx?n=john-o-summey&pid=168876829&eid=sp_shareobit#sthash.n3wlpwT4.dpuf