Love Memoir

Indian Giving

Indian Giving           One of my favorite possessions is a stone and copper outdoor statue of a reclining Socrates.  This is a life-sized Socrates, who’s draped toga is a rough field stone that is shaped just so, to look like a reclined flowing robe. Nature crafted it thus and caught the eye of the artist.  The artist attached a head, arms and feet made of copper and adding the element of realism to the subtle…

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Fiction/Humor Love

Every Picture Tells a Story

Every Picture Tells a Story There are two ways in which we acquire art. The less obvious way is that when I have bought a house (primary or secondary or, even tertiary) I am usually quite rabid about getting the place set up to be immediately useable. To me, usable means with art on the walls. That approach requires me to be a devotee of art.com, where I shop for and buy relatively inexpensive artwork…

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Business Advice Memoir

Looking Shrewd

Looking Shrewd One of the things I have learned in doing business in the Middle East is that shrewdness is a highly prized attribute. I have worked for and with Israelis. I have worked with and for Saudis. I have worked for (decidedly not with) a big-time Uzbek. I heard it said by one of these groups and maybe all of them that the greatest praise you can give a man is to tell him…

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Love Memoir

Summer’s End

Summer’s End               No matter who you are, in the United States we all know summer starts on Memorial Day and ends on Labor Day.  And the July 4th holiday is more or less mid-summer.  That’s how we roll in the good old US of A.  It doesn’t matter that colleges end in early May, and public schools end in late June.  Most colleges start in late August, but at least most public schools start…

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Fiction/Humor Love

Cogito Ergo Sum

Cogito, Ergo Sum           This morning my head is swirling with thoughts after watching a Broadway rendition of Hadestown. The show is a revival of a Greek mythological story, like so many other great tales.  The details of the myth and the story are somewhat irrelevant, but suffice to say that it does what it is supposed to do, which is to ignite thought. I imagine that the Golden Age of Greece certainly raised the…

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Politics

Cracking Up

Cracking Up           It’s falling apart for Trump…again.  How many lives can this cat have?  Is this a dead cat bounce or is he likely to rise again from the ashes and regain lost momentum?  He was getting pummeled about his handling of El Paso and Dayton (while his fellow septuagenarian, Joe Biden was getting slammed for his thoughts on Houston and Michigan…ouch!) and then the markets started to gyrate.  Out of desperation, he came…

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Love Memoir

Loving New York

Loving New York              In 1964 I made my first trip to New York City.  I may have been here before that but at age ten I can remember the visit with my mother and sisters on a visit from our home in Middleton, Wisconsin.  We drove there in our white Chrysler New Yorker, strangely enough.  We went to see the World’s Fair, which proved to be especially significant to my view of the future…

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Politics

The Empty Chair

The Empty Chair           We now have the iconic symbol of the Trump presidency.  As we have all seen, Trump chose to absent himself from the G-7 meeting on Global Climate Change.  He literally was a no-show, leaving an empty chair at the roundtable of world leaders.  There are several ways to interpret this phenomenon.  To begin with, there are a series of empty chair metaphors.  I suppose it is possible that as a student…

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Memoir Politics

The Eisenhower Cohort

The Eisenhower Cohort           General Dwight David Eisenhower (a.k.a. Ike) was Supreme Commander of the Allied Expeditionary Forces throughout its existence.  That is when we all know he guided the efforts of Operation Overlord 75 years ago and pushed for the reclamation of continental Europe from the clutches of the fascist Nazi war machine. The books and stories that recount those daring days are plentiful and we have almost all seen some version of the…

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