6.26.2026 – all the summer world

all the summer world
was bright fresh – brimming with life
music at the lips

Saturday morning was come, and all the summer world was bright and fresh, and brimming with life. There was a song in every heart; and if the heart was young the music issued at the lips. There was cheer in every face and a spring in every step. The locust-trees were in bloom and the fragrance of the blossoms filled the air.

From The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain (Hartford, Conn: American Publishing Co., 1884).

I am keeper of the calendar where I work and we keep the next three months of those big desk calendar pages pinned to the wall with significant dates marked up.

I took down June today (as the last week of June is also on the July page) and put up September.

I outlined the important dates of Labor Day, 1st day of NCAA football and 1st day of NFL season and marked the ‘end’ of the summer season here on the Island where I work.

I thought about and thought that something was missing and I noticed I had not included the back to school dates for the area.

This is important for us as it marks the end of the family vacation cycle for the summer.

I looked up the dates for the South Carolina county where we are and the neighboring Georgia County.

Beaufort County, South Carolina starts school … on August 7th.

On a Friday!

Chatham County, Georgia starts school on Monday, August 3rd.

I do not want to get into the school year and extended fall breaks discussion or how if you want to have weeks of High School Football playoffs and still end your football season on Thanksgiving weekend you need to start school earlier and end earlier.

I want to talk about my summer as a kid at Crestview Elementary school in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where I grew up.

We would get out early in June.

Looking at a calendar for June, 1967, when I was in 2nd grade, most likely we got on around June 15th or 16th.

I do remember that Memorial Day was, 1) a day off from school and, 2) a day off anywhere in the week as it was May 30th and if it happened to fall on a Saturday or Sunday, that was too bad.

After Memorial day, there would be another 2 weeks of school in hot rooms with no one able to concentrate on any type of school work.

It was during these two weeks that at some point I would put on my most saddest, mournful face and walk up to the teacher’s desk and ask about final report cards.

I would say, “Guess I’ll be seeing you next year,” and shuffle away.

Somehow I was always passed to the next grade.

The only thing that happened in that last two weeks was field day.

To us kids, field day was the Super Bowl, World Series and Olympics all rolled into one and I thought it was the only one held anywhere in the world.

It wasn’t until years later that I was reading a book about WW2 POW camps in Germany where British soldiers would organize a yearly field day in the spring.

About the same time I also came across lots of references of any number of books and short stories that took place at boarding schools and colleges where field day was a fixture in the schedule.

It had all the great events like standing broad jump, vertical high jump, soft ball throw and running.

And here’s the thing.

Everyone was in it.

No one was left out.

And …

AND … at the end of the day, little medals would be handed out to the winners.

THERE WERE NO PARTICPATION AWARDS!

It was do or die on your own except for the last event which was a relay race between mixed gender teams selected from each grade, 1st thru 6th.

It wasn’t a 100 yard dash or even a 60 yard dash but a dash for as long as lanes could be laid out in the big field behind the school.

As I remember it, someone from the City parks and recs would show up and a race track was laid out with white chalk lines.

The only competition in this relay race was if the 5th grade might pull off the upset and win over the 6th but otherwise those big 6th graders always won.

I always approached field day with enthusiasm and and a level excitement.

I could imagine winning a ribbon or two or, maybe … all of them.

There is an episode of The Andy Griffith Show were little Opie day dreams about winning so many ribbons at field day, they have to turn him around to pin more on his back.

Boy! Howdy! but could I relate to Opie.

Then Field Day would come and it always seemed to be a hot day.

Our playground field was grass but a grass of a kind that didn’t grow anywhere else in my world.

It was sparse and wide blades and prickly and when you ran on it, more dirt and dust came up out of the ground in a way that didn’t happen on any other grass anywhere else that I knew of.

The dirt had a sweet sickly smell to it.

On a hot day with hundreds of kids running around, a cloud of gray hovered about six inches off the ground and your shoes and socks turned an odd dirty gray.

I also remember that in that day and age, no shorts were allowed so we were all wearing long, hot slacks as blue jeans weren’t allowed yet either.

It was hot and stuffy and smelly.

From enthusiastic anticipation I became more and more anxious.

Thinking first what am I doing here to thinking HOW DO I GET OUT OF HERE.

The events would start and I would take my turn and though I might jump kind of high or through my softball kind of far there was always a Don Gagnon or Ross Dornon who jumped higher or throw farther.

It wasn’t humiliation because so many other kids where at my level but every once in a while someone like Donny Gray would go nuts and unleash some super jump or record softball throw and take home a medal.

It didn’t take long for the magic and excitement of field day to wear off and all I wanted was for it to be over.

The relay race would be run and we would all be herded into the gym for the Awards Ceremony but we all had a chance to line up at the drinking fountain from the sink in our classrooms.

The lower EL classrooms also had a small restroom and after looking at the long line at the sink, I went into the restroom and cupped my hands under the sink in there to get a drink.

Which I thought was pretty smart and biblical (thinking of Gideon and his 400 men who drank water from the stream with a cupped hand) and I did this for years until someone caught me and yelled “Mike’s drinking bathroom water!”

Off to the gym to here the names yelled out for kids to come up and get their ribbons.

I could have listed them before we started.

They all would have been those big kids in school.

When you were a little kid, you knew who the big kids were and you knew the law of the jungle.

This was their day.

At least my name wasn’t Opie.

But my day was coming, that last day and when that last day came, it was usually a half day.

Our desks would be empty.

The blackboards were clean.

Because it was spring the windows would be open and the rooms smelled better then they did the rest of the year.

Our gym shoes that hung from our desk seats would have been brought home which also might have contributed to the cleaner smell.

There was nothing we had to do, that final bell would ring and summer would start.

We knew we had the rest of the month of June.

And we had the entire month of July.

And we had the entire month of August.

And somewhere in the far far future, away in September, after some holiday called Labor Day, we would have to be back in school.

But until then, there was NOTHING we had to do.

It was summer break and it seemed like we were off the entire summer and all the summer world was bright and fresh, and brimming with life.

There was a song in every heart; and if the heart was young the music issued at the lips.

There was cheer in every face and a spring in every step.

The locust-trees were in bloom and the fragrance of the blossoms filled the air.

Freedom.

A freedom you don’t get to experience too often.

I looked at those school schedules today and I thought August 3rd? August 7th?

Those poor kids.

A modern view of our playing field. The playground and basketball courts are new and we didn’t have soccer nets in those days.

The run down ball diamond is gone.

But that grass and the dirt is still there and I can smell and feel the heat and drama of field day.

6.25.2026 – daily dawns – summer

daily dawns – summer,
winter, spring, and fall — I’m a
fool to rise at all!

Daily dawns another day;
I must up, to make my way.
Though I dress and drink and eat,
Move my fingers and my feet,
Learn a little, here and there,
Weep and laugh and sweat and swear,
Hear a song, or watch a stage,
Leave some words upon a page,
Claim a foe, or hail a friend—
Bed awaits me at the end.

Though I go in pride and strength,
I’ll come back to bed at length.
Though I walk in blinded woe,
Back to bed I’m bound to go.
High my heart, or bowed my head,
All my days but lead to bed.
Up, and out, and on; and then
Ever back to bed again,
Summer, Winter, Spring, and Fall—
I’m a fool to rise at all!

Inscription for the Ceiling of a Bedroom by Dorothy Parker as published in Enough Rope (New York: Boni & Liveright, 1926).

This from the woman who famously would yell What Fresh Hell is This? anytime the phone rang.

Try that at work some day, I betcha!

High my heart, or bowed my head.

All my days but lead to bed.

I just wish I wouldn’t start thinking about it an hour after I get to work.

I mean, if I went right home and went to bed when I wanted to, I would miss my after dinner nap.

I start looking forward to that as soon as I get up each day.

6.24.2026 – morally and

morally and
intellectually and
politically

Readers of this blog will know that I bemoan that I started this haiku nonsense to recognize word play and use of words and not as an avenue to point out the shortcomings of the man currently in the high office of president.

While that is a short and easy avenue to take, I do want to return to my roots and recognize the word play in the NYT Opinion piece, If You Love America, Cringe for It by Bret Stephens.

Mr. Stephens is a NYT contributor who takes part in a weekly piece called the conversation where he takes the conservative view of things in a conversation with another writer, Frank Bruni, who takes the liberal view side and they converse and write up their conversation as a column.

For today, Mr. Stephens did not need a liberal view to counter to write If You Love America, Cringe for It.

His feelings did not need a conversation with a liberal to show themselves and he did with marvelous word choices when he wrote:

To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe — morally, aesthetically, intellectually, politically. If the administration were a play or film script, it would be neither farce nor tragedy but instead a kind of absurdist travesty, “Waiting for Godot” meets “Pulp Fiction” meets “Dumb and Dumber.”

Lets take that paragraph apart.

That first sentence first.

To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe.

(Remember the scene in the movie Amadeus when the Emperor wants Mozart to write an Opera in German and his Director of the State Theater say … But not German, I beg your Majesty! Italian is the proper language for opera. All educated people agree on that. Too which the Emperor replies, ‘ahaaa’.)

Once again that first line, To exist as a sentient American in the age of Trump is to live in a perpetual cringe and I admit that would eliminate most of his followers. I mean, define sentient?

The Merriam-Webster online dictionary says, “capable of sensing or feeling conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling.”

So to exist as an American capable of sensing or feeling, conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling, certainly excludes anyone who supports this guy.

Then live in a perpetual cringe.

Yes! That so perfectly describes life since George W. Bush described the 2016 Inaugural Screech as That’s Some Weird Shit!

I have lived in a perpetual state of cringe since then and let me tell you, its taking a toll!

What might he do next?

What might he NOT do next?

What might he say next?

What might he NOT say next?

CRINGE!

Then the wonderful word choice, like battleships majestically steaming through a harbor.

Morally!

Aesthetically!

Intellectually!

Politically!

BOOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM!

Sadly it is …

Morally!

Cringe!

Aesthetically!

Cringe!

Intellectually!

Cringe!

Politically!

Cringe!

Mr. Stephens then states: For 10 years, I’ve watched my former political party work overtime not to cringe; to pretend that the Vesuvius of verbal infamies erupting daily from Trump’s mouth is either unimportant, or hilarious, or calculating and shrewd.

Republicans turned their tolerance for the president’s mental goo into a shot-drinking contest — the more you drank, the manlier you were supposed to be.

John McCain and Mitt Romney refused to play, to their everlasting credit; other Republicans, less admirably, did so only after Trump had ended their political futures.

To be sure, Mr. Stephens is a Republican and he brings in the other party writing:

But for 10 years, too, I’ve also watched the president’s opponents fail to appreciate the necessity of cringing — by understanding their role in Trump’s rise.

The Democrats and their media enablers who, until June of 2024, insisted Joe Biden was fit for a second term (surely knowing, somewhere in the dim recesses of their minds, that this could only help Trump) are complicit.

So are the progressives who, on one cultural issue after another, shoved the Democratic Party so far to the left that it became the very caricature of what MAGA-world said it was.

Not sure I can hold with that entirely but here is the problem.

We cannot afford the luxury of pointing out who is more to blame for where we are now.

We are all in this together.

Its the Americans capable of sensing or feeling, conscious of or responsive to the sensations of seeing, hearing, feeling against those folks who are out searching for the whoever vandalized the reflecting pool in Washington and don’t let anyone tell you different.

No time to point fingers.

No time to try for the high ground between members of the Americans capable of sense.

As Mr. Lincoln said, We must disenthrall ourselves, and then we shall save our country. We — even we here — hold the power, and bear the responsibility.

6.23.2026 – their trust is broken

their trust is broken
it is the nation’s chief threat
to the rule of law

Based on the NYT Opinion piece, A Malicious Chapter in the History of American Justice by David French (NYT 6-21-2026) where Mr. French writes:

When I’m in my more optimistic moments, I think we’ll look back at last year as the high-water mark of Trumpism, when the combination of arrogance after Trump’s victory and the inherent authoritarianism of the Trumpist project led to a unique period of state violence and legal corruption.

And now, my optimistic self says, the justice system is reasserting itself. The combination of personal courage, legal persistence and judicial independence is preserving due process and the American system of justice.

But optimism is no cause for complacency. Federal prosecutors in Illinois may be chastened, but Todd Blanche, the man who announced the bogus prosecution of the Broadview Six in the first place, is Trump’s nominee to replace Pam Bondi as the attorney general of the United States.

If he is confirmed, expect more vindictive prosecutions. Expect more prosecutorial misconduct. And expect more federal judges (and more American citizens) to say, along with Judge Perry in Illinois, that their trust is broken.

Why? Because the Trump administration is the nation’s chief threat to the rule of law.

According to the ever faithful Wikipedia, “The attorney general’s duties and responsibilities as the chief law enforcement officer of the federal government include overseeing the United States Department of Justice, enforcing federal laws, and providing both formal and informal legal advice and opinions to the president of the United States, the cabinet, and the heads of executive departments and agencies.”

Let’s put those thoughts togther shall we?

The Trump administration is the nation’s chief threat to the rule of law.

The Attorney General is the chief law enforcement officer of the federal government.

As bizarre as it is that those two statements really exist in to the current world, I am as confounded to the point of disbelief and despair that there is a significant portion of the nation’s population that does not see any problem between the two statements.

Somewhere those founding fathers, Jim Madison and Al Hamilton and all those guys are sitting around a pool sipping beer and saying to one another, ‘… something went wrong here.”

I would say to them, our trust is broken guys, and it’s not on you.

6.22.2026 – inevitable

inevitable,
immutable law, every
thing he touches … dies

It was back in 2018, in his book, Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever (New York: Free Press, 2018), Rick Wilson wrote:

I can’t tell you everything the next two years hold, but I can tell you a few things I’ve learned on the road this year.

First, Trump inspires the worst in some people and the best in most people.

For every scumbag alt-Reich stain on the Republic, for every pipe-bomber or synagogue-shooter, he’s inspired 10,000 more people willing to be the Americans we should be: connecting, talking, knocking on doors, volunteering, and lifting people a little higher.

He’s inspired people from vastly different ideological backgrounds to try to fumble our way toward an understanding that the United States still deserves saving, and so we’ll fight out the ideological policy battles later.

The second thing I know is now approaching the status of an immutable, proven, and inevitable law: Everything Trump Touches Dies.

I didn’t really question the concept when I first heard this back in 2018.

Eight years later, the views of the Reflecting Pool in Washington, DC on life support really brought it home.

It IS 100% true!

Everything Trump Touches Dies.

And I still feel, the United States still deserves saving.