take 10 everyone movies, yes, need in real life who is in charge here?
It happens in movies and on TV where a group of people, all engaged in some effort, reach a point of confusion or performance or something and the person in charge yells, “take 10 everyone” and all work stops and everyone can go off to their own little corner and regain focus, think or just do nuthin.
I need that today.
I need someone in charge to yell ‘Take 10 Everyone” and I can go off in my corner and do nuthin.
In that 10 I also want my head to stop hurting.
My brain to stop thinking.
My stomach to stop churning.
My eyes to focus.
My knees stop aching.
My sinuses to clear up.
My sense of smell to come back.
Just for 10.
Just 10 for me myself.
10 what?
10 minutes I guess but I would settle for 10 seconds some days.
10 hours would be really nice but I won’t hold my breathe.
10 days, hmmmmmmm.
10 weeks, oh come on.
Just a short break.
But I want to be conscious of the passage of time.
I don’t want to close my eyes and have it be 10 minutes later.
I think that some people smoke so they can take a break and sit with a burning cigarette just to watch those beautiful trails of smoke go by as time passes.
troubles we suffer memory of pain drips in hearts so we gain wisdom
Wisdom comes through suffering. Trouble, with its memories of pain, Drips in our hearts as we try to sleep, So men against their will Learn to practice moderation. Favours come to us from gods.
― Aeschylus, Agamemnon
Aeschylus (c. 456/455 BC) was an ancient Greek tragedian. He is often described as the father of tragedy. Academics’ knowledge of the genre begins with his work, and understanding of earlier tragedies is largely based on inferences from his surviving plays. According to Aristotle, he expanded the number of characters in the theater and allowed conflict among them; characters previously had interacted only with the chorus. (Wikipedia)
Agamemnon
Aeschylus begins in Greece describing the return of King Agamemnon from his victory in the Trojan War, from the perspective of the towns people (the Chorus) and his wife, Clytemnestra. However, dark foreshadowings build to the death of the king at the hands of his wife, who was angry at his sacrifice of their daughter Iphigenia, who was killed so that the gods would restore the winds and allow the Greek fleet to sail to Troy. She was also unhappy at his keeping of the Trojan prophetess Cassandra as a concubine. Cassandra foretells of the murder of Agamemnon, and of herself, to the assembled townsfolk, who are horrified. She then enters the palace knowing that she cannot avoid her fate. The ending of the play includes a prediction of the return of Orestes, son of Agamemnon, who will seek to avenge his father. (Wikipedia)
that awful question each morning, again at noon what is in my lunch?
Before we begin let me say that I understand that the ‘awful question’ I will be discussing would be a welcome issue in much of the United States and the world for that matter.
That being said, it is an awful question.
I question I face each work day and have faced since about 1972 when I started bringing my lunch with me to Riverside Junior High School.
Not, “What is for lunch?”
But, “What is in my lunch?”
I make and pack my own lunch each morning.
I dread it.
For one thing, coffee is about the only thing I want when I get up.
Coffee is about the only thing that my stomach will stomach.
There was a time when my favorite breakfast was an ice cream sandwich.
There was a glorious period in history when Oreo Ice Cream sandwiches were available.
At my age, that just doesn’t seem appropriate, so coffee it is.
How then, with food not something I want to think about, can I make a lunch?
I watch the clock and as the minutes run out of morning, I say to myself, “Got to do it!”
At this point, all I want is to get this over with.
What is the fastest sandwich I can make?
I check the fridge.
Any cold cuts?
Cheese?
Any packable fruit?
I make an uninspired sandwich as quickly as I can.
I start with and empty cold cut container to hold the sandwich.
We save these containers and their lids for leftovers and such.
I like these better than a baggie as I have eaten too many peanut butter sandwiches that have been squashed flat.
I take the empty container and toss in a piece of bread.
Then I drop a slice of cold cuts or cheese or cold cuts and cheese or maybe spread peanut butter on it.
Then another piece of bread on top and snap on the lid.
The sandwich is done and in the lunch bag.
Now the chips or pretzels or maybe, if I am really lucky, some oreos which I put into another plastic container and into the lunch bag.
Is there any fruit?
An apple, orange or banana?
If the oranges are clementines, I pack 2.
If its a banana, I have to think if its edible.
I have to ask that question because my wife likes bananas to be light green and chewy
How she can eat an unripe banana is beyond me.
There are some days when we have leftovers.
A container of lasagna or chicken alfredo is more than lunch, its a relief that I don’t have to make anything.
Often at dinner the night before, I get excited when I see that there are leftovers for my lunch.
I will be sitting with my coffee and watching the clock move and say to myself, lunch is ready to be packed up, and I sit for one more minute with a smile for my good fortune.
I slide the container in my lunch bag.
Wrap a fork in napkin.
A plastic fork?
Well.
That just isn’t right is it.
I drop the fork into the lunch bag and seal up the Velcro flap.
Lunch is packed in my back pack.
That should clear up any mystery as to what is in my lunch bag each day but, for me, the question still nags at me.
When lunch time rolls around, which is 11AM for me, I still ask myself, “What’s in my lunch?”
I am hungry now and hopeful.
Even though, I know the answer.
I am reminded of the summer when my brother, Tim, worked in construction.
He needed at least three sandwiches a day.
But he couldn’t stand the thought of, one, having to make them, and, two, knowing what was in his lunch.
Not that he was any master of the kitchen.
I have a memory of him standing in the kitchen holding an empty water pitcher and a can of instant powdered lemonade and saying to me, “do you know how to make this?”
Anyway, my brother Tim started paying my brother Pete a dollar a day to make his sandwiches.
That lasted until there was an argument over the selection of sandwiches.
Tim wanted them all different,
Pete felt that a ham sandwich with a slice of cheese WAS different from a cheese sandwich with a slice of ham.
Couldn’t keep it in Let it go, so, let it go Turn away, slam the door
Disney song on a Monday morning?
When I was a kid, Disney songs were all pretty light hearted and happy tunes.
Whistle While You Work, Zip a Dee Doo Dah and Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious.
Light hearted, saccharine and fairly meaningless.
Got me thinking of music class Crestview Elementary School.
We had a weekly visit from a music teacher and we learned songs for the school wide spring concert.
One year, sometime in the late 19060’s, when the music teacher must have been right out of college when learned tunes from Simon and Garfunkel (59th street Bridge Song), Peter, Paul and Mary (Leaving on Jet Plane) and Bob Dylan (Blowing in the wind).
I guess it was a bit much for the school board and the next spring we sang Lets Go Fly a Kite and Chim Chim Cher-ee from Mary Poppins.
But I digress.
I have heard this song for years.
I never seen the movie, but my a lot of my grand children’s toys play it over and over again.
While there is much discussion to the meaning of this song and the role its plays in the movie and what is portrayed as an allegory, it is the phrase, let it go, that sticks in my mind.
Recent news from family up north has put choices of life and death into focus.
So many things, issues, hurts and concerns lose their importance when the either – or of life and death are truly in mind.
Let it go.
Slam that door.
But that leaves the question, what does matter here on earth?
Assuring yourself of a salvation throughout eternity stands out.
But what about the here and now.
What matters?
I was stuck by a passage this passage of prose.
“… there does come a point in life where a great deal that used to worrisome simply becomes easier. It is surprising how easy life can get. A man and a woman look at each other across the breakfast table and realize it’s been a long time since they’ve had bad feelings about each other, these two who’ve gone through rough patches when big arguments could come up suddenly out of nowhere that left them emotionally drained and sorrowful for days, and now it feels as if they’ve turned a corner found something easy, a simple pleasure in each other, in their domestic arrangements, in their mutual life …”
Garrison Keilor, Life Among the Lutherans, Augsburg Books, 2009 (Church Organist, Page 77)
will work tomorrow John kanaka kanaka but not today, YAY
Why is today’s haiku taken from an old sea shanty?
Last night, the wife and I watched the movie, FISHERMANS’S FRIEND and the song stuck in my mind
ALL
NIGHT
LONG!
I heard, I heard the old man say, hey John kanaka kanaka tura yay, Today is a holiday John kanaka kanaka tura yay, Tura yay, oh, tura yay, John kanaka kanaka tura yay, We’ll work tomorrow, but not today John kanaka kanaka tura yay, We’ll work tomorrow, but not today John kanaka kanaka tura yay, Tura yay, oh, tura yay, We’re bout aaway from frisko bay John kanaka kanaka tura yay, We’re bout away the break of day John kanaka kanaka tura yay, Tura yay,…
They are reported to be the first ever commercially developed cough drop.
My daughter D’asia will tell you there are poison.
Do they work!
I offered one once to a reporter here in Atlanta just before he went on air.
“That thing near took my HEAD OFF,” he said later.
Sometime after that I came across a singing group famous for their authentic renditions of sea shantiess.
The name of the group?
Fisherman’s Friends of course.
In a world of transcripted phone calls, tweets, posts and Kardashian’s, the movie is a welcome break with a sweet story and a view towards another world.
And when the world comes crashing in on your world, well, you can always suck on a fisherman’s friend.