Wednesday, January 28, 2009

AAARRRRGGHHH

Quote from a news article, the topic of which is the dramatic decline in auto sales:

"“It’s done a 360. I don’t think anyone was prepared for it,” Morgan said."

Well, GREAT! If it's done a 360, then it's gone in a complete circle! Things are now booming just as much as they were when the circle started, right?

You meant "IT'S DONE A 180"; meaning it's now the exact opposite of what it was before.

Position markers

There are markers everywhere that tell us about things.

There are markers on the highways that tell you how many miles this point on the Interstate is from its western or northern state border; there are markers that tell you "Houston 100" or "Austin City Limits".

There are markers on the oven dial to tell you what temperature you're setting; there's another "marker" called a timer that dings after a certain amount of time to tell you it's ready.

The major markers are "Milestones"; the original Milestones were exactly that; stones the Romans placed every mile to tell you where you were. Now we use that term to describe certain major markers: our 50th birthday, a Presidential Inaugural, etc. Some of them are important enough to be recognizable simply by the date itself: December 7, 1941; November 22, 1963; December 6, 1969; September 11, 2001.

Then there are the MINOR markers, the cultural ones. I have a theory (aren't you surprised?).

When a new thing is introduced, it goes through phases:

First, you have the early adopters---the brave ones on the cutting edge, who try some brave new technology or food or style.

Then (marker) the item is picked up by some news outlet or other, or just starts spreading through the population. This is when the item is still restricted to people who are innovative (though not crazy-try-anything, like the early adoptors.)

This is when the item is considered "COOL".

Now that it's "COOL", the early adopters begin dropping out, heading for the next new thing.

Then (marker) the item becomes widespread through the population, and "COOLNESS" begins to wane a bit, while popularity is at an all-time high. SATURATION is reached and the "Cool kids" start heading for whatever the early adopters are doing NOW.

Finally, (GRAVE marker) the item arrives at Wal-Mart and/or the Manufactured Housing Association (nothing wrong with manufactured housing, just saying...).

So, you'll have a certain, say, style of furniture. The early adopters start it (they're in Architectural Digest). It's picked up by the "Cool Kids", and suddenly there are spreads on it in the newspapers or the magazines and it's carried by your local Haverty's.

Finally, the style shows up in the furniture section of Wal-Mart and in mobile homes. It's at that marker that you know: the style is DEAD DEAD DEAD.

*************************************

What's the point of this little exercise?

Facebook.

It started out as JUST college kids FOR college kids (it replaced the Freshman Annual, for those of us old enough to remember those) at one or two campuses. They were early adopters and it rocked.

Then it went widespread on all the college campuses and it was COOL.

Now it's at mass-market stage. You can tell because all of my age group has discovered it.

It's one foot out of the grave! ;-)

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Politics and Religion

If you want to have and keep friends, it's better to just leave the subjects of Politics and Religion alone.

Monday, January 19, 2009

I am thrilled

I am thrilled, and delighted, and elated, and excited, and otherwise pumped about the fact that on Tuesday, January 20, 2009, we will swear Barack Obama in as the 44th President of the United States.

The obvious fact that Mr. and Mrs. Obama and their two beautiful daughters are African-American speaks volumes about where we are now as a country. The fact that Nathan's (and Kathy's sons', and the entire Millenial Generation's) views on the subject are NOT that we've got a black President, but that we have an excellent lawyer, Harvard Law grad, highly intelligent, seemingly competent, articulate (something that has certainly been lacking these last 8 years....) gentleman as President---that's a very exciting thing.

We're turning the page.

When I was a boy going to see my grandparents in Malvern, Arkansas, Malvern was basically "Mayberry". We were all influenced heavily by The Andy Griffith Show, and Malvern seemed to me (being raised on Air Force Bases) to be "Mayberry". I'll never forget as long as I live, walking downtown to the Bank (where Grampy was President) and passing the barber shop. There was this old black gentleman (no idea what his name even was! But he knew ME!) who, every time I'd pass, would say, "Mawnin, Mister Nick!" I always returned the greeting, but one day I stopped and said, "Sir, you shouldn't call me "Mister", I should call YOU "Mister"---I was honestly confused, he was older than me and I respected my elders!). He said, "Naw, suh, I'm nigh 70 year old, and you's white. You's Mistuh Nick and ah's (name, which I have shamefully forgotten)." Well, I couldn't figure that one out, but ok....

How far we've come. And a damn good thing, too.

I am so glad that we've got a man the caliber of Barack Obama taking the reigns. I feel much more confident, even though his task is heavy. I'm glad it's him and not me; I'm not nearly smart enough to cope with the challenges we face.

The Texas State Song actually is appropriate here (paraphrased):

God Bless You, Mr. Obama, and keep you brave and strong!

May God give him the discernment to make the difficult decisions that face us; May God give the lovely Michelle Obama the grace to stand the pressures of Presidential life; may God keep the two beautiful little girls in the palm of His Hand.

TURN THE PAGE. A NEW DAY DAWNS. THE TORCH PASSES.

Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men.

Sunday, January 4, 2009

What an amazing weekend


Leroy's death was pretty traumatic to all of us who were involved with him. What's fascinating is just how large a number that was. Leroy had touched literally thousands of people during his life. He was one of those incredible, rare people who really was close friends with thousands of people. Each individual became his personal project, to be loved on, corrected when necessary, doted upon, supported. Each one of us had an individual relationship with him.

This weekend, we all came together in San Antonio to celebrate his life. Leroy was cremated and has already been interred in First Presbyterian Church's columbarium, so this was literally the Celebration.

Many of us arrived Friday night and went to Mi Tierra's (Leroy's favourite Mexican restaurant in a town full of them.) Leroy loved him some Mi Tierra's. How he maintained his slender shape I'll never understand; the only explanation is the incredible amount of energy he had. He never sat still, he was always DOING something.

The pictures are on my facebook page and can be found in my Picasa albums here.

It's funny---when you really are truly close friends with people, you can go 35 years without seeing each other and pick up your conversations with the very words you left them off with (I know, grammar; sue me). That was certainly the story at Mi Tierra's as we all hugged, cried, told funny stories, laughed ourselves sick, ate ourselves sicker, and wound up (ONCE AGAIN! SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE!) getting kicked out of the restaurant for (a) being too loud (b) taking their tables for too long and (c) being general nuisances. I can proudly state that we have been kicked out of restaurants literally worldwide for these same offenses---we were just much younger.

I stayed with my lifelong friends the McCarty's, and can report that the couch sleeps as well now as it did when I was 16.

This morning, Robert and I picked up our old buddy Keith at the airport, ate lunch at EZ's (San Antonio institution), and headed down to First Pres.

I should probably explain that we all met in Leroy's youth choir, the Mainstream. There were other groups, the Majority and The Sound Foundation, but we were ALL in the Mainstream. We had 125 people in a church youth choir!

When we arrived at First Pres, there was a movement afoot for us to sing two of the songs Leroy wrote (well, wrote one and arranged one). Many of us were -very- apprehensive about this, having not sung together for 35 years and some having not sung SINCE we last sang together (I was in church choirs for 25 years). We were to sing at the reception (maybe). Rehearsal was, um, -GULP-.

On to the Celebration.

Simply, it was the best "funeral" I've ever attended. The music (carefully selected and planned by Leroy himself) was flawless, executed flawlessly. The speakers had many interesting things to say; one made a particularly good point: many ministers of music/choir directors/church musicians are in it for the beauty of the music, or the aggrandizement of themselves. Leroy was a MINISTER who USED music as the medium to touch other people's lives. The fact that he demanded excellence and gave excellence himself was a by-product.

We were touched when Mike Fanning (son of our old Pastor, Buckner Fanning)(Mike is our contemporary; knowing what I know about some of his dates, his Baylor experience, and some of the things we did while there, it's hard to think of him as DR. Michael B. Fanning, pastor of his own church now and well-known middle-east expert, fluent in Greek and Hebrew, and respected member of the community). In any event, we were especially touched when Mike gave his portion, stating that he stood there representing not only his father (who had emergency eye surgery yesterday or he'd have been the one standing there), but also US, Leroy's "kids".

We know Leroy loved all the choirs he had, and all the kids he taught---but we also know he loved us BEST (a la Tommy Smothers). Actually, Edy told me one time that that was literally true, that we were his favourites. Maybe she was just being nice...

Anyway, the Celebration was just that, a Celebration of his life. We laughed some more, cried some more. It was hard to get through "It is Well With My Soul" due to choking. The final congregational act: we stood, faced the choir (in the loft at the rear of the church) and sang (resoundingly) the Hallelujah Chorus, with brass and strings.

After the last Hallelujah, the family left and we stood to leave. The brass started up again. Leroy spent a signficant part of his life in New Orleans. We were delighted when the brass started up with "Just a closer walk with thee". I wish I'd a white handkerchief, I'd have waved it.

On to the reception. The string quartet played tastefully; there was a tremendous spread of food/snacks (all fattening and carby), and literally thousands of people. We all visited and enjoyed---until the quartet quit and packed up to leave. This was the big moment.

Amazingly, as soon as we formed up, and Lee Hinson (our ol buddy Lee, who married his sweetheart Jan James; who is now DR. G. Lee Hinson, Chairman of the Music Department of Oklahoma Baptist University) raised his baton, and the pianist hit the first notes---amazingly, amazingly, we immediately were transported 35 years back in time. It was as if we had had one of Leroy's legendary practices the day before. We were a bit worried about how Edy, Melody, and Gina would take it---till I looked over and saw them, and they were obviously delighted. When we stopped, there was a thunderous round of applause and the three Yarbrough ladies rushed over and started hugging us. So there was that.

Tonight, we went to the Barn Door, a well-known steak place here. Buckner, Martha, Edy, Melody, and Gina joined us and it was magical. Once again we told stories, some funny, some serious; we sang (again, at the request of the Fannings, who weren't able to be at the Celebration due to Buckner's eye condition), we laughed, we cried, we held hands and sang Amazing Grace.

None of us were really close to our High School crowd. Oh, we had friends at school, but our real friends were at church. We couldn't wait for the weekend so we could see all our friends again.

**********************************************

You know, lightning never strikes twice, but for one more weekend we felt it.

We didn't realize this growing up, but we had a MAGICAL experience. We thought this was "just how it was" (if we thought about it at all). We never knew this would be a truly magical, once-in-a-lifetime, wonderful time. We had no idea then (really) how much we loved each other.

We have realized that now. We all just wish it hadn't taken us 35 years and a death in the family to bring us all back together.

We were blessed.



It's true! It's true! The crown has made it clear.
The climate must be perfect all the year.

A law was made a distant moon ago here:
July and August cannot be too hot.
And there's a legal limit to the snow here
In Camelot.
The winter is forbidden till December
And exits March the second on the dot.
By order, summer lingers through September
In Camelot.
Camelot! Camelot!
I know it sounds a bit bizarre,
But in Camelot, Camelot
That's how conditions are.
The rain may never fall till after sundown.
By eight, the morning fog must disappear.
In short, there's simply not
A more congenial spot
For happily-ever-aftering than here
In Camelot.

Camelot! Camelot!
I know it gives a person pause,
But in Camelot, Camelot
Those are the legal laws.
The snow may never slush upon the hillside.
By nine p.m. the moonlight must appear.
In short, there's simply not
A more congenial spot
For happily-ever-aftering than here
In Camelot.