Friday, September 29, 2023
Coyotes, raccoons, and foxes, oh my….
Wednesday, September 27, 2023
Our Youtube channel: Who wants to watch old people dance to old music?
We started it a few months ago, posting videos of us dancing to oldies.
We can't believe how many people have watched these videos and have liked them. Why would anybody take the time to watch two mid-70-year-olds dancing to old music?
Our dancing is seriously affected by our porch. It is narrow, so I, as lead, have to get Vicky in the correct position on the porch so she can show off her moves. If it was a regular dance floor, all of the moves we use could be used in any direction. So, sometimes we have to "waste" a move so I can lead Vicky to the right spot to start her next move.
Makes it more challenging, but that sort of is more fun in a way.
In addition, the porch surface is AWFUL to dance on. It's uneven, and sometimes we even trip on it.
But we don't care. We aren't professional dancers. We just want to show the joy of dancing, and the joy of dancing in one's old age.
Here is the count of visitors to our most popular dancing video, as of today. It is of Roy Orbison's In Dreams. Nobody had a voice like his. And few people had as tragic a life as he did. He lost his wife in a motorcycle accident when she ran into someone's car door who had unexpectedly opened it. He lost two children in a house fire. And he died at a young age, 52, of heart problems.
He has been gone for 35 years now. We feel like we are still honoring his talent by dancing to his beautiful music.
Five days later we have passed 20,000 views. By far the most for any of our videos. It's not even our best dance.
Five-six days later: 30,000
A week later: 40,000 views.
Saturday, September 23, 2023
Merlin is a true magician
Tuesday, September 19, 2023
Two wonderful days with Candice
For Candice’s 200 consecutive ultramarathons.
Sunday, September 17, 2023
Our Letter to the Editor about the article in The Atlantic titled "Don't let love take over your life."
The article:
Here is the article:
From the article:
"If you build a life with your relationship at the center, everything else gets pushed to the perimeter. There’s a way to maintain what I think of as “love-life balance,” to preserve your identity and autonomy while nurturing a caring partnership. Losing that balance can be damaging for a person, for a relationship, and for society."
The rest of the article elaborates on this argument.
We read this article going "wow."
Very little of the article is actually about "love." It is mostly an argument that one should cultivate a meaningful life outside of one's love interest. And to not do that is dysfunctional.
The author also makes the specious claim that to absorb yourself with your love means abandoning your "identity" and "autonomy." Really?
And is "damaging...for society."
So we wrote a letter to the editor. Won't get published (I don't think The Atlantic publishes letters to the editor), but we felt better pointing out the flaws in Faith Hill's argument.
For one thing, she never mentions something that people who fall in love want--
AND THAT IS TO STAY MADLY IN LOVE.
Look at movies, at music, at poetry. There is basically one theme: Love. Either acquired or lost. How many movies and songs are about the excitement of feeling a need for "outside" relationships?" Or about preserving "your identity and autonomy while nurturing a caring partnership?"
A "caring partnership?" That's what a marriage is? That's what falling in love and feeling the power of love is? A partnership? How many Valentines say "I want you to be in a partnership with me?" That sounds like a couple of people forming a small company together to sell shoes or something.
So, with that, here is our letter:
Wednesday, September 13, 2023
Nature gives us peace of mind
Four nights ago, while in bed, we heard a crash.
We went into the living room to figure out what had happened and saw that there was a chipmunk trapped in one of our mouse traps. They are too big to be killed by the trap, and it was strong enough to pull itself out and get behind the fireplace rock wall.
So we set some more traps and went to bed. Nothing else we could do.
Awhile later we heard another noise (scraping and clanking), and went to the living room to find the chipmunk was running around. Again, it had a trap on its leg, which it quickly got rid of.
Vicky opened the back and front doors so I could use the (vintage) yard stick to "invite" it out, while Vicky attempted to herd it towards the door. She also had our heavy gloves on so she could grab it.
If you have ever tried to coax and herd a scared, fast-as-lightning chipmunk out a door, you will know that it doesn’t work. So I proceeded to chase it around the living room while swatting and batting at it.
I was missing it by a mile, with the yardstick, but then I got lucky (or unlucky) and hit it.
I was afraid I had killed it, hoping that I had just stunned it. Why would I feel so differently about a chipmunk than if we had killed a mouse in a trap?
But I did.
So I scooted it out of the house and onto the front yard.
The next morning I found it. It was dead.
For a day or so I was really bummed out. We don't like killing any creatures. I know there is this thing called "nature" where animals are being killed all of the time for food (yes yes including by us who are carnivores). But this one seemed unnecessary, and wasteful. The chipmunk wasn't doing anything wrong.....our best guess is that it fell into the chimney and that was the first sound we heard.
Two days later, with the DEAD chipmunk in the grass in our front yard we spotted three Turkey Vultures circling overhead.
Vicky quietly staked out the most aggressive vulture for about 20 minutes...standing motionless with her camera at the ready. She took over 60 photos as the vulture surveyed it’s prey from every angle and distance.
Then it flew down to the ground and walked toward us, and the chipmunk:
And headed right for the chipmunk. What incredible eyesight these birds must have.
It made short work of the chipmunk. A minute later the Turkey Vulture had eaten it all:
Then it flew away...without even leaving a tip for its server.
I am reminded of the Alfred Lord Tennyson poem: Nature Red in Tooth and Claw.
We have fashioned our lives so we are out in nature almost every day. There is a beauty to it that is unmistakable, and which we love and need.
But it is also brutal in many ways.
In an odd way I feel slightly less bad about having killed the chipmunk, rationalizing that the Vulture also needed to eat, and that is also nature.
Sunday, September 10, 2023
Our two year Cabinversary
Today is two years since we bought our cabin and moved into our mountain home.
Here is my dear Danny “carrying” me over the threshold of our cabin two years ago.
Wednesday, September 6, 2023
Playing with our Georgia family…..
….and celebrating Emily’s first day as an Associate Professor at Rutgers University!
Every year we look forward to spending Labor Day weekend with Emily, Sean, Soren, and Sebastian. For several years when our grandsons were little, we camped close to their home at Stone Mountain. But ever since 2018 we have driven north into the mountains of Georgia stayed in the same cabin at Unicoi State Park.
This is a magnificent destination vacation spot for us, and it is now our family Labor Day celebration tradition. We get to play together all day, every day!
The first thing we always do is go tubing on the Chattahoochee River. You can be assured that with a river named Chattahoochee that it’s going to be peaceful, fun, and, at times, exciting. And that you’re going to end up off your tube and in the river!