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Shakespeare, lost socks and the laundromat
Being curious about the coming availability of artificial intelligence (AI), I logged in and signed up to use ChatGPT. It’s a forerunner demonstrating some of the possibilities of massive databases that can be put to use – both good and bad, or just for fun.
After logging in the OpenAI’s ChatGPT, I found that it could come up with some fun writing in different styles. Here’s one I asked and got the response below:
ChatGPT, please write a sonnet in Shakespearian style about loosing a sock in a laundromat.
Here’s the response! How would you grade this attempt?
Oh laundromat, where socks go to die
A place of spin and steam, of heat and toil
Where garments cleanse and freshen, yet one sock
Gets lost in the fray, forever to boil
In circles it goes, round and round, alone
No partner to share its fate and woes
A lonely sock, forsaken and unknown
In the abyss of the laundromat it goes
But fear not, dear sock, for all is not lost
For somewhere, a match awaits for you
A sock in need, a sock in want, at any cost
Together again, forever, sock and shoe
So laundromat, take pity on this sock
And reunite it with its long lost partner, quick!
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Day 5 of the NYT Happiness Challenge: The Importance of Work Friends
Ed note: Although retired, many of us still “work,” that is, we volunteer on committees, in our faith groups or in the community at large. A friend found there will have common loves and interests–another step in personal happiness. It’s also a reminder to put in effort to keep in touch with former work friends.
This is Day 5 of Well’s 7-day Happiness Challenge. To start at the beginning, click here.
I met one of my closest friends at a magazine I worked for years ago. At the time, she was a stranger who sat across from me in the world’s most stupendously boring meeting. I felt her looking at me, and then she rolled her eyes. I smirked. A 30-year friendship was born.
Workplace relationships are often overlooked, said Dr. Bob Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and an author of the new book “The Good Life,” but they are vital.
A 2022 report from Gallup showed that people who have a best friend at work are more engaged than those who do not. They were also more likely to innovate and share ideas, get more work done in less time and report having more fun.
Friendships with colleagues are also “aspects of our work lives that we have some control over,” Dr. Waldinger said. “They have the potential to improve our daily experience immediately, no matter what we do for a living.”
Happiness Challenge Day 5: Get closer to a colleague
This is your exercise today: Reach out to someone at work — or, if you’re a student, at school — whom you would like to know better. If you’re retired or a parent who does not work outside the home, you can still participate: Consider your “workplace” anywhere you might go regularly, whether it’s a class, an organization where you volunteer or even a coffee shop in your neighborhood.
Here are four ways to forge new workplace connections:
For someone you don’t know: One of the best ways to foster a workplace friendship is to follow up about something that a person mentioned in a meeting or a group setting, said Shasta Nelson, a friendship expert and the author of “The Business of Friendship.” “Make a note to yourself about what they mentioned,” she said, “so that a week later, you can say, ‘How did that 5K race go that you said you were going to do?’ Or, ‘I hope your daughter isn’t feeling sick anymore.’” When you follow up, Ms. Nelson said, people “are so surprised and pleased.”
For a colleague you’d like to know better: Invite them to do something casual that only takes a few minutes, along the lines of: “I need to clear my head — do you want to take a quick walk around the block with me?”
Or give them a specific, thoughtful compliment, suggested Gena Cox, an organizational psychologist and executive coach based in Clearwater, Fla. “Recently, someone sent me a note out of the blue and told me why they admired me,” she said. “I was shocked. And I will always feel closer to that colleague as a result of them doing that little thing for me.”
If someone offers you any sort of help at work, whether it’s to fix a computer issue or show you where the best snack machines are, resist the urge “to automatically refuse because you don’t want to inconvenience the person,” Ms. Nelson said. “Instead, say yes. And then be generous back, and ask if there’s something you can do to make their job easier or more fun.”
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If you work remotely: Show up early on a call and make conversation before everyone gets down to business. Give a co-worker a shout-out for their contribution, Dr. Waldinger said, or ask them about an interesting object in their background, or about their pet dozing behind them.
You can also message them and request a quick, friendly chat, Ms. Nelson said. “You can say, ‘I’d love to hear your story about how you came to work here, would you be willing to talk in our own room for ten minutes?’”
If you’re a manager: Before a meeting starts, try a few icebreakers: “What was your first job?” or “What was the worst advice you’ve ever received?” These sorts of exercises “create conditions where friendships naturally blossom,” said Ron Friedman, a social psychologist and the author of “The Best Place To Work.” “Far too many employers leave close connections to chance. That’s a mistake. When we look at the data on why people stay with an employer year after year, often the best predictor is not the size of their paycheck or how well they get along with their manager — it’s how connected they feel to the people on their team.”
What’s your best advice for how to make friends at work? Share your thoughts and stories in the comments.
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An update from WACCRA
Ed note: The Washington State Continuing Care Resident’s Association is the advocacy body for rights of residents residing in CCRCs. If you’re not a WACCRA (click to learn more) member, please consider joining and supporting their activities.
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Visit the nearby Memory Hub
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Day 4 of the NYT Happiness Challenge: Why You Should Write a ‘Living Eulogy’
By Jancee Dunn
This is Day 4 of Well’s 7-Day Happiness Challenge. To start at the beginning, click here.
For today’s exercise, we’re going to get vulnerable and tell an important person in our lives how we feel about them. “Think about what they have done for you in your life,” said Dr. Bob Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the author of the new book “The Good Life.” “Where, or who, would you be without them?”
Happiness Challenge Day 4: Thank someone special
Consider what you would thank this person for if you thought you would never see them again. Take a few minutes and write down what you would tell them, with as many specific examples as possible. Don’t overthink it: It can be both dashed off and straight from the heart. Think of it as a eulogy for the living.
Then send it — by email, text, handwritten note, whatever. The medium doesn’t matter; sending it does.
The happiest people take time to explicitly cherish the people they love, Dr. Waldinger said. Writing a note of appreciation to someone, research has shown, has an immediate positive impact on feelings of well-being and connectedness, for both you and the recipient.
“Something that holds a lot of people back from reaching out is that they might be wondering, ‘Is it weird that I’m reaching out after all this time? What are they going to think?’” said Peggy Liu, an associate professor at the University of Pittsburgh’s Katz Graduate School of Business, who led a 2022 study in which participants sent a short note to someone in their social circle with whom they hadn’t interacted in a while. “But the recipients aren’t thinking about that. They’re thinking, ‘Someone has taken the time to reach out. They thought about me.’”
Bonus exercise: If you have a partner, try a gratitude list
Guy Winch, a psychologist in New York City, author and co-host of the podcast “Dear Therapists,” recommended a similar exercise to strengthen bonds in couples. Without showing your partner, write down 10 specific things they have done — with as much detail as possible — that you appreciate.
When you’re finished, clear some time with your partner, turn to them and then read your list aloud. Look at your partner after you read each item on the list. Talk about how each gesture makes you feel. Then have your partner read their list to you.
Focusing on your partner’s gestures, rather than, say, cataloging their good qualities, “highlights the real and concrete ways your partner shows up for you,” Dr. Winch said. “And many of these small moments get lost and forgotten when we’re in the emotional autopilot of daily life, so curating a list of these gestures is a way to give them the spotlight.”
My husband Tom and I tried this once. As I prepared to read my list aloud to Tom, I was seized with a sudden, uncharacteristic shyness. As I listed his thoughtful gestures — driving me everywhere because I’m timid behind the wheel, cheerfully fixing all of my computer problems — I stopped abruptly on No. 7.
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“Painted my parents’ new house last summer, weekend after weekend in the heat.” I had thanked him perfunctorily for his help, but the magnitude of his gesture suddenly overwhelmed me. Every weekend he was up there, teetering on my parents’ rickety ladder. In record humidity. Near a buzzing wasp’s nest. Tears spilled down my face. Helping my elderly parents was a direct act of kindness — toward me.
Dr. Winch said that in his practice, he’s seen that the benefits of this exercise can last months, or even years.
As often as you can, look for these gestures and point them out, Dr. Waldinger said. This is an easy and ongoing way to reinforce your connection with your partner. “I call it ‘catching’ your partner being kind,” he said. “Make a practice of doing it whenever you can.”
Share your experiences: Did you thank a person who made a big impact in your life? What did you hear back? How did it make you feel?
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Day 3 of the happiness challenge: Small Talk Has Big Benefits
Often on my daily neighborhood walk, I pass a woman and her dachshund, who used to bark at me frantically. I found it irritating. One day, on a whim, I decided to go beyond our customary nods. I asked her how I could make friends with her dog.
“Oh, Petey gets upset when he sees people wearing hats,” the woman said. “It’s just too tiring to tell everyone.” Because more people wear headgear in winter, she went on, it’s a hard season for Petey.
That was enough to make me fall in love with that dachshund. Now, when I spot Petey in the distance, I quickly pull off my hat. It’s become a bit of a game for me. I can honestly say that if I’d never chatted up this woman, my daily walk would be a lot less fun.
Today’s exercise is to talk to someone you don’t know well. Or to a total stranger. Or to both.
Happiness Challenge Day 3: Chat up someone you don’t know.
As often as you can today, advised Bob Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the author of the new book “The Good Life,” “seek out and notice opportunities for friendly moments of uplift.”
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Day 2 of the happiness challenge: The Secret Power of the 8-Minute Phone Call
I just had an eight-minute call with my good friend Tina, whom I’ve known for over three decades. I could never seem to connect with her (she has a very demanding job) until I sent her a text last week proposing an eight-minute phone call.
That seems weird, she wrote back.
Come on, I wheedled. You can do it. The president of the United States could probably do eight minutes! I promise not to go long. Name a time.
At the appointed hour, I gave her a ring. In short order, we talked about our mothers’ health, made birthday plans, gossiped about a friend who abruptly quit his job and moved to a tiny Mexican town, traded book recommendations and explored the possibility of an afterlife (verdict: we’re not sure). Intently focused, we knocked out subject after subject, before Tina announced that our eight minutes were up — and besides, she had arrived at the dry cleaner’s.
I hung up, smiling and humming a little tune. I had missed her, and didn’t realize it until I heard her voice. I was also surprised by how much ground we covered without the call feeling rushed. Our connection was brief, but it was real.
Happiness Challenge Day 2: Try the 8-minute phone call
Today your goal is to think of a person you love: someone you miss, someone you wish you connected with more often.
Send that person a quick text asking if they can chat on the phone for eight minutes — ideally today, but if not, schedule it for sometime this week. You can even copy and paste the following:
Hi! I read this in The New York Times and it made me think of you. Want to schedule an eight-minute phone call this week?
After the eight minutes are up, decide together when your next such catch-up will be — and then honor your time commitment and sign off promptly. (Unless your friend is having some sort of crisis, in which case it’s good that you got in touch anyway.) Hang up and enjoy that little glow of well-being.
Dr. Bob Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the author of the new book “The Good Life: Lessons From the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness,” said that most busy people “tend to think that in some unspecified future, we’ll have a ‘time surplus,’ where we’ll be able to connect with old friends.” That may never materialize, he said, so pick up the phone and invest the time right now.
The value of hearing someone’s voice
Hearing the sound of a loved one’s voice, said Claudia Glaser-Mussen, a psychotherapist in New York City, “is emotionally regulating.”
In eight minutes, she added, “I can call my friend Mary Beth from high school, and say, ‘I love you so much, here’s what’s happening,’ or ‘Listen, I want to run something by you really quickly.’ It’s a short period of time, but you can get a lot in, and it’s deep enough that all the bonding hormones start to hit.”
Have a hard out
A hard out, agreed upon in advance, solves a common conversational issue revealed in a 2021 study. Researchers looked at 932 conversations between pairs of people and found that they almost never ended when both people wanted them to. Some preferred to continue, while others felt that the interaction dragged on too long.
When one person shuts down the conversation too early, the researchers wrote, or chats away while ignoring standard wrap-up cues (such as use of the word “anyway”), the result is what’s known as a “coordination problem.” A clear boundary of eight minutes avoids that.
A study of 240 adults in 2021 found that when participants received brief phone calls a few times a week, their levels of depression, loneliness and anxiety were “rapidly reduced” compared with people who didn’t receive a call. As Dr. Waldinger writes in his book, “a few adjustments to our most treasured relationships can have real effects on how we feel, and on how we feel about our lives — a gold mine of vitality that we are not paying attention to.”
Try an eight-minute phone call and let us know how it goes.
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Day 1 of the 7 day happiness challenge: Take Stock of Your Relationships
Ed note: When’s the last time you sent a note or visited someone you haven’t connected with for some time? Have you visited a friend in the Terraces? Sent a note of appreciation to someone affecting your life? Or have you simply listened to someone? The NYT in this series has some of the keys to happiness in how we connect with and support others. What’s your story?
In 1938, researchers at Harvard set out to learn what makes a person thrive.
They recruited 724 participants, a combination of students at Harvard College and low-income teenage boys in Boston. All were willing to let the researchers track their lives, from childhood troubles to first loves to final days.
Every five years, the researchers gathered health records from the participants. They asked detailed questions about their lives at two-year intervals, and, in later years, took DNA samples and performed brain scans. Twenty-five of the participants even donated their brains to the study after their deaths.
Now, 85 years later, the Harvard Study of Adult Development has expanded to three generations and more than 1,300 descendants of the original subjects; it is, according to the researchers, the longest-running in-depth study on human happiness in the world.
From all the data, one very clear finding has emerged: Strong relationships are what make for a happy life. More than wealth, I.Q. or social class, it’s the robustness of our bonds that most determines whether we feel fulfilled.
How to build your social bonds for more joy
In a new book, “The Good Life: Lessons From the World’s Longest Scientific Study of Happiness,” Dr. Bob Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the study’s fourth director, and Marc Schulz, an associate director of the study and a psychology professor at Bryn Mawr College, have distilled the study’s insights.
If you’re going to do one thing this year to ensure your own health and happiness, the authors maintain, find the time to nurture and develop relationships. To help get you started, Dr. Waldinger and I have created this challenge — seven simple exercises, starting with taking today’s quiz.
Dr. Waldinger and Dr. Schulz have coined a term for the process of assessing and treating the health of our relationships: “social fitness.” It’s just as crucial as physical fitness, said Dr. Waldinger, who added that neglected relationships can atrophy, like muscles. “Our social life is a living system, and it needs exercise,” he said. “It’s a choice you make to invest in, week by week, year by year — one that has huge benefits.”
Why ‘social fitness’ matters
The Harvard study is far from the only one to have found a link between our relationships and happiness. Ample research shows that people who are more socially connected live longer and are more protected against stress, depression and declines in memory and language.
Loneliness, on the other hand, damages our physical health. “I believe loneliness is one of the defining public health concerns of our time,” Surgeon General Vivek Murthy told me in an email. While the pandemic exacerbated loneliness, he added, “it also helped many people take stock of their lives and reflect more deeply on how important their relationships are. That means taking steps in our day-to-day lives to invest in them.”
It’s not just your bonds with friends and family that are crucial to happiness. It’s your relationships with romantic partners and community groups. It’s the friendly conversation with your mail carrier or the acquaintance you see at the dog run.
Take the quiz
Today, you will identify the areas of your life in which you would like to be more connected. “Maybe you’ve got lots of people to have fun with, but you don’t have anyone to confide in about really personal, private things,” Dr. Waldinger said. “Or maybe you’ve got lots of people to confide in but don’t have anyone to have fun with.”
A few things before you begin:
There is no right number of friends. Don’t get hung up on numbers, Dr. Waldinger said. It’s the quality of your relationships, not the quantity, so try to discern what is most fulfilling for you (our quiz will help give you some perspective).
You don’t need to be an extrovert to improve your social fitness. While adult friendships require effort, happiness is not out of reach for you if you are shy or introverted, Dr. Waldinger said. You can engage with others in quieter settings around things that you care about. Try small, controlled activities such as a knitting group, a computer programming class, hiking or working in a community garden.
It’s never too late. People often assume that it’s too late for them to build relationships, Dr. Waldinger said, but that’s never the case. He points to many stories in “The Good Life” about people who made connections later in life, like a lonely 68-year-old who joined a gym after he’d retired. Three months later, he had amassed more friends than he’d ever had in his life.How strong are your relationships?Answer these 10 questions to find out.
Start the quiz Get this challenge by email, for Times subscribers only. You will also receive the Well newsletter, with guidance to live your healthiest life, every week. Get it in your inbox.
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Panda, panda, panda …..
Thanks to Pam P. Although it’s not a great time to visit China, I hope you someday get to see the visitor and research center in Chendu.
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US Postal Service to purchase 66,000 electric delivery vehicles in major shift
Thanks to Pam P. By UMAR SHAKIR from The Verge
The United States Postal Service said that it will add 66,000 fully electric delivery vehicles to its aging and polluting fleet of trucks. The mail agency agreed to spend $9.6 billion on 106,000 “next generation delivery vehicles,” which includes $3 billion secured through the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act. After 2026, USPS will only purchase EVs.
It’s a significant shift from the USPS’s previous proposal, which included only 40 percent EVs out of a full order of 84,000 delivery vehicles. And that deal came after an even less climate-friendly one that would have only seen 10,019 EVs being added to the fleet. But the constant pushback from Democrats and the Biden administration, which is requiring all federal vehicle purchases to be emissions-free by 2035, finally resulted in a significant change in policy from USPS.
White House Senior Advisor John Podesta believes the plan will result in a USPS fleet that is fully electric. It also “significantly reduces vehicles miles traveled in the network, and places USPS at the forefront of the clean transportation revolution,” Podesta stated in a White House press release. The mail service still has to replace its current 217,000-plus fleet of trucks, many of which are over 30 years old and don’t have safety features like airbags or air conditioning, amongst other things.
The $3 billion will also go toward building the USPS’s EV charging infrastructure, which includes “tens of thousands” charging stations, creating a smarter network that will help make deliveries more efficient. “Moving packages from point A to point B in a way that’s cleaner, more cost-effective, and accelerating toward an electric vehicle future stamped ‘Made in America’ — this is the Biden climate strategy on wheels,” National Climate Advisor to the president Ali Zaidi stated.
The USPS is primarily looking to get its fleet from defense contractor Oshkosh, which will provide 60,000 vehicles, with 45,000 of them being electric. But the mail agency will also look to other automakers for another 46,000 vans, with 21,000 of those being EVs.
Podesta told The Washington Post he believes it will pressure other shipping and delivery companies “to up their game, too.” Some companies like FedEx have already reserved 2,500 electric delivery vans from GM-backed BrightDrop, and Amazon ordered 100,000 Rivian EVs to be on the road by 2030.
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Pictures of the year from the NYT
Make sense of the day’s news and ideas. David Leonhardt and Times journalists guide you through what’s happening — and why it matters. Get it sent to your inbox.
Photographers for The New York Times trod around the globe in 2022 to document news, history and everyday life, whether embedded alongside troops on the front lines in Ukraine, chronicling lawmakers in the halls of Congress or reporting from floods and wildfires on several continents.
Near the end of the year, The Times publishes its annual Year in Pictures feature. This edition of The Morning is a tribute to the work of The Times’s photographers.
The photos
Millions of people fled Ukraine in the early weeks of Russia’s invasion, seeking refuge in other countries. Desperate families shoved their way onto a train leaving the capital, Kyiv, in early March:
Ketanji Brown Jackson became the first Black woman appointed as a Supreme Court justice. Her husband, Patrick Jackson, and her daughter Leila sat behind her on the first day of her Senate confirmation hearings in March:
For years, China’s government had stuck to its zero-Covid strategy of going to extreme lengths to mitigate the virus, before easing restrictions late this year after highly unusual protests. The government had locked down entire cities, erecting security checkpoints and other barriers. In May, a worker locked a fence around a residential area in Shanghai:
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New Year’s Eve Celebration with The Jewel Tones
We were treated to a mixture of Motown songs bringing back memories of Diana Ross, The Supremes, Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder, The Jackson 5, The Temptations and Gladys Knight. The staff at Skyline provided a lovely atmosphere celebrating the arrival of 2023 , live from New York, at 9 PM PST.
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Camp Lewis 91st Division football team plays the Mare Island Marines in the Rose Bowl on January 1, 1918.
Thanks to Bob P. This article was published on History Link by Duane Colt Denfeld, Ph.D.
On January 1, 1918, two armed-services football teams, composed largely of former star college players now on active duty, meet in the 1918 Rose Bowl. The Camp Lewis 91st Division team from Washington loses to the Mare Island Marines from California by a score of 19 to 7. The unusual meeting in what is normally a college bowl game comes during World War I. College football teams have been depleted as students leave for military service, while the armed services have been able to field teams with all-star players. Military leaders particularly emphasize football, considering it excellent combat training and arguing that it teaches discipline, teamwork, and following orders. For the 1917 season, Camp Lewis, the large army base south of Tacoma in Pierce County, organized a 12-team intramural league. The best players from that league have been selected for a camp team, the Camp Lewis 91st Division, which played against colleges and other service teams. The Camp Lewis team has proved to be one of the best service or college teams on the West Coast, winning a berth in the 1918 Rose Bowl.
College Sports During Wartime
With the mobilization that followed U.S entry into World War I on April 6, 1917, many college athletes joined or were drafted into the military. Universities found themselves with diminished enrollments and, in a patriotic move, colleges dropped or cut back their sports programs. For example, in 1917 the Washington State College football team had a limited schedule, which included a game against the Camp Lewis team. When Tournament of Roses officials considered their January 1, 1918, game, the Rose Bowl, they debated canceling it. In discussions that reached the White House it was decided for public morale to play the New Year’s Day game. (cont)
Being a woman
For more commentary, please read Erma Bombeck’s book, “Motherhood the Second Oldest Profession.”
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Engineering for Grief
Universally as we age, we can unfortunately experience loss and grief. The following is an essay from the current issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
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The Old Man & a Bucket of Shrimp
Great true story🎄 Thanks to Sybil-Ann
You will be glad that you read it, especially those who know Key Biscayne, Florida. I hope you’ll pass it on.
It happened every Friday evening, almost without fail, when the sun resembled a giant orange and was starting to dip into the blue ocean.
Old Ed came strolling along the beach to his favorite pier. Clutched in his bony hand was a bucket of shrimp. Ed walks out to the end of the pier, where it seems he almost has the world to himself. The glow of the sun is a golden bronze now.
Everybody’s gone, except for a few joggers on the beach. Standing out on the end of the Pier, Ed is alone with his thoughts … and his bucket of shrimp.
Before long, however, he is no longer alone. Up in the sky, a thousand white dots come screeching and squawking, winging their way toward that lanky frame standing there on the end of the pier.
Before long, dozens of seagulls have enveloped him, their wings fluttering and flapping wildly. Ed stands there tossing shrimp to the hungry birds. As he does, if you listen closely, you can hear him say with a smile, “Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you”
In a few short minutes, the bucket is empty. But Ed doesn’t leave. He stands there lost in thought, as though transported to another time and place.
When he finally turns around and begins to walk back toward the beach, a few of the birds hop along The Pier with him until he gets to the stairs, and then they, too, fly away.
And old Ed quietly makes his way down to the end of the beach and on home.
If you were sitting there on the pier with your fishing line in the water, Ed might seem like a ‘funny old duck,’ as my Dad used to say. Or, to onlookers, he’s just another old codger, lost in his own weird world, feeding the seagulls with a bucket full of shrimp.
To the onlooker, rituals can look either very strange or very empty. They can seem altogether unimportant, maybe even a lot of nonsense.
Old folks often do strange things, at least in the eyes of Boomers and Busters. Most of them would probably write Old Ed off, down there in Florida. That’s too bad. They’d do well to know him better.
His full name: Eddie Rickenbacker. He was a famous hero in World War I, and then he was in WWII. On one of his flying missions across the Pacific, he and his seven-member crew went down. Miraculously, all of the men survived, crawled out of their plane and climbed into a life raft.
Captain Rickenbacker and his crew floated for days on the rough waters of the Pacific. They fought the sun. They fought sharks. Most of all, they fought hunger and thirst. By the eighth day, their rations ran out. No food. No water. They were hundreds of miles from land and no one knew where they were or even if they were alive.
Every day across America millions wondered and prayed that Eddie Rickenbacker might somehow be found alive. The men adrift needed a miracle. That afternoon they had a simple devotional service and prayed for a miracle. They tried to nap. Eddie leaned back and pulled his military cap over his nose. Time dragged on. All he could hear was the slap of the waves against the raft. Suddenly Eddie felt something land on the top of his cap.
It was a seagull!
Old Ed would later describe how he sat perfectly still, planning his next move. With a flash of his hand and a squawk from the gull, he managed to grab it and wring its neck. He tore the feathers off, and he and his starving crew made a meal of it – a very slight meal for eight men. Then they used the intestines for bait. With it, they caught fish, which gave them food and more bait…and the cycle continued. With that simple survival technique, they were able to endure the rigors of the sea until they were found and rescued after 24 days at sea.
Eddie Rickenbacker lived many years beyond that ordeal, but he never forgot the sacrifice of that first life-saving seagull… And he never stopped saying, ‘Thank you.’ That’s why almost every Friday night he would walk to the end of the pier with a bucket full of shrimp and a heart full of gratitude.
* Reference: (Max Lucado, “In The Eye of the Storm”, pp…221, 225-226)
PS: Eddie Rickenbacker was the founder of Eastern Airlines. Before WWI he was a race car driver. In WWI he was a pilot and became America’s first ace. In WWII he was an instructor and military adviser, and he flew missions with the combat pilots. Eddie Rickenbacker is a true American hero. And now you know another story about the trials and sacrifices that brave men have endured for your freedom
As you can see, I chose to pass it on. It is a great story that many don’t know. You’ve got to be careful with old guys, you just never know what they have done during their lifetime.
P.S. And the road into Key Biscayne is the Rickenbacker Causeway
Follow up on our 2021 heatwave
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A Christmas message from two Presidents – one with hope and grace; one with anger and lies
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Little Phrases = Large Lessons
Thanks to Sybil Ann. (From the late Rev. Dale Turner, favorite of many)
I feel as good as I did at 20, only not as often.
An apology is a good way to have the last word.
It isn’t your position that makes you happy – it’s your disposition.
Best vitamin for making friends – B1.
An exhaustive study of homicide records reveals that no woman has ever shot her husband while he was doing the dishes.
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WHY THE PAST 10 YEARS OF AMERICAN LIFE HAVE BEEN UNIQUELY STUPID
It’s not just a phase.By Jonathan Haidt in The Atlantic
What would it have been like to live in Babel in the days after its destruction? In the Book of Genesis, we are told that the descendants of Noah built a great city in the land of Shinar. They built a tower “with its top in the heavens” to “make a name” for themselves. God was offended by the hubris of humanity and said:
Look, they are one people, and they have all one language; and this is only the beginning of what they will do; nothing that they propose to do will now be impossible for them. Come, let us go down, and confuse their language there, so that they will not understand one another’s speech.
The text does not say that God destroyed the tower, but in many popular renderings of the story he does, so let’s hold that dramatic image in our minds: people wandering amid the ruins, unable to communicate, condemned to mutual incomprehension.
The story of Babel is the best metaphor I have found for what happened to America in the 2010s, and for the fractured country we now inhabit. Something went terribly wrong, very suddenly. We are disoriented, unable to speak the same language or recognize the same truth. We are cut off from one another and from the past.
It’s been clear for quite a while now that red America and blue America are becoming like two different countries claiming the same territory, with two different versions of the Constitution, economics, and American history. But Babel is not a story about tribalism; it’s a story about the fragmentation of everything. It’s about the shattering of all that had seemed solid, the scattering of people who had been a community. It’s a metaphor for what is happening not only between red and blue, but within the left and within the right, as well as within universities, companies, professional associations, museums, and even families.
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