Action by action

“You have to assemble your life yourself, action by action.” – Marcus Aurelius

I had a dream the other night that I was back in college. I was in the same dorm and even had the same freshman roommate. But this time around, I didn’t go down to The Daily Beacon (Student Newspaper) and didn’t draw cartoons — because I was lazy.

I literally am who I am because I had the courage to try out for the cartooning job (even after my advisor told me not to bother). Looking backwards, I realize how each step brought me to where I am today. And I think my dream was a reminder to stay busy. I did the work back then. I have to do it now. Urgency is the key — but there is also something else.

Seeing into the future is harder than looking back.

Obviously it is harder to look forward and see where you’re going. That requires planning. And as I am getting older, I don’t have the time to waste like I did when I was 20. I can’t bounce from rock to rock as my raft floats down the stream. I need to paddle with purpose. The last chapters of my life will require more outlining as I assemble them.


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Turkey Karaoke

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Kids coming over for Thanksgiving? Here are some recent coloring sheets

I’ve done nearly 700 of these coloring sheets since the pandemic began. I really need to put them into a book.

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Cornucopia

As I type this, I’m shivering because the heat in my house went out. I’m waiting on the repairman and praying it isn’t too expensive of a fix — otherwise, Christmas will mean a new heating and air system (NOT something I asked Santa for this year.) But instead of worrying, I’m focusing on what I do have and how I can use that to get past this hiccup. How can I reframe the situation and make it a positive? Or if nothing else, how can I hustle to pay for this.

This Thanksgiving, remember that gratitude is a superpower. It illuminates the dark and lifts us above our worries — or at least gives us the strength to handle it.

Thanks to John Cerami (Cerami Air Conditioning Heating Refrigeration) for coming out so quickly and getting the furnace back operating again. On this day before Thanksgiving, I am very thankful for him.

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Happy Thanksgiving!

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Paradise on a Cold, Cloudy Day

The Florida Panhandle has some of the most beautiful beaches in the world. Its white sand makes the water a beautiful, translucent green color. It’s a place that pops off of postcards. Last weekend, the weather was definitely not from central casting — it was cold, drizzly and gloomy. But a quirk in how I see things is that I can find beauty even in the middle of the gloom. Last Sunday, I went for a walk along the beach and saw the sun struggling to burn through the clouds. There were patches of the trademark green water. The sand was white but not quite as vibrant. But the sea oats and scrub had patches of brown and yellow that gave a warm glow.

Here’s my painting of what I saw:

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Meeting Old Friends in New Places

Last weekend, our nephew Ian got married to his wonderful girlfriend Lindsay at the town hall in Rosemary Beach, Florida. It was a grand affair — one of the happiest weddings I can remember.

They’re off to a good start.

During the reception, a voice from behind me said, “Are you Marshall Ramsey?” Considering 99.9% of the crowd was from the Atlanta area, it caught me off guard. Maybe someone else besides us was from Mississippi? I turned around and saw a woman about my age. She was attractive but I didn’t recognize her.

“Yes.”

She replied, “You took me to the senior prom.”

I looked again and sure enough, she was right. It was Tammy Wayne, who had gone with me as a friend. We ate, went to the dance and then I dropped her off afterwards. She was dating someone else by that point. I went off and had fun with my friends.

It was nice night.

I didn’t see her again after that.

Thirty six and a half years later, there she was.

We caught up on three decades of life, I introduced her to Amy and my middle son. I couldn’t hear well (the band was amazing and loud and I’m deaf when things starting getting the least bit loud). I did hear her say a couple of times that I hadn’t changed.

I drink Formaldehyde after all.

She is a good friend of the bride’s mom. I’m uncle to the groom. What are the odds?

She walked away and I didn’t see her again after that.

Life is totally random. And I’ll probably bump into her again in the nursing home.

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SNJ (T-6 Texan)

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Learning to Swim

If you are thrown off the boat, you can either thrash around in the water or you can swim. Of course, you need to know HOW to swim — that’s helpful. Panic causes the thrashing. I can tell you from experience, if you think you are drowning, you get tired very quickly. Easy, measured strokes can take you were you need to go.

In 2008, the newspaper business started cutting people. For two years, I lived in fear as my colleagues got laid off around me. I ended up having stomach issues and had to have a couple of procedures to make sure something wasn’t wrong. Stress is a killer in more ways than one.

Twelve-years ago this week, I was thrown off the boat — with a rope still attached to my leg. After coming back from running the Marine Corps marathon and raising $13,000 for charity, I was made part-time at the Clarion Ledger. (And my dog died — If my mom had been hit by a train, it would have been a country song) It initially cost me my benefits (which were later restored) and half of my salary. I still did six cartoons a week — which meant the paper got me for half off. They told me that I could get another job — which I did to keep my house. I got a job at SuperTalk. Soon all the promises made to me like “you can work from home some” went away. I was sitting in the CL building at 6:00 a.m. sharp. I’d get home at 6:30 at night and then do it all over again the next day.

I was thrashing in the water.

Back then, I was afraid because I didn’t think I could do anything else other than draw editorial cartoons. Today I know better. I am a storyteller.

Twelve years ago, the management at the Clarion Ledger did me a favor. I am grateful to them. First of all, they didn’t lay me off. Being part-time, I still had some money to survive on. Second, their business decision allowed me to start making some business decisions of my own. I published books, I got better on radio, I did TV and I now work with a great team at Mississippi Today.

There were some costs in those twelve years. But as I look back this morning, I thank God and need to get busy swimming.

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One call, that’s all

My dad, Dave Ramsey, graduated from The University of Tennessee in 1959. I graduated from there in 1991. Talking UT football was our currency — it was the one thing I knew we could always talk about. I’d love calling him after a game and sharing notes. It was a tradition that started on September 6, 1980 when he took me to my first UT game. Tennessee had just expanded Neyland to seat 98,000. The day was crowded, hot and electric — My blood turned from red to orange. That’s the game when Herschel Walker ran over Bill Bates. Georgia won the game but lost a prospective student. In awe of Neyland Stadium, I looked at Dad and said, “I’m going to school here.”

A piece of art that I drew for the Graduate Hotel in Knoxville. Dad and I are in the middle.

Six years later, I did.

When dementia cast a cold shadow across his mind, I could no longer call him up and chat about OUR Volunteers. Dementia is like getting an advance on grief.

I would love to hear his hot takes on the Vols big win over Alabama.

This much I do know: He’d love Josh Heupel and would love seeing Neyland Stadium back alive like it was on that hot day in 1980. I know I do.

A few years ago, when I was in Neyland, I walked down at the end of the game from the club section to where Dad and I sat on that hot September day. I plopped onto the aluminum bleacher and I sat for a moment. I closed my eyes and was transported back to 1980. The stadium came alive. I was 13 again. I could feel Dad sitting next to me.

As Amy and I were driving home from our sons’ university Saturday night, I listened as Tennessee finally got the Alabama monkey off its back. I looked off to my right and saw the sky in North Mississippi glowing a beautiful bright orange. My hand reached for my phone to call my Dad.

God how I wish I could give him a call.

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