Thursday Free-For-All

Hope everyone is safe and sound and has an uneventful day as Isaac throws a fit on top of us today.

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CARTOON: The linemen

Drew this on Sept. 7, 2005 (after Katrina) but I think it still fits today. Bless everyone working to get the lights back on.

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CARTOON: One Mississippi, Two Mississippi

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Levity in the face of the storm

As I write this, the Hurricane Issac is hammering the Gulf Coast and dumping rain on South Mississippi.  Here in Central Mississippi, we watch and wait, wondering if and when we’ll get the rain.  My hurricane preparations are ready. I won’t complain if I don’t need them.

Yesterday, The Sun Herald ran a story suggesting that “Land Massgate” (yes, I just launched a “gate” scud) might not have really happened. And in return, people swear they heard it — although no video has appeared yet.   So now the backlash of the backlash of the backlash has begun  — and  I just smile at the whole thing. Why?  I had Jana Bell, the creator of the brilliant and viral Facebook Page “The Land Mass between NOLA and Mobile, on my radio show yesterday; and I applaud what she did. She took what was perceived to be an insult (I’ve been in broadcasting long enough to know you sometimes say stupid things on air without ill intent) and turned it into a positive. She created a fun way for people to vent pent up frustration from poor media coverage  seven years ago. I’ll be honest, some of the memes, posters, cartoons and other things from land masspalooza are hilarious.  The Weather Channel hasn’t been harmed. Jim Cantore is still chasing danger. People are able to vent and laugh.  And now the Weather Channel says “Mississippi” more than “Who” is said in “When the Grinch Stole Christmas.”

Isaac is frightening.  Not only because of the damage it’s doing. But because it’s churning up emotions from seven years ago.  A little levity in the face of the storm isn’t exactly a bad thing.

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Finding a little humor

“I bet you are carving your name and phone number in my back.”

“I hope I have a melanoma on the other side so I can get rid of my love handles.”

“Could you give me a chin while you’re working on me?”

“Of course I won’t draw a cartoon about you; you have a knife in my back.”

“I’m afraid to make you mad, I might wake up with a boob job.”

The jokes poured out of me.  I had just been diagnosed with a very dangerous form of cancer and was scared to death. I was lying on the operating table about to lose a good chunk of my side and most of my sense of well-being. I’m sure some might have told me to “Get serious” at that moment but I couldn’t. At least not the way they would have wanted me to.  I was fighting my fear head-on with the most powerful weapon in my arsenal: Humor.

I was once told that I and should quit making jokes and “stick to the issues.”  I felt really sorry that person.  I think it’s because I was once just like him at one point in my life: I really used to take life (and myself) way too seriously.  But I’ve been an editorial cartoonist for too long not to believe that the best way to the truth is through humor.

The times in my life when I have truly failed are when I couldn’t laugh at the situation or myself.

Don’t get me wrong.  I can make jokes and still I take care of business. This is a wonderfully complex world and you can do both.  Really. I made fun of my cancer yet managed to still work, pay my bills and chart out my care with my doctor.  Amazing, isn’t it?

I speak to cancer survivors and tell them that if you can’t laugh at the things that scare you, you’re in trouble. I truly believe that.  And lately, there has been a lot of good stuff to laugh at.

So go ahead, crack a joke. Make those around you smile. Find the humor in the situation. And if someone complains, tell them I said it is OK.  And then crack another joke.

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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: Against the Wind

I know, I know. You just read the headline and are humming some Bob Seger.  I am, too.  But it doesn’t seem like yesterday. And it wasn’t long ago.  It was this morning.  I got up at 4:15 a.m., checked the radar and decided to go out for my morning run. It was hot, gooey and windy. You could tell a hurricane was to the South.  I headed out, still wondering if my I.T. Band was going to hold.  It did and I ran 5.03 miles.

I can tell you that running with the easterly wind was easier than running against it. In fact, I could’ve outrun Usain Bolt at one point. I finished up, lighter from the sixty gallons of sweat I lost, and got ready.

I’ve had trouble with my right I.T. Band in the past. The first time, it knocked me out of running the St. Jude Marathon (which was probably a good thing; I had not trained well for it and would have suffered). Now, it has manifested some pain up in my hip area.  I’ve quit running before because of this injury. This time?  No way.  I’ve dialed back my mileage, added more stretching and continued to watch what I stick in my mouth (I’ve cut back on a couple snacks I normally eat).  Add to that, I’ve added some cross-training exercises.  I’m still making good choices.

It’s harder than quitting. Trust me, I’ve already tried to freak out about it. But it’s not enough to make me stop.  But quitting means losing. Or in this case, gaining.  I refuse to gain back my weight.

Overcoming an obstacle like an I.T. Band injury is never easy.  But sometimes life is most rewarding when you run against (and overcome) the wind.

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CARTOON: The Anniversary Gift

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On this eve before the seventh anniversary of Katrina

With tomorrow being the seventh anniversary of Katrina, it’s easy to make comparisons between Katrina and Isaac. But Isaac is a very different storm — and we live in a very different time.  Isaac doesn’t pack the wind of Katrina, but he will dump more rain on us. He is moving slower and will cause wide-spread flooding. Katrina, for all her fury, was gone in a day. Isaac is as big as his wicked aunt, but is only lumbering ashore as a tropical storm/weak hurricane and stick around for a while.  We’re in for a soaker.

The weather isn’t the only thing different. The Federal Government has gone from a much sounder financial position in 2005 to where we are today.  Sen. Thad Cochran is still there on the Senate Appropriations Committee, but is in the minority. The House of Representatives, which was hostile to the block grants that rebuilt much of the Gulf Coast, is even more hostile to such spending today. Governor Haley Barbour, whose Rolodex helped twist some arms, is now a lobbyist. Let’s pray the Isaac’s feared storm surge turns out to be an overestimation and we’re not faced with the type of devastation we faced seven years ago. We’ll have to sell cookies to pay for it.

What is the same is the fact that Mississippians are strong. We’ve made it a habit of bouncing back from near-death experiences. But the Coast has been hit with one thing after the other since 2005: The hurricane, the economic downturn, the oil spill — even the strongest can only take so much.  If this was a football game, Mother Nature would be flagged for piling on.

As I type this, people all through the Southern part of the state are finishing up their preparations. We’ve learned it is better to plan than panic.  And once our emergency plan is in place, we’ll just watch.  We’ll wait and see what nasty surprise Isaac will leave on our front porch. On this eve of the seventh anniversary of Katrina, I pray for the victims of that killer storm. And I pray for the safety of everyone in the path of her nephew Isaac.

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When things get bad…

It is Monday afternoon and I can’t tell you where Isaac is going to come ashore. Even the experts at the National Hurricane Center are struggling with its forecast track.  The computer models have taken the storm consistently to the west since the weekend. We were once in its crosshairs. Now, we are a little to the right.

That’s not totally good news, though. The Mississippi Gulf Coast will be in the upper right-hand quadrant.  That means winds will drive the Gulf of Mexico ashore — right now predictions are of up to 15 feet of surge along areas punished seven years ago. Even though Isaac is disorganized and relatively weak (it ain’t Katrina or Camille), it will push a lot of water.  As most Katrina survivors along the coast can tell you, that is hell in itself.

Once on land, the dying storm will dump copious amounts of rain across most of Mississippi.  Add to that some wind and tornadoes.

Someone somewhere will be hurt.  That’s all I can predict.

But this is no time to panic.  It is, however, time to prepare.  You know what to do.  If you don’t, listen and read. Go to MEMA’s website msema.org.  Have a plan. Stick to it.

What I can predict is this: No matter what happens, we will bounce back.  Our friends and neighbors will come to help us if we need it. And we will help them.  How do I know that? Because that’s what we do. That’s what makes Mississippi special.  I saw it after Katrina. I saw it during the South Delta flood. I saw it after the Smithville tornado.  When things get bad, we get good.

And that is one prediction I can make with 100% accuracy.

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CARTOON: Discovery of a landmass

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