Saturday Free-For-All

Good morning! Hope you have a great day!

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A Day at the Beach: A Memorial Day story

High up on the hillside, an elderly man in a wheelchair rolled onto his porch.  He looked down at where the Pacific Ocean taunted the land.  It was another beautiful day at LaJolla Shores Beach. The thin strip of sand was teeming with holiday revelers.  He could hear their laughter and cheers mixed in with a constant drumbeat of the aqua blue waves crashing.  On the horizon, the marine layer (a thick bank of clouds), hovered just off shore. The elderly man closed his eyes for a minute and opened them.  Out of the marine layer, hundreds of Higgins Boats appeared, chugging slowly toward the beachhead.  Explosions began to surround the boats, occasionally picking one off.  He suddenly was in one of the boats, feeling the old fear again and smelling the vomit and diesel.  Bullets whizzed over his head and when the landing platform dropped, all Hell broke loose.  Smitty, his best friend from basic training, evaporated into a red mist of meat and blood.  His sergeant lost his head.  He jumped into the too deep water to escape the hail of lead and struggled not to drown.  The beach turned red and the teeming people he had seen before became a sea of corpses.

The man  closed his eyes again.  He opened them and rolled himself back into the house.  Even after nearly 70 years, the memory was too much.

He knew the true meaning of Memorial Day.

A few hundred yards below him was an attractive 40-year-old brunette. She was playing Frisbee with her 15-year-old son in a park across the street from the beach.  As she leapt high to catch the flying disc, smoke from a nearby grill tickled her nose.  She smelled the cooking meat and the smoke and closed her eyes.  When she opened them again, she was in Iraq, leaping out of a landing UH-60 Blackhawk.  On its side was painted a red cross. She was on a mercy mission. She was a medic.  Off the the left of the chopper was a burning Humvee. She saw the bodies and ran to assist whoever she could.  The heat was searing.  In the driver’s seat was a young private.  Adrenaline pushed her closer to the flames and she grabbed him, yanking him from out behind the wheel and to safety.  His badly burned mouth was screaming for his mother. And before she could save him, his expression went blank.  She would never forget his face for the rest of her life.

She opened her eyes, looked at the burn scars on her arm and hugged her son.

She knew the true meaning of Memorial Day.

Forty yards away from the former medic was a balding grandfather on a boogie board. He was playing with his young granddaughter in the surf when a bright orange Coast Guard helicopter roared over the white sandy beach.  The grandfather stopped, touched the bottom of the seabed and allowed the waves to crash over him. He closed his eyes and when he reopened them, he was on a UH-1 Huey gunship, firing his machine gun into the perimeter of the landing zone. The Viet Cong was riddling the chopper and the people on it with bullets.  Smoke poured from the hit engine but he kept firing.  The co-pilot was dead and the pilot fought with all his might to get the Marines out of the area.  He felt the searing pain of the bullet that ended up taking his right arm.

He opened his eyes again and smiled at his beloved granddaughter.

He knew the true meaning of Memorial Day.

Down the Coast a few miles from the grandfather is Fort Rosecrans National Cemetery. Perched high on Point Loma, it overlooks the entrance to San Diego Harbor.  A small group of people were gathered around a grave that looked just like the hundreds surrounding it.  A lone bugler played taps as the color guard fired their rifles into the air.  A fighter flew over the gravesite and a young widow watched as her Navy SEAL husband’s coffin was lowered into the cold earth. Ashes to ashes. Dust to dust.

The marine layer finally approached the shore, shrouding the land in a cold, damp fog.  A single tear trickled down her face. As the Navy Captain handed her the flag, she opened her eyes.

She, too, knew the true meaning of Memorial Day.

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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: 5/25/12

Goal weigh: 195 lbs.

Normally I’d be running right now, but I took the day off. It’s a rest day — I’ll do a long run tomorrow morning.  Rest is a good thing.  Right now I need more of a good thing.

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Friday Free-For-All

Good morning! It’s the start of a three-day weekend.

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Daily Links 5/24/12

Good morning!  Hope you’re having an awesome Thursday. Just one more day until a three-day weekend. But don’t forget why we are getting the long weekend.

A quick few links (because I have to draw).

I have nothing but respect for Smithville Mayor Gregg KennedyNow the Small Business Association does, too.

LIVE (as opposed to what I don’t know) TWEETS about the S.E.C. Tourney.

Stennis Space Center in South Mississippi is one of the state’s least known-about gems.  One of the many functions that goes on there is rocket engine testing (it was created to test the giant engines on the Saturn Five.)

Dude jumps from 2,600 feet without a parachute and lives to tell about it. Sounds like me doing my radio show every single day.

Sorry, if you wanted to buy the vile of Ronald Reagan’s blood at auction — it’s now off the market.  I wonder if they could have used it like the old guy at Jurassic Park and made an army of Gippers.

Madison County and Tupelo Schools will only teach Abstinence-Only sex education.  Parents need to step up and fill in the gaps.

From USA TODAY: Cadillac’s XTS’s carseat shakes to warn drivers of danger. I went to a  motel room that had a bed that did that, too.

Dates set for two out of three inmates for their executions at Parchman. Attorney General Jim Hood’s office had asked earlier this month that justices set execution dates for Henry Curtis Jackson Jr., Gary Carl Simmons Jr. and Jan Michael Brawner on June 12, 13 and 14, respectively. But now they won’t be back to back.

Who’s going to be at the Mississippi Museum of Art watching Ferris Bueller’s Day Off? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller?

United airlines will no longer allows families with small children to early board. Probably will charge to check them in baggage, too.

The New Orleans Times-Picayune survived Katrina. It may not survive the changing media market. Damn.

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Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog: 5/24/12

Goal Weight: 195 lbs.

Whew. I actually hit the snooze this morning (much to Banjo’s disgust.) I was whooped.  I didn’t start running until 4:45 a.m. — it took me a while to get ready this morning for some reason. Thankfully I only had planned on running a little over three miles.  The first mile was slow (my legs are very tired and I had some big hills on the first leg of the run). The second mile I ran a little faster and then I sprinted the last mile.  I walked about 100 yards at the end of the run, just as a change of pace. I turned my music off and listened to the birds sing as they announced the pending sunrise.   Not many air conditioning units were running in the neighborhood, so it was quiet. It was a very peaceful end to a quick run.

I came in and did 50 pushups and 50 sit-ups. My stomach is starting to actually have some definition.  I don’t have a six-pack, but I also don’t have a 2-liter.  My chest and shoulders are more defined, too.  Even my melanoma scar on my back doesn’t hurt as bad as it did when my fat self was stretching it.  A little muscle tone goes a long way to making you look better.

Tomorrow I will rest and then I’ll get up bright and early and do a long run. There’s a race on Saturday my boys and I might run — but I have to check the family schedule.

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Thursday Free-For-All

Good morning! The three-day weekend is almost here!

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Banjo update

Banjo has a new ACL, two less teeth and a soft spot on our bed. I have an empty wallet.  But I’m glad he’s home.

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Daily Links 5/23/12

Good morning! I hope were able to get out early this morning. It may be one of the best mornings for a run I’ve experienced in months.  The breaking dawn (not the vampire movie) was spectacular and the cool temperatures was refreshing.  The jaws of summer are about to clamp down on us. We need to enjoy this while we can.

I appreciate WAPT morning meteorologist Ethan Huston for giving me a shout-out on the air this morning.

Here’s my Fit-to-Fat-to-Fit Blog on today’s run and why I exercise. It’s not to look pretty (good luck there). No, it is to keep from going nuts.

CONGRATS to Jimmy Buffett for opening the new Margaritaville casino. Of course, you can lose more than just your shaker of salt there. Wonder if he sang, “A pirate looks at 65″ last night?   Good to see Mac McAnally on stage at the other Coral Reefers.

Making a joke about a man who has no fear of ever owning saggy pants pushing a ban on them is too easy, so I won’t do it.  I’m not a big fan of the style myself, but I wonder if this is just a feel-good resolution that will do nothing whatsoever.  And I’m a little uncomfortable with the government telling people what to wear.

BONUS CARTOON: I do national cartoons, too. Click here to see today’s.
All about Falcoln 9, the parent’s of the SpaceX rocket. A cool article for us space nuts out there.

I know copy editors are being laid off daily, but here’s a very compelling case for their importance via the University of Texas.

A new thing to fear: Taxmageddon. Good grief.

Share your memories of Bailey Magnet: Mine, talking to the journalism class many years ago. Kids were great but the building was fascinating. An amazing piece of architecture.

BREAKING NEWSStolen concrete pig found abandoned.  Thank goodness, I think.

Isolated severe thunderstorms expected this afternoon in Central Mississippi.  A warm front is heading our way (which means the humidity is coming back, too.)

Vote like an Egyptian: Presidential elections story from the NY Times.

Jim Hood’s bad dayGovernor signs the Sunshine Act limiting the A.G.’s authority. And it opens up more business for lawyers outside of the A.G.’s rolodex.

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I believe in you

Had a person I know (in a moment of frustration and brutal honesty) say to me, “Marshall, I’ll never succeed. No one believes in me.”  I was kind of stunned by his statement.  But after a moment, I related to it. I’ve sunk that low before — when you feel like the whole world is pulling against you.  But of course that isn’t true.  The world is too busy to care about screwing you or anyone else over. It just seems like it.  I said the only thing I could say to him.

“OK, I believe in you. Now, go succeed.”

While it seems like a sarcastic comment (I’ve been known to be a smart-alec), I was sincere. I do believe in him. I believe in just about everyone. Why? My friend has the talent. He has the means to succeed. He has the opportunity. All he lacked was faith.

I’ve been there.  I was there when I was a janitor. I have been there off and on since I was made part-time. Thinking the world does not believe in your talent can cripple you.  You have to get past that.  Like I said, the world is too busy to care.  Remember that your talent is a gift (read the Parable of the Talents for a refresher course.). It’s your own lack of belief that is keeping you back.

Trust me on this one.

So I do believe in my friend.  I also believe in you.  If that helps, run with it. The world, even as busy as it is,  needs every successful person it can get.

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