Personal

Personal reflections, comments about things I've been doing, etc.

Contest at Lulu – The Silent Serian by Miranda Hynes

Lulu.com is having a August Author Sales Contest. My daughter, Miranda Hynes has signed up for the contest. Please, go out and buy a copy of her latest book, The Silent Serian, by Miranda Hynes. In addition, if you entered the code “README” at checkout, you can receive a 10% discount. If you are a blogger, seeking a link from a fairly high traffic blog with good page rank, please add a link to Miranda’s book, or even a book review. I will highlight the best reviews with links from this blog and if she does well enough in the book contest, I’ll give away thousands of EntreCard credits to people that have linked to her; details yet to be determined.

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Notes for August

Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, or should I say Lapin, Kaninchen, coniglio. Each month starts off with new hopes, and on this blog, I like to start with the old superstition that saying Rabbit, Rabbit, in some form will bring luck. Today, August 1st, is also Swiss National Day, so perhaps saying Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit in French, German and Italian, three of the major languages of Switzerland would be appropriate.

Hopefully, August will be less rainy than June and July have been. We did get a call from the Country Club of Woodbridge letting us know that the pool is now open and they are accepting pool memberships. We may head over and swim today. Later, we hope to head over to the Orange Volunteer Firemen’s Carnival.

On Monday, I will go to the UNESCO International Leadership Training Programme: A Global Intergenerational Forum at University of Connecticut. The trial of Anthony Maio is also scheduled to start on Monday. I probably won’t make it to the court on Monday, but I am thinking of attending some of the trial later in the week.

Meanwhile, I have plenty of pending blog posts to complete, as well as continuing to dig out from under all the emails and other social media messages that have piled up. There is also work to do on some financial services consulting and some campaign consulting.

So, that’s a brief look at the coming month. What are you up to?

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Updates

Well, I'm back from the Falcon Ridge Folk Festival. I have around 5000 unread emails with many additional messages on assorted social media sites.

There are many things that I need to write about, but it will slowly trickle out as I also have to get some other work done.

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Promises

“It promises to be another beautiful day on the Outer Cape…”

As I awake on this beautiful Monday, I think about all the various promises in our lives. Some are God’s promises; the promise of a new day, or the promise of a rainbow. Some are very big human promises; promises to uphold the constitution, promises to have and to hold in sickness and in health. These are important promises to be kept that too often people break. There are other big promises that may never be fulfilled, but are important ones, the ones of hopes and dreams; the vacation in Paris, or “next year in Jerusalem”. There are even those promises that are huge to some and seemingly inconsequential to others, like the promise of going to the lighthouse if the weather is fine in the beginning of Virginia Woolf’s novel, “To The Lighthouse”.

Yet within each promise of a new day are many small promises, like the promise of a fresh cup of coffee. These are the promises I would like to think about this morning. One friend of mine has a child fighting mental illness. Their life is made up of little promises. “Would you like me to bring home some ice cream for you from the grocery store?” There are implicit promises built into this; a promise of a mother to return with a treat, and a promise of the child to hold things together while she is gone.

Recently, there have been a lot of stories about suicides in the news. I don’t know how much this is a result of the economic woes so many are struggling with, but the promises the mother evokes from her child has made me think much more seriously about not only the big promises, but also the little promises. When I tell my wife and daughter that I’ll be back from the store in an hour, it is a small promise that is part of the much larger promises. We might all be a little better off if we thought about our promises that way.

For over a year, I’ve been writing a blog post every day. Some are very short, like a Wordless Wednesday post. Others require much time and thinking. I don’t want to make a promise to update my blog every day, even though I generally manage to succeed with this, but I do promise to update my blog frequently, even if the frequency falls off a little during vacations. I make the same sort of promise about visiting friends’ blogs.

How do you think about your promises? If you are a fellow blogger, are their promises implied or stated about your blog? Do you have implied or stated promises in reading other people’s blogs or commenting on them? Are you viewing your promise to take out the trash as an important part of the promise, ‘to have and to hold’? Do you view each of these promises as an important part of God’s promise of each new day?

For me, the promise right now is to let Kim sleep a little this morning. It will be followed by fulfilling the promise of going to the beach to swim, and at some point over the days to come, the promise to write more about these experiences on the Cape.

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#FRFF – Amy Speace, Girlyman, and Eric Lowen

This evening I discovered that Amy Speace will be playing at Café Nine in New Haven next Tuesday. Last year, she was one of the 2008 Falcon Ridge Emerging Artists. I liked what I heard of her online before I went and then enjoyed her performance at Falcon Ridge. I wasn’t surprised when she ended up getting the most votes to be asked to return this year.

So, this got me looking at the list of performers for this year’s Falcon Ridge. The first name that jumped out at me was Girlyman. If I recall properly, Girlyman was Miranda’s favorite band for a while and we went to see Girlyman perform in Hartford. From there, I looked for one of Kim’s favorite bands, Lowen and Navarro. The performer’s list included Dan Navarro, but not Lowen and Navarro. I quickly went to the LowNav website.

A black and white picture is front and center. There is a crack in the middle of the road leading off to mist covered mountains. Next to that are the words, “El Fin Del Camino”.

It's been just over five years since Eric Lowen's diagnosis with ALS, and after 250 performances logged since that giant day, we now find our shows this weekend in Annapolis Fri June 5 and Alexandria VA Sat June 6 must be our last.

I sit in front of my computer, trying to find words for my reaction. If I had known that that would be their last performance, would I have tried to make it to Alexandria? Would it have been too difficult? I don’t know.

As I prepared to write this blog post, I thought I would check to see who this year’s emerging artists would be. Ron Olesko has the list up. Last year, I listened to most of the emerging artists before going to Falcon Ridge and writing my initial reactions. I figured I would try to do the same this year, if I can work it into my writing schedule.

The first artist on the list is A. J. Roach & His Strange Pilgrims. The site is in Drupal and has links to ten different social networks. I’ve followed him on Twitter, and became his fan on Facebook after listening to a few of his songs on sonicbids.

It is late now. I will find time to listen to more of the emerging artists later, but now I should head off to sleep.

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