Archive - 2010
June 23rd
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 06/23/2010 - 05:18June 22nd
My First Go Language Program on the Nokia #N900
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 06/22/2010 - 10:01On the Maemo users mailing list, there has been a discussion about the Go Programming Language. Various people have tried various things to get Go to work, so I thought I would take a crack at it and see what I could do with it.
June 21st
Music Monday - Patrick Rickelton (prattle on, rick)
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 06/21/2010 - 12:46I keep waiting for something to happen, I can't grow younger
Patrick Rickelton (prattle on, rick), taught high school history and German for nearly seven years which he left behind to take up a busker’s approach to performing, “focusing instead on art shows, cafes, restaurants, museums, houses, etc.” Maybe he stopped waiting for something to happen and set out to make things happen.
How well has it been going for him? If we take his lyrics at their face value, perhaps not as well as he would like.
lately I walk on a lonely road
it's the only road I know
lately I talk with my shadow
no ear to hear my groan
no dwelling to call home
no shelter from the snowlately I sing on a broken stage
no words upon my page
lately I stroll on an empty lane
it's easier that way
no one to see the pain
or to break my heart again
Perhaps we shouldn’t take the lyrics as reflecting how is career is going. Perhaps some of it is that he’s not playing the music industry game the way it is currently rigged and not enough people have discovered his music.
Patrick’s music resonates with me. There is something to be said about taking on the busker’s attitude and going on to share one’s music. Patrick was one of the first people to respond to my request on Sonic Bids. I liked his music right away and tried to find the right time in my schedule to review it.
As luck would have it, today was the day I had scheduled to write my review. As I started relistening to his music, I received a couple emails from family members. An old close friend of my mother just died as did my cousin Doug.
Although, the song ‘lately’ does not stay on a sad lonely theme. It ends with a sense of a promise.
someday we'll sing a perfect melody
in perfect harmony
we'll worship perfectly
see what we've longed to see
where everyone we meet
is long-lost family
no reason more to grieve
no need no more to leave
So, I stroll down my empty lanes, waiting for something to happen. Along the way, I will mourn the death of friends and family, but I’ll also keep listening to groups like prattle on, rick. It will make the road a bit more enjoyable and keep me reminded of the beauty in life.
June 20th
Happy Failed Father’s Day
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/20/2010 - 08:30It is eight in the morning, and I am awake for Failed Father’s day. A little before seven, our aging chocolate lab Barley started barking. She does this just about every morning. It could be that she needs to go outside, that the cat is outside asking to come inside, that she is hungry, that she needs attention, or simply that she always barks a little before seven. Fiona gets up and tells me to go back to bed. It’s father’s day and she will take care of Barley. Of course, Barley doesn’t stop barking. A little later, my wife gets up to check on Barley, telling me to try and rest, but still Barley barks. My wife comes back to bed and we rest a little more, but I am awake now, so I come downstairs and start writing.
Even the simplest things, I fail at. I can’t sleep, even though my family wants me to. The past few years have been pretty tough. I haven’t been able to earn the sort of money necessary to get my family everything they want. At times it wears on me, and I even have difficulties being as emotionally available as I should be. Of course, being able to only meet familial needs instead of familial wants, may be better for the family. Part of growing up includes learning that you can’t always get what you want.
Yet all in all, we’re doing okay. I think of a friend, thousands of miles away, who lost his son five years ago. Even over the great distance, made a little shorter over the Internet, and over the years, the sharp pain is still palpable. It reminds me of a story I heard online a while ago.
A father is at the playground watching his daughter ride her bicycle. He looks at his watch and sees that it is time to go. His daughter begs to stay, “Please, just five more minutes.” He smiles, and says, “okay, just five more minutes.” A mother nearby, watching the interchange compliments him on being a very tolerant father.
He responds that things are not what they seem. He explains that a year ago, the little girl’s big brother was killed when his bicycle got hit by a car not far from the playground. He is glad that his daughter has managed to learn to enjoy riding a bicycle safely at the playground. More importantly, he explains that his daughter may think he has given her a gift by allowing her five more minutes to ride her bike, but the real gift is that he is receiving five more minutes to watch her daughter enjoy her childhood.
So this father’s day, I am pretty sure I know what my family will give me. Fiona will give me an opportunity to help her with something on the computer and a chance to do another radio show with her. Miranda will probably give me the chance to sit in the passenger seat as she drives around a parking lot learning how to drive. My eldest will probably give me the opportunity to be concerned for her, even though she is mad at me for telling her no to something she really wanted. My wife will probably give me an opportunity to help her with some simple task that she used to be able to do before her horrible bout with Lyme disease.
Yes, there will be times throughout the year that I will receive these gifts less thankfully. After all, like all fathers, I am a failed father. Some fathers might have problems recognizing or accepting their own failures and believe that by yelling at the umpire they are being a good role model. Others might have problems accepting their own fatherhood leaving their children to be raised by others. Some may carry pains of great loss. Others may be losing much through their inability to connect with their emotions.
Whatever the failures, I want to wish everyone a Happy Failed Father’s Day. I’m Aldon, and I’m a failed father.
June 19th
Juneteenth, Father’s Day and the Summer’s Solstice
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sat, 06/19/2010 - 21:45Today was the last day of my youngest daughter’s softball season. The weather was beautiful, and between the game, swimming and party, I am finally getting a moment to write a few thoughts before heading off to bed.
Today is Juneteenth, and there have been various celebrations around Connecticut and beyond. Today, if something big happens, you get the message almost instantaneously. Years ago, this was not the case. On September 22, 1862, President Lincoln issued an executive order declaring freedom to all slaves in any of the Confederate States. Word travelled slowly, especially during the Civil War, and it wasn’t until June 19th, 1865, that the message made it to Galveston, Texas. Since that day, Juneteenth has been a special day to celebrate emancipation.
Then, in 1909, Sonora Dodd came up with a new idea as she listened to a Mother’s Day sermon. She wanted a special day to honor her father, William Smart. Smart was a widowed Civil War Veteran who raised Sonora and her five siblings. With that, the first Father’s day came into being, on June 19th, 1910.
The first presidential proclamation honoring fathers didn’t come for another 56 years when President Johnson designated the third Sunday in Jun as Father’s day. Then, in 1972, President Nixon signed a law that made it permanent.
This year, Father’s day will happen on the 20th. The next day, the earth reaches its northern most tilt towards the sun.
With all of this, there will be many opportunities to celebrate, so my writing may be a little sparse. Happy Juneteenth, Father’s Day and Summer Solstice.