Department Of Getting All Zen On Y’all’s Asses
Remember that everyone you meet is afraid of something,
loves something,
and has lost something.

And everyone feels better after looking at a picture of a baby sloth wearing pjs.
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Department Of The Theory Of Let Them
I’m not sure if this can – or should – apply to politics in the wider sense; e.g., when it comes to the depredations of The Mandarin Turd Führer and company, we don’t just want to let them. But in one’s personal dealings, I have found this to be helpful.
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Department Of Dude Doesn’t Waste Time
Getting Down To Brass Tacks [1]
Sub-Department Of Things I Learned From The Older [2] Man Who
Approached Me As I Was Waiting For The Door To Zumba Class To Open
Dateline: Monday; circa 10:55 am. An affable, petite, elderly man, [3] whose appearance and accent indicated he came from a culture different from mine, approached me and wished me a good morning. He looked familiar; I’d seen him in class at least once. Thus, after I returned his greeting, I passed on the information a staff member had given me when I first entered the Rec Center: the Zumba class was going to start a few minutes late, as another group was using the facility.
He nodded, said he’d just come from another Zumba class at Hidden Creek (another Hillsboro Parks & Rec facility), and asked if I was married.
The casual ease with which he spoke his question – which I found to be both a straightforward query and a non-sequitur, given the circumstances – took me by surprise…but not in a threatening way.
“Yes,” I said, “I am married.”
He looked at my left hand, his eyes widening and sparkling with mischievous disbelief when he beheld the modest band on my ring finger (MH and I currently choose to wear plain but colorful silicon bands, which, I have been told, “…don’t look like *real* wedding rings” ).
“You are married?” he asked again. I laughed, repeated my marital status affirmation, and decided to return the straightforward-ness: “I take it you are not married, and are looking to meet someone?”
He seemed pleased by my supposition. Yes, he enthused, he is looking to meet a woman for dating! He reached into his jacket pocket, retrieved a piece of paper that had his name and phone number on it, and asked me if I would be so kind to take down the information and pass it along to any women I know who might also be looking for companionship.
Moiself was feeling generous, and said that I would. As I reached for my phone to take a picture of the paper, I asked if he was using his family for matchmaking ( a common practice in his culture ). He said he’d decided not to go that route. I asked him what he sought in a date, and what should I tell prospective dating partners about him? He told me…
* He is 78 years old, a retired chemical engineer originally from ____ (another country);
* He was married for 43 years, has been widowed several years;
* He frequently visits his daughter, who lives nearby;
* He doesn’t ask his daughter to “fix him up” because she isn’t happy about him wanting to date;
* He has looked at online dating apps but is not impressed by them (and he doesn’t do social media);
* The age of the woman doesn’t matter to him;
* He offers companionship, kindness, and affection, and seeks the same;
* He has found that there are two things which people think are important to control in their life: their diet and their religion. But he wants people to know that he doesn’t care “about any of that;”
* “Everyone” at the Hillsboro Recreation centers knows him (he said that after an employee passed by and greeted him by name), because he is so friendly;
* He is open to meeting a woman from any background, *but* not from ____ (his home country). This is for several reasons, including the “fact” (as he put it) that after they (women from his culture) are widowed, they don’t look to date or remarry; rather, they join their children’s families and spend their time looking after their grandchildren.
I guess I won’t be passing his number on to June.
He asked me to stress that he is monogamous (“Not like many other men who,” he said, “flip around” [4] ), and that he goes to exercise classes and takes care of himself, “even though with age…” he glanced down, patted his protruding belly, and chuckled. He then complimented me – “And you obviously take care of yourself” – and touched my upper arm, very lightly and quickly squeezing my bicep. It was a gesture I might have found insulting and/or icky from someone else, but from him, it was almost…sweet? Is that ageist, or patronizing of me?
I found him wistfully charming; not creepy or threatening, and there was an air of both optimism and loneliness about him. As the Zumba classroom door opened I said something positive about networking ( “Well, that’s how you do it – let others know you’re looking” ) and wished him well in his search. We shook hands and he bid me farewell. It turned out he was not going to class. It also turned out (surprise! As in, not) “He does that to every woman,” I heard from another female class member, after she asked about the bemused look on my face and I told her about my gentleman solicitor.
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Department Of Sometimes I Feel Like Moiself Should Wear
A Black Arm Band For My Country
Context: recently messaging a friend from high school, who has lived now for decades overseas, about The State Of Things In My (and formerly, his) Country ® . My friend’s past experiences include being in the US military and working in health care with mentally ill – life experiences which, along with being bicultural and multilingual and an expat ( a stranger in a strange land which he has now made his own) – give him a keen and unique perspective on what he sees going on in his native land. His pithy articulation shredded my heart.
“Do I miss my homeland? No, not really, but I do mourn for it.”
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Department Of What’s The Best Advice You’ve Ever Received
While listening to the rebroadcast of the No Stupid Questions podcast, What’s The Best Advice You’ve Ever Received [5] moiself didn’t immediately come up with my alternative (as in, Ah, yes, and the best advice I ever received was….” Instead, I was intrigued by how many possible answers there might be to that question, perhaps as many different pieces of advice as there are advice givers, and seekers.
Podcast host Angela Duckworth:
“The first thing that leaps to mind is I was about 19 or 20 years old. There was a professor named Kay Merseth, who I’m still in touch with. And I remember being unhappy and going to Kay for advice. I can’t exactly remember whether it was another romantic breakup…or more that I was struggling with a career decision. Like: should I go into education, which I really wanted to do, but my dad wouldn’t speak to me after that, or should I become a doctor like he does want me to.
And I remember she said this: ‘Angela, it sounds to me like you really want to make the right decision, the best decision.’ And I nodded. And she said, ‘But life’s not like that. Life is a story. And your job is not to tell the ‘right’ story or even the best story. It’s just to tell a story that you can be proud of.’ And I went away from that day thinking, ‘What the hell did Kay mean? This is too deep for me.’
But I have actually used that advice when I talk to undergraduates in my own course. Now they’re the 19 or 20-year-old, and I’m the professor. And I do think the reason why Kay gave that advice to me — and why I pass it along — is that I think I was a little bit paralyzed by, like, ‘What’s the absolutely correct or best decision?’ And we can’t know. I mean, life is just mostly uncertainty. All we can do is act in a way where we can use the intuition we have. There are many, many paths in life, and who knows how this is going to turn out? But am I doing something that — at the end of the story, will I look back and say, ‘I’m proud of that?’
( Excerpt; my emphases, No Stupid Questions podcast,
What’s The Best Advice You’ve Ever Received ),
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Freethinkers’ Thought Of The Week [6]
“No myths need to be embraced for us to commune with the profundity of our circumstance. No person god needs to be worshiped for us to live in awe at the beauty and immensity of creation. No tribal fictions need to be rehearsed for us to realize, one fine day, that we do, in fact, love our neighbors, that our happiness is inextricable from their own, and that our interdependence demands that people everywhere be given the opportunity to flourish.”
( Neuroscientist, philosopher, meditation teacher, podcast host, author Sam Harris,
excerpt from The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, And The Future Of Reason )
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May you discern when or when not to just Let Them;
May we do more than wear a black armband for our country;
May your life be the best advice someone else has ever received;
…and may the hijinks ensue.
Thanks for stopping by. Au Vendredi!
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[1] Whence that phrase, which means getting down to the basics or serious business? And can the tacks-one-is-getting-down-to be of an alloy other than brass? Getting down to pewter? Bronze? Sterling silver?
[2] As in, older than moiself.
[3] Not stooped with age; he had good posture but couldn’t have been more than 5’2″ (and even smaller, were he barefooted).
[4] I think he meant, flit around?
[5] originally aired 8-29-21
[6] “free-think-er n. A person who forms opinions about religion on the basis of reason, independently of tradition, authority, or established belief. Freethinkers include atheists, agnostics and rationalists. No one can be a freethinker who demands conformity to a bible, creed, or messiah. To the freethinker, revelation and faith are invalid, and orthodoxy is no guarantee of truth.” Definition courtesy of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, ffrf.org