Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Read in 2013
Kind of slacked off this year, reading-wise. I try to read 1,000 pages a month, but didn't quite hit it this year.
So here's this year's tally:
3-Minute JRR Tolkien, by Gary Raymond. 160 pages.
Airframe, by Michael Crichton. 431 pages.
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (Kindle edition), by Lewis Carroll. 100 pages.
Ballymore Bedtime Tales, by Bob Brooks. 100 pages.
Big Russ & Me, by Tim Russert. 336 pages.
Burmese Days, by George Orwell. 263 pages.
Capone, by John Kobler. 416 pages.
City of the Golden Sun, The; by Marylin Peake. 176 pages.
Count of Monte Cristo, The; by Alexandre Dumas. 544 pages.
Design of Everyday Things, The; by Donald A. Norman. 257 pages.
Diary of A Wimpy Kid: Dog Days, by Jeff Kinney. 218 pages.
Diary of A Wimpy Kid: Last Straw, The, by Jeff Kinney. 217 pages.
Diary of A Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules. 217 pages.
Diary of a Wimpy Kid: The Third Wheel, by Jeff Kinney. 217 pages.
Eats, Shoots and Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, by Lynne Truss. 208 pages.
Emerald City of Oz, The; by L. Frank Baum. 320 pages.
Erewhon Revisited, by Samuel Butler. 170 pages.
Fisherman's Son, The; by Marylin Peake. 176 pages.
Frightful's Mountain, by Jean George. 258 pages.
Glinda of Oz, by L. Frank Baum. 232 pages.
Harbors and High Seas, by Dean King and John B. Hattendorf. 220 pages.
Last Continent, The; by Terry Pratchett. 390 pages.
Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, The; by C.S. Lewis. 208 pages.
Main Street, by Sinclair Lewis. 354 pages.
Miss Pickerell to the Earthquake Rescue, by Ellen MacGregor and Dora Pantell. 158 pages.
Mr. Bean's Diary, by Mr. Bean and Robin Driscoll. 128 pages.
My Side of the Mountain, by Jean George. 208 pages.
Nixon's Shadow, by David Greenberg. 460 pages.
Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea, by Barbara Demick. 336 pages.
Peanuts: The Art of Charles M. Schulz, by Chip Kidd. 336 pages.
Peter Principle, The; by Laurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull. 189 pages.
Place Byond the Map, A; by Samuel Thews. 338 pages.
Prayers from the Ark and The Creatures' Choir, by Carmen Bernos de Gasztold; translated by Rumer Godden. 127 pages.
Prince Caspian, by C.S. Lewis. 256 pages.
Professor and the Madman, The; by Simon Winchester. 242 pages.
Reaper Man, by Terry Pratchett. 253 pages.
Report from Group 17, A; by Robert C. O'Brien. 210 pages.
Road to Oz, The; by L. Frank Baum. 261 pages.
Secrets of Successful Fiction, by Robert Newton Peck. 119 pages.
Spirits in Bondage: A Cycle of Lyrics, by CS Lewis. 87 pages.
Star-Treader, The; and Other Poems, by Clark Ashton Smith. 122 pages.
This Beats Working for A Living: Confessions of A College Professor. By Professor X. 160 pages.
Thulsa's Gate, by Robert Schultz. 402 pages. (Beta read)
Walking, by Henry David Thoreau, 37 pages.
What Ho, Jeeves? by P.G. Wodehouse. 234 pages.
Will: The Autobiography of G. Gordon Liddy. 374 pages.
Wonderful Wizard of Oz, The; by L. Frank Baum. 137 pages.
Ze page total: 11,254 pages.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Beta Reading -- Not An Easy Task
Beta reading, we all know, is an essential thing when you've written a novel and you're worried it's not ready to publish.
But it's not an easy thing, being a beta reader.
I just finished beta reading a 400-page fantasy novel for a friend of mine. I enjoyed it. At least I think I did. The process of beta reading is enlightening to a writer, as we're more aware of the mechanics of stories and how good stories go together. But at the same time, we're more attuned to what we like and what we don't like, and telling the author this while being honest and wanting to help.
It's more than spelling errors and such, obviously.
It's pointing out where the story is lagging, bogging down, making it tougher to read. And it's also measuring praise where it's needed and deserved, to balance things out.
On top of it all, you have to remember to read for the pleasure of it. For the story. For the fun. Because if you don't do that, you don't know much about the book at all.
So it's obvious what has to be done: I have to read it again. And that may be the key to beta reading: Not spreading it out over as many readers as possible, but giving a smaller group of readers the time to read your novel more than once. More than twice, per preference, so they can read once for mechanics and the other time for pleasure.
That's something I'll keep in mind when I send a novel of my own out for beta reading.
But it's not an easy thing, being a beta reader.
I just finished beta reading a 400-page fantasy novel for a friend of mine. I enjoyed it. At least I think I did. The process of beta reading is enlightening to a writer, as we're more aware of the mechanics of stories and how good stories go together. But at the same time, we're more attuned to what we like and what we don't like, and telling the author this while being honest and wanting to help.
It's more than spelling errors and such, obviously.
It's pointing out where the story is lagging, bogging down, making it tougher to read. And it's also measuring praise where it's needed and deserved, to balance things out.
On top of it all, you have to remember to read for the pleasure of it. For the story. For the fun. Because if you don't do that, you don't know much about the book at all.
So it's obvious what has to be done: I have to read it again. And that may be the key to beta reading: Not spreading it out over as many readers as possible, but giving a smaller group of readers the time to read your novel more than once. More than twice, per preference, so they can read once for mechanics and the other time for pleasure.
That's something I'll keep in mind when I send a novel of my own out for beta reading.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
From the Fridge
Just a little humor to ease the tension in the days before Christmas. My wife thought it was funny . . .
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Monday, December 23, 2013
A Thousand Views
For the first time since I started blogging in 2009, one of my posts has had more than a thousand views. And it's not an old post, lying around on the blog for a long time. No, it's this one, featuring the last chapter of Doleful Creatures, my NaNoWriMo 2013 winning entry.
I have no idea why people are reading it. I can look at the analytics, but they don't tell me much. They don't tell me what key words might have brought someone to this page; whether it's some unfortunate combination of key words there that has brought them to my blog -- briefly -- or whether they're actually interested in reading the book. The absence of comments leads me to believe the former, as my typically pessimistic and cynical soul continues to take over. But I hold out hope. Wouldn't it be fun if it were Doleful Creatures drawing people to this blog. A guy can dream . . .
I have no idea why people are reading it. I can look at the analytics, but they don't tell me much. They don't tell me what key words might have brought someone to this page; whether it's some unfortunate combination of key words there that has brought them to my blog -- briefly -- or whether they're actually interested in reading the book. The absence of comments leads me to believe the former, as my typically pessimistic and cynical soul continues to take over. But I hold out hope. Wouldn't it be fun if it were Doleful Creatures drawing people to this blog. A guy can dream . . .
Monday, December 16, 2013
The Airing of Grievances . . . to the Idaho Falls Public Library
My wife thought she was doing something nice.
Something helpful.
Something honest.
Turns out what she did was a mistake.
Through a combination of negligence, our three children left
our puppy alone for a few minutes with a book borrowed from the Idaho Falls
Public Library. So my wife took to the Internet and found a copy of the book
she figured she could take to the library and offer as a replacement.
She made the kids pay for the book, which totaled $8,
including shipping.We returned a pile of books to the library Friday. My wife
explained to the librarian what happened to the book, then presented her with
the replacement book, identical in every detail except for the protective film
and barcode the library puts on its books.
“Oh, you can’t do that,” the librarian said. “We have to
charge you for the book.”
And full retail price. $14.99. Plus a $5 administrative fee.
That’s library policy. Inviolate. Because what if someone
else brought in a book to replace one that was damaged that wasn’t as good as
it should have been? They’d have to argue over every book. It’s just simpler to
have this policy.
Simpler, maybe.
But easy to file in the big manila folder of bureaucratic
nonsensicalism? Absolutely.
Here’s what galls me: My wife found the book – identical to
the one the dog chewed on – for $8, including shipping. But the library had to
have $14.99 to buy it from its distributor. At almost twice the price of the
book my wife had in hand, ready to give the library. So when the library asks
for monetary donations or a tax increase to help bring more books into the
community, the tale of refusing a book in the hand while insisting on ordering
one at nearly twice the cost of the one being offered will always come to the
fore now. Always.
Reality for the library may be that the policy makes for
less work for librarians, But what’s more important is the perception of
reality: The Idaho Falls Public Library refused a good-faith effort by a patron
to replace a book damaged by her own childrens’ negligence.
They did waive the $5 administrative fee. Theoretically. The
receipt we got shows a “balance owed” of $5; when we called the library to ask
about it, we were told the library administrator would have to approve it.
We’re not holding our breath.
We were not defrauding the library. We were not offering an
inferior copy of the book. We were trying to correct a mistake.
I was in the library a few weeks earlier (oh, we’re big-time
library users, up until now) and heard a librarian make several calls to
patrons, requesting information about books that came back damaged. Apparently
all the people had done was stuff the books into the return slot and hope the
damage wouldn’t be noticed. That seemed to be oafish behavior on the part of
the patrons. I’m sure the librarian didn’t enjoy making those kinds of calls. I
know I wouldn’t. So you’d think having someone come in, acknowledge the damage,
and offer recompense right there that would have the book on the shelf as soon
as it could be labeled would be a breath of fresh air.
Oh yeah. This is a bureaucracy. Fresh air is not needed.
What’s important is policy. A one-size-fits-all policy that might convenience
the library in some ways but in others punishes patrons who thought they were
doing right by replacing a damaged book, like for like.
Now I don’t pretend to understand library cataloguing, or
appreciate the superior quality of books procured from library-approved
distributors. That’s a reality outside my experience. But again, it’s the
perception of reality that’s important: Policy was treated as more important
than people.
That’s the true crime of bureaucracy.
So we now have two copies of the book. One dog-chewed, the
other pristine. The final irony: It’s not a very good book.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Give Me Learning, Sir . . .
Back when I was in high school, I participated in the ubiquitous gym class.
And let me paint a picture: I was not athletic then. Nor am I now. I was, and am, a bone-idle, out of condition bloke to whom regular exercise -- let alone something as organized as basketball or volleyball -- was completely alien.
Why do I have to do this, I wondered, every time I had to strip down to the "skins" -- invariably, all the fat kids ended up on the team that had to take their shirts off; I guess the skinny ones liked to see our man boobs jiggle.
But you know what? I did it.
I sweated through the warm-up exercises. I panted and wheezed through all the running. And though I refused to play baseball, I wasn't shunned. Nor did I get a bad grade. Because I did everything else. I even learned to like things like the warm-up exercises and pickleball.
I still regard physical fitness as important. I'm not wild about team sports, but I will go biking and walking and hiking. I try to watch what I eat.
I got something out of high school gym, even though it wasn't my favorite thing in the world to do.
So Rebecca Schuman's essay in Slate today really got my goat.
She thinks students who don't like to write shouldn't be asked to write any more. Because they hate it. Because teachers hate reading their essays. And because they'll never learn how to do it effectively, so why bother teaching them.
Yikes.
She says keeping writing in strictly English courses is okay. I assume she's OK with writing in other subjects -- history comes to mind -- but for those who don't want to be English majors or historians or whatever, writing should not be required in their college careers.
Her attitude stuns me. "They don't like to do it. It's too hard to teach them how to do it. So let's not do it." How DEFEATIST is that?
I don't recall seeing it written that what we learn in school has to be easy for us to do. Or something we'll be doing for the rest of our lives. I remember going in with the attitude -- and I get this from my father, whose schooling was interrupted at the third-grade level by World War II -- that we should learn whatever we can, even if it's hard. And he learned a lot of things, reading a lot of books and writing things down in a language that was not his native tongue. He might know what he's talking about.
I get it from this, too:
And as all have not faith, seek ye diligently and teach one another words of wisdom; yea, seek ye out of the best books words of wisdom, seek learning even by study and also by faith;
Organize yourselves; prepare every needful thing, and establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God.
-- Doctrine and Convenants 109:7-8
Or, if you prefer something a little less churchy:
"Give me learning, sir, and you may keep your black bread."
-- Leo Tolstoy
Let's just not treat everyone like this:
And let me paint a picture: I was not athletic then. Nor am I now. I was, and am, a bone-idle, out of condition bloke to whom regular exercise -- let alone something as organized as basketball or volleyball -- was completely alien.
Why do I have to do this, I wondered, every time I had to strip down to the "skins" -- invariably, all the fat kids ended up on the team that had to take their shirts off; I guess the skinny ones liked to see our man boobs jiggle.
But you know what? I did it.
I sweated through the warm-up exercises. I panted and wheezed through all the running. And though I refused to play baseball, I wasn't shunned. Nor did I get a bad grade. Because I did everything else. I even learned to like things like the warm-up exercises and pickleball.
I still regard physical fitness as important. I'm not wild about team sports, but I will go biking and walking and hiking. I try to watch what I eat.
I got something out of high school gym, even though it wasn't my favorite thing in the world to do.
So Rebecca Schuman's essay in Slate today really got my goat.
She thinks students who don't like to write shouldn't be asked to write any more. Because they hate it. Because teachers hate reading their essays. And because they'll never learn how to do it effectively, so why bother teaching them.
Yikes.
She says keeping writing in strictly English courses is okay. I assume she's OK with writing in other subjects -- history comes to mind -- but for those who don't want to be English majors or historians or whatever, writing should not be required in their college careers.
Her attitude stuns me. "They don't like to do it. It's too hard to teach them how to do it. So let's not do it." How DEFEATIST is that?
I don't recall seeing it written that what we learn in school has to be easy for us to do. Or something we'll be doing for the rest of our lives. I remember going in with the attitude -- and I get this from my father, whose schooling was interrupted at the third-grade level by World War II -- that we should learn whatever we can, even if it's hard. And he learned a lot of things, reading a lot of books and writing things down in a language that was not his native tongue. He might know what he's talking about.
I get it from this, too:
And as all have not faith, seek ye diligently and teach one another words of wisdom; yea, seek ye out of the best books words of wisdom, seek learning even by study and also by faith;
Organize yourselves; prepare every needful thing, and establish a house, even a house of prayer, a house of fasting, a house of faith, a house of learning, a house of glory, a house of order, a house of God.
-- Doctrine and Convenants 109:7-8
Or, if you prefer something a little less churchy:
"Give me learning, sir, and you may keep your black bread."
-- Leo Tolstoy
Let's just not treat everyone like this:
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Visit Sunny Saturn
Visit Sunny Saturn, or at least think about it in the infomercial my son made for his eighth-grade science class. Makes me want to work on The Hermit of Iapetus again. But Doleful Creatures awaits. That's the one I think I can have published in the next few months . . .
Monday, December 9, 2013
Want to Code? Learn to Read First.
Dear President Obama,
I like the idea of encouraging people to learn how to code –
whatever that means. I’ve tried at least one variation of coding – using simple
HTML not only on this blog but in an online class I teach. I built my own
websites in the early 1990s, mimicking the code I saw back then. I haven’t kept
up with it much, I admit.
You know what I like better? Encouraging people to learn how
to read.
I listen to a lot of young boys read. I mean a lot of young
boys. And most of them can’t. They stumble over pronouncing words. Simple
words. And if you ask them to explain what it is they just read, the pat answer
is “I don’t know.” And they’re telling the truth, because when they read aloud,
they’re saying the words, but that’s all they’re doing. They’re concentrating
on getting to the end of the passage, everything else is secondary.
I can tell the readers from the non-readers at the first
meeting. They sail through simple and complicated texts – and I hear them read
everything from news stories to their Boy Scout manual to more complicated
texts, like the King James version of the Bible. If they encounter a word they’re
unfamiliar with, they sound it out, and usually get it right. They can guess at
meaning, and usually get it right. And if they’re stuck, they know where to go
to find the answers. They can summarize. They can explain.
The non-readers can’t do any of that. Or at least they don’t
try.
And it’s not just young boys. I also can tell pretty quickly
which of my college students are readers and which are not. I don’t get to hear
them read aloud, but I do get to see them think as they write essays and post
responses in our online classes. Those less interested in reading stand out,
even more so than those for whom English is not their first language – and I
have a lot of students that fit that category too.
These aren’t dumb kids. They have other talents ranging from
excellent math skills, a deeper understanding of emotion and empathy, and
athleticism, among others. Reading isn’t “their thing.”
But it’s fundamental to everything. Including coding.
We haven’t left it up to schools to teach our kids to read.
We read to them. We started early, with picture books, then Dr. Seuss, now
others – right now, I’m reading CS Lewis’ “Prince Caspian” to my two youngest
kids. And we read aloud, nearly every night, from our scriptures. We take turns
reading and explaining what we read – requiring our kids to go over what they
just read and using their own words to explain what’s happening.
And they’re readers. They’re up late at night reading,
getting yelled at to turn off the lights and go to bed. They’re always sneaking
books into the car for trips, sneaking books off the shelves to read at
mealtimes. They’ll read newspapers. And magazines. And comic strips. I’m sure
if I put a book on coding in front of them, they’d read it. And maybe get
interested.
But the reading comes first. If it doesn’t, well, we’re
slipping into Snow Crash a lot faster than previously thought. Technological
achievement is highly valued in the Metaverse, but that achievement can be as
shallow as it is stunning.
There is, of course, this argument:
Coding does require a lot of mental discipline, dealing with
the concrete hidden in the abstract. Yes, a lot of what is written is drivel.
But so is a lot of what is on the television. As is much of what is coded.
Coding for the sake of coding, I’m not necessarily in favor of. Coding with a
foundation on the ability to think and reason, well, that sounds a whole lot
better.
Could coding prod a non-reading kid into reading more? I’m
certain it could. But you’re going to get more coding kids if they’re reading
kids first.
Tuesday, December 3, 2013
I'm A Scofflaw. And So Are You
I’m a scofflaw.
The sole difference between a sales tax and a use tax is the person that ends up giving the money to the state government. When it is a sales tax, the retailer is the one handing over the money, while a use tax is handed over directly by the consumer. However, collecting use taxes on small purchases often costs more than simply letting the consumer not pay the use tax. Instead, state tax agencies try to focus more on collecting use taxes for big ticket items that are purchased online with no sales tax, such as cars and boats.
However, there are a number of states that have stepped up their enforcement of their use tax laws and are now trying to make their state residents pay the taxes that should be paid. However, these states are still hampered by limited resources as well as the complexities involved with tracking down minor purchases and demanding that a use tax be paid.
,
I’m stealing money from schools. From schools. And other important things like state parks. Roads.
And all those ivory-handled back-scratchers they pass out to state legislators.
And my guess is, if you’re an Idaho resident, you’re a
scofflaw too.
If you buy things online and don’t pay a sales tax – and
there are few ecommerce sites out there that do collect sales tax by state –
you owe the state money. And not by some new-fangled law taxing internet
purchases. No, you owe the state money under a “use tax” law passed in 1965,
well before Jeff Bezos was even thinking about getting bald.
The math is pretty simple. The state tax commission
estimates Idahoans spent $1.08 billion on online purchases in an average year,
with that number growing. At six percent, that equals about $65 million in
taxes. Most of that is going unpaid. In 2011, only 9,555 Idahoans paid an
average of $56 in use taxes – or only 1.4 percent of those filing tax returns
with the state also paying the use tax.
The Statesman skirts one issue: What happens to you if you
don’t pay that tax? What are the penalties involved? Laws being what they are,
the consequences appear murky, but this statute, requiring that anyone evading
the tax be required to pay that tax once caught seems applicable.
But the situation gets murkier than that.
According to the US Small Business Administration – an
official appendage of the federal government, businesses that conduct ecommerce
are not required to collect sales taxes everywhere. Here’s the deal:
If your business has a physical presence in a state, such as
a store, office, or warehouse, you must collect applicable state and local tax
from your customers. If you do not have a presence in a particular state, you
are not required to collect sales taxes.
Note the murkiness: Online businesses aren’t required to
collect sales taxes. The SBA says nothing about whether or not purchasers area
required to pay such taxes. So it appears we fall back to the state statute.
And the state’s demands that the taxes be paid.
Additionally, if you’re looking to the federal government
for clarification on this, that’s shouting into an empty room. The US Supreme
Court decided this week not to take up a challenge to a New York state law
requiring online retailers to collect state sales taxes, instead saying that
job is one best left to Congress. And we all know how well that organization
works.The sole difference between a sales tax and a use tax is the person that ends up giving the money to the state government. When it is a sales tax, the retailer is the one handing over the money, while a use tax is handed over directly by the consumer. However, collecting use taxes on small purchases often costs more than simply letting the consumer not pay the use tax. Instead, state tax agencies try to focus more on collecting use taxes for big ticket items that are purchased online with no sales tax, such as cars and boats.
However, there are a number of states that have stepped up their enforcement of their use tax laws and are now trying to make their state residents pay the taxes that should be paid. However, these states are still hampered by limited resources as well as the complexities involved with tracking down minor purchases and demanding that a use tax be paid.
But to answer Mr. Incredible’s question:
Did I do something illegal?
The answers appear to point to yes.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Hand in Hand: Scouting, Online Instruction Making Each Other Better
I sat in the Deacons Quorum room, waiting.
The young man giving the lesson quietly slipped out a
borrowed tablet, got it ready to play some videos. Two other young men sat in
chairs near the window. Sat is a loose word for Deacons; one sat
conventionally, feet on the floor, the other sat with his legs pulled up onto
the chair, knees tucked under his chin. He had something in his lap – LEGO
figures – he was showing to the other boy.
Two other boys leaned their chairs against the wall. One of
them realized with both the president and the first counselor gone, he, as
second counselor, was in charge. He called the group to order.
I am their Scoutmaster, but in the fuzzy leadership links in
the LDS Church between the Aaronic Priesthood and the Boy Scouts of America, my
role at church is uncertain. Tuesdays are my days to shine and campouts and
merit badge pow-wows are my territory; Sundays belong to the deacons quorum
adviser. Who was not present.
The lesson commenced. The boy giving the lesson resembles my
own: intelligent, obsessive, smug in his abilities and eager to challenge his
cohorts to read a long list of scriptures, to guess the identity of the general
authority speaking – Jeffrey R. Holland – and to repeat several times with joke
that we look under our beds for devils and demons, while devils and demons look
under their bed for Jeffrey R. Holland.
The boys by the window weren’t listening. The LEGO figures
were more compelling.
The boy who took charge appeared to be asleep.
The other boy challenged everything the young man teaching
said, finally blurting “Why does everything have to be a competition?” throwing
the boy teaching off his game. He tried to recover by bringing up the Elder
Holland joke again.A bishopric member poked his head into the classroom, looked
at me. “You alone here?”
“Apparently so,” I replied.
He took a seat. As it was Fast Sunday, he wanted to make
sure the fast offering routes were assigned. They were not. One boy lamented he
wanted to sing with the choir after church and thus couldn’t do fast offerings.
Another said since he’d volunteered to help pass the sacrament at a retirement
community that afternoon, his obligation to fast offering collection was
nullified. Three other boys just stared at the brown leather envelopes in the
counselor’s hand.
Eventually, they decided amongst themselves that they could
do two of the five routes. The leader went to find conscripts from the teachers
and priests quorums for the other three. The lesson recommenced. With the Elder
Holland joke.
These are my scouts, I thought. On Tuesdays, they’re
noisier. There are others there who don’t regularly come to church who add
their own individual elements of chaos and decorum, often at the same moment.
As I watched them, Wood Badge training kicked in. This kid
challenging the teacher isn’t one who comes to scouts regularly. But when he
does, I thought, our Scout team will go from norming to storming again – the
team dynamic they’ve figured out (the norming, everything’s working normally) in
his absence due to football practice will be upset and they’ll have to learn
how to work as a team all over again (the storming, as in thunder and
lightning) as he comes in, not knowing where to fit in, not knowing how the
team has worked before, and with the team not knowing what to do as he attempts
to fit in and his attempts are interpreted as disruptions.
I sat there with them, terrified.
Not because of anything that happened in the classroom. This
wasn’t my first experience with this knot of Deacons on a Sunday. The boys
always teach the lessons. That one kid always brings LEGOs and those two always
sit by the window, distracted. The second counselor almost always looks like
he’s asleep. And if the kid questioning everything isn’t there, another kid who
does the same thing is.
But because I’d seen it all before. Somewhere. Deja-vu.
The Scoutmaster Handbook tells us this: “A new Scoutmaster
is likely to approach his troop with self-confidence. He anticipates that his
enthusiasm will excite his young charges to get the most they can out of
Scouting.”
I can do self-confidence and enthusiasm. As can just about
anyone any bishopric would call as Scoutmaster, providing he meets the basic
requirements: He appears to be breathing, is likely to pass a background check,
has not been openly heard swearing, and
is also on the bishopric radar after the ward paid for his Wood Badge training.
But the Scoutmaster handbook goes on to say, in the same
breath and with that same self-confidence and enthusiasm: “Learning about the
characteristics of boys, how to motivate them, how to deal with their behavior,
and how to help them with their problems will give the Scoutmaster the insights
necessary to enjoy working with his Scouts.”
Oh woof. This is something respiration and a mild financial
obligation can’t cover.
Wood Badge taught me enough to know that “learning about the
characteristics of boys” goes much beyond pigeonholing them into categories:
Smug, self-confident yet awkward in social situations; At ease in social
situations but prone to sweating and stumbling when called upon to pronounce
words with more than three syllables; Distracted LEGO aficionado; Thrall of the
LEGO aficionado; Avoider of responsibility unless it’s easy; and the inevitable
Scout Camp Slob. Wood badge taught me that learning the boys’ characteristics
meant finding ways for them to learn, to accomplish, to lead, despite the
challenges they face from broken homes, aversion to schoolwork, or fixation
with Danish toys.
Wood Badge taught me it’s okay to let the boys lead and to
let them make mistakes; the Scoutmaster Handbook cautions me against “falling
into the trap of controlling the Scouts’ experiences and doing everything for
them.” Wood Badge taught me it’s better for boys to try and fail and then try
again than never to bother trying because “the Scoutmaster did it for me.”
Wood Badge taught me that old saw from Lord Baden-Powell
himself: “Scouting is a game with a purpose: the game is a fun and exciting
program, and the purpose is to become better adults.”
To become better adults.
Funny, I’ve heard something like that before.
Part of Brigham Young University-Idaho’s mission statement
reads “Prepare students for lifelong learning, for employment, and for their
roles as citizens and parents.”
Different words. But the same thing.
All this time I’ve been concentrating on how the training I
got at Wood Badge could help me be a better online instructor at BYU-Idaho.
Part of me now sees this as a two-way street, as there are elements of our
online teacher training and the experience of teaching diverse groups of online
students will help make me a better Scouter.
As I sat in that Deacons Quorum room, I thought not of
Scouting, but of my students at BYU-Idaho. What am I doing in class to, as the
Scoutmaster Handbook advises, to make my classroom a safe place? To think
ahead? To recognize students as individuals? And then conversely: What am I
doing with my Scouts to encourage them to live gospel principles, to provide a
quality education for Scouts of diverse interests and abilities, and to
maintain a wholesome academic, cultural, social, and spiritual environment?
Should my goal be to squeeze my scouts through the eight
hours of community-based service they need for their Citizenship in the
Community merit badge, or to show them that there are community-based
organizations who need service from every person, including Scouts and Scout leaders,
so those organizations can concentrate on serving the public?
Should I sign my Scouts off on the Personal Fitness merit
badge because they‘ve stumbled through three months’ worth of push-ups and mile
walks and bookwork, or because through example they’re seeing how fitness now
will pay dividends well into the future that for them may as well be a million
years from now?
One hand can learn from the other. My role as an online
instructor at Brigham Young University-Idaho has as much to learn from Wood
Badge as my role as Scoutmaster has to learn from my teaching online English
students.
So I took two of those Deacons – my Scouts – on their fast
offering route, forgetting that when I arrived at church, my first thought was:
My son is home sick; I don’t have to do fast offerings today either. We talked
about the wind, the cold, the coming snow that might make our camping trip the
coming weekend a bit more interesting. I reminded myself that one of those boys
was in charge of planning our upcoming court of honor as he works on his
Communication merit badge; I’d better follow up on that on Tuesday, lest the
court of honor go unplanned and his experience fulfilling those merit badge
requirements goes unfulfilled.
I also noted the need to plan ahead for my Foundations
English students. They’re starting work on their group projects, with some of
them already expressing anxiety over the mistake-makings of their peers. As I
remind them I’m not a fan of group work myself, I also mention, casually –
about half of what I do in my full-time job as a technical writer involves
working with groups. Work doesn’t have to be pleasant to be necessary.
A game with a purpose.
Preparing students for lifelong learning.
One hand complementing the other.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Too Abrupt?
NOTE: So, I'm concerned this ending chapter is a bit too abrupt. Thoughts? (I know it's a challenge, reading this without the rest of the novel in context. Anyway . . .
Chapter Seventy-Four: The Waters Rise
Chapter Seventy-Four: The Waters Rise
Starlings chased rabbits and moles into their holes. They
grabbed at mice and shrews and voles, carrying some up into the sky to toss
back and forth as they squealed.
Where the Lady slithered, tendrils shot into the ground,
seeking those that burrowed. Where the Lady slithered, tendrils shot into the
air, seeking those that flew. Her color darkened as the fear and panic spread.
And deeper she probed.
She felt the strength lying there, somewhere underground.
The tendrils probed and searched.
She would find it.
This and That cowered in the truck. As it was a human
machine, the Lady and the starlings ignored it. Even when its engine turned
over and the truck began to back out of the clearing.
“That’s a close thing,” That said, jerking at the rods that
turned the steering wheel.
“Where are we going?” This asked from the floor.
“Away, away for now. Perhaps back to the shepherd’s shack.
That would be best, until the Lady is gone.”
“Is she going?” This asked. “For a long time, the box canyon
has been hers. Now she is here.”
“Doomed, doomed,” That whistled to himself.
Father Marmot did not see the truck leave. He was the first
the tendrils took. As he wandered the wood, he nurtured his hatred. Hatred of
Jarrod and Aloysius who had brought the beavers down from the canyon. So
industrious, they were. Already felling trees and packing mud, he saw.
Treacherous creatures. And dangerous, he knew. He remembered from the last
time.
Tendrils stopped up his ears, closed his eyes. Time, he felt,
like molasses on his skin. He imagined the sun rose and set, rose and set, rose
and set. He felt the tendrils caress him, feed his hatred, bring him stores of
rumors and talk and imagined actions to feed the bubbling mudpot of anger
inside his soul.
The Lady gorged on his hatred, and grew. She snared other
marmots, who went into holes to brood and drown as water from the creek poured
into their tunnels. She found others, and others. And grew and grew.
She sensed Jarrod and Aloysius. Not far. Not far. First the
appetizers, she thought. Then the feast.
Her starlings fled.
Her starlings fled.
And the sky grew dark with sparrows.
On the edge of the clearing, the magpie and the badger.
The magpie rode the badger, perched on its low back, claws
digging in as the badger ran. She turned to meet them and slithered through mud
where once there had been dry ground.
The magpie had in its claw, braced on the badger’s back, a
bit of rock.
The badger climbed a tree, the magpie hopping from branch to
branch. They fled the water that carried the flotsam of the forest floor in eddies
and whirlpools inching up the tree trunks, up the sides of the hills.
She splashed through the water and coiled ‘round the tree the
two had climbed.
“Oh, I taste the both of you, both of you through this tree,”
she hissed. The tree shed its leaves. Its branches grew brittle. Aloysius
grabbed a branch and it snapped off in his hand, where moments ago the branch
had been green. “Let me come, and we will sup together.”
From Jarrod: silence.
From Aloysius: the same.
Her tendrils reached them, but hesitated. Where they had
always found channels, or cracks, or breaks or tears or leaks, there was
nothing but feathers. Nothing but fur.
And the sky was full of sparrows.
A hammer blow, they fell. And they too, were silent save the
ruffling of their wings.
The Lady screamed as they pierced her skin with their tiny
claws, jabbed at her with tens of thousands of beaks.
And the waters rose.
This and That abandoned the truck, its engine flooded with
water. They swam through the flood, found a tree, and climbed.
The Lady squeezed the tree, which creaked under the strain.
Then she fell. She fell with a great
splash in the water and lay still. The sparrows swarmed around her, diving in
and out of the water in their speed, wrapping her in a coil of bone and feather.
Silence from Jarrod and Aloysius.
Silence from the sparrows.
A great gust of wind scattered the swirling birds which fled
to the four corners.
Bits of wood and pumice and plant and stuff bobbed in the
water.
Sparrows and the Lady gone.
Aloysius collapsed in tree fork, muttered. He gave Jarrod a
nod. The bird hopped over, landed on the badger’s back, folded its wings and
tucked its head down.
Both creatures slept.
Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Dragon Tryptich
I have a dragon-loving daughter I was trying to amuse at church a few weeks ago. She wasn't terribly amused, but I had fun. I'm particularly proud of the first one.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Gorilla Detecting
NOTE: A little something I wrote for my BYU-Idaho writing students. I think it's a fair, concise shake at showing what you ought to do in a research proposal. And that it features the Muppets, so much the better. Alan Murray would be so proud.
Gorilla detecting. It's gonna be big.
And how does detecting gorillas
apply to writing your research proposal (due this week)?
Have you presented us with a problem
that needs to be solved? Dr. Bunsen Honeydew has: How many times have you
awakened at night in the dark and said to yourself: Is there a gorilla in here?
So be sure to state the problem
you're addressing. And if the problem you're addressing isn't quite,
word-for-word, what you signed up for, that's fine. Just make sure you're clear
in presenting your problem.
Next, set the stage. Tell us why
this your problem is worthy of solving. Dr. Honeydew does: How many family
vacations have been ruined by undetected gorillas. Who wants a vacation
ruined by gorillas, undetected or not? Clearly, you're at the beach -- I'm
thinking Cannon Beach in Oregon -- and you don't want your playing in the surf
or gazing at Haystack Rock to be marred by a gorilla attack. So you've got my
attention. What's your solution?
Yes, present your solution to that
problem. Dr. Honeydew does: The solid-state gorilla detector.
Now, you're not done. Someone may
object to your solution. It may have its flaws -- the gorilla detector
certainly didn't work as advertised. So explain why your solution is a good'un,
if not the best. Present clear evidence, by once again turning to setting the stage:
Tell and show us why your solution is the best. Do better than Dr. Honeydew,
please . . .
SCHEDULE for the week: Try to have
your rough draft in your writing groups by WEDNESDAY, rather than MONDAY. I
don't think it's fair to dump that on you first thing Monday morning. Please
finish your commenting by midnight FRIDAY, then turn in your proposals by
midnight SATURDAY.
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Doleful Creatures: 45,000 Words In
Chapter Sixty-One: Upstream
Side
Jarrod flew, clinging to the bit of rock in his claws. The
rock was lighter than he dared hope, filled as it was with bubbles of air left
over from when the basaltic rock cooled long ago.
“Fly far from the creek, kind Jarrod,” the man in the rock
said, speaking from the bit in Jarrod’s feet. “The creek I will see afore long;
I desire to go further afield.”
“Pardon my indulgence,” Jarrod said. “Trust me a bit further
as we follow the creek. I have things on its shoreline to show you. We at least
travel upstream, where you are not likely to follow.”
They flew northeast, where the canyon opened up a bit after
the narrows at man in the rock. Here the creek split in two, one branch
continuing northeast and the beaver lodges, the other to the northwest and the
lake where Nimble and her kind found home. Here and there, rapids and
waterfalls, as the creek descended out of the box canyon.
Below, the creek wound through a narrow valley, a tumble of
rock really from the mouth of the canyon. Soon the canyon widened and its
bottom flattened into a gentle U-shape. Tiny ponds and lakes appeared, linked
by the creek as if on a grey-blue rope. Jarrod descended and flew low over the
creek, whistling and grunting in a mix of magpie and beaver tongues.
A young beaver mending a portion of a dam heard Jarrod’s
calls and slapped the water with his tail. From holes and bushes and out of the
nearby wood, beaver faces emerged, peering first at the water, then at the sky.
Jarrod started a gentle glide down to the pond shore, then
the starlings were upon him. Several flew at his face while others came from
behind, raking his eyes and wings with their bony feet. Jarrod folded his wings
and dropped, avoiding a third barrage, opening his wings just in time to stop
himself from falling into the water.
“Kill!” the starlings screamed. “Kill!”
Jarrod surged back into the sky.
Below, the surface of the pond roiled. Beavers leaped from
the water and their dam, fleeing with their youngsters into the wood as the
water surged and boiled. A whirlpool formed near its center, occasionally
gouting spouts of foam and water and mud. A terrible head on a long neck,
dripping mud and scum from the bottom of the pond, shot out of the whirlpool
and bolted into the sky.
The starlings screamed with joy. “The Lady! The Lady emerges
to fight with us!”
In a whirl, clouds of starlings shot from the sky and from
the strees and seemingly from holes in the ground to fly in a twisting knot
around the Lady’s leering, toothed head.
“Jarrod!” the Lady screamed. Spittle dropped from her mouth
and caused the surface of the pond to smoke. “Jarrod! Once you were mine, and
you will be mine again. And to the beavers” – she lowered her head to shout
into the wood – “if you desire to help this one, so be it. But remember the
massacre. For if you help him today, you will wish for the blessings of that
day, when so many died!” She roared and the trees in the full gust of her
breath withered, their leaves turning to dust before they hit the ground.
“Oh,” the man in the rock said. “This I have seen. This I
have seen before.”
“Fight!” the Lady bellowed.
In a single cloud, the starlings barreled through the air to
Jarrod, alone in the sky.
“Fly higher, fly higher,” Jarrod said to himself, pumping his
torn wings. He flew away from the pond, seeking a rising thermal as Nimble the
hawk had shown him. This early in the day, one might be hard to find, but he
had to look . . . there! He felt the wind bearing him up. The starlings, too,
would find the rising air and follow, he knew, but perhaps they were not used
to flying so high. He shifted his grasp on the bit of rock in his claws.
“Jarrod,” the man in the rock said, “you must descend. Fly
over the water. Fly back to her.”
Jarrod flew higher, his heart thumping.
“Jarrod,” the man in the rock said, “how long have we known
each other?”
“A long time.”
“And do we call each other friend?”
“Yes . . . friend,” Jarrod said, slowing his flight. Below,
the starlings’ screams approached.
“Descend. Fly over the water. And when I tell you, drop me.”
“But what –“
“I have seen it before,” the man in the rock said. “I know
what is to be done. But be cautious. This will be only a temporary stop to her.
She will find you again, and soon. In the meantime, fly to your friends.”
“The crows,” Jarrod said. The starlings screamed. The
starlings screamed.
“No, to the hawks,” the man in the rock said. “The crows are
noble birds, but the hawks; but Nimble. She will know what to do. In a way, she
has already told you.”
Jarrod swallowed, then folded his wings.
He dropped like a stone, still carrying the rock in his feet.
He fell through the cloud of starlings, knocking several from
their flight. His fall was too fast for them to do anything but dodge. Below
them, he spread his wings again, righted himself, then folded his wings again,
aiming for the roiling pond and the leering head staring up at him, mouth
agape, withering breath bellowing a putrid heat into the clouding sky.
Over the whistle of the wind, he heard the Lady’s familiar
voice.
“Ah, you are coming after all, once again into my embrace,”
she said, licking her lips with a slimy tongue. “Sweet Jarrod, so full of fear
and guilt. You have grown more bitter these past few weeks, but we will make
you sweet once again.” Tentacles shot out of the pond and beat upon the water,
sending waves over the muddy shores and into the wood where the beavers had
fled. Other tentacles smashed the lodges, uprooted trees and flattened the dam,
sending brown water boiling downstream.
But as Jarrod dropped, the smile faded on the Lady’s lips,
the shine in her eyes dimmed a little. There was something. Something.
Something she could not follow. Something wrong. Something wrong.
“Now, Jarrod,” the man in the rock said. “Drop me. Drop me
before the water is gone.”
Jarrod released the stone.
It fell and landed in the water with a plop so tiny among the
waves and flailing tentacles that it could not be heard.
The water was black and full of clinging ichors, but to an
eye that could see through rock, such obstructions were of little consequence.
The man in the rock tumbled through the water, falling closer and closer to the
sucking hole through which the Lady was forcing her body. He fell between her and
the rock the flailing and churning had exposed, and during an undulation,
slipped into the darkness below.
The Lady paid no mind. She continued to stare into the sky,
wide-eyed, as Jarrod flew away, higher and further, and as her starlings
quivered at her wails of despair.
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
WORDLE!
This, my friends (if it worked correctly, it does require Java after all) is a Wordle of "Doleful Creatures" in its current state. It'll be interesting to see if things change over the next 10,000 words. But I doubt it.
Lots of character names here. And some words that surprise me. Know? Really? One I understand -- many of my minor characters are nameless. And the Lady is mentioned far less than I expected, as are the sparrows. And maybe that's fine. Marmot (or a derivative) three times. That I understand, one of my marmots is named Father Marmot, so that's going to show up a lot.
Doleful Creatures: Coming Together At Last
Earlier this week, this happened:
It is, in fact, a very rough outline of the rest of "Doleful Creatures," which I'm hoping should consume another 8,000 words or so, but we'll see. There are other bits of the novel that need re-working, or re-re-working and that may take more words (or fewer) but progress is being made. And it's s far sight better than the novel it was this time six months ago, when I'd pretty much given up one it.
And today, this happened:
I like to do a map, mostly because I like to do maps, but also because it works like a kind of visual outline and reminder of things that happened, and things that still need to happen.
So I'm excited about this one. Again. The plot-within-a-plot is working well, and I hope to have things tied up soon.
It is, in fact, a very rough outline of the rest of "Doleful Creatures," which I'm hoping should consume another 8,000 words or so, but we'll see. There are other bits of the novel that need re-working, or re-re-working and that may take more words (or fewer) but progress is being made. And it's s far sight better than the novel it was this time six months ago, when I'd pretty much given up one it.
And today, this happened:
I like to do a map, mostly because I like to do maps, but also because it works like a kind of visual outline and reminder of things that happened, and things that still need to happen.
So I'm excited about this one. Again. The plot-within-a-plot is working well, and I hope to have things tied up soon.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Gratitude, Part III
20. . . .to the producers of “JFK – 3 Shots that Changed
America,” for producing such a fine, factual documentary on the assassination,
by sharing a link to it here.
And then freaking out when Mr. Salt from “Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory” offers a Kennedy tribute at about 1.13:00 into the film.
Don’t forget Part 2.
19. . . .to Jim Bishop, who wrote “The Day Kennedy Was
Shot,” a fine piece of historical journalism, by plugging his book here to
anyone interested in this bit of history.
18. . . .to Art Flores, who took a chance on a washed-up
journalist and hired him as a technical writer at the Idaho national
Laboratory, by manning the RWMC as the sole tech writer now, where there were
five before.
17. . . .to Jilene Burger, who ran for some kind of elected
office in Idaho Falls and who has left some of her campaign signs up, by
imitating Homer Simpson saying “Mmm . . . burger,” every time I see one of her
signs.
16. . . .to Pat Perry, ops manager at RWMC, who trusts me on
procedure writing methods enough to ask for help, by being honest in defending
the other writers when they’re right, and questioning when I think they might
be wrong.
15. . . .to Dan “Gunga Dan” Rather, the last entertaining
evening newscaster this nation ever had, by calling him “Gunga Dan.”
14. . . .to Danny Raschke, my writing supervisor, who trusts
me enough to do my work to leave me alone at RWMC, by doing my work as it
should be done.
13. . . .to Walter Wangerin Jr., whose book “The Book of the
Dun Cow” affected me greatly, by writing a book that’s even a shadow as good as
his.
12. . . . to Tony Lanzio whose gonzo approach to speaking
combined his native Italian with English, French, and German, by learning
French as a missionary so in part it was easier to understand him (he was one
of my Dad’s friends).
11. . . . to Tony Lanzio, for letting us know that CAL Ranch
has nice shiny buckets, by promising to buy one of them, someday.
10. . . . to Mr. Beddingfield, who taught us pinochle in
junior high school, by continually looking for people who’ll play it with me.
Anyone? Really?
9. . . . To Jeff Bezos, who is giving Apple a run in the
tablet market, by owning two Kindle Fires to balance out the iPad and the iPad
Mini my wife has.
8. . . . to Steve Martin, for being a ramblin’ man, by
sharing this:
7. . . .to the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, for their rendition
of “Give Said the Little Stream” and how it makes me bawl like Flick every time
I see it, for sharing this, while I cry some more:
6. . . . to Charles Schulz, for insisting that this scene be
included in his first Peanuts TV special:
5. . . . to Richard Thompson, for bringing us characters
like Ernesto Lacuna and Petey Otterloop Jr. (and Sr.), and for his current
battle against Parkinson’s Disease, by encouraging everyone to read his comic
strip.
4. . . .to Scott Adams, for making me want to emulate Wally
far more than is healthy for a good employer-employee relationship, by secretly
idolizing Wally while trying to achieve competence at work.
3. . . .to Groundskeeper Willie, for reminding us that
there’s nary an animal alive that can outrun a greased Scotsman, by shouting
“Make way for Willie” whenever I do something I thought was physically beyond
my ken.
2. . . .the prophet Enos, who taught us that even if you’re
a smelly hunter, you can still be in touch with God, by being a smelly writer
who tries to be in touch with God as much as I can.
1. . . .to Nephi, who reminds us of this: Adam fell that men might
be, and men are that they might have joy. By being joyful.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Gratitude, Part II
49. . . .to my younger brother who showed me the way to put a sprinkler system in by not only finishing (well, almost) what he started at my house but also by maintaining what he's done at Mom's.
48. . . .to my mother who, well, put up with everything I did, ever, with a smile, by putting up with what silly little things she does now, such as telling her doctor that she's OK with going without oxygen when we visit because we have boring conversations and she can sleep through them.
47. . . .to my mother again who doesn't mind if we bring our dogs over to visit, by visiting often.
46. . . .to CS Lewis, JRR Tolkein, Richard Adams, Sinclair Lewis and so many other authors for writing such excellent books, by re-reading them again and again.
45. . . .to my long-suffering wife who plays Santa Claus so well for our children (rivaling the real guy) by playing Santa Claus to her with more than what she buys for herself and gives to me while saying "Here, surprise me for Christmas."
44. . . .to the folks at Read Write Web, who write so many goofy articles, by making fun of their articles every chance I get.
43. . . .to the City of Ammon Utility Department, which does such a fine job of collecting our trash every week, by not putting anything in the can that's not authorized.
42. . . .to grammar slobs all over the Internet, by giving up my Grammar Nazi bent for Lent.
41. . . .to our dogs Dottie and Daisy, who make life that much more exciting having two furry children in the house, by racing around the staircase in the basement, alternately chasing them or being chased by them.
40. . . .to Monkey, mom's cat, who hides when we come to visit, by bringing our dogs, who flush her out and give her some exercise.
39. . . .to my cat-loving sisters, who take care of the orphans and strays, by showing them Crazy Cat Lady videos from the Simpsons whenever I can. And by letting them call me the Crazy Weenie Dog Man.
38. . . .to whoever it was who Photoshopped my brother Al to look like the happiest Grim Reaper ever, by sharing this photo.
37. . . .to Ebeneezer Beesley, who wrote so many wonderful bits of music to accompany Mormon hymns, by singing "High on the mountain top, a badger chased a squirrel . . ."
36. . . .to the ladybugs who winter in my woodpile, by shooing them out of the wood before I throw it into the firebowl.
35. . . .to my quick-witted brother Al (same guy in the photo above) who, when he hit me in the side of the head with the stub from the carrot he was eating, was smart enough to reply that I was among the "wortle-y wounded," by sharing this joke. And having to explain that "wortle" is Dutch for carrot. We're half-Dutch, see.
34. . .to my Dutch ancestry which makes me more quietly stubborn than others, by being quietly stubborn.
33. . . .to those Dutch ancestors who got kicked out of their synagogue because they wouldn't relinquish the front pew that the rich guy paid to sit in, by not really caring where I sit in the chapel as long as I can doze there.
32. . . .to those Dutch relatives who hid Jews on their farms during World War II, by honoring the memory of those who were not able to remain hidden.
31. . . .to Dad who took us out of school for a few weeks to visit The Netherlands so we'd connect better with our heritage, by remembering there's a whole nation of people across the sea who might appreciate some of the Dutch jokes Dad told us.
30. . . .to my Aunt Sharon, one of only two people I'll allow to kiss me on the lips, by letting her kiss me on the lips.
29. . . .to my Aunt Sharon again, who made me those wonderful plaid "Aunt Sharon pants" when I was a kid (Sorry, it was the '70s), by letting my kids occasionally wear something I find blindingly objectionable.
28. . . .to Mike Henneke, who put up with my joke about Forks, Washington, by vowing not to repeat it. At least today.
27. . . .to whomever it is who currently owns my 1990 Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais, by remembering what a wonderful car it was, despite its cosmetic warts.
26. . . .to Steve Martin, who wrote such wonderful modern screenplays to the likes of Silas Marner and Cyrano de Bergerac, by repeating often, with my wife, the line "Boys, the ladder is up. Boys, the ladder is up. BOYS! The LADDER! IS UP!"
25. . . .to the crooners and balladeers of the 1950s and 1960s, for recording so much wonderful Christmas music, by playing it year-round, no matter who thinks I'm insane.
24. . . .to my children, who steal my pens and then act shocked when they discover three or five of them in their bedrooms, by not getting mad when I take them. And when they steal them again.
23. . . .to Brigham Young, who said "This is the place" and then had the gumption to stick it out when things got bad and people got complainey, by not wondering why Dad decided Idaho would be a good place to settle as an immigrant in the 1950s.
22. . . .to the manufacturer of this computer desk who chose such a fine imitation wood grain laminate for the surface, by covering as much of the surface as I can with books and paperwork.
21. . . .to the guys who installed our gas furnace in 2012, by staying warm in our house and taking the heat for granted, until I remember how inexpensive gas is compared to electric heat.
OK. Top 20 tomorrow. Or at least an additional 20. I've been doing them in no particular order.
48. . . .to my mother who, well, put up with everything I did, ever, with a smile, by putting up with what silly little things she does now, such as telling her doctor that she's OK with going without oxygen when we visit because we have boring conversations and she can sleep through them.
47. . . .to my mother again who doesn't mind if we bring our dogs over to visit, by visiting often.
46. . . .to CS Lewis, JRR Tolkein, Richard Adams, Sinclair Lewis and so many other authors for writing such excellent books, by re-reading them again and again.
45. . . .to my long-suffering wife who plays Santa Claus so well for our children (rivaling the real guy) by playing Santa Claus to her with more than what she buys for herself and gives to me while saying "Here, surprise me for Christmas."
44. . . .to the folks at Read Write Web, who write so many goofy articles, by making fun of their articles every chance I get.
43. . . .to the City of Ammon Utility Department, which does such a fine job of collecting our trash every week, by not putting anything in the can that's not authorized.
42. . . .to grammar slobs all over the Internet, by giving up my Grammar Nazi bent for Lent.
41. . . .to our dogs Dottie and Daisy, who make life that much more exciting having two furry children in the house, by racing around the staircase in the basement, alternately chasing them or being chased by them.
40. . . .to Monkey, mom's cat, who hides when we come to visit, by bringing our dogs, who flush her out and give her some exercise.
39. . . .to my cat-loving sisters, who take care of the orphans and strays, by showing them Crazy Cat Lady videos from the Simpsons whenever I can. And by letting them call me the Crazy Weenie Dog Man.
38. . . .to whoever it was who Photoshopped my brother Al to look like the happiest Grim Reaper ever, by sharing this photo.
37. . . .to Ebeneezer Beesley, who wrote so many wonderful bits of music to accompany Mormon hymns, by singing "High on the mountain top, a badger chased a squirrel . . ."
36. . . .to the ladybugs who winter in my woodpile, by shooing them out of the wood before I throw it into the firebowl.
35. . . .to my quick-witted brother Al (same guy in the photo above) who, when he hit me in the side of the head with the stub from the carrot he was eating, was smart enough to reply that I was among the "wortle-y wounded," by sharing this joke. And having to explain that "wortle" is Dutch for carrot. We're half-Dutch, see.
34. . .to my Dutch ancestry which makes me more quietly stubborn than others, by being quietly stubborn.
33. . . .to those Dutch ancestors who got kicked out of their synagogue because they wouldn't relinquish the front pew that the rich guy paid to sit in, by not really caring where I sit in the chapel as long as I can doze there.
32. . . .to those Dutch relatives who hid Jews on their farms during World War II, by honoring the memory of those who were not able to remain hidden.
31. . . .to Dad who took us out of school for a few weeks to visit The Netherlands so we'd connect better with our heritage, by remembering there's a whole nation of people across the sea who might appreciate some of the Dutch jokes Dad told us.
30. . . .to my Aunt Sharon, one of only two people I'll allow to kiss me on the lips, by letting her kiss me on the lips.
29. . . .to my Aunt Sharon again, who made me those wonderful plaid "Aunt Sharon pants" when I was a kid (Sorry, it was the '70s), by letting my kids occasionally wear something I find blindingly objectionable.
28. . . .to Mike Henneke, who put up with my joke about Forks, Washington, by vowing not to repeat it. At least today.
27. . . .to whomever it is who currently owns my 1990 Oldsmobile Cutlass Calais, by remembering what a wonderful car it was, despite its cosmetic warts.
26. . . .to Steve Martin, who wrote such wonderful modern screenplays to the likes of Silas Marner and Cyrano de Bergerac, by repeating often, with my wife, the line "Boys, the ladder is up. Boys, the ladder is up. BOYS! The LADDER! IS UP!"
25. . . .to the crooners and balladeers of the 1950s and 1960s, for recording so much wonderful Christmas music, by playing it year-round, no matter who thinks I'm insane.
24. . . .to my children, who steal my pens and then act shocked when they discover three or five of them in their bedrooms, by not getting mad when I take them. And when they steal them again.
23. . . .to Brigham Young, who said "This is the place" and then had the gumption to stick it out when things got bad and people got complainey, by not wondering why Dad decided Idaho would be a good place to settle as an immigrant in the 1950s.
22. . . .to the manufacturer of this computer desk who chose such a fine imitation wood grain laminate for the surface, by covering as much of the surface as I can with books and paperwork.
21. . . .to the guys who installed our gas furnace in 2012, by staying warm in our house and taking the heat for granted, until I remember how inexpensive gas is compared to electric heat.
OK. Top 20 tomorrow. Or at least an additional 20. I've been doing them in no particular order.
Gratitude
100. . . .to one of my scouts who got up early on a windy, snowy morning and started a fire by blowing on the coals from last night's fire, for a half hour, by praising him in front of the troop and then buying him a doughnut.
99. . . .to my assistant scoutmaster who took time out of his weekend to camp with the scouts by letting him work with a struggling scout to complete the bookwork for his Physical Fitness merit badge.
98. . . .to another scout for teaching a new scout the oath, law, motto, and slogan using the EDGE method by praising him in front of the group and then telling him he'd passed off a Life rank requirement doing so.
97. . . .to the professional scouter taking notes on the Targhee District pow-wow by sending the clear message that the pow-wow was a welcome event, that the $10 per scout charge was reasonable and that we'd help out next year teaching courses to help ease the instructor shortage.
96. . . .to my wife for letting us go camping while she stayed at home with two demanding children and two demanding dogs by cooking Sunday dinner.
95. . . .to my daughter for writing me a guilty note chastising me for not reading to her at night by starting "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe."
94. . . .to my youngest son for being "man of the house" while we were camping with the scouts by bringing him a pow-wow patch for his collection.
93. . . .to my wife for doing all of our laundry by putting my clean clothes away.
92. . . .to a scout mom when she came to collect her son's gear by saying he's a fun kid to be around, and thoughtful too for bringing cookies to the campout to help celebrate another scout's birthday.
91. . . .to the father of a new scout by letting him know in a letter what progress his son has made on his Tenderfoot rank, and getting him involved by showing what he and his son can do together to finish things up.
90. . . .to the Idaho Transportation Department for clearing Highway 20 of its first snow in a manner that made it safe for me to drive scouts home by obeying the speed limit and not causing mayhem on the roads.
89. . . .to one of my Brigham Young University-Idaho students who wrote a funny essay profiling a friend by showing us what he admired about his work ethic through the eyes of the Subway sandwich shop security camera by giving him an A+, and then telling him he made me feel like the teacher from "A Christmas Story" when I got to give him that grade.
88. . . .to my mentors at BYU-Idaho who work hard with instructors who are not professionally trained as teachers by posting my self-evaluation on schedule and with answers that were thought out and, above all, honest.
87. . . .to my son who worked hard this weekend in cleaning his room by reminding him that we put that extra shelf up in his closet so he'd have a place to stow his LEGOs.
86. . . .to my father- and mother-in-law for raising such a wonderful daughter by telling them in word and action that I do still love her very much after 16 years of marriage.
85. . . .to my neighbor who got a little worried last year that I let the weeds by the "junky" side of the house grow too tall by keeping them cleaned up all summer long.
84. . . .to the city council candidate who came by our house shortly before the election to see what was on my mind, by having a sincere, neighborhood-wide concern to share with him, rather than just saying, "Oh, everything's fine." (He won, by the way. Hopefully we'll see that storm drain cleaned out so the flooding stops on Tiebreaker Drive.)
83. . . .to my Father in Heaven for a blessed life in which I have seen many examples of how he knows what is troubling me by working on a novel that shares that message.
82. . . .to my employers who put up with my occasional crankiness and sometimes gonzo approach to work by putting in a full day's work for a full day's pay.
81. . . .to the bishopric member who called me to scouting by completing the first tour and trip plan he's seen in the last few years.
80. . . .to the former scoutmaster, whose shoes are enormous to fill, by ensuring that the four scouts he's got close to earning their Life rank will earn that rank, three of them in December.
79. . . .to the ward member who several years ago got us a deal on a new Springbar tent for the scouts by hanging it in my garage all weekend so it can dry out and not go moldy.
78. . . .to the parents of at least half of the scouts in my troop (and the other half will come soon) by meeting with them and their scouts to find out what they want out of scouting and out of their scoutmaster.
77. . . .to my brother who is in jail for mistakes he knows he made and wants to fix by writing letters of encouragement to him as often as I can.
76. . . .to my employer who wants to make sure I'm adequately trained for the job I'm doing by taking the training in an expeditious manner so they don't have to nag me to get it done.
75. . . .to our financial adviser who is helping us plan for retirement by listening to what he says and taking it seriously, and then joking that we'd like him to find us a Ponzi scheme in which we can get into early.
74. . . .my wife who wants to be able to spend retirement with me by following up when she asked if I was putting the maximum contribution into my 401k. I was not. But I am now.
73. . . .to Cecelia Fife, who enjoyed what I wrote in a high school creative writing class, by still working on creative writing endeavors.
72. . . .to the instructors I had at Utah State University in the technical writing program by remembering what they taught me as I perform my duties at work and by striving to maintain a habit of lifelong learning.
71. . . .to my brothers and sisters who love me by loving them back, even if that loving sometimes takes the form of goofy Facebook posts.
70. . . .to Robert Schultz who wrote a terrific book by being sincere in my comments as I beta read so this terrific book he's written is even better.
69. . . .to my BYU-Idaho students who turn their papers in on time by grading them on time.
68. . . .to my father (may he rest in peace) who collected bucketsful of nails, screws, and other whatnots against a time of need by doing the same thing, and actually using what I collect.
67. . . .to my father who taught me how to work by teaching my children how to work.
66. . . .to Kevin Korth, by Wood Badge troop guide, who worked us hard to write our goals, by actually working on those goals.
65. . . .to Andy Hurd, who gave us a puppy, by loving that little ball of fur (the puppy).
64. . . .to my mother who taught us by example to love animals even if you don't want to (my favorite quote: "No, I don't want to hold it [a kitten]! I don't want to hold it! I don't want . . . oh, it's purring.") by loving the animals we have.
63. . . .to my Father in Heaven who gave us "dominion" over the earth by remembering that dominion is not a synonym for "do whatever the heck I want with it."
62. . . .to Bob Clark, director of "A Christmas Story," who helped bring to the screen one of my favorite films, by watching it every Christmas.
61. . . .to Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, by lighting a candle every 8 June 1955.
60. . . .to Carl Sagan, whose show Cosmos inspired me into a life-long love of the universe, by buying a telescope for my oldest son and going stargazing with him.
59. . . .to my oldest son who loves to learn, by learning right alongside him.
58. . . .to Jesus Christ, who paid for my sins, by trying as hard as I know how to be good. And more than in just a Santa Claus way.
57. . . .to the inventors of Diet Coke, by drinking their wonderful elixir. But not to excess.
56. . . .to Dieter F. Uchtdorf, apostle of God, who shares stories of growing up impoverished yet ambitious in East Germany, by saying "Danke Deiter" every time he speaks at General Conference.
55. . . .to Joseph Smith, founder of Mormonism, who listened to God as a small boy, by singing "Joseph Smith's First Prayer" with gusto.
54. . . .to my wife, who is turning into a lifelong Scouter, by trying to latch on to her coattails as I enter Scouting myself.
53. . . .to my father who showed me how to plaster a wall with a trowel and mortar, so when it came time to plaster my own walls with actual plaster, I knew what I was doing.
52. . . .to my father, who took good care of his tools, by using the tools I inherited from him when I work around the house. including that plaster trowel. I think of him every time I use it.
51. . . .to my mother, who loves me unconditionally, by bawling like Flick whenever I watch the "Baby Mine" sequence from Dumbo.
50. . . .to Jackie Gleason and Art Carney, funnymen from the 50s who taught me how to address the ball, by saying "Hello, ball," every time I see a ball. And then chuckling for hours afterwards.
I'm halfway there. I have to move on to other things. But there will be more to come.
99. . . .to my assistant scoutmaster who took time out of his weekend to camp with the scouts by letting him work with a struggling scout to complete the bookwork for his Physical Fitness merit badge.
98. . . .to another scout for teaching a new scout the oath, law, motto, and slogan using the EDGE method by praising him in front of the group and then telling him he'd passed off a Life rank requirement doing so.
97. . . .to the professional scouter taking notes on the Targhee District pow-wow by sending the clear message that the pow-wow was a welcome event, that the $10 per scout charge was reasonable and that we'd help out next year teaching courses to help ease the instructor shortage.
96. . . .to my wife for letting us go camping while she stayed at home with two demanding children and two demanding dogs by cooking Sunday dinner.
95. . . .to my daughter for writing me a guilty note chastising me for not reading to her at night by starting "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe."
94. . . .to my youngest son for being "man of the house" while we were camping with the scouts by bringing him a pow-wow patch for his collection.
93. . . .to my wife for doing all of our laundry by putting my clean clothes away.
92. . . .to a scout mom when she came to collect her son's gear by saying he's a fun kid to be around, and thoughtful too for bringing cookies to the campout to help celebrate another scout's birthday.
91. . . .to the father of a new scout by letting him know in a letter what progress his son has made on his Tenderfoot rank, and getting him involved by showing what he and his son can do together to finish things up.
90. . . .to the Idaho Transportation Department for clearing Highway 20 of its first snow in a manner that made it safe for me to drive scouts home by obeying the speed limit and not causing mayhem on the roads.
89. . . .to one of my Brigham Young University-Idaho students who wrote a funny essay profiling a friend by showing us what he admired about his work ethic through the eyes of the Subway sandwich shop security camera by giving him an A+, and then telling him he made me feel like the teacher from "A Christmas Story" when I got to give him that grade.
88. . . .to my mentors at BYU-Idaho who work hard with instructors who are not professionally trained as teachers by posting my self-evaluation on schedule and with answers that were thought out and, above all, honest.
87. . . .to my son who worked hard this weekend in cleaning his room by reminding him that we put that extra shelf up in his closet so he'd have a place to stow his LEGOs.
86. . . .to my father- and mother-in-law for raising such a wonderful daughter by telling them in word and action that I do still love her very much after 16 years of marriage.
85. . . .to my neighbor who got a little worried last year that I let the weeds by the "junky" side of the house grow too tall by keeping them cleaned up all summer long.
84. . . .to the city council candidate who came by our house shortly before the election to see what was on my mind, by having a sincere, neighborhood-wide concern to share with him, rather than just saying, "Oh, everything's fine." (He won, by the way. Hopefully we'll see that storm drain cleaned out so the flooding stops on Tiebreaker Drive.)
83. . . .to my Father in Heaven for a blessed life in which I have seen many examples of how he knows what is troubling me by working on a novel that shares that message.
82. . . .to my employers who put up with my occasional crankiness and sometimes gonzo approach to work by putting in a full day's work for a full day's pay.
81. . . .to the bishopric member who called me to scouting by completing the first tour and trip plan he's seen in the last few years.
80. . . .to the former scoutmaster, whose shoes are enormous to fill, by ensuring that the four scouts he's got close to earning their Life rank will earn that rank, three of them in December.
79. . . .to the ward member who several years ago got us a deal on a new Springbar tent for the scouts by hanging it in my garage all weekend so it can dry out and not go moldy.
78. . . .to the parents of at least half of the scouts in my troop (and the other half will come soon) by meeting with them and their scouts to find out what they want out of scouting and out of their scoutmaster.
77. . . .to my brother who is in jail for mistakes he knows he made and wants to fix by writing letters of encouragement to him as often as I can.
76. . . .to my employer who wants to make sure I'm adequately trained for the job I'm doing by taking the training in an expeditious manner so they don't have to nag me to get it done.
75. . . .to our financial adviser who is helping us plan for retirement by listening to what he says and taking it seriously, and then joking that we'd like him to find us a Ponzi scheme in which we can get into early.
74. . . .my wife who wants to be able to spend retirement with me by following up when she asked if I was putting the maximum contribution into my 401k. I was not. But I am now.
73. . . .to Cecelia Fife, who enjoyed what I wrote in a high school creative writing class, by still working on creative writing endeavors.
72. . . .to the instructors I had at Utah State University in the technical writing program by remembering what they taught me as I perform my duties at work and by striving to maintain a habit of lifelong learning.
71. . . .to my brothers and sisters who love me by loving them back, even if that loving sometimes takes the form of goofy Facebook posts.
70. . . .to Robert Schultz who wrote a terrific book by being sincere in my comments as I beta read so this terrific book he's written is even better.
69. . . .to my BYU-Idaho students who turn their papers in on time by grading them on time.
68. . . .to my father (may he rest in peace) who collected bucketsful of nails, screws, and other whatnots against a time of need by doing the same thing, and actually using what I collect.
67. . . .to my father who taught me how to work by teaching my children how to work.
66. . . .to Kevin Korth, by Wood Badge troop guide, who worked us hard to write our goals, by actually working on those goals.
65. . . .to Andy Hurd, who gave us a puppy, by loving that little ball of fur (the puppy).
64. . . .to my mother who taught us by example to love animals even if you don't want to (my favorite quote: "No, I don't want to hold it [a kitten]! I don't want to hold it! I don't want . . . oh, it's purring.") by loving the animals we have.
63. . . .to my Father in Heaven who gave us "dominion" over the earth by remembering that dominion is not a synonym for "do whatever the heck I want with it."
62. . . .to Bob Clark, director of "A Christmas Story," who helped bring to the screen one of my favorite films, by watching it every Christmas.
61. . . .to Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, by lighting a candle every 8 June 1955.
60. . . .to Carl Sagan, whose show Cosmos inspired me into a life-long love of the universe, by buying a telescope for my oldest son and going stargazing with him.
59. . . .to my oldest son who loves to learn, by learning right alongside him.
58. . . .to Jesus Christ, who paid for my sins, by trying as hard as I know how to be good. And more than in just a Santa Claus way.
57. . . .to the inventors of Diet Coke, by drinking their wonderful elixir. But not to excess.
56. . . .to Dieter F. Uchtdorf, apostle of God, who shares stories of growing up impoverished yet ambitious in East Germany, by saying "Danke Deiter" every time he speaks at General Conference.
55. . . .to Joseph Smith, founder of Mormonism, who listened to God as a small boy, by singing "Joseph Smith's First Prayer" with gusto.
54. . . .to my wife, who is turning into a lifelong Scouter, by trying to latch on to her coattails as I enter Scouting myself.
53. . . .to my father who showed me how to plaster a wall with a trowel and mortar, so when it came time to plaster my own walls with actual plaster, I knew what I was doing.
52. . . .to my father, who took good care of his tools, by using the tools I inherited from him when I work around the house. including that plaster trowel. I think of him every time I use it.
51. . . .to my mother, who loves me unconditionally, by bawling like Flick whenever I watch the "Baby Mine" sequence from Dumbo.
50. . . .to Jackie Gleason and Art Carney, funnymen from the 50s who taught me how to address the ball, by saying "Hello, ball," every time I see a ball. And then chuckling for hours afterwards.
I'm halfway there. I have to move on to other things. But there will be more to come.