This morning, over coffee and last night’s jalapeno cornbread, three of us were discussing how well continuous improvement initiatives work in shipyards and football fields, so why wouldn’t they work well in our personal lives? Several reasons came to mind. The major reason that occurred to all of us is how often we identify our […]
September 21, 2010
More Coffee Club
As Texas weather finally turns cooler and the warm showers from the Gulf become the occasional cold rains from the west, thoughts have turned from shrimp salads and iced tea back to smoked ribs and baked beans. After the last bit of wet weather, our morning coffee has been driven temporarily indoors as flights of […]
September 16, 2010
Dangerous Rocking Chairs
When I was growing up, we had a TV room, not a family room. The TV room was relatively small because you couldn’t sit that far away from the tiny screen. I prefer to remember it as compact. The origin of the TV tray occurred about that time. One could sit in the overstuffed chair, […]
September 11, 2010
All for the love of boiled crawfish.
We watched the last of the storm clouds recede rapidly to the north where they gathered again to pester Dallas with a couple of tornadoes and settled a bit of dust in Oklahoma and Kansas. It had been a wet few days, so we decided to take a break by heading south to the shores of the Gulf […]
September 9, 2010
Anniversary of Elvis Presley on the Ed Sullivan Show
Today is September 9, 2010. Elvis Presley vaulted to fame and fortune on September 9, 1956. I watched it live on my black-and-white set in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and wondered what the big fuss was all about. It may not have been his first national television appearance, but it was the one for most of us […]
September 7, 2010
On Being a Life Coach
If you are going to be a mentor and a life coach, you are required to do at least most of the following things or their equivalent (in no particular order): astronomy, psychology, sociology, physics, chemistry, math, English literature including Shakespeare and French literature including but not limited to Guy de Maupassant, modern and ancient […]
September 5, 2010
Did You Have an Imaginary Friend?
Not long ago, I was watching a boy playing with his toy truck. He was down at eye level, face against the carpet, eyes slatted, moving the realistic-looking model vehicle back and forth while making growling engine noises. Tiny electric headlamps illuminated an imaginary roadway. The idea suddenly occurred to me that this could be […]
September 3, 2010
Insurance, what’s it for?
A very good friend, I’ll refer to her as Jaqui, recently had her house damaged by a severe storm. This is the second time in five years that major damage to her property has been sustained. This morning, over coffee, she told me some of the details that I hadn’t been aware of. I was […]
September 1, 2010
Words that are Newer than you Think
Sometimes we need to put history in perspective. I was around for the early digital computer revolution, having grown up in an age that found analog computers quite satisfactory for a number of applications like fire control on gun turrets. Lest we think that many terms and expression we use today have been around for […]
August 31, 2010
A Peek at the Next Callie Houston Thriller
Our friend and companion, our dog, Bilbo, died an untimely death outside of Hammond, Louisiana. My wife and I felt that this second book in the Callie Houston Series was one way to revisit some of our most treasured memories of our times together. Callie, our orphaned girl from Hammond, Louisiana, has finished high school […]
August 30, 2010
Losing Weight, it’s about the Taste
I wanted to step up to a subject which is on nearly every one’s mind. There will be no depressing political harangues, no complicated arguments, just descriptions of pure pleasure–losing weight and enjoying the process. “Ha!” you say. “Fact or fantasy?” In our case, fact. I’ve lost 27 pounds, my wife reached her ideal weight […]
August 28, 2010
Age of Gregarious
I was munching my way through a hamburger, eating lunch in a little off-campus dive in the college town where I live and thinking about who we are handing the future of our world over to. Not that it matters, really. Generational transformation is never dignified. New Ages will come and I won’t be around […]
August 26, 2010
The Function of Memory
For most of my life I haven’t noticed my memory because it was something that was just there. I never had trouble remembering my wife’s birthday or our anniversary date. I’ve always known what kind of chocolate she likes and what colors are her favorites. I get up this morning before daylight because I remembered […]
August 25, 2010
Lesson for Lazy Cooks
At the risk of repeating myself, I’m going to incur the wrath of certain cooks by trying to destroy one of those myths that plagues people who would like to eat fresh bread but have no local or decent bakery. Sorry, dedicated bread makers, but this business about complicated bread making is pure crap. You […]
August 24, 2010
Argue Religion, not Politics?
All of us eventually realize that one way we change is by taking sides in arguments. But should we? While arguing over either religion or politics is unlikely to change any opinions, if forced into the situation, I insist on arguing only about religion and never politics. For one thing, there are no new candidates likely […]
September 23, 2010
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