Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Home


This is where I grew up.
What is it about the song "Home" from Phillip Phillips that has advertisers clamoring to use it in their commercials?  It's quite simple, really.  Next to the word family, there is no other word like home that elicits such an immediate, passionate, and emotional response.  It's an attachment that cannot be explained; it's human nature.  Maybe it’s the house you were born or perhaps the house where you lived your formidable teen years, but we all have that one special place that we call home.  For me that place is not a house, but rather a stretch of railroad tracks near the small Indiana subdivision where I was raised.  From the mid-1980s until the mid-1990s, I spent the bulk of my adolescence on this former Pennsylvania Railroad mainline.  The line once saw dozens of diesels hauling coal, auto parts, and even passengers, but by the late-80s was a shell of its former self.  During the tracks twilight years, I was out watching 70 year-old men switch train cars for the local Ford plant or else I was making my patented late-night walk down the tracks with my friend John.  Despite the passing years, my memories of home are fond and still vivid.  Business on the old tracks dried up in the late-90s and nature soon took over the route.  Where two sets of shiny rails once proudly stood, weeds and trees now rule the right of way.  I flinched and (admittedly) gasped when I learned that the end of the line for these idle tracks is near.  Soon the rusted rails and rotting ties will be torn up and hauled away.  While this news tugs at my heart, I am pleased to learn that a bike path might soon replace the tracks.  One day, I’ll be able to go home again.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Your Oscar Speech

These statues would like to thank the Academy.
2/24/13

Imagine for a moment that you're accepting an award that recognizes your work.  As you step on stage to accept said award, you offer thanks to those responsible for getting to where you are today--all in just 30 seconds.  After mentioning your spouse, family, or perhaps God, who would you thank?  Most likely it will be someone who mentored or motivated you.  But what about those other people: the people who told us that we weren't good enough.  Sometimes proving someone wrong is the greatest motivation.  Michael Jordan once mentioned that his high school basketball coach who cut him from the team served as one the biggest influences on his life.  Maybe it's being turned down for a job, rejected by someone you dated, or being told that you'll never have a future doing what you're most passionate...the opportunities are endless.  Who do you want to thank?

Sunday, February 10, 2013

PB&J

"Sometimes all you need is a peanut butter & jelly sandwich and all is right with the world." 
--Socrates?
--Robert Frost??
--Paula Deen???

2/10/13