Nobody told her to draw this. Kids can be really creepy sometimes.
De ta maison disposeras
Comme de ton bien transitoire,
Car là ou mort reposeras,
Seront les chariotz de ta gloire.
Posted in Death, tagged Argyle, Art, Childhood, Children, Construction Paper, Crayon, Dança Macabra, Dance, Danse Macabre, Dansul Morţii, Danza de la Muerte, Danza Macabra, Death, Dodendans, Emperor, Family, Fear, Hans Holbein, Kids, Love, Memento Mori, Parenting, Totentanz on March 25, 2014| Leave a Comment »
Nobody told her to draw this. Kids can be really creepy sometimes.
De ta maison disposeras
Comme de ton bien transitoire,
Car là ou mort reposeras,
Seront les chariotz de ta gloire.
Posted in Family, tagged Alcohol, Bacchus, Behavior, Childhood, Children, Consequences, Dionysos, Dionysus, Discipline, Family, Marriage, Parenting, Whining, Wine on April 13, 2012| Leave a Comment »
My Beautiful and Sexy Wife: Kids, what should be the consequence for whining? You’re driving me crazy.
My Daughter (Age 4): I think if we whine, you should make us drink wine. Because, whine and wine rhyme!
Posted in Book Reviews, Parenting, Spirituality, Western Fiction, tagged Adulthood, Ambition, Arthurian Legend, Bible, Books, C. S. Lewis, Cattle, Childhood, Christian Fiction, Christianity, Commitment, Cupid, Darkness, Death, Divine, Divinity, Eros, Evil, Family, Fantasy, Fiction, Friendship, God, Good, Horror, Illinois, Jack Schaefer, Judgment, Kingship, Larry McMurtry, Latin, Literature, Lonesome Dove, Love, Mississippi, Monarchy, Montana, Morality, Motto, Myth, Mythology, Obligation, October, Parenthood, Place, Psyche, Ray Bradbury, Royalty, Science Fiction, Self, Shane, Sin, Something Wicked This Way Comes, Southern Literature, Strength, T. H. White, Texas, Texas Ranger, The Once And Future King, The South, Theme, Thomas Sutpen, Till We have Faces, War, Waukegan, Western Fiction, William Faulkner, Women on June 8, 2011| 6 Comments »
My top five favorite books of all time, in alphabetical order by author:
1. Ray Bradbury, Something Wicked This Way Comes: A dark carnival comes to a fictionalized Waukegan in a timeless October, bringing nightmares. It is a story about childhood and growing up, fathers and sons, friendship, and the good and evil in every one of us.
2. William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom!: Unimaginably rich and mythic, a magnum opus about the South, chronicling Thomas Sutpen’s obsessive but doomed struggle to found–“tore violently a plantation”–an aristocratic dynasty in Mississippi before, during and after the Civil War, and about the destruction brought down on his bloodline and the land they inhabit as judgment that ripples through place and generations as a result. In the end, it is relentlessly a book about the dark places we should not go but that we ultimately cannot resist.
3. C. S. Lewis, Till We Have Faces: Lewis’s re-telling of the myth of Cupid and Psyche is the most true book about God that I have ever read. It is the story of an ugly queen whose beautiful sister is taken from her by a god, and who unintentionally enacts her revenge on everyone around her by taking just as ruthlessly, until at last she is finally forced to come to terms with the true nature of herself and the Divine.
4. Larry McMurtry, Lonesome Dove: An epic, episodic novel about a pair of grizzled ex-Texas Rangers and the men and boys they lead on a cattle drive from Texas to Montana, for no reason at all, more or less, other than to be the first to be there. It is a powerful and poignant story about manhood, friendship, obligation, women, cattle and death. Uva uvam vivendo varia fit.
5. Jack Schaefer, Shane: A short but intense novel from a young boy’s perspective about a dark gunfighter who drifts into a Wyoming range war between farmers and an unscrupulous cattle baron. Shane is a cracking, fast-paced novel about courage, love, commitment, manhood and true strength.
6. T. H. White, The Once And Future King: A lush and quirky but immensely powerful retelling of the entire Arthurian legend. In a sense, there is nothing that this book is not about. If I had to give a boy only one book to live their life after, it would not be the Bible. It would be this book.
Posted in Spirituality, tagged Celtic Mythology, Cernunnos, Childhood, Dreams, Faunus, God, Gods, Greek Myth, Greek Mythology, Hellenic Polytheism, Hellenismos, Herne, Herne The Hunter, Horned God, Mysticism, Mythology, Nature, Paganism, Pan, Polytheism, Spirituality, Trees, Wicca on November 30, 2009| 5 Comments »
I was standing on a playground near Rock Creek Park, nestled up against the woods. It was mid-day, and the sun was bright, casting yellow light on bright green leaves everywhere. I slowly turned to my left, and standing nearby in a copse of leafy trees was an imposing horned figure, his face in shadow. His horns or antlers arched high above his head, and he was draped in a blood-red robe of come kind. Seeing him, there was a half-second of hang time, of total silence, and then his presence pushed so powerfully on me that it shoved me out of my dream and into wakefulness. It was like a psychic hand-grenade went off when I looked at him.
Who was he? Pan? Cernunnos? Herne? Some other horned god? What does he want from me? Why did he show himself to me?
Posted in Spirituality, tagged Childhood, Chriatmas, Christianity, Church, Commercialism, Faith, Family, Holiday, Jesus, Jesus Christ, Light, Memory, Music, Religion, Sacred, Spirituality, Television, Time, TV on December 2, 2008| 2 Comments »
I absolutely love Christmas. I love the music, the decorations, the cookies, the shopping, the presents, the smiles, and the colored lights. The commercialism of Christmas just doesn’t bother me. It’s fun, and its only once a year (commercialism the rest of the year bothers me).
I can remember each Christmas distinctly going back to when I was six years old, and I have hazy memories of Christmases before that. These memories are some of my favorite memories, some of the best and most important times I have shared with my family. Christmas for me is the true mark of the turning of the year and the passage of time.
The spiritual side of Christmas has always seemed incredibly important as well. The religious side—the birth of Jesus and all it means for the world. It is amazing to me. Of all Christmas carols, I like the sacred ones the most. While I love the glitz and the sparkle and the watered-down-TV-special stuff, the things about Christmas that are really meaningful to me—really meaningful, are the baby in the manger, no room in the inn, shepherds watching their flocks by night, a new star in the sky, angels proclaiming the birth, and the three wise men. All that Christmas means, explicitly and symbolically, is precious to me. For most of my life, the sacred meaning of Christmas has been enough to hold me to Christianity even when my faith was weak and other options seemed more interesting.
Because of my attachment to the sacred core of the holiday, last Christmas was hard for me. It was the first Christmas in my life where I had serious doubts about whether or not I was a Christian, and so I was not sure what to think or feel about Christmas. We weren’t going to church at the time, so there were no Christmas services. I just wasn’t sure what to make of Christmas, and it made the holiday confusing and even a little bit painful for me. If I am not a Christian, then what is the point of Christmas? And Christmas has been so important and valuable to me, that losing it—or even losing just its sacred core, is something I don’t really know how to cope with.
So here I am, a year later, and not really any closer to figuring out what I believe—or what I want to believe. I can’t call myself a Christian and feel honest about it, and so I don’t know what to make of Christmas. But there’s something in that sacred core of the holy day that I yearn for. What do I do?