Month: February 2009

  • Whatever happened to little Marie?

    Since 2002, when I was blogging the part of my life story in which I "lost" my two daughters, several people have asked me what became of the older of them, Marie.  Longtime readers know that the younger of the two, whom I named Carol, was adopted, had her name changed to Angela, and found me when she was in her thirties.  She has blogged on Xanga under several names, emerging and then going incognito or incommunicado again and again.  She is back on Xanga now, and I'm not sure she wants me to reveal her latest identity.

    But this story is about Marie.  Through the years since I posted about losing her, I have given brief answers to questions about what became of her, if I ever saw her again, etc.  I don't think I've told the whole story, and if I ever did, I didn't save a link to it.  Today, Phx_Butterfly was the latest to have asked, and rather than put the condensed version in a reply to her comment, I decided to post the whole story.

    After she went away with Bobbie, Marie's life wasn't much easier than it had been with me.  Bobbie's GI husband was transferred and their growing family moved a few times.  Bobbie had believed, when she adopted my daughter, that she couldn't have children of her own.  She soon had twin boys, and then another son.  By Marie's own statements and my mother's, Marie became the Cinderella of the family, a housemaid and unpaid babysitter.

    Then, Bobbie and her husband were divorced.  She moved back to Wichita, where her family lives.  I don't know what kinds of work she had done to support herself, her three boys and Dorrie (no longer called Marie).  All I know is that at some point she got into the escort business.  She was running an escort service, which in Kansas is a euphemism for out-call prostitution, which is technically illegal but tolerated as long as it is done hypocritically and unobtrusively.

    Dorrie ran away from Bobbie's house in her teens.  There was a man (one of her "mother's" clients?) twenty or thirty years her senior, who kept her for some time (...months, a year or two?  I don't know.) until he died in an industrial accident.  Devastated with grief, destitute when the man's ex-wife, guardian of his minor heirs, evicted her from his house, she took a job in a fast food joint.

    The manager of that drive-in restaurant, Dennis, became interested in her and she married him.  Up to this point and beyond, I knew nothing of these events.  My mother had maintained contact with Dorrie all along, and had kept the pledge she made to the judge at the adoption hearing to never facilitate any contact between Dorrie and me.  Occasionally, she sent me a photo of her, but the first time my mother shared any information with me was when Dorrie's first child was born. 

    Reconsidering that pledge given sixteen years previously, since Dorrie was then an adult, married and a parent, Mama wrote me a letter to tell me I was a grandmother at 34, less than a year older than she had been when I was born.  She told me Dorrie had married a man named Dennis, omitting his surname.  She enclosed a picture of Dennis, Jr., taken in the hospital nursery.  It came glued into a paper folder/frame.  I took the folder apart and removed the picture, looked at the back, and there, for the photographer's record-keeping purposes, was a rubber stamp with the hospital's name, and a scrawled surname.

    It was an uncommon surname.  The hospital was in Wichita.  I called directory assistance and got Dennis's phone number.  Dorrie answered.  She was delighted to hear from me.  She said she had been begging my mother for years to tell her where I was.  I traveled to Wichita to reunite with her and meet my grandson when he was eight months old.  The story of that trip is here.

    My mother was living within an hour's drive of Wichita at the time.  I spent part of my visit at her husband's farm outside Burrton and part of it in Wichita with Dorrie and Dennis.  Mother gave me a pile of old family photos, including many that had been taken of Dorrie throughout her childhood.  Dorrie filled me in on her life.

    Bobbie and her family had told Dorrie I gave her away because I didn't love her.  She clung to me and cried within an hour of our reunion, as she told me that and said she never believed them.  She remembered enough about her first three years to believe that I loved her.  She said she didn't love Dennis, didn't think she would ever love another man after that father-figure rescuer who had died.  We talked, really communicated on a deep level.  She remarked on the extreme physical difference between us, and I said that I had always wished she had looked more like me and less like her father.  She looked over at Dennis Jr. and said she felt that way about him.

    Dennis seemed likeable at first and barely tolerable after I had been there for a few days, heard the way he verbally abused his wife and son, and saw the man beneath the saccharine veneer.  In retrospect, his behavior seems like NPD.  I quickly adopted the role of protector and defender to Dorrie and the baby.  Dennis would be raging and bitching at them, and would back down as soon as I stepped in.

    I came home after a few weeks in Kansas, and asked Charley if we could have a baby.  My second son, stillborn in Colorado, coming after my having "lost" my daughters and first son, had convinced me I never wanted to give my heart to a child again.  For several years, I had been afraid to have a pet.  I couldn't stand the prospect of more grief.  Not only had DJ captured my love, the cuddling and giggling we did together had left me with a craving for more of the same.  A year or so later, when Dorrie called to tell me about the birth of my first granddaughter, I told her I was pregnant.

    Doug had been born and was three years old, and Dorrie had one more boy, by the time she decided to leave Dennis.  My mother called me and said she would give Dorrie a plane ticket to Alaska if that was okay with me.  I figured we could find room for Dorrie and share what we had, and there was no way I was going to reject her.  She left her kids in Kansas, spent a few weeks here, and as the date for her divorce hearing approached, waffled back and forth over whether it was hopeless to go back and try to get custody of her kids, or unthinkable not to.

    Mama had spent all she could spare to get Dorrie up here, and Charley and I were broke.  She left behind several suitcases she had brought with her, telling me she would send money to me so I could ship them to her.  I gave her a backpack, and Charley drove her to the H&H truck stop where she hung out until a trucker came through from Fairbanks, headed all the way down the Al-Can Highway.  She called me from Montana, to say he had bought her hamburgers all the way south and gave her a hundred dollars when he dropped her off.  She was in a truck stop, waiting for a ride to Wichita.

    She didn't get custody of her kids.  I don't think she made it to the hearing.  She never sent money to have her suitcases shipped.  She moved in with Bobbie and worked as an "escort."  Occasionally, usually in the middle of the night, I'd get a phone call from her.  The last time she phoned, she said she had a "friend," who was using cocaine.  She asked me what I thought about it.  I told her I'd tried it and gotten scared off by the way it made my heart stop and then race to catch up.  I said I had read that the stuff caused irreversible brain change and was a miserable addiction to kick.

    Several months later, I got a phone call from a cousin of Bobbie's telling me that Dorrie had died not long after that last call.  The cause of death was listed as, "heart failure."  Some time after that, I went through the luggage she left behind.  It had lain untouched in a storage shed since she'd gone back to Kansas.  There was a diary in one of the bags.  One entry mentioned a concert she had attended with Bobbie's younger sister, who had given Dorrie her first taste of cocaine.  Several later entries mentioned coke as well. 

    No matter how many different ways I think it through, I don't know if I could have changed anything by snooping in that diary sooner, or if Dorrie had said she was the one doing coke, or if I'd picked up on that subterfuge at the time....

    Dorrie died a few months before she would have turned thirty.  The entry about our reunion was posted on the 48th anniversary of her birth.

  • Comet Lulin and Saturn's Moons

    Two big opportunities for skywatchers are coming up next week.  On Tuesday, February 24, 2009, Lulin, the green comet, will make its closest approach to Earth, and four of Saturn's moons , Titan, Mimas, Dione, and Enceladus, will be visible silhouetted against the planet's cloudy surface.

    Photo credit:  Jack Newton (I found it at Spaceweather.com)

  • Yukon Quest update, halfway to Fairbanks

    Eleven teams are now in Dawson City, the halfway point, where everyone is required to take a 36-hour rest before continuing.  William Kleedehn and Jon Little had been leapfrogging each other for days.  Approaching Dawson last night, Little was in the lead.  Then his dogs stopped briefly, just long enough for Kleedehn to pass and arrive in Dawson two minutes ahead of Little, winning the halfway gold.

    Following Kleedehn and Little into Dawson, in this order, were:  Hugh Neff, Hans Gatt, Sebastian Schnuelle, Brent Sass, Michelle Phillips, Warren Palfrey, Martin Buser, Mike Ellis, Dan Kaduce.  Each of them has dropped at least one dog.  Buser and Ellis are each down to ten dogs now. 

    Two mushers have scratched:  Jerry Joinson and Jean-Denis Britten, both at Pelly Crossing.  Joinson had left the checkpoint, then returned and scratched.  Only one team still in the race, William Pinkham's, in 26th position out of Scroggie Creek, has dropped more that four dogs, down to nine now from the starting fourteen.

    Twelve or thirteen teams (depending on where Iris Wood Sutton really is) are on the trail between Scroggie Creek and Dawson City.  Two or three teams (Iris, again) are still in Scroggie Creek.  Becca Moore is still in last position, on the trail between Stepping Stone and Scroggie Creek. Jason Mackey has advanced a few positions since my last report, and Jamaican celebrity musher Newton Marshall has fallen back a few positions.

    Dan Bross of KUAC says Newton Marshall is "a very quiet guy, who smiles easily and is a little weary of all the media attention he's getting. He is quite at home in the cold and snow and with his dogs. He says he's following a schedule Hans Gatt lined out for him, and has to slow the dogs down to stay with it. He told me he wants to stay in the north and run dogs after the Quest, even though his job at dog cart tour operation in Jamaica is waiting for him. No Jimmy Buffet sightings so far 'mon'."  Jimmy Buffet's Margaritaville restaurant chain is a major sponsor of the Jamaica Dog Sled Team.

    This year's trail has been unexpectedly fast.  Into the Scroggie Creek Dog drop, mushers started arriving about five hours earlier than predicted.

    Some of the fun for me has been drained from passing along these reports, due to the uncertainty that the standings shown on the YQ website are accurate.  For example, the Scroggie Creek results show Iris Wood Sutton checking in twice (both times the same time) and out once.  Either she is still there, or she left there at 14:40 today.  Take your pick.

    Dan Bross was complaining yesterday about the race officials' restrictions on media representatives, but now says the situation has improved.  Links to his pre-race, start, and Braeburn-Carmacks reports are in an earlier post of mine.  Click the images below for his two latest reports.

  • Things That Go Boom

    Early yesterday morning, Anchorage police stopped a car in the parking lot of the school district's administration building.  Their justification for stopping the car was a broken driver's side mirror.  Reading that came as a shock to me.  My outside mirror was cracked when I bought the car, and still is.  Is that a "traffic violation"?  Can I now be stopped for no reason other than that?  Yikes!!

    The broken mirror was enough cause for them to stop the car and run the ID of the two men in the car, but not probable cause for them to search the car.  I guess they really wanted to search that car.  When the info came back that the passenger was on probation, the police phoned his probation officer and got consent to search the car.

    They found pipe bombs and black powder.  Consequently, traffic was stopped on a section of Northern Lights, a major crosstown boulevard, for more than five hours while the bomb squad did its work.  I'm guessing that this was a by-the-book response to finding explosives of any kind.  The description of the bombs suggests to me that it was an overreaction, but someone would surely argue that it's better to overreact in such a situation than to take chances.

    The thing is, if I were to find a canister of black powder and a bunch of sealed pipes with fuses sticking out of their ends, I'd have no fear about handling or moving them, or disarming them, and I am neither foolhardy, nor trained at bomb disposal, nor do I have a death wish.  I'm just not afraid of black powder pipe bombs.  I'd hesitate to handle sweaty old sticks of dynamite, but that's different -- very different.

    I have a close friend and neighbor who has a thing about things that go boom.  Once, years ago, he was going out of town to work for a few weeks and left his pickup for me to use while he was gone.  He told me there was a pipe bomb under the driver's seat.  I idly wondered if he'd had a plan for it when he made it and changed his mind, or if he'd made more than he needed and this was a leftover, or what.  Halfway sure that I wouldn't get a straight answer if I asked, and knowing that it was none of my business anyway, I didn't ask why it was there.

    I drove the truck for a few weeks, a couple of hundred miles around here.  Then, I asked my new boyfriend to drive, because he had a license and at the time I did not.  I didn't think about that pipe bomb for a while.  Then, one day while we were going down the road, I said, "By the way, there's a pipe bomb under the driver's seat."  At first, he thought I was kidding.

    As soon as he realized I was serious, he pulled over and told me to get rid of the bomb.  He stood well away from the truck while I pulled it out.  He wanted me to just pitch it, but that was a stupid idea for a number of reasons.  We were miles from any safe place to dispose of a bomb.  I was in no mood to dig around looking for tools and then to dismantle a bomb there by the highway, and I was not about to pitch it into the ditch intact for some idiot or child to find and do damage.  I stuck the bomb in a tool box in the truck bed.  Later, back at home, I moved it back where it belonged, under the seat.

    It never crossed my mind at the time that the bomb might be illegal to possess.  I'm still not sure it was.  The components are common hardware items.  Black powder is easy to come by, and should be.  Explosives have several legitimate household uses.  I have seen them used to remove stumps and boulders, and to excavate holes for outhouses.  If you don't have a backhoe, it sure beats digging by hand.

    Here is the point to my story:  Anchorage police Lt. Dave Koch said the two men, "were certainly up to no good."  This was after the city police, FBI, and ATF agents had gotten warrants and searched the home of the passenger, the one they call the, "primary suspect," and the feds backed off the case.  "'There was no terrorist nexus,' FBI special agent Eric Gonzalez said."

    There are some mysteries involved here.  The driver was released, not charged with any crime.  The passenger went to jail on probation violation, and a friend of his found at his apartment was arrested on an outstanding warrant.  Nobody had anything to say to the cops about what they intended to do with the bombs.  The police did not identify the driver, but did say he was 27 years old.  That's the biggest mystery to me.  Is he an undercover agent?  ...or what?  If he was a juvenile, not identifying him would make sense.  This does not.

  • Yukon Quest update, evening, day 3

    Jon Little has made up the gap that resulted from the six hour rest he took this morning.  He is back in the lead out of the Stepping Stone Hospitality Stop, breezing through there at 13:52 with 13 dogs.  Sebastian Schnuelle and his full team of 14 are just a bit less than 3 hours behind Little's team, blowing through Stepping Stone at 16:40.

    William Kleedehn, Hugh Neff, Hans Gatt, Brent Sass, Martin Buser and Warren Palfrey are resting at Stepping Stone.

    Michelle Phillips, Kyla Boivin and Mike Ellis are on the trail between Pelly Crossing and Stepping Stone.

    Seven teams are resting in Pelly Crossing.  Newton Marshall of the Jamaica Dog Sled Team is the only musher currently at the McCabe Creek Dog Drop.  The remaining ten teams are on the trail between Carmacks and McCabe Creek.

    Only five teams are still running with all fourteen dogs they started with.  The most dogs dropped thus far has been three, leaving four teams running with 11 dogs each.  No penalties, scratches, withdrawals or disqualifications so far.

  • O Brave New World!

    I'm feeling a little like Miranda from my favorite Shakespeare comedy, The Tempest.  I am marveling not so much at the people in this new world as at technology, and not even at particularly new technology.  I know very little about the latest things.

    How far behind the times I am!  Much of that is by choice.  I prefer life on the edge of wilderness.  I avoid crowds and urban pollution when I can.  For fifteen years in middle age I lived off the grid.  I got onto it again not through effort or investment of my own, but because ten years ago someone gave me this trailer and it was already hooked up to the power grid. 

    It is in a cell service void and if someone here wanted to make a cell call,  he'd have to drive down toward the spring and stop on top of the hill before the waterhole.  It would be pointless, under the circumstances, for me to have a cell phone, but I am ever so glad that Greyfox has his.  Not only does it mean that he no longer has to walk to a pay phone or drive to a free phone to call me.  It means that this morning as he browsed books at the Wasilla Public Library book sale, he could call me frequently to ask if I wanted a particular book or video.  Technology is great, and the Old Fart is super!


    I was chilled when I saw an article in today's International Newsletter from Der Spiegel Online.  I wonder what it might mean for the general level of background radiation in the biosphere.

    Customs officers in Hamburg were routinely inspecting a load of stainless steel waiting for shipment to Russia.  "Their radiometers indicated unusually high levels of radiation. They measured a level of 71 microsieverts per hour, a level that in 24 hours would exceed the amount permitted for an entire year."  The container was immediately returned to the ship and sent back to India.

    This was, however, no isolated case. For months, similar cases have been found across Germany, all involving bits of metal contaminated with radioactive cobalt. And most of them come from the same source: three steelworks in India, in particular a company called Vipras Casting, based in Mumbai. Germany's environmental authorities are alarmed.
    . . .

    More than 500 elevator buttons, which came to Berlin from France, showed radioactivity levels of 270 becquerel per gram. The buttons have since been replaced. A component found at a company in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania and tested on Jan. 19 radiated an astounding 600 becquerel per gram.
    . . .

    Just how the radioactive isotope cobalt 60, which can be found in nuclear power stations or some medical technology, is finding its way into the Indian steel industry isn't completely clear. It may be that sources of radioactivity, from hospitals for example, are being thrown into blast furnaces along with other scrap. The resulting steel is then sold to to companies abroad.

    The dangerous import from Asia shows the downside of globalization. Cheaper is not always better. Machine manufacturers and metal-working companies in Germany know that the cheaper the steel coming from a supplier is, the more likely it is that a high proportion of the metal is from India.

    Since last August 180 tons of radioactive metal has been seized, but some of it has gotten through.  In nineteen incidences reported this month, involving twelve German states, investigators found radioactive bars, steel cables, chippings, and valve housings.

    With recent publicity within Germany regarding this issue, people have begun checking the radiation levels in their own business and industrial establishment.  Some have already found cobalt 60, and more discoveries are expected.


    Another story, from International Herald Tribune, might not (or, then again it might) involve release of radioactive materials.  In the North Atlantic earlier this month, a French nuclear submarine collided with an English nuclear submarine.  This being a matter of international military security, not much detail has been released.  It is known that both subs were damaged.  From the fact that it took the French vessel several days to "limp" home, it has been inferred that the collision occurred far out in the deep Atlantic.

    Another inferrence was that they were involved in war games.  Both subs carried ICBMs with multiple warheads.  "According to military journals, Le Triomphant carries 16 ballistic missiles with a range of 5,000 miles, each with six warheads. H.M.S. Vanguard is a Trident-class submarine, 492 feet long and weighing 16,000 tons. It, too, carries 16 missiles, each with three nuclear warheads."  Some are calling on the British Royal Navy to replace all its old Trident-class subs within the next 20 years.

    In 2007, 2 sailors on the H.M.S. Tireless were killed off Alaska under the polar ice cap when an oxygen generator exploded.  "A Royal Navy inquiry into the explosion said 'systematic failings' in the oxygen-generating system, which had caused seven incidents aboard British nuclear submarines in the 14 months before the explosion, were probably to blame for the explosion."  The Tireless belongs to the hunter/killer class of submarines, Trafalgar class.

    I am in favor of world peace and demilitarization.  How about you?

  • Yukon Quest - Day 3

    Six teams are through the Pelly Crossing Checkpoint, and only one of them, leader William Kleedehn's, still has its full complement of 14 dogs.  He blew through Pelly Crossing this morning, leaving after twelve minutes, at 7:29.  Half an hour after him Hugh Neff dropped one dog, leaving after fourteen minutes with 13 dogs... I think.  Data entry for the current standings on the YQ website is iffy.  I have found obvious errors in times into and out of checkpoints, such as the same time listed for in and out.  It should take at least a minute for checkpoint formalities

    Hans Gatt stopped in Pelly Crossing for eight minutes and dropped a dog, leaving with 13 at 8:23.  Brent Sass and 13 dogs blew in at 8:38, out at 8:39.  Jon Little rested at Pelly Crossing for six hours last night and dropped one dog, leaving at 9:38 with thirteen.  Warren Palfrey had left two dogs at the McCabe Creek dog drop earlier this morning, then spent 49 minutes in Pelly Crossing, leaving with 12 dogs at 11:20.

    Sebastian Schnuelle, Martin Buser, Michelle Phillips, and Mike Ellis have been resting in Pelly Crossing for several hours this morning.  Ellis dropped a dog at McCabe Creek, bringing his team down to eleven dogs.

    In eleventh and twelfth positions, Josh Cadzow and David Dalton are on the trail between McCabe Creek and Pelly Crossing.  Kyla Boivin, Dan Kaduce, Luc Twedell, Newton Marshall and Wayne Hall are still at McCabe Creek.

    No teams have scratched or been withdrawn, and the rest of the pack is on the trail between Carmacks and McCabe Creek, with Becca Moore bringing up the rear at 29th position.  Jason Mackey is at 27th.

    Reporter Dan Bross of NPR station KUAC in Fairbanks is complaining of the "media circus" (probably due primarily to Newton Marshall of Jamaica) and severely decreased access this year to mushers.  Images below are links to his reports from the trail.


    Whitehorse


    Whitehorse 2


    The Start


    Braeburn and Carmacks checkpoints

  • Quotations on Religious Freedom

    The most detestable wickedness, the most horrid cruelties, and the greatest miseries that have afflicted the human race have had their origin in this thing called revelation, or revealed religion."
    Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason

    "The Government of the United States is not in any sense founded upon the Christian Religion."
    1797 Treaty of Tripoli, signed by President George Washington, and approved by the Senate of the United States

    "The Bible was established altogether by the sword, and that in the worst use of it - - not to terrify but to extirpate."
    Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason

    "When a religion is good, I conceive it will support itself; and when it does not support itself, and God does not take care to support it so that its professors are obliged to call for help of the civil power, 'tis a sign, I apprehend, of its being a bad one."
    Benjamin Franklin, statesman, inventor, author, in a Letter to Dr. Price

    "Reason and free inquiry are the only effectual agents against error. Give a loose to them, they will support the true religion by bringing every false one to their tribunal, to the test of their investigation. They are the natural enemies of error, and of error only."
    Thomas Jefferson, 1785

    "I am tolerant of all creeds. Yet if any sect suffered itself to be used for political objects I would meet it by political opposition. In my view church and state should be separate, not only in form, but fact. Religion and politics should not be mingled."
    Millard Fillmore (1809-1865) 13th U.S. President, address during the 1856 presidential election

    "Our reliance is in the love of liberty which God has planted in us. Our defense is in the spirit which prizes liberty as the heritage of all men, in all lands everywhere.  Destroy this spirit and you will have planted the seeds of despotism at your own doors.  Familiarize yourself with the chains of bondage, and you prepare your own limbs to wear them.  Accustomed to trample on the rights of others, you have lost the genius of your own independence and become the fit subjects of the first cunning tryant who rises among you."
    Abraham Lincoln, Speech at Edwardsville, IL, 1858.

    "Let us labor for the security of free thought, free speech, pure morals, unfettered religious sentiments, and equal rights and privileges for all men, irrespective of nationality, color, or religion;.... leave the matter of religious teaching to the family altar, the church, and the private school, supported entirely by private contribution. Keep church and state forever separate."
    Ulysses S. Grant's Speech to G. A. R. Veterans, at Des Moines, IA 1875.

    "Next in importance to freedom and justice is popular education, without which neither justice nor freedom can be permanently maintained. Its interests are intrusted to the States and the voluntary action of the people. Whatever help the nation can justly afford should be generously given to aid the States in supporting common schools; but it would be unjust to our people and dangerous to our institutions to apply any portion of the revenues of the nation or of the States to the support of sectarian schools. The separation of Church and State in everything relating to taxation should be absolute."
    James A. Garfield, Letter of Acceptance of Nomination for the Presidency July 12, 1880

    "To discriminate against a thoroughly upright citizen because he belongs to some particular church, or because, like Abraham Lincoln, he has not avowed his allegiance to any church, is an outrage against the liberty of conscience, which is one of the foundations of American life."
    Theodore Roosevelt, letter on religious liberty

    "As I say, not all of Jefferson's ideas were popular, though most of them were absolutely right.…He was also called an atheist because he didn't believe in a state church, an official church of the government, and in fact made it clear that he didn't much like any church at all, though he did admire many, though not all, of the teachings of religion.…And you'll recall that it was Jefferson, as governor of Virginia, who wrote the Statute of Religious Liberty in 1786, which said that ‘no man shall be compelled to frequent or support any religious worship’ but that all people ‘shall be free to profess…their opinion in matters of religion.’ He summed up very bluntly one time his view that no man harmed anyone else in choosing and practicing his own religion, or no religion. ‘It does me no injury,’ he said, ‘for my neighbor to say that there are twenty gods, or no god. It neither picks my pocket nor breaks my leg.’"
    Harry S. Truman (1884-1972) 33rd U.S. President

    "The Middle Ages were an era of mysticism, ruled by blind faith and blind obedience to the dogma that faith is superior to reason. The Renaissance was specifically the rebirth of reason, the liberation of man's mind, the triumph of rationality over mysticism—a faltering, incomplete, but impassioned triumph that led to the birth of science, of individualism, of freedom."
    Ayn Rand

    "...a religion-neutral government does not fit with an America that reflects belief in God in everything from its money to its military."
    Antonin Scalia

    Unfortunately, Justice Scalia believes that the mis-fit should be adjusted by changing the Constitution, not by changing the military and the money.  Who appointed that moronic asshole to the Supreme Court, anyway?

  • Self-Inflicted Misery

    There are more ways to make oneself miserable than there are people alive to find ever more and more new ways to add to all the old ways.  Some of the more effective and widespread ways involve poisoning ourselves with various chemicals that, once our body chemistry is altered by them, our bodies don't want to go back to living without them.  I have written about that more than once.  I'll probably do so again sometime.

    More than once when writing about my own experiences and my observations of how people hurt themselves, I have used the phrase, "fairy tales and soap opera."  For me, that's shorthand for the many influences of popular culture that lead us into unreasonable expectations and false, limiting beliefs.  There would be no broken hearts if nobody had ever spread the dirty lie that hearts could break.  No one would feel embarrassment or hurt feelings because of something said or done by another, if we had all been taught to detach from such nonsense.  Only those who are acculturated and indoctrinated to such beliefs are subject to those discomforts and miseries.

    There isn't much a little child can do but accept the doctrines and dogmas he is fed, and to mimic the actions of, first, his elders and, then, his peers who have been acculturated by their elders.  In that sense, some people never grow up and learn to observe and reason for themselves, but go on all their lives swallowing what they're fed and aping what they see others do.  As Mark Twain wrote in his autobiography, "In religion and politics people's beliefs and convictions are in almost every case gotten at second-hand, and without examination, from authorities who have not themselves examined the questions at issue but have taken them at second-hand from other non-examiners, whose opinions about them were not worth a brass farthing."

    It's not only in religion and politics that this is true for most people.  It holds true in romance, child rearing, commerce, psychology and virtually, if not absolutely, any field you'd care to name.  It has been my observation that much if not all of the suffering in the world comes from second- or third-hand bullshit.  I think suffering could be eliminated if people would grow up, think for themselves, look around and see reality as it truly is, and take responsibility for their own thoughts, feelings and actions.

    I could be mistaken about that.  Maybe some people just are not capable of thinking for themselves.  I haven't tested this theory on absolutely everyone.  All I know is that for myself, those closest to me, and a large number of others who have been similarly deprogrammed from traditional bullshit, life took a sudden turn for the better when we quit allowing our parents and society to dictate our beliefs, stopped blaming them for our problems, and took responsibility for ourselves.  We stopped fearing the future and began to love life.

    Each of us was pretty much on the edge of disaster and self-destruction before we made that turnaround.  Maybe that is what it takes to shake one loose from the bullshit belief systems.  I am sure that that there are people who can learn truth as well as bullshit from others, even if the bullshit does tend to comfort and the truth is not so comfortable.  I am not so sure, but I like to think that not all of them have to hit bottom and get to the brink of disaster before they develop a bullshit detector.  But I know that this new version of me is somewhat optimistic, about like the bastard offspring of Candide and Pollyanna.  As I said, I could be mistaken, but I don't think I am.

  • Yukon Quest Update - Day 1

    Last night at 9:00 PM, Jean-Denis Britten of Dawson City, YT, was first into the Braeburn Checkpoint.  Within the next hour, Alaskan Martin Buser and Yukoner Luc Twedell were in Braeburn.

    It was over an hour after Twedell's team arrived before Alaskan Jon Little pulled in.  Before midnight, four more teams were in:  Sebastian Schnuelle, Mike Ellis, Warren Palfrey, and Mark Sleightholme.

    In the next hour, Hugh Neff, Hans Gatt, his protege Newton Marshall of the Jamaica Dog Sled Team, Wayne Hall, William Kleedehn, William Pinkham, Dan Kaduce, and Josh Cadzow pulled into Braeburn.

    Standings changed as the teams took their rests and left the checkpoint.  First out, at 3:16 AM, was Jon Little, followed by:
    Martin Buser
    Hans Gatt
    Hugh Neff
    Kleedehn
    Britten
    Twedell
    Schnuelle
    Kyla Boivin
    Sleightholme

    Newton Marshall spent nearly seven hours at Braeburn, leaving shortly after 7 AM.  Jason Mackey was out of Braeburn at 7:35 after 6 hours 15 minutes rest.  By 10 AM, 28 of the 29 teams were through Braeburn.  In last place, Becca Moore left Braeburn at 11:38 AM, after dropping two dogs.

    Five teams dropped one dog each in Braeburn:  Luc Twedell, William Pinkham, Wayne Hall, Jerry Joinson, and Iris Wood Sutton.

    Audio from Quest preparation in Whitehorse and the Start is available from KUAC Fairbanks.



    FIRST UPDATE TO DAY 1 UPDATE:
    13:45
    Three teams are in Carmacks Checkpoint:
    Jon Little arrived 12:47
    William Kleedehn arrived 13:12
    Martin Buser arrived 13:20

    SECOND UPDATE:
    17:00
    At 16:35, when Josh Cadzow became the fourth musher into Carmacks, none of the first three teams had left that checkpoint.

    THIRD UPDATE:
    18:40
    Sebastian Schnuelle was the fifth musher into Carmacks at 17:55, and took first position in the race when his team became first (and the only one so far) out of that checkpoint, at 18:05.
    Luc Twedell entered Carmacks at 18:25.

    FOURTH UPDATE:
    20:30
    Hugh Neff, following Sebastian Schnuelle by about half an hour, breezed through Carmacks checkpoint, staying only three minutes.  He is now in second position on the trail, followed by Jon Little (out at 18:51 in 3rd), Hans Gatt (out at 19:02 in 4th), and William Kleedehn (out at 19:18 in 5th).
    Brent Sass went through Carmacks in 6th position about half an hour after Kleedehn left, apparently pausing only long enough to drop one dog.  All five race leaders still have their full teams of 14 dogs.

    Martin Buser, Josh Kadzow, Luc Twedell, Wayne Hall and Dan Caduce are in Carmacks.

    FIFTH UPDATE (and probably today's final one)
    21:20
    Martin Buser, Michelle Phillips, and Jean-denis Britten have left Carmacks in the past half-hour to an hour, each of them having dropped one dog there.

    Since the last update, Warren Palfrey and Mike Ellis have gotten into Carmacks.