Wednesday, April 25, 2012


SKY MASTER

 
I often wonder why we can't have more sunny days particularly during the rainy season. It seems like several days go by and all we get is rain and gray skies. I remember when I lived in England, those gray days lasted for weeks and I came to realize why the English people had such white skin and yet rosy cheeks, because they hardly got to see the sun. Well, I got to thinking about my old friend the Sky Master who once told me many years ago that he was doing some research and some day would finish his invention.

So, I decided to pay him a visit. He lived in an old house in the countryside where he was surrounded by acres and acres of land. When I arrived he was very pleased to see me and wondered where I had been for so many years. He looked hardy and had not aged at all. He still had his white beard and was smoking his curved briar pipe while sitting in his rocking chair on his front porch.

I asked him how he was doing with his weather inventions and without saying much, he took me for a walk to the huge barn behind his house. The double doors were open and as I looked into the barn my question was answered. Hanging on one wall were loads of bicycles with colored umbrellas fastened to them. Another wall was adorned with caps, each with a small umbrella glued on top. On the floor were stacks of hooded raincoats each dyed with rainbow colors. Piled up on the other wall were over a thousand rolls of heavy steel baling wire. As we walked toward the back of the barn I saw thousands of brooms piled to the ceiling. Each broom was about nine yards long with thistles at least nine yards long, made from broom corn, bound on each cylindrical broom handle whose base was at least a yard wide. I was amazed by such a spectacle.

"No doubt you are wondering what all that is about," he said. "Those wires and brooms are for my major project. I contacted a company to build one hundred of their sturdiest and highest flying helicopters with pilots trained to implement my project. I arranged to have each helicopter connected with the baling wire to which the brooms would hang below. The helicopters were to fly above the clouds parallel to one another, each at least five miles apart. Then, the pilots were to synchronize their journey by flying into the clouds and sweep away the rain clouds. For about a few hundred yards it seemed like the project was going to be a success. But, unfortunately, the broom thistles got so wet that the weight of the brooms broke away from the baling wire. Like the Wright brothers in their early attempts to fly failed, so did I. But, all this material you see is my second order of equipment and I plan to try again with more durable thistles."

I know that many of us in the community like to play tennis and golf or bask in the sun near the pool. I guess we will have to wait until the Sky Master succeeds in sweeping the clouds away.








 

CLOUDS
Can block the sun
Limiting places for fun
If they get dark
There's no walk in the park
But a movie becomes a base
To spark our interest
For diverting a dreary day
Challenging our emotions
While the clouds pour their oceans
So when we go home the sun
Out again is drying the water
Offering choices for taking a new step
To avoid puddles we face
Keeping our feet from getting wet

 

 

Friday, March 9, 2012




WALLS
They mark off spaces
And give us rooms
To eat or sleep
Or places for people to meet
Sometimes they block the way
Holding others at bay
Denying the chance
To build a door
Or staying in a cell many years
Paying a price
For doing wrong
By stealing, wheeling and dealing
Playing with vices
That can ruin a life
Then finally listening and taking advice
Walking away through a door in the wall
Having paid the penalty
Enjoying the space well earned




 


IS THE SKY FALLING?


When I hear and read so much about how times are bad and the world is facing economic crises, a famous fable comes to mind. Remember the story of Chicken Little and The Sky is Falling? This tale dates back as far as 1916 and there are several accounts of it all of which relate to a chicken who believes the world is coming to an end.
The best known version concerns a chick that believes the sky is falling when an acorn falls on its head. The chick decides to tell the King and on its journey other animals (mostly other fowl) join in its quest. From here on, there are many endings. In the most familiar, a fox invites them to its lair and eats them all. In one story, the chick is warned and escapes and in others all the animals are rescued and finally get to speak to the King. The moral to be drawn depends upon the ending. If it is happy, it means not to be chicken and have courage. If the birds are eaten by the fox, the message might be not to believe everything you are told. The important point to be made is that we do not need to accept there is a bad sign indicating a hysterical belief that disaster is imminent.

It is true that the world has experienced devastating wars and shocking crimes to humanity. Yet, I have heard it said that life was much less complicated years ago. Milk was delivered to your house. We listened to the radio and were not couch potatoes drugged by TV. We left our front doors and automobiles unlocked. We enjoyed going for walks without carrying mace to protect us from molesters. In essence, life was much simpler and peaceful years ago.

Just by chance, I came across a very interesting psychologist, Dr. Steven Pinker, a professor at Harvard University. He is a prolific writer who has authored eight books as well as published for the New York Times, Time Magazine and the New Republic. His academic work and research has been devoted to cognition and the mind. However, in more recent years his interests have expanded to the cultural aspects of the human condition. In his latest book, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined, published by Viking Press, 2011 he makes the claim that the 21st century of terrorism in the Middle East, genocide in Darfur, civil war in Somalia represent the least violent era in human history. In this startling book with the help of more than a hundred maps and graphs, he presents some astonishing numbers. Tribal warfare was nine times as deadly as war and genocide in the 20th century. The murder rate of Medieval Europe was more than thirty times what it is today.

What has happened to bring down substantially the degree of such violence? How could this have happened if human nature has not changed? Pinker asserts that we need to understand the inner demons that pull on us. Humans are challenged to let the better angels steer us to reason. It is our increasing control of impulses and the ability to empathize that reduce the tendency toward violence. The sky is really not falling!


 

Thursday, February 2, 2012




WALKING ON EGGS

Most of the time feelings are comfortable in conversations with people. However, there are occasions when it becomes necessary to be very guarded in how we speak to another person. It's usually a situation in which we tread lightly around a sensitive topic or make every effort not to offend a potentially volatile or hypersensitive person. Politicians sometimes will use caution as well as diplomacy to avoid possible arguments regarding certain issues. Then, there are family members who are very careful to avoid talking to a loved one whose serious medical diagnosis recently has been revealed. Employers sometimes find it difficult to offer suggestions to an employee who is known to be very sensitive to receiving any form of constructive criticism regarding the outcome or progress of a work project, particularly if the employee is known to be easily upset.

Any of these preceding situations occur as part of the whole human condition. Yet, there are individuals who have poor anger management skills or a hair trigger temper. The slightest offense or deviation from a usual routine may be enough to set off an emotional outburst or even a physical reaction. This potential volatility may be enough to cause others to modify their own behavior and actions to maintain a tense but workable social environment. Avoiding a temperamental person may be viewed as a form of self-preservation often accompanied by a degree of anxiety or dismay. Failing to maintain a calm non-confrontational atmosphere may end badly.

Some people who show emotional instability or vulnerable temperaments have been identified in the field of psychology as possessing a Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD). This disorder is a condition in which people have long-term patterns of unstable or turbulent emotions and feelings about themselves and others. These inner experiences often cause them to take impulsive actions and have chaotic relationships. The causes of (BPD) are unknown; but, genetic, family, and social factors play a role.

Professionals and researchers such as Drs. Kernberg, Beck, Gunderson, and Herman all concur that people with a Borderline Personality Disorder typically see things in terms of extremes, such as either all good or all bad. A person who is looked up to one day may be looked down upon the next day. Such shifts in feelings often lead to intense and unstable relationships. These people have primitive defenses that include magical thinking. For example, they may think that someone is reacting negatively toward them without bothering to find out if their perception is correct. Therefore, they become impatient and appear to reject others.

Unfortunately, it is sometimes very difficult and uncomfortable for friends or relatives to relate socially in the presence of an individual with a Borderline Personality Disorder. Friends become sensitive to the distancing that is created and will either avoid the person or become very obsequious or submissive to that person. Relatives often try to appeal to them suggesting ways to change their behavior but are unsuccessful.

.Most people are aware of their shortcomings but rarely are willing to face them. They continue to convey and exhibit many behaviors that are characteristic of a borderline personality. It's sad that some of us need to "walk on eggs" to get along with those who can only see black and white but no gray.






 

Friday, January 6, 2012





MIAMI DOLPHINS
ARE AN INSPIRATION 

     I have found the Miami Dolphins to be a very dedicated, motivated and loyal team. Their record this season was by no means high in the rankings of the football leagues but the Miami Dolphin entire organization deserves to be highly praised for what it has accomplished. Following the team's games this season has set a very good example to me and anyone who has at some time experienced failure or a defeat. To see the team rally together with such a united spirit sets a model of great courage and fortitude. They aroused in me as a spectator continued confidence to know that adversity always can be overcome. The drive to succeed is an essential ingredient for good mental health. Sometimes people lose sight of the human potential they have. How important it is to always face challenges regardless of the obstacles they encounter. Usually going uphill is much more difficult than going downhill and we saw this happen all the way from the Dolphins' preseason games to the last ones. Yet, they never faltered but kept moving onward. 
 
   Having taught at a university for twenty years and been a practicing psychologist I am very aware of the many trials and tribulations we humans face throughout life. What I admire so much is how well the Dolphin organization, which involved not only the team members but the coaches and managers, joined together to support each other to bring their season to a positive, uplifting, and I might say, victorious conclusion. Regardless of the scores, the effort to succeed against failure deserves to be highly honored. The Miami Dolphins are a true inspiration to all of us.














Monday, November 21, 2011





AGE

Birth starts the day
For one to grow
Making the way
To reach a stage
That shows a blossom
Almost ready to pick
But plucked too soon
May leave no room
For its stems to flourish
Time and patience
Love and affection
Become the sources
To nourish perfection