Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Affected by Aphorisms

There must be a reason I forgot the meaning.  Is it my advancing age or my declining memory?  Or is it because I never wrote about aphorisms in six years of blogging?

“An aphorism is a short, pithy statement containing a truth of general import.”  – dictionary.com

"Aphorisms can sometimes be humorous, but are not necessarily so. They often have some parallelism or juxtaposition to make the point, such as in the example of Lord Acton’s famous quote 'Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.'
Common Examples of Aphorism:
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. –Lao Tzu
A rolling stone gathers no moss.
Better safe than sorry.
Early to bed, early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.
Every cloud has a silver lining.”
– literarydevices.com

As I view them, the writings of William Shakespeare (1564-1616, Stratford-upon-Avon) are richly aphoristic.  (See Romeo and Juliet.)

Now I recall being affected by aphorisms in grade school and later in life.  Some helped me gain wisdom and inspiration along the way.  Others just tickled my funny bone to help me bear life’s burdens.

I could add more examples and explore the importance of aphorisms, but you can take it from here.  Remember, “Life's tragedy is that we get old too soon and wise too late.”  – Benjamin Franklin 
(Thanks to brainyquote.com)


a wise grandson fishing for fun in UT


granddaughter wisely loving literature and music in AZ

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Let the Sunshine

As I opened our wood blinds on the home front to let sunshine in this morning, I caught myself singing à la The Fifth Dimension ("Aquarius" 1969).
Google defines the preposition, à la: 
"(of a dish) cooked or prepared in a specified style or manner.
(informal:) in the style or manner of."

Aquarius / Let the Sunshine In
"…
Harmony and understanding
Sympathy and trust abounding
No more falsehoods or derisions
Let the sunshine, let the sunshine in, the sunshine in”
– google.com

Although I don’t follow astrology, I love the upbeat music for soaking up sunshine and feeling "safe and warm ... on such a winter's day" 
(à la The Mamas & the Papas, 1965).

Wishing you (in cold weather) joyous sunshine this month,
and a little healthy fast food.


grandson at our frontier home, snowed in (26 Dec 2016)

Thursday, January 12, 2017

The Truth Is, ...

This came to mind two days ago as I heard a devotional talk by BYU President Kevin J Worthen; he spoke about absolute truth.  Years ago, I decided to quit using the common phrase, “To be honest, …” and instead say, “The truth is, ...”  If I’m maybe dishonest sometimes, and honest other times when I qualify a statement as “honest”, what does that imply?  Anything I say otherwise may be suspect.  One might see only a slight distinction here, but it's significant to me.

Admittedly, I use Google Search and Wikipedia a lot, well aware that they are not always trustworthy sources of truth.  I chuckled when Pres. Worthen quipped, referring to the New Testament epistle (1:5), “James did not say, ‘If any of you lack wisdom, let him Google.’ …  Sometimes we can't make it all add up, because we don't have all the numbers."  As a student of math, I liked that too.

In a CES broadcast for young-adult students, January 2013, a talk entitled "What Is Truth?" was given by Dieter F. Uchtdorf of the First Presidency of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.  Reading it for the first time, I see it as a classic, inspired discourse.  He told the familiar story of “The Blind Men and the Elephant” with this introduction: “Well over one hundred years ago, an American poet put to rhyme an ancient parable.”  Concluding the poem, he said, “I suppose the reason this story has remained so popular in so many cultures and over so many years is because of its universal application. The Apostle Paul said that in this world the light is dim and we see only part of the truth as though we are looking ‘through a glass, darkly.’ And yet it seems to be part of our nature as human beings to make assumptions about people, politics, and piety based on our incomplete and often misleading experience.”

Typical of the former airline pilot, President Uchtdorf went on to state a fact, then use analogy:
"The thing about truth is that it exists beyond belief. It is true even if nobody believes it.
We can say west is north and north is west all day long and even believe it with all our heart, but if, for example, we want to fly from Quito, Ecuador, to New York City in the United States, there is only one direction that will lead us there, and that is north—west just won’t do.
Of course, this is just a simple aviation analogy. However, there is indeed such a thing as absolute truth—unassailable, unchangeable truth.  …  I bless you with confidence in the Lord and a deep-rooted desire to rightfully discern truth from error—now and throughout your life."
– lds.org/broadcasts/article/ces-devotionals/2013/01/...

The truth is, Kay and I know it is true, and hope our children and grandchildren do too.


Kay watching wildlife at Great Salt Lake Shorelands Preserve (2 June 2014)


Our quiet walk with sunlight in the Sacred Grove, New York (12 June 2010)



Thursday, January 5, 2017

Excess? Lack? Words

Texting, instant messaging ("IM" or "IMing"), Facebook Chat, Email, voicemail, talk radio, advertising, talking heads on TV, "news" and sports with analysis ad infinitum.

Would an economy of words this year provide any balance to the excess?  I value quiet time to think.  On the other hand, folks need more meaningful dialogue and real conversation. You've probably seen a group of close friends ... not talking, just looking down at their smartphones.

I often face a dearth of words to write ... thank-you notes and letters, for example.  However, some think I write too much and labor too little.

So I see both excess and shortage.  What's new under the sun?  (Ecclesiastes 1:9)

Seaside Oregon 2012