Original Musings by Kerry Gleason

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Excerpt, Angels & Enemies: An Exorcist Describes the Soul


I am editing copy for my upcoming horror novel release for ANGELS & ENEMIES. I came across this, and it struck me as being worthy to share. When Prescott Blakely, a demonically possessed businessman, asks if his soul can be saved, Fr. Francis Vindicare responds.

People are fascinating creatures,” Fr. Francis said. “Each of us is different. Made in God’s image. What does that mean?
The human being consists of two components, a corporeal body and the soul. The body is a relatively worthless heap of chemistry. Man understands it. Man can synthesize parts of it, for pennies or dollars, and the pieces he can’t, well, he is working on it. Man can improve it. Man is fixated on the body. But the body is imperfect. Mine is perhaps more imperfect than most. Heck, I’ve even got pig parts to complete mine. The body is prone to failure, breaking, weakness, disease. The body is finite. The body is of the world.
Because the body is of the world, it is an easy target for the Satan and his minions. They can take over a body with ease, although, in order to do that, they must be invited. There must be a welcome mat and an open door.
The soul, ah! There’s a mystery. Man can’t figure the soul out. He can’t see it, so he can’t reproduce it. It is infinite. It has no chemistry, no mass, no density in the physical sense. It may be immortal – no, it certainly is immortal. It may be SUPERMORTAL, in that it may live forever. That’s part of the mystery. The soul is precious. The soul is Divine. Capital D.
People seek religion to save their soul. We, the clergy, cannot save your soul. I cannot save your soul. Don’t put that on me! At some point, either during your life, or at the end, you surrender your soul. This precious gift, the domain of the Holy Spirit, your gift from God, you either give it back to the Heavenly Father, glory be to God, or you give it to Lucifer, the Satan of darkness, the Thief of Souls.
“So I… I am not feigning modesty, I cannot save your soul. I can only help you to return it to its Creator, Most High, God of Mercy and Light.
How are you going to choose, Prescott? To whom are you going to entrust your soul?”

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Adventure of the Day: #BroncosParade


Denver Broncos’ Parade

The voices on the radio strongly suggested getting to the noon parade at 9 a.m. I figured I’d be safe if I left the house shortly after 9 to take the RTD light rail into Denver. It was a beautiful day, closing in on 60 degrees with the bright Colorado sunshine I’ve grown accustomed to.

I wore my Broncos’ 50th super bowl champion shirt that might get me evicted by my Chiefs-loving housemate, Craig. And just a few minutes into my journey, I was already shedding layers. It was a short-sleeve February day in Denver. I arrived at the parking lot for the light rail and saw the fruitless circling of the lot by others. I went forward to the Aspen Grove shopping center lot. It’s a huge lot, and I had to park on the far side, a half-mile away, feeling lucky to find a spot.

Denver fans of all ages wait for their light rail tickets. Eventually, RTD said "Screw it!" and let people ride for free.

Denver fans of all ages wait for their light rail tickets. Eventually, RTD said “Screw it!” and let people ride for free.

Oh, and then the light rail ticket line. It stretched from the automated kiosk to the far end, and a short ways back again. I waited nearly 2 hours and became buddies with the guys in line behind me. It was clear that this day was one of excitement for people all over the area known as Broncos Country. There were lines on both sides of the tracks, and one of my new friends sent his bride and little boy to the other side, where the line was shorter but moving at a slower pace. As we got within sight of the kiosk, the line on the other side dispersed, and people went to the tracks. Apparently, a lady purchased 100 light rail tickets and handed them out to the people in line behind her. With that line almost vacated, I crossed the tracks and got in it. Shortly after that, an RTD security cop asked who was taking the C Line to Union Station. “Go ahead and get on. Don’t worry about having a ticket.” Having been busted once before for jumping a train, I asked, “Is this a trick?” He laughed, and said, “No, it’s not a trick. Go on. Have a good time and be safe today.”

To the lady who bought the 100 tickets: “Sorry, babe. You’re out a lot of cash, but what a fine gesture!”

Getting close to Civic Center Park, where crowds and excitement were building.

Getting close to Civic Center Park, where crowds and excitement were building.

The train was packed, but I was fortunate to have a seat. I offered it to some of the strap hangers, but they declined. It was a 15-block walk to Civic Center Park, which stretches about six blocks between the Colorado State Capitol and the City County Building. As I drew closer, excitement built. I was most excited to learn that many of the port-o-potties were immediately available. The entire trip took about 2 hours, and I arrived well before the parade hit full stride.

Here, I must confess, I’m not a huge Bronco’s fan. I hated the team and its iconic QB John Elway for two decades for what they did to the Cleveland Browns two years in a row in the ’80s. As VP of Football Operations, Elway signed Peyton Manning and continued to sign a string of support players around him that made the team a powerhouse. What’s not to like about them? So I let bygones be bygones and started rooting for the home team. On this day, having heard that a crowd of 1 million people was anticipated, I felt an obligation to make this my Adventure of the Day because I had never been anywhere with a million people before.

A large crowd gathers in Civic Center park during the Denver Broncos Super Bowl championship celebration and parade on Tuesday February 9, 2016. (Photo By AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

A large crowd gathers in Civic Center park during the Denver Broncos Super Bowl championship celebration and parade on Tuesday February 9, 2016. (Photo By AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)

The crowd was incredible. The parade route was lined 15-deep from Union Station to the State Capitol. At Civic Center Park, the entirety of the grassy area was filled with humanity. Some of the younger folks climbed trees, or scaled statues for a better view. Six or maybe eight Jumbotrons were set up in various places, with huge speakers. Large media bleachers were erected near the stage at the City County Building, where TV teams broadcast live coverage. Ebullient wide receiver Emmanuel Sanders commented, “I heard there was a million people and I couldn’t believe it. But I think I saw a million people out there.” Former Rochester news guy Kyle Clark later announced on the air that Mayor Michael Hancock announced there were a million people, but that a Denver police spokesperson estimated the crowd at 800,000. The spokesperson later called back, and said, “If the mayor says there were a million people, then that’s what it is.” Ha! That’s funny!

One lovely Bronco fan getting a selfie!

One lovely Bronco fan getting a selfie!

My view.

My view.

Yours truly, at what could be a once-in-a-lifetime event.

Yours truly, at what could be a once-in-a-lifetime event.

Regardless, the size of the crowd prompted Denver Police to call in reinforcements across the state for crowd control.

A motorcycle cop high-fives fans along the parade route.

A motorcycle cop high-fives fans along the parade route.

Rooftop security at the parade site. Helicopters and undercover security were also utilized.

Rooftop security at the parade site. Helicopters and undercover security were also utilized.

The officers there were polite and embraced the spirit of the day, with motorcycle cops high-fiving the people along the parade route and others joining in good-natured chants of “Let’s Go Broncos!” Homeland security played a role, as well, with men in army green with binoculars and presumably with rifles stationed on the rooftop of a federal building.

The grassy areas still had unmelted snow that was trampled down to ice, blotched by patches of mud. My biggest concern on this gorgeous day was slipping on the ice and falling into the mud, and I was able to avoid any mishap.

If there were a million people there, the combined value of their NFL Broncos’ merchandise was at least half a billion dollars worth. The fans cheered as the jumbo screens showed the parade getting underway at the train station. Occasionally, the screens would divert from shots of the crowd to show players riding atop huge vehicles, or a fire truck with the owner’s wife and Super Bowl MVP, Von Miller. Cheers and chants of “MVP! MVP!” erupted. More than a few people wondered if anybody was working, or if there were any kids in school.

The people on the grass basked in the triumphant moment as well as the warming sun. Little children sat on their daddy’s shoulders. People danced and sang to the music. “All we do is Win! Win! Win!” and “Let’s Get This Party Started.” The first glimpses of the motorcade created a swelling wave of cheers. Moments later the tributes began on stage. A national recording artist sang the Star-Spangled Banner, followed by an unforgettable rendition of “We Are the Champions” by myself and one million backup singers. Magical.

The mayor and the governor came out of their offices to make proclamations. Then, a few of the players were brought up on the stage, with Von Miller encouraging the crowds manic enthusiasm. The finale was a joint interview with aging superstars Demarcus Ware and Peyton Manning. Why they didn’t give them the individual spotlight is beyond me, but These two leaders stoked the fire in the hearts of their fans.

And then it was over. The throng retreated in orderly fashion to the light rail and to the bars. And eventually to their homes, to think about the team’s prospects of earning another parade next February. As I waited in line for the D-Line train, I wished my Buffalo and Rochester and Cleveland friends could experience the same civic pride and exhilaration that the Denver people did.

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Adventure of The Day: Watrous Gulch Trail


Adventure of the Day – Herman Gulch Trail

Watrous Gulch Trail

July 19, 2015

The overcast morning and forecast for afternoon thunderstorms in the high country did not dissuade me from heading out on my Adventure of the Day to Herman Gulch Trail. It’s in the Arapaho National Forest, Exit 218 off I-70 just east of the Eisenhower Tunnel. In my haste to use the Port-O-Potty, I did not notice the map, which, if it fell on me would have killed me.

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So after climbing the trail for about 10 minutes, I came to a split where I had to choose left or right. No signpost for guidance. I chose right, which was actually wrong, but I was left with the impression it was the right decision. Left would have taken me up the Herman Gulch Trail, which would have been a little more challenging, and my friend, Carol, told me there are fields of wild columbine. Right took me along the Watrous Gulch Trail, and I was not disappointed with the difficulty level or the wildflowers.

It’s a good climb, starting at 10,400 feet on up to about 12,000. Much of the trail is rock-strewn, and other parts are shared with water runoff making its way down the mountainside. I must backtrack a little. The exit sign on the Interstate does not give a destination, just Exit 218. As soon as you turn right, BAM! There’s the sign for the Arapaho National Forest Herman Gulch trailhead. Right next to that sign is a very impressive water feature, with three creeks splashing over rocks and converging right near that sign. I didn’t see it but I heard it from the parking lot. The temperature was about 15 degrees lower than where I started in Denver, 58 opposed to 73 degrees. I put on a nylon jacket at “base camp.”

Back to the trail. The early portion of the hike provided multitudes of wildflowers: Arkansas roses (rosa arkansana), fireweeds (chamerion angustifolim), golden ragwort (packera aurea), wedelia (sphagneticola trilobata), canada anemones (anemone canadensis), asters, bulbous buttercups (ranunculus bulbosus). And although there wasn’t a field of them, I saw plenty of Colorado’s state flower, the columbine (aquilegia).

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Rosa Arkansana. Opening up.

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Columbine.

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Queen Anne’s Lace. I grew this in my Rochester Garden, but did not know it was here in Colorado.

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Wild Snapdragons.

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Canada Anemones.

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Golden Ragwort.

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The Arkansas Rose, fully opened.

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The Scarlet Paintbrush. As with the Columbine and many other plants, it is illegal to pick Indian Paintbrushes and other wildflowers in Colorado parks.

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Virginia Bluebell.

About the time my lungs started burning, I came across cut timber, supposedly dating back to gold mining days in the 1880s to early 1900s. Common sense tells me it was more recent, but that’s what it said on the info board. Immersed in the sight of the felled forest below, a twig snapped up the slope. I turned, too late to capture it on camera, but a chestnut-colored deer loped across the clearing into the dense thicket. It did not appear as stocky as the mule deer that are common in the area, but I did not see its head. I paused, quietly waiting to see if others might follow but they did not.

The only people I saw on the trail were a father and daughter, and a family of four. I chatted with Wag and Beth a bit, and we marveled at the clouds wrapping around the Torry and Greys. Wag mentioned that people were still skiing the snow-covered parts of the slopes, and one was called Dead Dog Run. As soon as he said it, Wagner, Jr.’s face scrunched up and tears filled his eyes. “A puppy didn’t die there, did it?” Mom and Dad had no response, so I told him, “No. They just call it that to scare people who might go skiing there.” And his tears stopped. Whew! Mom, Dad… little Wagner, Jr. is never going to compete in the X Games.

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Torrey’s Peak. The middle run, starting at the peak, is Dead Dog Couloir. It’s still covered in snow in late July.

By this point, I was overheating and put the nylon jacket back in my pack. The trail split again, and I followed along Watrous Gulch Trail, leaving the Bard Creek Trail for another day, after I can brush up on my Shakespeare. That trail leads to Mount Parnassus, which provides a spectacular view of other peaks along the Divide. My decision was rewarded with rushing waters, some impressive pines and spruce, and two unforgettable “friends.” The first was The Yawning Rock. The Beatles’ “Norwegian Wood” popped into my head – Had it been another day, I might have looked the other way… I imagined this grumpy, centuries-old boulder waking up from a slumber. Further up the trail, I encountered another rock, which I’m naming Kerry’s Cleft. Wildlife Alert! Inside the cleft, a Rocky Mountain Least Chipmunk was cavorting. I sat down for a few minutes and took a few pictures. He’s quite a photogenic little guy.

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The Least Chipmunk. A part of the squirrel family, they feature five stripes on their backs, and across their face. They’re high altitude lovers, and can survive over 14,000 feet.

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Least Chipmunk. I love this shot.

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The Yawning Rock.

Shortly after that, rain started to fall. I did not wish to be stuck up to mountain as electricity gathered in the heavens, so I made my way down.

This was my first hike where the altitude change affected me severely. A few times when I bent over to take photos, I got a little dizzy with a touch of vertigo.

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A raging creek with a rock cascade carves through grass and sedum meadows along the Watrous Gulch Trail.

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I was hiking on parts of the Continental Divide Trail.

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Kerry Gleason with Kerry’s Cleft and his little Least buddy perched and posed.

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Part of the trail looked like this.

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Much of the trail was rock-strewn and sometimes part of the creek bed.

The adventure was hardly over. I still had to navigate traffic on I-70. At 1:30 p.m., it was almost at a standstill heading back toward Denver. In the next lane was a car with New York plates, and when my lane moved forward, I noticed the plate holder from O’Connor Chevrolet. The young lady in the back seat had the window open, so I asked, “Are you from Rochester?” She was. “Me, too.” Then my lane sped up and I had to move forward. She probably wondered how I figured they were from Rochester. It adds to my mystique.

I left without having anything to eat or bring anything with me, so I was famished. It took about 45 minutes, but I pulled off to get a $1 Cheesy Bean and Rice burrito at Taco Bell. The place was packed with dozens of people waiting to get their food. Nobody complained because it was better than sitting in their cars on I-70 and not moving. Well, one woman complained. Her name was Mary, as in “You can cancel my order. The name is Mary,” which we all heard about a dozen times before she finally left. But I heard the Taco Bell manager say the most unimaginable thing ever. She said, “We are almost out of food.”

When I heard that, my heart stopped, almost the same as when I eat the $1 Cheesy Bean and Rice burrito. I mean, if Taco Bell runs out of food, the world must surely be coming to an end. So when it was my turn at the front of the line, I ordered two.

“SOLITUDE”
There is a pleasure in the pathless woods;
There is a rapture on the lonely shore;
There is society where none intrudes,
By the deep sea, and music in its roar:
I love not man the less, but nature more.
From these our interviews, in which I steal
From all I may be, or have been before,
To mingle with the universe, and feel
What I can ne’er express, yet cannot all conceal.

Roll on, thou deep and dark-blue ocean, roll!
Ten thousand fleets sweep over thee in vain;
Man marks the earth with ruin: His control
Stops with the shore; upon the watery plain
The wrecks are all thy deed, nor doth remain
A shadow of man’s ravage, save his own,
When, for a moment, like a drop of rain,
He sinks into thy depths with bubbling groan,
Without a grave, unknelled, uncoffined, and unknown.
-BYRON, Childe Harold

All photos Copyright Inspiration Point Productions, 2015

Keeping Arborvitae Green


Are Your Arborvitae Green?

Arborvitae, in Latin, means “tree of life.” At The Home Depot in Colorado, we’ve been hearing lots of reports of arborvitae blight. Discolored, brown, dry foliage is a sign of blight. While we are not aware of any epidemic attacking arborvitae, common conditions might be the cause of some problems within the species in this locale.

If your arborvitae have turned brown, these are the things you should check. It is common for arborvitae to temporarily lose color during the winter and drop some of its small, inner branches, but the trees usually bounce back in the spring and make up for its losses with new growth.

NEW GROWTH
If there is new growth, your tree is still alive. If there is no new growth, scratch the woody bark near the trunk to see if there is green below. If so, simple remedies may bring it back.

DRY SOIL
Dig within a few inches of the trunk to a depth of about six inches. Feel the soil. If it is dry, your major problem may be lack of water. Many homeowners don’t realize that Front Range winters are very, very DRY. Many of your trees and perennials will benefit from consistent winter watering, taking snow and natural precipitation into account.

Give your arborvitae water each day for 3-4 weeks to nurse them back to health. Measure the trunk at knee level. For each inch in diameter, provide 10 gallons of water every 10 days. It seems like lots of water, but that’s what these hydrophilic evergreens love. A steady drip from a garden hose is fine, and the standard residential hose delivers 10 gallons of water in five minutes.

Water the soil directly. Watering the lacy foliage may contribute to sunburn.

Add polymer crystals beneath the surface of the soil around your trees and shrubs. These little crystals will balloon to the size of a grape and gradually release water to plant roots as needed.

IRON DEFICIENT SOIL
Colorado soil is notoriously iron deficient. Add some Ironite, or other iron additive, to your normal fertilizer mix.

MULCH
Pine bark mulch and pine needles are natural forestation by-products that will help retain water and add beneficial nutritional elements to your arborvitae bed.

FUNGAL INFECTION
The browning might be caused by a fungal infection. The Home Depot offers a variety of remedies. To keep a fungal infection from spreading, prune the branches at least 3 inches before the browning. With each cut, sterilize your pruners in a 15% bleach or alcohol solution. Collect the cuttings and immediately bag them, keeping them away from the host plant and any other plants.

LEAFMINERS
Leafminers are an insect that burrows in the foliage of arborvitae (and citrus leaves!). Leafminers are easier to see on plants with flat leaves than in arborvitae, but they leave discolored trails where they’ve traveled. Prune with sterilized pruners, as described above. Then, treat with one of the Sevin products containing carbaryl.

What is the Soul?


The universe is ever in motion. Is there ever a moment where we, where the earth, the moon, the sun and all the stars, where it all stands still? God never stands still.Heaven Ride Book cover

An so it is with our souls. They are the embodiment of the Creator. The soul resides within us, a constant reminder of the living, moving and creating source of all things. The soul is infinite, imperishable, self-luminous, beginningless, endless, impervious to decay, without birth, without death, soaring, never shrinking, and strident in its divinity. Independent. We don’t know where it exists, only that it is, and ever will be. Vastly misunderstood, our source of Understanding. It will be the beacon that guides us home, and the vessel that carries us onward. It will be the song comprised of millions of voices. At once praiseful and praiseworthy, the soul is yesterday’s fair shadow, today’s hope and eternity’s key.

It is not ours to give away, or sell, for we are merely caretakers. But we do sometimes lose our souls in the mundane folly. Most often, it is lost to negligence and neglect. Without the soul we may live, or die, in varying shades of gray. Joyous hues recede into an endless night. The night recedes into a far-off vacuum, which eventually diminishes to unbearable nothingness.

And yet, the universe is ever in motion.

In Heaven Ride, The Sojourn of Souls, we try to imagine the soul and life without it. It is nearly impossible to force words to fit our conjectures and ideas. As a testament to our human frailties, we try. We put forth a vain effort, knowing the outcome is futile. We have no words to match the glorious nature of the soul, so we choke on our inadequacies. Lies. Lies! We know they are lies, but we hope they are lies that will bring us all closer to a truth

So won’t you join us on our ride? Share in our mystery, and again, in the discovery.

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The Book’s Cover


As a writer, I believe that powerful words will stand triumphant. Good ideas and entertaining characters will be in demand with readers.

As a marketer, I understand that a well-designed cover is essential to success.

I have experience in graphic design, and more experience in directing professional graphic designers. I’m not an illustrator, and those people amaze me. Images abound in this world. How does one choose the image that will represent 90,000 words or more, and pull the attention of the bookstore browser while competing with thousands of other books on a bookstore shelf, and millions of others online?

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The Heaven Ride Advance Reader Cover

John Eccleston and I wrote a book that’s more about a marketing phenomenon than a religious eventuality. Early on, we asked 10 beta readers to preview the first six chapters. Our story took place primarily in San Francisco, and we selected an ominous royalty-free photo of the Golden Gate Bridge partly obscured by clouds. We printed the ARC copies at The Tattered Cover Book Store in Denver using their Espresso publishing machine. While I was there, I had three other authors ask for my business card for their book designs. It was an effective cover.

But when the time came for the full book cover, John and I both agreed that we needed something more personal to the Heaven Ride story. We wanted something that would establish the Heaven Ride brand. Janella Eccleston, a professional graphic designer, created an original logo that we both love. Meanwhile, I researched book store shelves, and the covers of books in the techno-thriller category. I asked people which covers stood out. Which ones didn’t they like? Why?Which ones would they be inclined to pick up to peruse? Covers with intriguing people topped the informal poll. Simplicity was next in importance.

Heaven Ride Cover Art

Heaven Ride Cover Art

Many of our competitors feature black, or very dark colors, on their spine. We decided to go with white. The lettering will be a serif font for the byline, but a bold Helvetica style for the title.

Our cover design may or may not succeed in attracting readers in the aisles. We think it will. We know that it is the best possible means to establish Heaven Ride as a brand. We look forward to having t-shirts and merchandise promoting us. We look forward to the possibility that a film producer might option our novel for a movie. We look forward to two more novels to complete the trilogy.

Perhaps, just perhaps, our logo will stick in the minds of readers enough that they will tell friends about our story. That, along with some powerful words and a creative story that makes one think, will be the reasons why we will succeed.

Heaven Ride will be available for pre-order this week.  Look for out FB page and Twitter feeds for further details:  HeavenRideNovel

RIP, Phillip Seymour Hoffman


I heard about the death of Phillip Seymour Hoffman while working at my part-time job, which affords me the privilege of writing as a career. It saddened me deeply. Mind you, I never met Mr. Hoffman. Like millions, I was a fan of the many splendid and psychotic characters he brought to life in film. Secretly, I hoped that one day, he might act in one of my films. I was saddened as if one of my good friends had passed.

Pondering a few hours on the heartfelt strength of my reaction, it is not the passing of him that shrouded my day. It was how he passed. It is reported that he died of a drug overdose, and with a needle still in his arm. Tragic.

Here was a man who made brave choices as a professional actor. He was highly regarded by tradespeople for his uncanny ability to bring life to every character he portrayed. In the final act of his life, he bowed to a force that, to him, was greater than all the success he earned as a father, a son and a brother, greater than gold statues and klieg lights, greater than the inner drive that made his talent stand so tall, perhaps the best at his craft for our entire generation.

Whatever demons ensnared him, he gave in to drugs. Here’s where I write of that which I do not know, for I can’t comprehend giving power to substances that alter, that maim, that destroy the fabric of families, careers and lives. I can’t condone or deprecate the deadly use of drugs, seemingly for recreational purposes, because I cannot understand them. What I do understand is the pain one must feel to succumb to their allure. I can understand the lonely, dark road one travels to reach the place where those brave choices made in the light of day can be overshadowed by cowardly vices.

And that is what saddens me.

May the peace that eluded you in life be with you through eternity.
May the joy you brought to us all live on for the ages.
May your brave choices inspire others.
RIP, Phillip Seymour Hoffman.

Florida Bound: Meet the New Sidekick


If you followed my other travel blogs, you will know that I have traveled with a sidekick who incited a little mayhem and created some adventures that were fairly hysterical.  If you haven’t read them, you must read about the Frog Angel.  He/She/It took off after the trip to Colorado, but at last report, the frog is in Prague writing a blog.  In a bog.

For this round of travels, I staged a tryout.  Participants came from near and far.  My travel partner made it in just in time for, um, wings and she has been eagerly traipsing around Denver with me, leading up to the Florida road trip.

Meet Luna, the snowy owl from Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.

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Luna Trix

Name: Luna Trix

Species: Snow owl

Hometown: Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, Canada

Favorite Music: Hootenanny, Paul McCartney and Wings, The Eagles, The Byrds, Alvin and the Chipmunks (see Favorite Food)

Favorite Movies: The Birds, The Maltese Falcon, The Owl and the Pussycat

Favorite TV Show: Dr. Who

Special Powers: Keen Vision. Can see into the future. Very wise. Smart-Alecky.

Favorite food: Lemmings, Lemming Meringue Pie, Alvin and the Chipmunks (“They were delicious!”)

Favorite Actor: Arnold Schwarzenegger, when he says “Owl Be Back”

Favorite Christmas Carol: “Owl Be Home for Christmas”

Turn Ons: Staying up late at night, and David Hasselhoff

Turn Offs: Nursery Rhymes about the mass slaughter of feathered creatures, such as cooking blackbirds in a pie

*  *  *

At my Colorado wingfest sendoff, Luna posed with friends:

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With Peter Illig and Holly MacGregor

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With Mike Hance (seated) and Nicholas Lubofsky

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With Terri Saunders and Craig Moody

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With Joe and Monica Vondruska

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With the Norrises

 

 

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Luna at the Garden of the Gods in Colorado. The family that preys together stays together.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Harry’s Secret


Two big, black Packards rolled slowly down Roycroft Drive, stopping to locate a particular address. Two dogs, Ted and Spike, rose from their recline on the front porch and barked without descending the steps. Four men, all wearing dark suits and plain, narrow, black ties approached, but did not trespass the porch.

Jerome “Harry” Janowski, strong and wiry, with deep-set eyes and blond hair, hushed the dogs, and invited the men into the house. The spectacle of the big cars and the four strange men attracted a gallery of spectators on the Rochester street, primarily teenagers who attended school with the Janowski children and a few adults, their faces crossed with concern.

It was 1944. Mohandas Gandhi was released from prison in India; Anne Frank was arrested in Germany. Bing Crosby was crooning “Swinging on a Star” and Laurence Olivier brought Henry V to life in Technicolor. The world was at war. The U.S efforts were dispersed in the European and Pacific theaters, influencing most aspects of life in America.

The neighbors would never find out why the mysterious men in the dark suits were visiting Harry Janowski. His grandchildren would learn after his death in 1984 that he became a part of history.

Harry Janowski quit school before the eighth grade in Elmira, New York. Later, he would move to Rochester and ply his trade as a master electrician. His indefatigable work ethic earned the respect of his peers. Harry supervised the installation of lights at Red Wing Stadium at 500 Norton Street, and was rumored to have filled in as a right fielder when one of the regulars for the Red Wings could not get off their regular day job to play. He loved baseball. He loved the Red Wings. He loved his family, his hunting dogs and his country.

Later, he would be the lead electrician for construction at the University of Rochester, and at the UR’s Strong Memorial Hospital. It was there that his connection to the men in the black cars began.

In 1944, the United States was seeking a way to end the war and all its casualties. A projectImage had commenced to build a bomb that would end all bombs. The Manhattan Project involved top researchers from business and academia, and more than 129,000 workers in various cities across the United States. On that summer day in 1944, the men in the black cars interviewed Harry Janowski because they needed an expert electrician for the Manhattan Project. They would return four or five or a dozen times, ensuring that Harry’s patriotism and ethics were true. It was, and after the frustrating interview process, he was enlisted in the project.

True to his vow, he never talked about it.

June 10 marks the birthday of my grandfather, Harry F. Janowski, a humble and amazing man who changed my life more than any other person. When my father abandoned our family for gin joints and the bottle for a decade or more, it was my grandfather who took his turn at bat. He shared his knowledge of gardening, his love of baseball, his passion for life and the crown jewel, his work ethic, with his grandchildren.

He attended every single Little League game I ever played in, so popular among my friends and their parents that for years, they always asked, “How’s Grandpa?” Well after his neighborhood on Seabrook Street off Joseph Ave. had fallen to ruin by vandals and poverty, his home stood out with it’s trimmed, green grass and spectacular rose garden. Everything he planted grew. Everything.

He once planted a seed with a young boy, his grandson. He told me, “You can have anything you want in this life, anything, as long as you are willing to work for it.”

Of all the gifts that God has bestowed upon me, the greatest was my grandfather. He is still with me today, even thought he parted from this world nearly thirty years ago. Today, I might catch a baseball game and have an ice cream float in his memory, and exult in breathing the fresh air in a free country. My grandfather… he was quite a guy.

February 14: Happy Birthday, Frederick Douglass!


The birth dates for slaves were never recorded. Slaveholders took that away from black men and women to dehumanize them, and further, babies were often separated from their mothers within the first year to diminish any sense of “family.” So it was with Frederick Augustus Washington Bailey. His grandmother, Betsey, a free woman, recollected that he was born in 1818 in a Maryland February.

Later in life, after he escaped to the North and became a freed man, Frederick changed his name to Douglass, and adopted February 14 as his birthday.

FDouglass

From such modest beginnings, and self-taught in reading and writing, Frederick Douglass led an inspiring life as a world-renowned orator and best-selling author, abolitionist and statesman and adviser to five U.S. Presidents. He was the first African-American to be appointed to a federal position by a sitting president; the first to be an editor – and publisher – of a national publication; first bank president, first ambassador to a foreign country and the first man of color to be invited to an inaugural ball, for Abraham Lincoln’s second inauguration. He made his hometown, Rochester, N.Y., the first municipality in the country with non-segregated schools. He worked tirelessly for the conscription of black soldiers into the Union Army which helped change the tide of the Civil War, and later toiled vociferously for the passage of the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution, providing all citizens the right to vote regardless of race, creed or color. Douglass earned the first press credentials awarded to an African-American for the U.S. Senate Gallery, and upon his death in 1895, he was the first African-American to lie in state at the Capitol rotunda.

A most distinguished statesman, he was remembered by Theodore Tilton with this sonnet:

I knew the noblest giants of my day,
And he was of them–strong amid the strong:
But gentle too: for though he suffered wrong,
Yet the wrong-doer never heard him say, ‘Thee also do I hate.’ …

A lover’s lay– No dirge–no doleful requiem song–
Is what I owe him; for I loved him long;
As dearly as a younger brother may.
Proud is the happy grief with which I sing;
For, O my Country! in the paths of men
There never walked a grander man than he!
He was a peer of princes–yea, a king!
Crowned in the shambles and the prison-pen!
The noblest Slave that ever God set free!

– Theodore Tilton, Sonnets to the Memory of Frederick Douglass

For more information about the award-winning screenplay about Frederick Douglass’ fascinating rise from bondage to the forefront of the fight for American Civil Liberties, visit http://www.gleasonpr.com/nsfd/

Happy 195th Birthday, Frederick Douglass !