Saturday, March 31, 2007

An Old Dirt Road (1958 -1962) Minnesota Reflections in Poetic Form

Some how I think, but I'm not sure, perhaps it is just me,
we all go back sometime and try to find that place in time
that says in your mind: "I wish I was back there!"
Or "Yaw, those were the good old days."
Or "How did I get here, from way back there?"
I guess I could go on and on, but you get the picture,
Some things we just never forget. And it is surprising
what they can turn out to be, for me, an old dirt road.

(When I went back there, it never changed,
it remained the same, after forty-years!)

If you've ever felt like that, listen up, focus,
you are not alone, I was a soldier once, a soldier, in trying times
it was back in sixty-nine, from Fort Bragg, to Germany to
Vietnam, to Italy, and them some, but the Old Dirt Road
where I grew up, along side of it,
I never forgot, and as I used to walk it to its top,
I'd talk to the Lord, then catch the bus, go on to school,

Yes, oh yes, I can see myself walking through my backyard,
jumping over grandpa's fence, or walking around it,
way back when; up that old dirt road I'd go,
to Rice School (it isn't there anymore; nor did I attend it,
it was just at the top of the hill when I was young);
along the edge of the road, some houses still remain
some gone, some renovated it seems; still old barns,
turned into garages, as it was way back then.

In those far off days, I suppose in the 20s and 30s,
it was used for buggies with horses (the Old Dirt Road);
in my time, back in '58, a few cars, and my young feet.

It was a rough and jagged road; no car could have gotten down it
completely, not all the way, not without endangering
its under structures, floor boards, tires, shocks, and so on.

I loved that old dirt road, and now that I think of it,
possibly part of the reason could be, it served me:
almost traffic free, gave me time to think,
I was at peace; it was just Him and me.

As I walked the old dirt road, back in 1958, perhaps to '62,
I was but eleven-year old when I started, back then.
I'd pick out a piece of grass from the side of the road
(a weed) like my mother used to do, put it in my mouth,
walk up to its top, and talk to my angel friend,
Jesus too, some forty-years ago.

Yes, be it under the sun, rain or snow, a simple piece of grass,
on an old dirt road, talking to God, listening,
answering His questions,
they were simply ones back then.

Originally written 9-2001, complete 11/8/2001 (put into poetic form 3-31-2007)

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Pursuit of Happiness

We hold these truths to be self-evident,


That all men are created equal;


That they are endowed by their Creator


With inherent and inalienable rights;


That among these, are life, liberty,


And the pursuit of happiness;


That to secure these rights,


Governments are instituted among men,


Deriving their just powers from


The consent of the governed;


That whenever any form of government


Becomes destructive of these ends,


It is the right of the people to alter or


Abolish it, and to institute new government,


Laying its foundation on such principles,


And organizing its powers in such form,


As to them shall seem most likely


To effect their safety and happiness.

Effect - making a desired impression


Power to produce results; efficacy;


Force; validity; influence; accomplish;


Make happen; bring about; bring about;


Purpose or intention; operation or execution.


Not just an illusory fleeting phenomenon.

The pursuit of happiness requires effort


No government can secure it for you


Many try and the results are disastrous


To promise happiness is preposterous


It must be pursued by the relentless


Pursue - to follow in order to overtake,


Capture, to strive to gain; seek to attain;


Accomplish; to proceed in accordance with;


To continue; go on a journey with; capture.


To be fully engaged in such an adventure


One must be devoted and determined


To walk by faith and not be disillusioned


Endure delays, denials, and disappointment


Circumstantial setbacks and rejection


These will test your ability to continue


To wholeheartedly pursue and endue


A positive attitude and journey on to


The happiness you greatly aspire to


Possess, maintain, employ, and enjoy.


Happiness truly exists and is no ploy


Neither is it an amusing, trifle toy


I'm not trying to be trite, or coy


Happiness is considerably valuable


Certainly happiness is most attainable


Much more easy than stuff purchasable


Happiness is an inside job most doable


Juxtapose your perception and reality


Cultivate happiness within continually


Than with or without you will be happy


Because happiness is an inner quality


Accessible to all equally and pursued freely.

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Beautiful Older Women Galleries - Art Is Who I Am - Do I Fit In?

Beautiful older women galleries


do I fit in?


I line my paintings in a hallway


see them there


anywhere


does magic come their way?


Have I met the master of my own heart?

My gothic angel art


my whimsical angels of crystal


a pegasus I did ride here.


I see beginnings


the gate that leads me to survival


knowing my own being.


My lessons are in the doing.


Art is who I am.

I set out to meet the day


creativity reaches for me


rainbows or storm


I cannot tell as yet.


Fine art paintings


reproduction of my heart.


The sun is showing its head


I smile on past accomplishments.


Art is who I am.

It is a toss up


will my frailties trump me


will I bend


will I fly like a pegasus?


will I swim like a mermaid?


I lean toward opportunities


beautiful older women


and their galleries of age


timeless and ageless.


The Universe does smile on them


and hand them notes in the hallway.


I patiently wait for mine.


Art is who I am.

There is a darkness in me


late at night


still.


I paint by candles


ablaze by my own passion.


Gothic angels


whimsical angels


and older woman


I guess I am all of them.


Art is who I am.

I can be anything


still


it is never too late!


Fine art


painting reproductions


not my aim


I search to find my inner being.


An artist's brush full of paint


colors new and brilliant


I become everything new.


Art is who I am.

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Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Chutzpah, Get Some Guts

Get some nerve and gumption to function


Be aggressive in your needed initiation


Don't sit idly by in the same pitiful station


Waiting for a supernatural manifestation


Go ahead and make it happen captain!


Take some immediate necessary action


Alter the status quo and get on the go!


Don't hesitate to boldly give'm a show


Don't be so easily blowed over by a "no"


Persevere and push through so they know


You're not one to go along with the flow


Nicely, bureaucratically be put on a shelf


Sat on the sidelines behind someone else


While they have another smoke and coffee


Lift up your voice! Open their eyes to see


Success and progress doesn't come free


Somebody must plow and push through


This is why I am transparently telling you


To get some chutzpah and internal fortitude


Telling people what you want is not rude


What you tolerate will perpetually dominate


Your own mental health don't frustrate


Beating around the bush is what most do


Never accomplishing anything for me or you


Yet miserably moping quietly at home privately


Restlessly tormenting their friends and family


It would therefore be far more easy to act


Get some spunk, courage, grit, and guts


To more quickly get beyond life's many ruts


Get some intestinal strength and determination


Don't worry about being disliked by some


You can apologize later after you get done


What you need to do. As for now arise you


Make something happen before day's end


Gain respect before trying to make a friend


Diplomacy is good and sometimes a big help


But if not be resourceful to try something else


Be intolerant of wasting time and your dime


On ignorant, lazy, and disinterested people


Delaying your destiny for such is feeble


The timely, appropriate use of gall is regal


Harness that emotional intensity purposefully


To erupt with sheer, unrelenting audacity


Awake the dead and get things moving quickly.

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Monday, March 26, 2007

Purity - Power - Promotion

Purity precedes power


After which comes promotion


God purify me thoroughly


Burn away the chaff in me


Consume every impurity


Make me how you want me


Take me! I am Yours Lord


With living for self I'm bored.


Life in you is invigorating


Therefore Consuming Fire


Arise unquenchably mightily


Make Yourself known to me


I don't want to live halfheartedly


Make decisions presumptuously


Neither do I want subtle mixtures


Of sin, self, iniquity, and vanity


To subtly find their way in me


Identify, annihilate, and remove


Every ungodly, sinful tendency


Help me get in the spiritual groove


To see, hear, and flow smooth


Catch the spiritual wave and move


Through cunning manipulators


Devilish irritating aggravators


Transcend accusatory rumors


Overcome clever evildoers.


Give me heavenly vision


And abundant provision


So I can purposefully do


All that you ask me to


That I might wisely influence


This sadly perverse generation


Pimped by MTV's lustful station


Cleverly made merchandise of


By greedy corporation nation


Record and clothes companies


Selling labels and cute trivialities


Sexy designer logos, seduce us


Creating a conformist culture


Come Christ Jesus and deliver us!


God only You can break the chains!


Show yourself strong in Jesus Name!


Things cannot continue the same


Our national leaders are so lame


Selling out to Saudis for money


Sending our young men to die


WMD was an evil scheme and lie


Iraq an unnecessary fought war


Killing countless lives for sure


Alienating peoples and nations


This is why we need pure people


Peaceable, diplomatic, and amicable


To govern the world in which we live


Men and women with a heart to give


Who possess the power of love


More than the love of power


For the latter will quickly devour.


Egoism, nepotism, and despotism


Even those blinded by patriotism


Who are incapable of justly looking


At issues internationally affecting


They are unsuitable to rule people


No matter how articulate they are.


A passion for purity is powerful


Honest, sensitive, and insightful


To the pure, integrity is most natural


Not an act, charade, nor a facade


Purity comes as we draw near to God


Lay down our pride and lofty agenda


Listen attentively for a divine referenda


To direct us in the way we must go


As we humbly and prayerfully bow low.

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Sunday, March 25, 2007

Simply Sestinas

Repetition isn't necessarily a bad thing in poetry. There are ways to use it without sounding redundant. It means more than repeating the same words or phrases. It also refers to using sounds or patterns that are common throughout the poem.

Sometimes, repetition is so subtle that it's not recognized instantly. It's better when an author creates a poem and the reader doesn't see what's coming next. The last thing you want is to have your readers tired from reading recurring lines or words. The best advice I can give you is to keep your readers intrigued by using your repetition in a flavorful way.

For example, sestinas use repetition but if it's done the correct way there's nothing tiring about hearing the words being used more than once. Every line can sound fresh if a little creativity is put behind the poem.

Sestinas can be a tough challenge to master. It's made up of seven stanzas, the first six stanzas have six lines, while the seventh stanza has only three lines. There is a very precise and complicated pattern to the sestina's stanzas. However, since there isn't a rhyming pattern or a specific meter to follow there's still a lot of freedom in this form.

The first stanza determines the rest of your poem; the six words you use at the end each line will be repeated in different places throughout the rest of the poem. Even though you are using the repetition of words, your poem won't sound redundant if you use your words wisely.

The second stanza is created by taking the last six words you used in your first stanza and placing them in a certain order. Here's the breakdown of your second stanza:

The last word in the last line of your first stanza ends the first line in the second stanza.


The last word in the second line of your first stanza ends the fourth line in the second stanza.


The last word in the third line of your first stanza ends the last line in your second stanza.


The last word in the fourth line of your first stanza ends the last line in your fifth stanza.


The last word in the fifth line of your first stanza ends the last line in your third stanza.


The last word in the last line of your first stanza ends the first line in your second stanza.

Sestina Format

The end words rotate their position with each of your new stanzas in the following pattern.



First Stanza- ABCDEF


Second Stanza- FAEBDC


Third Stanza- CFDABE


Fourth Stanza- ECBFAD


Fifth Stanza- DEACFB


Sixth Stanza- BDFECA

Seventh Stanza- There are three lines, using the last three ending words, and then the other three inside each line in no particular order.

If you're ever up for a challenge try your hand at writing a sestina. The outcome is very rewarding and feels like quite the accomplishment.

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

Planet in Peril

Our magnificent planet is in peril


These notable facts we can't fake


Hear now what is exactly at stake?


The glorious Earth's ecosystem


Brilliant and rich in biodiversity


Overlaps dire human poverty.


Meanwhile biological treasures


In the rainforests are decreasing


Multinational corporations feasting


As they chainsaw, bulldoze, and burn


Short-sighted governments approving


Land owners aggressively slashing


Carelessly inflaming and consuming.


Yet we the people are greatly losing


137 plant, animal and insect species


Every single day from deforestation


50,000 species a year termination


Not a fear tactic, nor exaggeration


As the rainforest species disappear


So do many possible medical cures


For life-threatening illnesses and diseases.


Rainforest precious and prized ingredients


Make up 25% of Western pharmaceuticals


121 prescription drugs sold worldwide


Come from plant-derived natural sources.


Rainforest deforestation is a deadly course


Which we the people must fight and divorce.


Our health and sustenance is more important


Than leveling forests to tear down timber.


Now is the time, this next century's quarter


To stand in the gap and globally protest


Before we lose the Earth's rainforest


Half of the world's species of plants,


Animals, and microorganisms threatened


That comprise the planet's vital ecosystem.


Rainforests once covered 14% of the Earth's


Land surface. Now a mere 6% say experts


Who estimate the last remaining rainforests


Will be consumed in less than 40 years.


A statistic that will bring some to tears


But sadly not trouble or bother most


Because we are a kind, hospitable host


To greedy governments and corporations.


We don't want to deal with deforestation


It seems we've got better things to do


Like watch ESPN, MTV, and the news


Entertainment is preeminent, not activism


Besides we favor capitalism and consumerism


Enough with the environmental mumbo jumbo


It is just simply fear mongering and hogwash.


Now let us attend to Hollywood and being posh


Drive gas guzzling SUVs and smoke furiously


We toss cigarettes out the window carelessly


Litter beaches on holidays indiscriminately.


Throughout the world what will you see?


Filthy people disposing of trash anywhere


Aimlessly throwing rubbish without care


Foul farming and frivolous ranching operations


Destroying the environment without hesitation


World giants like Unocal, Mitsubishi Corporation,


Texaco, and Georgia Pacific profit handsomely


Their commercials and lobbyists say differently.


Nevertheless the truth will prevail mightily


The corporate crooks will pay severely


Dearly both now and throughout eternity


Public awareness will increase exponentially


The tragic consequences for industrial countries


Who disregard their land for exorbitant fees


Abandon environmentalists wise policies


Developing and destroying simultaneously


Building economically, breaking environmentally.


These shall have to answer to God and humanity.


Amazonian Indians and indigenous tribes are gone


People living off the land numbered in the millions


Today displaced and dead they're less than 200,000.


With them have gone centuries of outstanding insight


Accumulated knowledge of priceless medicinal value


Irreplaceable knowledge about medicinal plants


With the loss of each medicine man, we too suffer


Losing a library with a wealth of wisdom and skill


What shall we do when we ourselves feel strangely ill


With an incurable disease nobody can seem to heal?


"The leaves of the trees are for healing the nations"


God Almighty said it in His Word without disputation.


Endangered animals are now nearing extinction


Suddenly, sadly, and not surprisingly disappearing.


Their distinct sounds animals lovers aren't hearing


Poachers in Africa, India, and elsewhere don't mind


As long as you pay them for what they kill and find


Illegal traders of animals in Myanmar and Thailand


Will happily take money from your guilty hand


You are contributory in negligence and murderous


For being disregarding, deluded, and devours.


Go and have a word with animal rights activists.


Umbrella species sustain numerous habitats


Money hungry traders don't care about that


Some however care about conservation efforts


They are tigers, the swift fox, and sturgeon


The mong seal from the Mediterranean,


The gray kangaroo and giant panda,


Elephants, rhinos, and the gorilla,


Malayan sun bears and the grizzly,


Blue whales and sharks unfriendly,


Hippopotamus, great apes, and chiru


The songbirds who sing lovely for you


The chimpanzee, Amazon river dolphin,


The great white shark with the big fin,


Snow leopards, Mexican prairie dog,


The Florida panther hiding near a log


The grevy's zebra, and harpy eagle


The American bald eagle most regal,


Ethiopian wolf and whooping cranes,


Unfortunately many people disdain.


These lovely and unique creatures


Seeking to hunt, capture, and lure


Them into a trap or brutally attack.


Let's protect and welcome them back


Be good stewards our Earth


Revive, renew, and give birth


To environmental consciousness


Lest we be overcome by perilous


Times and tribulations turbulent


Because of the many arrogant


Disinterested people in our planet


Who curse, pollute, and damn it


Blatantly disregarding and defiling


Purporting, reviling, and denying.


Accurately the Jewish prophet told it.


We are despicable and truly desolate.


Humbly read Isaiah 24:3-6 and see


Our transgressions certainly many


Our hearts froward and haughty


Impending judgment nears quickly


Our planet falling apart rapidly


Let us therefore awake and repent


Be environmentally cautious and relent


Priceless natural resources we've spent


Let's reform and protect the environment


Consistently recycle plastics and metals.


Properly dispose of oil, tires, and chemicals.


Don't permit toxic pesticides to get inside


The Earth's surface and core deep below


Stop agricultural runoff and honor H2O


Without which we can't stay alive you know.


Protect wetlands. Conserve the habitat.


Use safe wildlife products to protect species.


Use renewable fuel to increase efficiencies.


Incessant air pollution causes you to sneeze.


Kindly confront and correct litterbugs please.


Protect polar bears from global warming


Employ special measures to be conforming


To environmental standards and initiatives


Choose good wood and save our forests


Say yes certainly to sustainable seafood


Conserve, clean up, don't be so crude.


The Earth and animals don't like lewd


Fellows who are obscene and indecent


To terrorize the ecosystem and planet


It's time for us to become intolerant


Of those who abuse our precious planet


And irreverently take it for granted.

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Thursday, March 22, 2007

Celebrity Weddings

Celebrity weddings


Come at quite a cost


Yet it's love without which we're lost


Love is precious and priceless


For the faint in heart precarious


True love is enduring and timeless


Love brings out of us our best


Whether you are rich or a pauper


Love cherishes and doesn't drop her


Love seeks to give and not take


Lust selfishly many hearts does break


Love is sincere without guile, nor fake


Love delicately nourishes and protects


Love feels, forgives, and kindly forgets


Love is attentive and never neglects


Love keenly discerns and detects


When something is bothering you


When you need an encouraging word to


Uplift, impart hope, and resurrect you


Love overcomes when it feels overwhelmed


Love leads, but also shares the helm


Love is a concerted, cooperative effort


It's not always a deluxe five-star resort


It's not pretentious, nor does it purport


Requiring teamwork and patience


Self-control and long-suffering resilience


Love is the essence of relational brilliance


The foundation of trust, which rids hesitance


It arises bravely when needed any instance


Love perseveres with a fierce persistence


It doesn't quit when it hits resistance


It is transparent and not defiant


Love is strong, though not self-sufficient


Love realizes what the heart needs


The intangible blessings beyond greeds


Marvelous beyond materialism


Though money makes life easier


To feed, clothe, and house her


To also provide her wants and dreams


Though not all things are as they seem


Some celebrity weddings go sour


As they suddenly turn on and devour


One another, en route to divorce court.


A wedding is far more than a ritz sport


Love is to be a secure citadel and fort


Wherein we can take shelter and comfort


Thus I wish all newlyweds a lifetime of love


An unbreakable bond with all they dream of


Plus unconditional love from God above.

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Tuesday, March 20, 2007

The Proving Ground

Seeing you change has got the better of me


You are not the same person you used to be


You turn your nose up with a downward frown


Just to let me know you do not want me around


It is such a heartache to know


You only wanted me when you were down and low

Sharing your love was a wonder to behold


The most beautiful story to ever be told


Now when you see me you turn your head


Forcing back my hellos for tears instead


The joys we shared we will never have again


You have climbed up the latter from whence you came


Cruel and heartless are some of the ones who succeed


They come from a roofless and selfish breed

I hope the time never comes when the day you shall fall


I applauded you for your success, accomplishments and a


Now that I have continued my own life to live


I've given to you everything my heart can give.

For myself I am happy but for you I am sad


Good never comes from that that turns bad


Do not let your life become the proving ground


For people who succeed and tumble back down


Life can come full circle for which there seems to


be no ends


Always remember never to turn your back on your friends


You can take this to heart or be like a circus clown


It is a lot harder to get up than it is to fall down


For when you find yourself reaching for the ones who care


Take care for you may find that nobody is there

Heed the moral of the story for this is true


The people you shun may do the same to you

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Monday, March 19, 2007

Integrity

Integrity


Who you are


When nobody is watching


I know the concept


Can be quite frightening


At times disheartening


But always enlightening.


As you gradually become


Increasingly self-aware


The probing question


Is how much do you care?


Are you willing to be honest


Truthful and confrontational


Concerning character flaws


That need to be addressed


Harnessed and corrected


Or will you contrarily


Be wayward and infected


By your stubbornness


And self-righteousness


By which you live in denial


Plateau, discredit, and file


Your skeletons in the closet


Bury them beneath the shelf


Conceal them from all else


Though privately you know


Your life is a vain show


Your heart within sinks low


As you feel a failure


Unable to arise and grow


Above deadly tendencies


Painful behavioral patterns


Which you wish to unlearn


Forget, remove, and overturn


Your heart does deeply yearn


To scorn, scratch, and sever


These demons that forever


Snare and entrap your soul


You want to be made whole


Fortified and strengthened


Empowered and equipped


Develop an inner hatred within


Victoriously confront and win


Collide with, correct, and conquer


The impurities within that linger


Break the seduction of immoral


People, things, and circumstances


With your precious personhood


Don't gamble and take chances


Don't be hasty to make advances


By cutting corners crookedly


Which is only followed painfully


By serpents eager to bite thee


Poison, beguile, and destroy


Maneuver, woo, tantalize, and toy


Employ you to be the devil's boy


So your integrity, he can destroy


Publicly revile, wreck, and ruin


Get it right now and wisely clue in


Be an example in all that you're doing


Integrity and character will keep you


Anything less will break and befall you


Many are ready to deceive and trick


Don't be charmed to cheat and risk


Your reputation, character, and name


Be honorable, discipline, and tame


Your appetites, lusts, and urges


Which if yielded to lead to dirges


A premature death, as you self-destruct


Hear this warning well and wisely deduct


Adhering to principles does preserve


Certainly your family and friends deserve


You to continue forward into the future


Rebellion and disobedience seeks to swerve


Downplay, redirect, deviate, and diminish


To err and ignorantly succumb is skittish


Get a grip and refuse to be restless


Uphold your person and progress


To wayward ones and fun reluct


Integrity and character construct.

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Sunday, March 18, 2007

Fantasy Art and a Goddess of Art's Creative Dreams - A Colorful Artist's Palette

Fantasy art


mingles with the colors


my palette, my inspiration


my tune, a fairies dream.


Cold and gray


bold and red


midnight meets a sky of lavender


if I choose to paint it so.

I close my eyes and breathe it in.


I am a fantasy artist


I plot and measure my songs.


I seek out inspiration.

I lie on the cool grass


the sky is my blanket


the moon is my compass.


Sometimes it leads me home


sometimes it takes me afar


I land in forests


or un-traveled seas.

I spy a bird in the air


and I become one.


I dream of magic


cloak my breath with requests.


Let me spin around and dance


lift my cares from this earth


plant orchids near my pathway


and line the trail with golden ribbons.

If there is a goddess in me


I will save her from the dragon


or perhaps I will become one.


I am the mystery in my own story.


I am the tailor of my own myth.


I approach the door anyway I please.

Fantasies live in the art of dreaming.


I write it all down


plot out tomorrow what was yesterday


and paint a desert knowing a waterfall.


I draw the surface of pretend


color it with crayons


and put it in an envelope.


I will open my secret in the afternoon


pour tea and eat chocolate and cookies.

I stand at the oceans roar


it tells me to continue dreaming.


I aspire to be the captain of a ship


that sets out to sail toward the Milky Way.


and I hear a spellbinding call,


"Look out to the beyond dear ones


the horizon is just within your grasp."


I turn to see a mermaid


blushing


as she treasures the illusion


for the message she sang to me.

I am a little girl today


a goddess and woman too.


I do as I please


the sensations are mine


and I alone define them.


Fantasy art


a legend I describe on canvas


or sculpt with clay between my fingers.


It is mine.








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Friday, March 16, 2007

The Eagle's Last Flight by Ron Standerfer - Book Review

The Eagle's Last Flight


by Ron Standerfer



iUniverse (2005)


ISBN 0595360874


Reviewed by William E. Cooper for Reader Views (2/07)

As a work of fiction Colonel Standerfer has produced a book that places his readers well within the realm of reality. It is the story of a decorated combat pilot who is dying of leukemia. The story takes us through his training (which he nearly fails to complete) to his association with veteran World War II and Korean War fighter pilots. These friends take him under their wing and teach him the realities of combat flying. He is assigned to combat operations in Vietnam and proves himself and capable and heroic pilot. Colonel Standerfer's writing skill puts you in the cockpit with pilot Skip O'Neill as he maneuvers and engages in aerial combat. The fact that the author himself flew 237 combat missions in Vietnam provides the background and real knowledge and skills to take the reader with him back into the fight.

Following his combat experiences O'Neill volunteers to be an observer at the testing of atomic bombs. Without the knowledge of radiation and the proximity to the detonation, O'Neill is exposed to what will become lethal doses of radiation, over time. He contracts leukemia and the story follows his treatments and reflections of his experiences. As the disease progresses, O'Neill decides to accept his fate with courage and dignity. He reflects over his life and career experiences while deciding how to meet his end. Colonel Standerfer creates and ending for the book which is both surprising and emotional. This review will not reveal that ending as the reader needs to experience it alone.

For anyone who reads, "The Eagle's Last Flight" should be added to your library. It is a well-composed and well-written story, and certainly worth your time and expense to get and read it. I have to tell Colonel Standefer very well done sir, very well done. Be proud of this work.

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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Weak, Restless, and Weary

Weak, restless, and weary


Quite a combination certainly


Not strong, liable to collapse


Under pressure or strain


Yet restless unable to tame


Wild and without reason


Incessantly searching


For an intangible something


Weary in well doing


Nevertheless continually pursuing


Becoming more weak while doing


Fragile, frail, feeble, and unfirm


Unstable and steadily do I squirm


Eating dust like a dirty old worm


Unhealthy, ineffectual, and aging


Lacking in force, neither forging


Boldly ahead, as I surely ought


This lengthy battle, I have fought


For family, finances, and fulfillment


How much longer can I endure it


What shall I do when feeling impotent


Without resources, nor resilient?


To think or consider thyself inadequate


If a mentality most deadly and deficient


However forget logic. I must be potent


Powerful and purposeful to use my potential


Undying, resolute, and plenteous in loot


Yet mentally and physically exhausted


Faint and forgotten, I've nearly lost it


Fatigued beyond measure and impatient


Dissatisfied and demoralized, I dramatize


Wishing my dreams to wonderfully realize


My solace is my ability to imagine and fantasize


Give me resurrection power God to actualize


My personal power and ability mightily utilize


Unceasingly active and irked within I despise


My tireless toil that fails to materialize


In some sort of grandiose gratification


Meaning monetary sums and satisfaction


Hence my restless mood and exertion


As I give my all and have consternation


I need some mild form of variation


Some heavenly insight and inspiration


I make no excuse for my irritation


As I await a supernatural manifestation


A miraculous financial flow for alleviation


Of all my increasing debts, doubts, and pouts


Of these present circumstances, I want out.

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Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Training Older Dogs - Book Review

This book is one of the publications I picked up for my son who adopted a young dog from a rescue shelter a few days ago. I found the book interesting enough to read before shipping it to my son, in case I may someday stay at home and get a dog for myself.

The contents of the book are:

Yes, You can Teach an Old Dog New Tricks!


Choosing the Right Trainer


Teaching Proper House Manners


The Basic Commands


Game Time!

Dogs, very much like people, get set in their ways as they grow older, but that doesn't mean that they cannot adapt to a new owner or a new home. Training an older dog is different than training a puppy, and an older dog may come to a new owner with his own set of psychological baggage from his earlier life.

One has to remember that all animals are not the same; older dogs may not learn with the same ease as the puppies, and they may not want to obey every command. Making the animal want to learn is an owner's major accomplishment. That is why the author Miriam Fields-Babineau touches the possibility of choosing the right trainer as a possibility inside the pages of the book.

Knowing the personality of the dog is important. A timid dog needs reassurance and patience, whereas a young dog with aggressive tendencies needs to learn slowing down and paying attention to the owner's commands.

Should you take on to yourself training your new older dog, the author continues with the basics such as proper house manners, a good schedule and a healthy diet for feeding, giving commands and making sure the dog understands them, the use of the crate, behavior modification, teaching the dog to stay alone and well-behaved in the house when the owner is away, eliminating problems such as jumping up, chewing, digging, mouthing, pushiness, begging, and excessive barking.

All dogs need obedience training. Obedience training is important because the owner, too, learns to communicate with the dog during the training sessions. Communication with a pet happens not only with words, but also with the tone of voice, touch, and body language.

No matter how old the dog is, he likes to occupy his time and feel that his owner is pleased with him.

"Training Older Dogs" teaches the owner how to teach the dog to heel, to sit, to stay, and to come when called. At the end of the book, further teaching of games like rolling over and doing little tricks are mentioned.

The book, "Training Older Dogs" is in hardcover with 64 well-written and easy-to-understand pages filled with splendid dog photos and with ISBN: 0793830389 and ISBN-13: 9780793830381.

The author, Miriam Fields-Babineau, after graduating from the University of Maryland with degrees in Zoology and Psychology, interned at the Boston Zoo and the National Zoo. Later she went into the field of training all species of animals, working with all kinds of animals for the entertainment and educational media. She has 19 books about dogs and dog training, such as: Raising Your Dog the Natural Way, Dog Training with a Head Halter, and Multiple Dog Household.

This book serves as a primer in older dog training. Without making the task complicated, it gives the basics. It is probably the first book to read even before you bring your older dog home.

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Monday, March 12, 2007

Slowpoke - Christmas is Coming

Hey you slowpoke


Christmas is coming


No really. No joke.


I'm being honest


You're taking a long time


Cruising behind you


Certainly isn't sublime


I'm trying to be patient


I'm trying not to resent


It's hard however to relent


When life has gone and went


While I with you have spent


Incessant moments of time


Ceaselessly trying to find


A way to motivate and move


Get you into the groove


Propel you to get up and do


Something to further you


Along in your precious life


I don't have time for strife


I don't want to push or offend


I'm just trying to be your friend


Yet if you want to squander


Your precious potential


Exist in a pitiful pit and hell


I cannot embrace nor gel


With your mindset, nor behavior


Disappointments cut like a razor


Hindering our forward focus


Devouring like unruly locusts


Nevertheless life goes on


Get over it we undoubtedly must


Lest we dwindle, dwarf, and rust


Harness yourself for a new thrust


Of personal power and desire


Awaken your desire's deep fire


To fuel and burn you forward


No need to be bitter and froward


Now there Mr. quite contrair


Bury your past, clean the air


Get your life out of reverse


Turn around your course


Hurts and wounds divorce


Get out of your parking space


Move forth in this life's race


Put some joy upon your face


Release all shame and disgrace


Slowpake be stirred and shake


Your potential and promises take


To your latent greatness awake


Feel the need for some speed


Don't sit and inwardly bleed


Arise now and do a good deed


Do something powerful and positive


Passion is no elective, nor alternative


Slowpoke don't be pathetic and passive


Take immediate action! Be aggressive.

Sunday, March 11, 2007

The War is Over

The war they say is over


And over, and over, and over


It doesn't seem to go away


Images pop up night and day


Innocents killed unnecessarily


Definitely I object conscientiously


Military psychologists can't help me


They label me according to policy


God help me push past the past


Wash it away, make it no longer last


Cleanse me by the blood of Jesus


Holy Spirit come liberate and free us


Veterans are bombarded in their brain


The screams reverberate with pain


Repeatedly and continually the same


Come someone and break the chains


Don't call me a hero. Don't give me fame


Just give me back my childlike innocence


Help me forget the grotesque violence


By which I mercilessly killed the living


God graciously give me a heart that's giving


I'm filled with grief and dire misgiving


I need comfort, nurturing, and forgiving


I've disregarded humanity with profanity


Recklessly maimed and murdered brutally


Fighting for my life got the best of me


Help wretched, messed up me just be


Dwell and exist in society peaceably


Sweep away the fixation paralyzing me


My soul is entrenched in calamity


My heart is engrossed in the military


The killing fields continually bloody


Break me free from my mental anguish


Affirm me so this guilt I can relinquish


I'm vexed deep within and want to vanish


Dying deep inside I just want to perish


If the war is really over, help me crossover


Into my personal promised land and inheritance


Send the power of the resurrection and resilience


Uplift me from the mental muck and mire


Ignite within me the fresh fire of desire


Perpetual thoughts of war do make me tire


I feel trigger happy like an explosive live wire


Rid me of the militant mindset so I can acquire


Gentleness, self-control, and be made whole


I must regain what from me this war stole.

Saturday, March 10, 2007

Captivated by Karlita

Captiva Karlita


Better than a starlight diva


Delightful when I see ya


Gorgeous and lovely to behold


Spirited, vocal, and bold


A heart as pure as gold


A Polish princess foretold


Your destiny did unfold


As your life God did mold


Guard, direct, and preordain


Through difficulties and pain


You purposefully came


To honor Christ's name


No matter the game


Season or situation


You stand strong


All night and day long


Making the Lord your song


Redemption and salvation


In Him you're a new creation


Unprecedented transformation


The power of the resurrection


Gives you the fire of desire


Igniting a passionate sensation


Waves of revival, a new vibration


Dutch damsel supernaturally dynamic


Graced, gifted, and perseverant


Assertive when others need to hear it


Gentle when it's time to keep quiet


Prayerful in trials and tribulation


Thoughtful through irritation


Self-controlled during aggravation


Motivated with insight and inspiration

Karlita you are victorious darling


You've defeated devils snarling


Seeking to kill, steal, and destroy you


Countless battles you've come through


Empowered and deriving strength


From wrestling with many struggles


Returning to the Father for snuggles


You're now a wife with tender cuddles


A woman of wisdom unable to befuddle


One who fights the fight of faith


Initiates and completes the race


Counts the cost and gains the prize


Karlita you are a precious surprise


Captivating, intoxicating, and wonderful


Feminine, affectionate, and faithful


Sensual, sacrificial, and deeply loyal


Elegant, regal, and divinely royal


Words are inadequate to fully express


The totality of your magnificent essence.

Friday, March 9, 2007

The American Way: Wrong is Wrong and Right is Right

Wrong is wrong


No matter if


Everyone is doing it


Regardless of how


A politician spins


Or window dresses it.


Unnecessary war and killing


Is undoubtedly Bushit


Though hawks and neocons


Somehow embrace and buy it


Know certainly God is not for it


"Thou shalt not kill" (Exodus 20:13)


Is still a divine commandment


I guess Bush & Co misinterpreted it


And thought they should do it.


There are never any winners in war


Though warmongers will sell it


As a war of good against evil


They're neerdowell and by no means noble


They're simply about oil and medieval


Unenlightened, dumbfounded, and numb


Our government illicit, ungodly, & broken


Our verbiage and finger pointing a token


Of our guise, disguise, and great demise


As they play dumb in DC and surmise


Purport sincerity, as they neglect military


Suffering soldiers wounded at Walter Reed


A medical center dismissed and in need


Now under the media spotlight


The White House is awake in the night


A Scooter Libby conviction adds to the plight


No more is there Bush business as usual


Cheerlead, spin, out of mind, out of sight


Hurricane Katrina victims are not alright


Insurance companies refuse to pay up


Nevertheless "we the people" won't shut up


Our governmental institutions need a check up


Because we the American people are fed up


A White House CIA leak, obstruction, & cover up


Jeopardizing national security and agents abroad


Republicans can no longer claim they're of God


Many have misused and abused their offices


To advance their own economic interests


Collecting money to build a Presidential library


Before the end of 2006 is absolutely unnecessary


Unless Bush is planning on leaving office prematurely


Perhaps he is quickly trying to secure his fragile legacy


His war of terror has certainly become quite messy


It will be interesting to read about him in history


Undoubtedly we have made many more enemies


Muslims, Afghans, Arabs, Iranians, and Iraqis


I guess America has forgotten the power of diplomacy


War without end seems to be our agenda aggressively


As our troops fight on for whatever reason tirelessly


Many return in body bags, others wounded and bloody


Maimed, mangled, crippled, without limb, and let down


The powerful in government spearheading war need to learn


Assuredly what comes around shall surely go around


Ignorance and indecision shall not always abound


A new breed shall arise with a powerful voice and sound


Sounding the alarm against international injustice


Global terror, American enterprise, and violence


Nation building and regime changing for oil


As our politically powerful seek to take a spoil


Get ready! The righteous shall arise and their plan foil


For our God on high shall tolerate it no more!


Neither will He allow America to play the whore


Sell itself and souls for gain, while globally causing great pain


Such behavior inhumane we must oppose, fight, and disdain


Permit no more the misappropriation of the American name


No more can we proudly claim our military might and fame


The American way has brought us great misfortune and shame.

Wednesday, March 7, 2007

Interview with Author David Keck, Part Two

David Keck, author of In the Eye of Heaven, has graciously answered my questions on writing and publishing. I enjoyed his responses very much. David is a Canadian, currently residing in New York, where he teaches at a Junior High. In the Eye of Heaven was published by Tor Books on April 4, 2006, and is available in paperback as of March 6, 2007.

About "In The Eye of Heaven"

Mary: What is the target audience for your book?

David: Like most writers, I can only write what I like. I'm a reader who has a terrible sweet tooth for traditional fantasy, but whose patience for paint-by-numbers characters and settings is just plain worn out. I want stories that feel real to me. I want to be surprised. I want to be challenged. I want the language to have a little life in it. If I succeed, I'm giving the readers what I want.

Mary: What makes your story unique?

David: A lot of reviewers have talked about the grittiness of the setting. (And it is faintly odd to think of realism in a land of fiends and sorcerers). But that's what I want to do. The world needs fleas and omens if it's to feel real. Maybe we're not in the real world, but we might be in world as people imagined it to be.

Mary: What was the hardest part of world creation?

David: World creation is a pure joy. I've spent years and thousands on it. I've spent vacations climbing castles and hunting for henges. When I was poorer, I spent days in libraries. Now that I've got a day job, I keep the booksellers in business. In my work, the only difficult area is making sure not to lose the reader. I often mention Patrick O'Brian's nautical fiction when I talk about world building. The man filled his pages with impenetrable jargon, but, somehow, managed to haul his readers in. As a reader, I never doubted his world for an instant.

Now, fantasy readers would likely be less patient with a real barrage of historical accurate terminology. Still, I want the readers to know that the world around the characters isn't full of borrowed backdrops and worn props. It needs to feel real.

Mary: Does the protagonist, Durand, share any characteristics with you?

David: I suppose Durand does share a thing or two with me. When I first began the book, we were both at the beginnings of our careers and very uncertain about whether we'd ever be able to find our feet. It might also be said that my Durand is a person very concerned about ethics, and such issues must be in my thoughts as well (or I would hardly have built a novel on a character like Durand). Sadly, however, I don't think I would have gone very far in the world of professional thugs and honorable killers.

Mary: Is there a message in your novel?

David: I haven't thought much about whether there might be a message in my writing. I think that novel-length work can deal with various themes and issues, but that it's hard for a satisfying work of that scale to send a single message. A reader could probably see evidence of my thinking about a great many of life's issues if that reader cared to look.

Mary: I notice you have sketches of your main characters on your website. Do you draw the picture and then use it to create a character, or is the sketch done after a character is developed?

David: Drawing is something I've been doing since before I can remember, and it's a big part of my thinking process. I often begin with an image and try to capture it on paper (just as I'll later try to wrestle the image onto paper). You will have no idea how long I will have obsessed over some detail of a character's appearance. The trouble with writing, of course, is that you can only gesture toward such details. I think that a writer has to be careful to choose only the most telling details rather than stopping the narrative to provide an exhaustive portrait.

Check out what others have had to say about David's book at http://www.keckbooks.com/KindWords.html

Tuesday, March 6, 2007

Yes - You Can Time the Market! by Ben Stein and Phil DeMuth

What great audacity!

The conventional financial media constantly barrages with the advice, "Don't try to time the market. Buy and hold. Buy now, and hold."

At the same time, the same financial media constantly barrages us with advice that implicitly (NOT explicitly) tells us to time the market: "10 Best Stocks to Buy Now." and so on.

We're constantly told that nobody can make money from trying to time the market, yet we're constantly advised to do things that -- in effect -- are in fact market timing.

And we're told that's what the professionals do. Mutual fund and portfolio managers, traders and so on constantly buy and sell, and vary their exposure to the market based on their evaluation of where the market is going in the short run (which is market timing.)

With this book, Stein and DeMuth rise above the noise to deliver one firm, clear-cut message. Yes, you can time the market, using these proven guidelines.

They start out by making a simple point. When it comes to buying everything else in life, we do have a sense of what's expensive and what's cheap. So why not apply that to buying stocks? Buy them when they're cheap and you're bound to have better results than if you buy them while they're expensive.

They also point out something that should be obvious but is one of those things so out in the open that we don't think about it -- the market moves every day because people and institutions are buying and selling individual stocks and indexes. Millions of shares. What's that but market timing?

Stein and DeMuth also agree that nobody knows where the stock market is going in the short run. The techniques they offer for timing the market have been proven to work in the LONG run -- the longer the better. They compare results for 5, 10 and 20 year periods. They don't claim you'll double your money by next month. They don't know where the stock market will be next month, and neither does anybody else. Their studies show that market timing works as long term strategy.

They start out with the premise that a stock's price must be related to its expected future return. The premise of the Anti-Market Timers is that there's no relationship between a stock's price and its expected future returns. The time to buy is always "now." But that assumes shares of stock are mere pieces of paper, and don't represent ownership interest in a particular business.

But they do represent ownership in a particular business. And if you can buy that ownership interest for $100 instead of $200, that just makes sense. Would you pay $1,000,000 for a hot dog stand that nets just $10,000 a year? Even if everybody else you know is doing that? But wouldn't you pay $10 for it? There's a price at which that hot dog stand is cheap, and a price at which it's too expensive.

Also, Stein and DeMuth do not claim they can help you pick good stocks. This book is about timing the market, not individual stocks. They advise buying the S&P 500 index.

Stein and DeMuth studied and tested the results of buying into the S&P 500 based on various criteria, and then tracked where the market went in the future. This book outlines the various techniques they found that did in the long run prove to make more money.

This book could also be called a guide to contrarian investing, because buying when stocks are cheap means that you're buying when other people are avoiding them. During the bull markets such as the late 1990s, you don't buy. The authors must know that very few people are capable of following this advise through the long term.

There's also the problem of waiting for the right time to buy. Not many people in the their 20s are capable of setting out on a firm, life-time investment plan. If there's a bull market and stocks are cheap, how many people 25 years old are willing to say, "Well, I'll just invest in bonds until the next bear market."?

Over an average lifetime of 65 to 85 years, people will see various bull and bear markets, but how many of us properly take advantage of all these opportunities over the long term. Either we're not informed (I wish I'd read this book 40 years before it was written) or other factors come into play. (I remember my grandfather saying that he could have gotten rich during the Depression, because he had a good job and therefore money to buy stocks -- when they were very cheap -- but his wife wouldn't let him.)

Also, most of us have only small amounts of money to invest at a time, as we work and receive our paychecks. We might get an occasional inheritance or insurance settlement, but of course such things come when they come, and infrequently.

Therefore, I'd most recommend this book to people who expect to soon receive a large lump sum of money, and are wondering what to do with it.

However, those of us who invest through payroll deductions to a retirement fund can also benefit from this book. I am assuming that you are able to choose where your money goes, and that you can switch money in your retirement account.

When the indicators in this book tell you the market is too expensive -- switch your money from stocks to either bonds or a money market account and also send your payroll deductions to a bond or money market fund.

When the indicators in this book tell you that stocks are cheap -- switch your savings from bonds or cash to stocks and use your payroll deductions to buy stocks.

Just what exactly are the indicators Stein and DeMuth use to time the market? It'd be unfair to reveal the details, but I can say they look at the price to earnings ratio, dividend yield, Tobin's Q ratio (a company's replacement cost divided by market price of all its stock), price to book value ratio, the price to sales ratio, and price to cash flow ratio.

They provide a website that keeps track of the current figures.

As someone who recommends investing for income, I have to admit to a prejudice for dividend yield. The accounting scandals at Enron, Tyco, WorldCom, and other companies have shown that "earnings" is a figure subject to fraudulent manipulation. Price to sales ratio and price to cash flow ratio measure the cash health of the company but not how much you'll benefit from it. Tobin's Q ratio and similar ratios (such as price to book value) measure a company's balance sheet, not how much income it's generating.

Dividend yield, however, is cash in your pocket. Furthermore, if the stock's price never goes up, who cares? You're collecting the dividends.

Monday, March 5, 2007

A Mathematician Plays The Stock Market By John Allen Paulos

Everyone who invests their hard-earned money in the stock market should be concerned with the truth of falsity of the efficient market, random walk theory.

According to many financial academics who have studied the data, stocks and the stock market tend to move at random. All relevant information about a company or the economy as a whole is reflected in the current price. Buying the stock of just one company is akin to making a bet in a casino. You will win some, you will lose some. Eventually, the transaction costs of paying your broker will more than eat away at your profits.

Therefore, the best way to play the market is to buy a broad index fund such as the S&P 500. You will then profit as all stocks gradually go up due to the long term growth of the U.S. economy.

However, most people who risk their money in the stock market have never even heard of it. Many have heard of it but think it doesn't apply to them. Most people still pay brokers, read newsletters, and listen to investing shows on cable TV. That is, they still think they -- or somebody whose advice they listen to -- can "beat" the market.

As a mathematician, Paulos brings a trained math professional's viewpoint to the issue. But much of the value of this book comes from his experience as a stock investor who got totally sucked into losing a lot of money on one of the high tech/telecommunications giants of the late 1990s-2000 bull market, and which went bankrupt with the revelation of massive accounting fraud -- WorldCom (ticker symbol WCOM).

So Paulos illustrates a lot of common investor errors by using himself as a bad example. As WCOM's price went down, he kept buying. He bought on margin and, as the price continued to drop, met margin calls. He bought calls. He spent hours of his life in Internet discussion forums writing and reading posts about WorldCom.

So his errors inspired him to write this book examining the stock market and its behavior both from both his professional and personal experience. He makes informed speculation about the value of technical analysis and fundamental (or value) stock analysis. He gives the standard random walk theory explanations for why these techiques cannot in the long run make investors any more money than simply buying and holding index funds.

He gives the standard random walk explanation for investors such as Warren Buffett who have long records of beating the market -- they're simply coin tossers who happen to have a long record of flipping winning coins. If enough people flip coins, most will have average results but the laws of probability state that someone will flip an extremely large number of heads or tails.

This is true, but it seems awful funny that people such as Warren Buffett, Peter Lynch and others who have proven market-beating records are also people who work very hard at it.

It is a coincidence that the most famous coin-flipper of all, Warren Buffet, was a hard-working business person as a little kid? That he saved his money through his childhood, then studied investing as though his life depended on it and that he knows more about most companies than any 5 other stock analysts? That he reads more company balance sheets than most of us read emails?

My own explanation is this: the ability to pick winning stocks is part innate ability, part intelligence, part analytical ability, part the motivation to learn all you can, and so on. These abilities have a high, nonrandom correlation with the proven stock-picking records of those who possess these combinations of traits.

The traits plus motivation to pick winning stocks are randomly distributed through the population just as is intelligence. But only a few people have enough of these traits plus enough motivation plus enough opportunity (would Buffett have been quite so successful if he hadn't taken Benjamin Graham's class in college?) to beat the market. (Buffett not only took Graham's class, he was the only student Graham ever gave an A to).

Paulos explains how con artists can use Internet chat rooms to "pump and dump" and "short and distort" to defraud investors. They choose a thinly traded, penny stock company. They buy a lot of shares of it. Then they use a variety of logon names to spread rumors and talk about how great the company is and how the stock price is going to go to the moon, and so on. Once enough people have bought the stock to raise the price substantially, the con artists sell their shares at a nice profit. They can also do the same by short selling a company's stock and then talking it down in the Internet.

This book is not light reading. Sometimes he doesn't explain his math as well as I wanted. Be prepared to think a lot.

Toward the end of the book Paulos makes an interesting point regarding the possibility of buying stock that's been fraudulently misrepresented -- that doesn't change the odds. Think about this -- you've got to bet on a coin toss. You know the coin is biased, but you don't know whether it's rigged to come up heads or tails. Your odds of winning are still 50-50. Because you can pick either heads or tails and either heads or tails could be the coin's bias.

His point is that you can buy a stock or sell one short, and if there's some fraud involved, you don't know which way it's driving the stock.

That's an academic abstraction, in my opinion. In the real world, most people buy stock (or go long) rather than sell short. Plus, in the real world, if your brokerage records may be investigated it'd be a lot easier to say that you bought Microdotcom at 10 cents in hopes it would go up to 15 cents rather than have to explain why you sold Microdotcom short in hopes it would go down from 10 cents. I doubt many brokers would even allow you to sell short the type of very small company stocks that are subject to Internet frauds running down their stock prices.

Plus, since only a relatively few people in the country own shares of Microdotcom to begin with, you have to convince a sizable fraction of them to sell their shares. It'd be much easier to convince some of the vast millions who haven't yet bought that company to buy some of its shares.

So I am certain that many more investors are burned through being convinced by pump and dumpers to invest on the long side than are burned by short and distorters who convince them to sell short.

Also, the fraud associated with WorldCom, Enron, Tyco and other such companies has nothing to do with Internet cons. Executives who manipulate the stock prices of their own companies do so to make themselves wealthy with stock options. That rules out rigging the books to make the companies look less profitable.

(That form of double bookkeeping does exist, but primarily in sole proprietor and partnerships, where the owners want to reduce the taxes they must pay.)

So I feel positive that in the real world fraud burns investors on the long side much more than it does to the short. Therefore, stock price manipulation, whether done by con artists or by corporate executives, is much more likely to distort the "efficient" market price of a stock to the high side than to the low.

Paulos has a less accusatory attitude toward the fraudulent corporate executives than many writers. While he should accept responsibility for his own errors as an investor, and he made many, detecting the accounting deceit in fraudulent financial statements was impossible for him.

It's too bad Paulos doesn't consider the obvious solution: If he'd invested for income, he never would have bought WorldCom in the first place. That would have protected him from all the accounting fraud firms, because executives that are so busy ripping off the company and inflating the stock price to take advantage of stock options, don't want to pay out the company's profits as dividends to the company's mere shareholders.

Investing for income saves you from John Maynard Keynes's famous "beauty contest" analogy. Years ago, British newspapers ran beauty contests where they published pictures of many women (stocks), and readers could vote on who was most beautiful (buy those most likely to go up in price). However, the only voter to win was the one who best predicted the beauty contest winner. (You make money in the market by predicting that many other investors will buy a company's stock, thus raising the price.) Guess wrong about what other investors think about a stock, and it doesn't matter how "beautiful" the company is to you -- its price goes down and you lose money.

Boards of directors who value their shareholders enough to pay them dividends, are much less likely to be cooking the books. And even if they are, it can't be on such a grand scale, because they still have to pay out some real, hard cash. And even if the stock price does eventually go down, shareholders at least did collect dividends.

Not investing for dividends -- that was Paulos' biggest mistake as an investor, though he doesn't mention learning that lesson.

Sunday, March 4, 2007

Alafair Burke: Close Case, Third Samantha Kincaid Crime Novel, A Journey Inside the Justice System -

Author Alafair Burke, former deputy district attorney in Portland, Oregon, and criminal law professor at Hofstra University, Long Island, NY, reveals the inner workings of the Justice system in Portland, Oregon, in her series of novels with heroine ADA Samantha Kincaid.

Truthfully, I picked up her first crime novel, Judgement Calls, when I saw her name on the cover, a name made famous by her father's, James Lee Burke, invented adopted daughter in his best-selling series of Dave Robicheaux crime novels based in New Orleans and Southwest Louisiana.

Alafair doesn't disappoint, her books are unique. She takes you inside a world she knows very well, the Portland, Oregon, justice system. In this Close Case, the obvious, usual suspects are all the wrong ones even the less-than-innocent ones that confess.

Conflicts of interest in the personal and professional relations between heroine Assistant District Attorney Samantha Kincaid and her boyfriend, a Portland police detective, complicate investigations into the murder of a popular newspaper reporter.

More die before the insidious tentacles of corruption that extend into the police department can be shut down by the efforts of Samantha and the Internal Affairs Division.

If you like crime or mystery series, you'll like Alafair's books. She just keeps getting better. Though she writes in the first person her books are different than her father's books. I eagerly await her next book, Dead Connection, coming out Summer 2007.

You can find her books, including her first Judgement Calls and her second Missing Justice with news of her upcoming book on her website with links to your favorite stores, at =>Alafair Burke

http://www.AlafairBurke.com

Saturday, March 3, 2007

Poetry – Can Poetry be Translated? Yes, if it's Got a Narrative

I debated myself for long years on the issue of translating poetry. I wasn't sure if one could do that without losing a lot in the process.

Despite many superior examples of poetry translated from one language into another, I still shied away from these translations like one would resist the charming offers from the guy selling Rolexes on the Fifth Avenue. The things look like original, but you still can't be sure enough.

Two years ago in October I was lucky enough to be accepted to a Master Poetry workshop conducted by Stanley Plumly, one of the leading American poets who heads the creative writing program at the University of Maryland.

For the first time in my life, I've realized in this workshop the importance of the narrative in lyrical poetry. Every good poem is indeed a bit like a short film. There is a story there. It's either that or the whole thing is nothing but a marvelous piece of linguistic fireworks.

Language is of course an important part of the reason why we fall in love with our favorite poems. But there is also the narrative behind that linguistic magic, weaving its way through every strand of the emotional fabric of the poem. That, I now believe, is what perhaps can be translated with reasonable success from one language to another.

With such a framework in mind, I began to translate the poems of some of my most beloved (and relatively unknown in the West) Turkish poets like Turgut Uyar, Melih Cevdet Anday, and others. I believe their words, the narrative and the emotions they've breathed life into, deserve a larger audience in the world today. I'll share some of these translations with you in my other Ezine articles.

Thursday, March 1, 2007

How You Can "Read" Your Favorite Novel In 3 Hours Instead Of 3 Months

I love to read a good novel and I guess you do too. It's great to spend some free time reading instead of sitting in front of the TV.

I've been reading since I was very little. I'm not a fast reader, but I used to read one book per week. Happy times this was, unfortunately all this change very quickly.

The thing is that when you are young you have a lot more time to read. But when you grow older and start going to college or some other school you don't have so much free time anymore.

I continued to read novels as often as I could even when I started my career. Sadly, it was starting to take me 3 months to read just one novel, instead of the one week it used to take
me when I had more time.

I would read a chapter or two one day and then put the novel aside. When I had some free time on my hands, I would read another chapter. Then it would be another 2 or 3 weeks before I could read another. And so on, until I would finish just one novel.

This was getting on my nerves and knew there had to be a better way. I wanted to be able to read a novel in the same period of time it used to take me. Not 3 months it now takes me to finish
just one novel.

I started asking for a way out.

Thankfully, I found one...

Audio books!

I simply buy the novel I want to buy, not in hardcover or paperback, but in audio book format - containing the exact same content of the novel in spoken-word!

Now I don't have the limitations I used to have with "reading"
my favorite novels.

In the morning while doing my exercising, making breakfast, getting dressing, etc, I listen to my novel in audio book format. While commuting to work, I continue from where I stopped. During break at work, I also listen. And before driving back home from work, I complete the remaining part of the novel.

Total time spent - about 3 hours for each novel.

Phew... how I love audio books for saving me so much time, yet
I'm still getting the same value!

If you have not tried the amazingly wonderful advantages of
audio books yet, don't hesitate.

Apart from novels you can get almost any kind of book in audio
book format. From business books, professional books,
motivational books, etc, all can now be found in audio book
formats.

Go online to find that book you have always wanted to "read"
but never had the time to. Now you can with audio books!

The best part is that you don't even have to buy a cassette or
CD anymore. You can download you favorite book directly to you
computer or mp3 player.

Yes, it's now far easier to get you favorite novel in audio
book format then you could ever imagined!