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- Thomas Jefferson

Friday, January 16, 2009

Wondering Where the Lions Are

I had another dream about lions at the door
They weren't half as frightening as they were before
But I'm thinking about eternity
Some kind of ecstasy got a hold on me...

— Bruce Cockburn, "Wondering Where the Lions Are"

I'm a few minutes from sleep yet, but this song comes to me tonight. It's been some week. On my last post, the one with the picture of a shark flying out of the water, Hayden asked, "Shark Week?" To which I replied, "Yes, and I'm wearing sealskin underwear."

Last Friday I had a meeting with our CEO who told me our business was heading into an interesting week. I'm guessing that most people's jobs, when they get "interesting" probably don't involve the media. My job, however, does and it turned out that two unrelated events were heading our way that the local and even national press would find hard to ignore. Neither were pleasant, and neither were a shock, but it was surprising for them to fall in such proximity to each other. My job as well is two-fold: messages for the media and for our employees — and only one of those two groups enjoys bad news.

One, of course, was layoffs. It was almost a relief for the crew, however, as folks had known it was coming and it had been stressful for many while waiting to find out how bad and how deep, while calculating one's own prospects to stay or go. Even if you were relatively safe it's hard not to ponder what you'd do while hurtling toward the inevitable. It was a sobering week, though our portion of the business was relatively unscathed. Still, we're a small group and even a few losses are felt; no one is nameless or faceless. Even if the cup passes you by it's hard not to think of the individuals and families involved. It does tend to focus you a bit, especially if you think, "What if it had been me?"

Same with riding in a crashing airplane. The news today of a US Airways jet taking off from LaGuardia and ending up in the Hudson River — miraculously without loss of life — is the type of story that you can't help but picture yourself belted in and, again, hurtling toward the inevitable, with only moments to review your decisions, regrets and priorities. Now there's no time to change anything, barely time to pray, and yet how heavy some choices must be as they seem to drag across your mind. "If I get out of this..." you might think. Then what? I thought, this afternoon after reading the news, of the time on that Iowa highway in the winter white-out when I moved to the left and the semi-truck careened through those on the right, taking others but not me. Changes were made, and here I am, the man I am today.

I had another chance. Those on the airplane today have another chance. Those in my office, whether staying or departing, each will have another chance, though it may come to us in different ways. Rather than be scary, or depressing, it becomes stimulating, even after the adrenaline fades and only clarity remains. And then the words of another Bruce Cockburn song come to my, and I can smile.

Don't the hours grow shorter as the days go by
You never get to stop and open your eyes
One day you're waiting for the axe to fall
And next you're dazzled by the beauty of it all
When you're lovers in a dangerous time
Lovers in a dangerous time

These fragile bodies of touch and taste
This vibrant skin this hair like lace
Spirits open to the thrust of grace
Never a breath you can afford to waste

When you're lovers in a dangerous time
Lovers in a dangerous time
When you're lovers in a dangerous time
Lovers in a dangerous time

When you're lovers in a dangerous time
Sometimes you're made to feel as if your love's a crime
Nothing worth having comes without some kind of fight
Got to kick at the darkness till it bleeds daylight

When you're lovers in a dangerous time...


We've got some daylight coming to us. It may take awhile, but it's coming. Be ready.



Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Catching the Ghost Train to Hawaii

It's six fargin' degrees below zero as I trundle to the light rail station tonight. I'm bundled up in "Big Blue", my below-the-knee length parka lined with down, thinsulate and cashmere, and a collar that zips up under my nose, and I've got on ear-muffs and a woolen hackers cap from Ireland. Big Blue also has a hood which I seldom use because I think hoods on coats make you look like you're in third grade, or like you're a dork, or a third-grade dork, which may be the dorkiest of all. In this cold, however, I have no shame and I also figure no one can recognize me with the hood pulled up over my cap and ear-muffs and fastened in front of my face anyway.

In this kind of weather I board at the LRT's terminus in the Warehouse District because there's almost always a train waiting there to start its run and it's nicer to wait in the train car rather than waiting for it a couple of blocks farther down the line. Tonight there is a train waiting, but when I try to get on the doors won't open. Then the driver speaks over the PA: "This train is not in service." It looks plenty serviceable to me, especially when it departs — empty — a few moments later. There is no other train in sight at the moment as the lights of the Ghost Train disappear toward the Nicollet Mall where it will no doubt tantalize other commuters before leaving them in the cold as well.

With the train's departure, however, I now have an unobstructed view of the front of a bar called Sneaky Pete's, immediately on the other side of the track. The front of the establishment features large plate glass windows and on one of the windows, positioned immediately under a neon Blue Moon Brewing Co. sign and hard up against the window, is a large flat-screen TV, facing the tracks. No one in the bar could possibly watch this TV, but people outside can. The TV is tuned to The Golf Channel, and it is showing scenes of PGA pros in their short-sleeve golf shirts practicing at Waialea Country Club in Hawaii for this week's Sony Open. I watch slack-jawed, with frost from my moustache thawing and dripping onto my lips, as Anthony Kim and Geoff Ogilvy and others roll puts across a High-Def green that could be called emerald green if emeralds took steroids, and just looking at it makes me wiggle my toes deep inside my mukluks.



Somehow the January wind starts to feel softer and, I swear, I think I can smell coconut oil wafting toward me on it. The angle of my shoulders, until now hunched up against my neck, drops by about six degrees and I loosen the hood and lower the zipper at my neck a couple of inches as I eye a bunker shot from a beautiful white sand hazard. No, wait, it's really a snow bank as the clanging bells of the approaching train take me out of my reverie.

Is it too early to get my clubs down out of the garage attic?