Rare, Collectible, & Otherwise

Category: Uncategorized (Page 34 of 45)

Risen from the Tomb

Imagine this. You get up out of bed, go to work, and stay there for the next two months. No lunch break, no pizza delivery. No combing hair or shaving. No TV. No iPhone. The air conditioner is out and its about ninety degrees as you sit around. All of your co-workers there with you, doing nothing, just waiting to go home.

Those miners in Chile are finally being brought up from their collapsed mine, the longest period of time anyone has been buried and lived to tell about it. Truth is, the story is pretty compelling, and I found myself switching over to a news channel last night – just in time to see the first and second survivors emerge.

There really is more to the story: for the first seventeen days, no one knew if the miners were still alive a half mile down in that cave. After the husband doesn’t come home for more than two weeks, I’m guessing most wives would have assumed the worst.

That’s what made for such great television. Seeing the expression of those waiting to see their husband and father, the joy at being reunited, the perceptible relief at having survived such a disaster.

It’s wonderful that the world was able to see a happy ending for a change. The government of Chile is to be commended for taking charge, and still allowing others with expertise to assist toward a successful conclusion. As for the workers, they’ll go from the dark of a cave to the spotlight of attention. The thirty-three men will have completely different lives from here on out – depending on how much they enjoy the limelight. Already, TV appearances complete with paid airline flights and hotels are in the works.

You know there will be book and movie deals. Those men who risked their lives to scrape precious metal from the earth’s core will have new opportunities.

No doubt, it’s well earned.

It is almost shameful that we risk the lives of husbands and fathers simply to produce pretty golden rings for fingerwear. That may be what gives the gold its value, but it does little to honor the memory of those whose lives are lost in its pursuit.

The real-life drama of the rescue points out the difference between treasure and the truly precious nature of human life.

Read up before you get stuck somewhere!

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A Man’s Man

He throttled the Harley up, and when the speedometer edged past the 100 line, the motorcycle began to wobble. It shook hard, then flipped, and before the needle had even dropped back down below the century mark, the Harley was on its side, and bike and rider were tumbling and scraping along the hard pavement.

Glenn Hawley was wearing riding leathers. They got pretty scuffed up. When he finished sliding along the highway at ninety, then eighty, then forty miles an hour – when he finally came to a stop a short distance from his mangled motorcycle, Glenn raised himself up and dusted himself off.

His buddy wanted to take him to the hospital, but Glenn declined. It hurt, sure. But not that bad. The buddies were going to the movies that evening, in a couple of hours. He needed to get back to town and change clothes.

He admitted – years later – that the movie and conversations were sort of a blur, and that he was probably in shock or something, from the wreck. At the time, he felt like he needed to be there, to do what he said he was going to do.

And he did. Throughout his life, William Glenn Hawley was that kind of guy.

In my circle of relatives, Glenn Hawley was superman, of sorts. He owned a boat and went fishing, and camped out, and slept in the woods, had a riding lawn mower, and wore plaid shirts that showed off muscular arms. I was a kid, the son of a psychologist, and Glenn was my uncle who could crash a Harley Davidson at one hundred miles an hour and then get up and get cleaned up for a date.

He married my father’s sister, and in all of my life, I never witnessed a better definition of love and committment. They did not argue, they smiled. They did not complain, they laughed and praised the children, and kept house and lived their lives through fifty-six years of marriage.

Uncle Glenn died just after midnight, on Friday morning. He was battling leukemia when I saw him last, but he didn’t show it. He spoke of his treatments, but not the pain. He fought it for eight years, but during the course of those years, you might well see him out on the riding lawnmower keeping up the immaculate lawn.

He was active in church and scouting. Knew no strangers. Always had a story to tell, and they were really interesting stories, not those listen-and-nod ones that some people push. He had friends for life, and a lifetime of friends and family.

He was a man’s man.

And a kid’s Superman.

Them’s Fightin’ Words!

Former CNN host Rick Sanchez says he was tired when he shot his mouth off and the darn thing backfired. His daughter had a softball game that he wanted to attend, but instead he had to answer questions on that dratted national radio show. He wound up calling people names, some of those people being his bosses at CNN, who fired him.

Back in the day, such insults would be settled in a gentlemanly fashion. That is to say, a couple of dueling pistols would be brought out and the injured party would step off ten paces against the injurer (twenty if they’re both nervous marksmen) may the best shot win. It was a completely different form of being fired.

Today’s society could incorporate the same idea with a much more civil end to debates, but instead of those messy pistols, why not introduce Scottish broadswords? The two duelers could stand back to back, march off their required paces, turn and begin swinging.

Of course, at such a distance the warring parties could only flail the air until their arms grew tired, or completely fell off. Then, after a handshake (assuming both could still manage enough of a grip), they could trot back to their jobs and resume a dignified life.

It might not end verbal gaffes, but it could provide a new revenue stream. CNN covers the event, sponsored by Gillette blades and the US Marines.

Why we just don’t say “Oops…”:

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