Thursday, March 27, 2014

Treasure the Time

101 Things You Should Do Before Your Kids Leave Home101 Things You Should Do Before Your Kids Leave Home by David Bordon

Whatever you plan to "put into" your kids, you'd better have it done by age 14.  I loved the notion of making a bucket list, as it were.  The "scrapbooking mom" in me would then create a page for each one and document them with photos and journaling as we ticked them off.  Each of the suggestions in this book is fleshed out with a page of narration--the whys and hows and possibilities.

My children are mostly grown now, so what we would do with something like this is look back and create our own journey, calling it something like "Mom's Rules of the Universe: A Guide for Scripting Ourselves and Our Families".

I tagged 60 of the 101 ideas to talk about with my family.  Anyone at a loss of what to do on "Monday Family Night" would do well to consult this little tome for inspiration.

Here's a sample suggestion from the book...
#50  FIND A CHURCH AND STICK TO IT (p.100)
  "Church families are as dysfunctional as any other. But they're also the place where you and your children learn to deal with problems, to grow, and to forgive. "Getting along" skills grow at church.
  There are many different types of churchgoers. You have the only-on-Christmas-and-Easter crowd and the whenever-the-building's-open crew, and those who don't go anymore. The latter group sees church as a machine of abrasive parts and squeaking gears. But they may be missing the big picture. True church is a place of excitement where like minds gather for a greater purpose.
  ...
  Once you've found a church and feel settled, support your pastor and fellow believers. Otherwise you and your children will forever feel like outsiders and never learn the value of commitment.
  Being faithful to your church is a way of showing unconditional love to flawed people. Show your kids it's okay to settle for the off-key earthly choir and a congregation full of people trying, but not quite there yet. Standing back in judgment isn't the answer--never has been. Only by joining in will you see discord disappear, joys heightened, and get a small sliver of your heavenly home."

Here are the things I marked that we did or should have done:

  1. Teach your kids to write "thank you" notes
  2. Share family recipes
  3. Make your kids all home-movie stars
  4. Laugh, cry, dance, and sing--in front of your kids
  5. Say it''"Kids, I made a mistake".
  6. Watch the sun come up -- or go down
  7. Treat your kids to "Only Child" dates
  8. Be on the lookout for a double rainbow
  9. Go to a museum--let the kids choose which one
  10. Join a parade
  11. Invite a dog, cat, guinea pig, or bird to share your domicile
  12. Have a talk about death and heaven
  13. Make every family affair a photo op
  14. Run throught the sprinklers--fully dressed
  15. Find out what your family values are
  16. Hug your kids until they let go
  17. Make a Big Production!
  18. Dance together in the ocean waves
  19. Pick up trash in a park
  20. Serve in a Soup Kitchen
  21. Practice the Art of Praise
  22. Take it to the Lord in prayer
  23. Plant a garden and tend it together
  24. Teach your kids to love God--by word and example
  25. Explore the fine points of financial management
  26. Say "I Love You" with words
  27. Find a church and stick to it
  28. Collaborate on a Family Memory Book
  29. Talk to your kids about sex, drugs, and alcohol
  30. Read a classic novel aloud
  31. Attack family chores with teamwork
  32. Waterproof your kids
  33. Lie back on the grass and examine the clouds
  34. Teach your kids how to ride out the storms of life
  35. Pile up the pillows, dim the lights, and watch a movie
  36. Two words--Diet and Exercise
  37. Walk in the rain with one umbrella
  38. Embrace a poem together
  39. Teach your kids to "be quiet and listen"
  40. Do silly serenades
  41. Take a nighttime stroll through the galaxy
  42. Remind your kids that cleanliness is next to Godliness
  43. Teach your kids good study techniques
  44. Have a family pen pal
  45. Make personal triumphs a family affair
  46. Camp out in the wild
  47. Instill a passion for thriftiness
  48. Foster family friendships
  49. Help your kids identify what they do well
  50. School your kids in ways to manage conflict
  51. Get creative in the kitchen
  52. Teach your kids organizational skills
  53. Let your kids know you will always be there for them
  54. Fly high with a kite
  55. Preach the gospel of manners and etiquette
  56. Trace your child's silhouette
  57. Model the value of hard work and self-discipline
  58. Create and bury a time capsule
  59. Pitch a tent--indoors
  60. Tell the family stories

Friday, April 12, 2013

The Question of God

The Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love, Sex, and the Meaning of LifeThe Question of God: C.S. Lewis and Sigmund Freud Debate God, Love, Sex, and the Meaning of Life by Armand M. Nicholi Jr.
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Suppose Sigmund Freud and C.S. Lewis had met and conversed with one another? What would have been shared between them? Armand Nicholi poses this question as the basis of this work, written when he was an associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

Having some curiosity myself about Freud and some respect for Lewis, I dived into the work more-or-less a blank slate. It seems that both men experienced tragic loss and disappointment and exclusion as youth--driving both to a decision to adopt a "materialist" worldview, meaning they disbelieved in the Judeo/Christian God (among other things).

Freud held to this worldview til his death (by euthanasia)at age 83. Lewis's 'conversion' to Christianity at age 33 dramatically influenced his quality of life, 'til his death at the (comparatively young) age of 65, for the better. I suspect that Nicholi's purpose in the writing of this book is to explore the "proof in the (respective) puddings".

Using their writings and correspondence he sets a debate-of-sorts around the following big questions:
Is there an intelligence beyond the universe?
Is there a universal moral law?
What is the source of our greatest enjoyment in life?
Is the pursuit of pleasure our only purpose?
Is all love sublimated sex?
How can we resolve the problem of suffering?
Is death our only destiny?
Or, more simple put, the questions of a Creator, Conscience, Happiness, Sex, Love, Pain, and Death (as noted in the subtitle of this work).



View all my reviews Note to self: p.80 "Several years ago I (the author) conducted a research..." p.86 the paragraph containing "Siegfried and the Twilight of the Gods" p.88 "Lewis argues that... influenced by Chesterton in The Everlasting Man..." p.89 "He would either be a... He did not intend to." p.104 "Lewis asserts that the primary purpose of our lives..." p.106 "Lewis keeps emphasizing ... increased..." p.121 "Lewis refers to pride as..." p.142 "He explains that the..." p.172 "Pride, Lewis points out..." p.177 Agape p.183 "No one is more likely to be arrogant than a ..." p.183 "After the great transition..." p.206 "If a thing is free to be..." p.207 "Did Lewis believe in..." p.211 "coterminous" (definition please)

Friday, November 11, 2011

Motherhood Rocks!

Mother: A StoryMother: A Story by Kathleen Thompson Norris
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Five stars? Really? Let me 'splain. Five stars, for me, means it went to my heart and or my mind.

In a mere 198 pages of delightful easy reading we follow young Margaret, a prototype for any young woman of her day (and surprisingly our day too)on a journey of self-discovery. Published in 1911, I couldn't help picturing my own grandmother possibly reading this very book. She would have been exactly Margaret's age and she might have shared this young woman's concerns, desires, and prejudices.

The writing was practical, nothing to sound off about and it was predictable in a way. Still, it was a pleasure to read and I think all my twenty-something daughters and even my teen daughter would enjoy it. Thank you Inter-library Loan!

Meet Margaret, twenty-one, from a small town in rural New York. She's bored of teaching school. She wants to travel, experience life and have adventures. Conveniently, an opportunity to do just that falls into her lap. The ensuing five years are a whirl as she joins the fashionable society as a capable secretary to a celebrity. She travels to Europe, wears fine clothes, dines elegantly. She even meets a man who captures her attention, if not yet her heart.

Interwoven through Margaret's story is the appreciation she has for her mother and her affection for her many siblings. Yes, she comes from a large family of insufficient means. She is mortified by their humble circumstances and happy to be of some financial assistance to them. She is happy for the social successes of her sisters and relieved that her newlywed sister's aspiring doctor husband has ambitious plans to better their own lives.

Norris gives voice to the strong prejudice of the rising society women regarding family choices and women's newly won freedom from drudgery. Impressionable Margret is relieved to hear these opinions, which support her own.

A watershed moment comes to Margaret on a late August weekend visit home. Her male interest happens to be visiting an aunt who lives nearby and wants to stop by for a Sunday afternoon visit. A comedy of errors ensues, with everything that can go wrong doing so. In the process Margaret comes to see her family and herself in an entirely new light.

**SPOILER ALERT (I'll hazard capturing some passages for my keeping...)

p.178
"Good-bye, Mrs. Paget," said Doctor Tenison. "It's been an inestimable privilege to meet you all. I haven't ever had a happier day."
Margaret, used to the extravagant speeches of another world, thought this merely very charming politeness. But her heart sany as they walked away together. He liked them--he had had a nice time!
"Now I know what makes you so different from other women," said John Tenison, when he and Margaret were alone. "It's having that wonderful mother! She--she--well, she's one woman in a million; I don't have to tell you that! It's something to thank God for, a mother like that; it's a privilege to know her. I've been watching her all day, and I've been wondering what SHE gets out of it--that was what puzzled me; but now, just now, I've found out! This morning, thinking what her life is, I couldn't see what REPAID her, do you see? What made up to her for the unending, unending effort, and sacrifice, the pouring out of love and sympathy and help--year after year after year..."
He hesitated, but Margaret did not speak.
"You know," he went on musingly, "in these days, when women just serenely ignore the question of children, or at most, as a special concession, bring up one or two--just the one or two whose expenses can be comfortably met!--there's something magnificent in a woman like your mother, who begins eight destinies instead of one! She doesn't strain and chafe to express herself through the medium of poetry or music or the stage, but she puts her whole splendid philosophy into her nursery--launches sound little bodies and minds that have their first growth cleanly and purely about her knees. Responsibility--that's what these other women say they are afraid of! But it seems to me there's no responsibility like that of decreeing that young lives simply SHALL NOT BE. Why, what good is learning, or elegance of manner, or painfully acquired fineness of speech, and taste and point of view, if you are not going to distill it into the growing plants, the only real hope we have in the world! You know, Miss Paget," his smile was very sweet in the half darkness, "there's a higher tribunal than the social tribunal of this world, after all; and it seems to me that a woman who stands there, as your mother will, with a forest of new lives about her, and a record like hers, will--will find she has a Friend at court!" he finished whimsically.

p.189
And suddenly theories and speculation ended, and she KNEW. She knew that faithful, self-forgetting service, and the love that spends itself over and over, only to be renewed again and again, are the secret of happiness. For another world, perhaps leisure and beauty and luxury--but in this one, "Who loses his life shall gain it." Margaret knew now that her mother was not only the truest, the finest, the most generous woman she had ever known, but the happiest as well.
She thought of other women like her mother; she suddenly saw what made their lives beautiful.

p. 190
Mrs. Carr-Boldt's days were crowded to the last instant, it was true; but what a farce it was, after all, Margaret said to herself in all honesty, to humor her in her little favorite belief that she was a busy woman! Milliner, manicure, butler, chef, club, card-table; tea-table--these and a thousand things like them filled her day, and they might all be swept away in an hour, and leave no one the worse. Suppose her own summons came; there would be a little flurry throughout the great establishment, legal matters to settle, notes of thanks to be written for flowers. Margaret could imagine Victoria and Harriet [her two daughters], awed but otherwise unaffected, home from school in midweek, and to be sent back before the next Monday. Their lives would go on unchanged, their mother had never buttered bread for them, never schemed for their boots and hats, never watched their work and play, and called them to her knees for praise and blame. Mr. Carr-Boldt would have his club, his business, his yacht, his motor-cars--he was well accustomed to living in cheerful independence of family claims.

p. 192
All her old castles in the air seemed cheap and tinseled tonight, beside these tender dreams that had their roots in the real truths of life. Travel and position, gowns and motor-cars, yachts and country houses, these things were to be bought in all their perfection by the highest bidder, and always would be. But love and character and service, home and the wonderful charge of little lives--the "pure religion breathing household laws" that guided and perfected the whole--these were not to be bought, they were only to be prayed for, worked, for, bravely won.

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Sunday, May 22, 2011

Before Memory

My mother told me she cried the first time she saw me.

More than anything else in the world she wanted to be a mother.  She had always wanted to be a mother.  She was the oldest of eleven children and had had plenty of time to learn mothering skills.  Before she was ten years old she could bake bread.  She loved sewing for her little sisters.  When she graduated from high school she wondered what she would do next.  She decided to attend a nurses training program in a hospital school.  After that she attended a university where she met my father.  After graduating she accepted a job near where he lived several states away.  They married and began life together and she hoped to become a mother.  A year she waited, then another.  Finally, along I came, and she cried.

I wouldn't have understood then why she cried.  I was completely unaware that only one in a thousand births included my complication.  It wouldn't have mattered to me that it was not hereditary or caused by exposrue to substances my mother worked with as a nurse or any other reason that has been discovered through research.  But, to her credit, I never knew my mother cried until she told me when I was much much older.

Here is what I am told about my early years.
  • When my first sister came along two years and several months later I took her bottle away from her and drank it.
  • When my parents traded the pick-up truck in for a car I cried when they put me in the back seat because I thought I would be left behind.
  • I hid the car keys in hopes that my dad wouldn't have to leave for work.  (He worked all week out of town).
  • Sometimes I would fall asleep in the car where I would hide so my dad wouldn't leave without me.
  • My parents chose an apartment because it had a fenced play-yard.  Soon I figured out how to escape (while my mom was keeping house or taking care of my sister) and I would walk to a nearby frosty and stand and look at people and they would buy me an icecream cone and that's when my mom would find me.
  • I was always getting away and I would do things like crawl under a train that was stopped.  I do remember being told to NEVER crawl under a train -- even if it was not moving.
  • When my mom was at work I tripped at the babysitter's and knocked out my front tooth.  My parents were not called and when I was picked up the bleeding had stopped so I wasn't taken to the dentist.  I was just two years old.  When the permanent tooth grew in it was discolored and misformed.
  • I had pneumonia when I was four.  I called it "laughing fever" because I was told I got it from rolling in wet grass--which I loved doing.  I remember my dad playing a recording of Aida "to get well by".
  • I went snooping in the detached garage and found my mother's wedding veil and completely ruined it by playing with it.
  • I got my mom's iron out to iron something and left it face down on the linoleum in our rented house and went out to play.  It left a mark.  It's a good thing my mom found it before any more harm was done.
  • I got into my mom's makeup and completely covered my sister in red lipstick.  I must have got some on me too as I recall enduring a good scrubbing.
  • I "snacked" on plain crisco til my mom found me eating it.
  • My sister and I made a complete mess of a batchelor neighbor's apartment while he was at work.  Two bear cubs on the lose couldn't have done more damage.  My mom had to clean it up and pay for the damages and apologize profusly.
  • One time I had two dimes to spend.  I put them in the radio-flyer wagon and attached the wagon to my tricycle and began peddaling to town, listening the the happy jingle of the bouncing dimes.  I didn't know we lived ten miles from town on a ranch.  I got clear to the nearest neighbor's house.  Their dogs started barking and I started crying.  The lady at the house took me inside and gave me a bowl of icecream.  By now I had two sisters and the laudry room flooded all the time and my mom had to do  lots of water baling in the basement.  We had only one car so my mom couldn't come after me.  The lady gave me a ride home and my didn't I feel grand.

Monday, May 9, 2011

A Westerner's Observations on the East circa 1950

White Man ReturnsWhite Man Returns by A.N. Keith


My rating: 3 of 5 stars


After the Keiths were freed from a Japanese internment camp during WWII on the island of Borneo they have an all-too-brief recuperation in Canada. This story is about their return to Borneo to participate in re-building the country following the war. The author introduces us to many interesting people. It is a very engaging and sometimes insightful narrative.

Thoughts shared...

p. 82 The more I know of aborigines the more I suspect that only time, unhurried, unharassed, unorganized, untiring and unbeatable, will tell on them. But time will. And meanwhile the factor that the primitive people of Borneo need for civilization is the liberty which alone prepares me for liberty.

p. 142 Goerge at seven is either full-speed or full-stop... (great description)

p. 270 But the young woman who writes me today is no longer a Eurasian girl assailing the Western world--she is a woman proudly Chinese. Jeannette writes:

First I must warn you not to jump to conclusions and start thinking that we are behind the "bamboo curtain" and all such bosh on which American politicians and journalists dwell with such delight.

Not being totally Chinese, I must say that I too sometimes feel it is hard to understand the Chinese, though it is easier for me to do so than for a Westerner. But the real trouble with most people is that they do not even bother to try to understand the Chinese, because it is more restful to just dismiss us from their minds.

The few months preceding the liberation of Shanghai were were so confused that I hope never to see such times again. The KMT once again showed its inability to cope with a situation which it had created with its own hands, because it had sunk so low that it just couldn't rise for any kind of effort. The monetary situation was absolutely terrible, with the black market reigning supreme and price fluctuations so violent, that if one did not dispose of one's money immediately, ti lost as much as 50 per cent of its value within a few hours. When our salary was due, we tried to get it as fast as possible, as a delay of 10 or 20 minutes meant a big loss. There were Chinese silver dollars in circulation and peddlers at every corner selling and buying them, and the tinkling of coins as they rang them became a familiar and irritating sound, with prices being upped all the time and white-collar employees and others were wondering whether to buy Chinese or U.S. dollars, and where no to get cheated. Pay day was not workday for any of us, but a series of speculative suggestions, and when one thinks back it was all very funny--but at the time it was more tragic!

Though it was a foregone conclusion that Shanhai would fall to the Communists, we did not think it would happen so fast, at least, not when the KMT was boasting of its impregnable defenses and warning the population to stock in six months' supplies. One of the fortifications built around the city was alternately called "great wall of Shanghai," or "toothpick defense," and consisted merely of a wooden barrier. No doubt someone managed to get quite a bit into his pockets on that project!

The battle of Shanghai was quickly decided. On the morning of May 25th and KMT had a "victory parade" in town to celebrate the "huge victories" they had gained! At two p.m. the same afternoon they were retreating, and the People's Liberation Army came in around 10 p.m., and we were awakened by the sound of running feet in our street and discovered the KMT soldiers were running full speed toward the Bund with all their gear. When we got up the next morning, the city had been liberated--all very peacefully except for a little resistance in some districts, which was quickly put down.

The first surprise in Shanghai was the good discipline of the PLA soldiers--we had become so accustomed to the behavior of the KMT soldiers who were always disorderly, and more a public menace than a protection; they would throw grenades in theaters and cinemas because they couldn't get in free of charge, and beat up or shoot bus or tram conductors who would ask them for tickets, ad infinitum. On the contrary, an event never before witnessed in China, the PLA man is polite, pays for everything he buys, and is well disciplined. Yet he does not have a beautiful uniform, and many of them wear plain Chinese shoes. It is argued that the reason for it is because he knows why he is fighting, and I believe this is true. (She writes several more pages).

p. 277 (to her husband upon finishing reading the letter aloud to him) What she says is no doubt true, the facts are there. She is an intelligent young woman, and that is the way it all looks to her. If so, it's frightening! ...Just how and why did we (the United States) fail to be that friend?

Because we didn't promise the right things. It's as Jeannette said, democracy and freedom half the world away have no meaning to people who have never known them--people who are schooled to the bondage of want.

(later, on a trip to town) I met old man Lo the next day, the paterfamilias of at least a hundred local Los, the best Chinese in our country. I asked him what impressions he had received on his recent visit to China, about the Communist regime.

"Very energetic!" Mr. Lo said promptly. "Very busy, very hard workers, and at first, very good! The Pople's Army comes into a village, the soldiers have ragged uniforms, but very fine discipline, and behave very politely and are honest, and always careful to pay for what they take. Then everybody very much impressed, and say Very good! Very good! And Communists say, Business as usual!

"Soon a levy is made on all shops and businesses, and a heavy tax is collected from shopkeepers, either in money, or in donations of necessary foods and materials. Then the shopkeepers say,We cannot do this! But the Communists say, You must do it because you have shops and materials, and you must share. The shopkeepers say, If I give you my materials I cannot do business, then I do not have a shop, then I myself need help. This I go broke! So he goes broke! And then business is not as usual."

"But China is a country with more people who have nothing to lose and something to gain," he continued, "than people who have plenty to lose. So more people will welcome Communists, than are afraid of Communists coming, for fear they lose something."

"What about the KMT?" I asked. "Did they help business? Or did they hinder?"

"Well, the Kuomintang did not help business, but they left shops and business alone."

"But under the old system," I persisted, "didn't you have to pay assessments and private contributions to government officials, to keep your business going?"

"Y-e-e-e-s, but we learn how, now. After we know the system, we make our money in spite of it. This Communism all right for young men who have nothing. Not good for old men like me who are too old to learn new ways."

When Harry came home at noon I said, "Why don't you get some dependable, sensible man of property like Mr. Lo to talk to these young Chinese here who rush about so anxiously waiting to get a chance to wave the Red Flag? He might put some practical common-sense ideas into their heads."

"Ol man Lo's worked hard all his life," Harry answereed, "and accumulated money and possessions in spite of the abueses of his own government. But there isn't a single young Chinese who would listen to what the old man says. Any more than they'd listen to me! The day of the old men, and the white man, is past in the East."

p. 287 (regarding the murder trial of a member of the Thirteen Essential Ingredients) The diary owner was asked to explain why he was considering these people for assassination. He gave as his reasoned response the following statement: "I wrote those names when I was in a bad state of mind!"

A bad state of mind, which is so bad that to remedy itself it feels justified in and takes steps towards promoting the murder of men of outstanding integrity, honesty, and unshelfish dealing, is more than a bad temper. ... A bad state of mind is a name for what takes place in a man's mind when he experiences a strong emotional urge for an end he believes legitimate, and at the same time finds himself without legitimate means of achieving the end. To such a state, there are three possible answers: one, to exterminate the minds in which the desire exists; two, to eliminate the desire from the minds; three, to concede to the desire.

By our own creed, and all the oaths that we have sworn at others for ruthless methods, we are forbidden to give the first answer, extermination. By our claims to educate subject peoples for self-government, we are morally forbidden to give the second answer, even if it were within our power to eliminate the desire for self-rule from the heart of men. Yet to give the third answer, self-rule for inexperienced peoples, when their primary need is still food and housing, is economically dangerous. And to give self-rule to any group not yet able to keep its own independence and maintain self-rule exposes it to certain exploitation by less well-meaning masters than ourselves.

So nothing is done. If nothing is better than anything, then we are right. If anything is better than a grievance which leads to "a bad state of mind" out of which comes murder, then we are wrong.

And meanwhile matters do not stand still. Out of a bad state of mind comes soon desregard of methods, and then follows quickly the end justifying every means. And then comes the long line of martyrs, the crepe-adorned, flower-strewn death-pale faces of conscientious men who followed their duty, only to be slain by other men, dark-browed, fanatic-hearted, bloody-handed men driven by a mad force madly--but to accomplish a not-mad end--self-rule.

p. 308 (Christmas Eve musings in Canada again) But in Asia it is different. There the majority of people do not have comfortable homes, glowing hearth fires, happiness and material contentment, and they never have had. Their living, or their dying, means little by Asiatic values. But democracies do not have masses of people who do not matter, masses to be sacrificed safely to the enemy as cannon fodder; the password of democracy is that every man matters.

New vocabulary to me...

p.23 pulchritude The most attractive women in every gathering were Chinese. These were graceful, dainty, beautifully formed women, with porcelain skins and sparkling eyes, exquisitely gowned, carefully tinted, tastefully jeweled. Although by cinema standards they lacked the two movie-marks of female pulchritude, the remedy for this lack was displayed in all the shop windows thich now offered in profusion...

p. 57 tiffin On this day Bob was sitting in the living room making notes for the coming film, and the household was quiet with the soundlessness which means the servants are all asleep and if you want anything done you'd better do it yourself. I left this peaceful scene to drive to the office and fetch Harry for tiffin.

p. 126 procurer He always would get that taxi because he was sorry for the driver, Sing Fook San, who used to be a procurer but had reformed now and kept taxis instead.

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Saturday, May 7, 2011

What it means to bear testimony

WitnessWitness by Whittaker Chambers

My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I have to rate this five stars because of its power to change minds and thus change lives. I began "reading" it by asking my library to obtain the audio edition through inter-library loan. I got half-way through before having to return it. I then picked up my library's re-bound copy and found myself scribbling notes and page numbers on both sides of two bookmarks. I am glad the audio got me through the background and the book got the ideas through me.

Chambers is an apt and intelligent writer. He was good friends with James Agee (who I put among the most genius of American writers)and other key thinkers of his time, which helped place him at Time Magazine during its years with Henry Luce at the helm.

Chambers was a Communist by conscience during the turbulent 1920's and 1930's and then conscientiously abandoned Communism in the mid 1930's with his wife and children. He later became a key witness under subpeona for the House Committee on Un-American Activities in the late 1940's. He had met ten years earlier with a fairly high-ranking government official and disclosed to him all the information he had at the time relating to espionage. He expected to be arrested but nothing ever came of it. Years later he learned the information had been disclosed privately to FDR who chose not to take any action.

Chambers' work in court and with typewriter was to witness FOR Christianity rather than against Communism. At one point he relates a conversation he had with another defector. This man said something to the effect that one is either a Revolutionary or a Counter-revolutionary. He meant by "revolutionary" one who is on the side of Communism and by "counter-revolutionary" one who is not. In other words, if you are not actively engaged in the counter-revolution you are actually in the camp of the revolutionary.

I had to think of this in terms of the war that is now taking place-- the war of Cosmic Humanist, Secular Humanist, and Judeo-Christian ideology in the minds and lives of the inhabitants of this planet. The revolutionary is the Secular Humanist and the counter-revolutionary is the Judeo-Christian. Cosmic Humanism, no doubt, has always been somewhat of a sub-current (as I understand it).

Chambers is most well-known as the person who informed on Alger Hiss, citing and providing evidence that Hiss was engaged in espionage (for which he could not now be tried due to the statute of limitations). Hiss, on his part, was a key player at Yalta and at the inception of the United Nations and very deeply imbedded in many departments of government. He had all the "friends", legal counsel, money, reputation, intelligencia, media, and public opinion on his side. Chambers had no money, initially no legal counsel, very little media and public, etc. on his side. And yet the legal battle stretched over several years, with even Pres. Truman calling Chambers a "red herring".

When Chambers broke with Communism he attempted to persuade Hiss to break as well. His former friendship with Hiss and his family made him reluctant to publicly cite Hiss's and other's espionage involvement.

Wikipedia articles on Chambers and on Hiss contain discrepancies and also expose distrubing flaws in Chambers' days with Communism and assert that Hiss claims to the end of his long life to have been innocent of all charges.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

In a Heartbeat

In a Heartbeat: Sharing the Power of Cheerful GivingIn a Heartbeat: Sharing the Power of Cheerful Giving by Leigh Anne Tuohy


My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This was very worth the time spent reading -- in fact, I read the first few chapters aloud to my family. If you enjoyed the movie The Blind Side, you'll enjoy this book. The book practically pulses with energy. They share life lessons and insights they have picked up along the way and implemented. Their purpose for writing this book is to help us all do whatever little bit we feel prompted to do. Note to self: look up http://www.makingithappenfoundation.com/




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