All posts by Gary Stuber

About Gary Stuber

Gary Lee Stuber is a West Virginia, Conservative Independent, Christian, Veteran Marine, Disabled, Retired, Widowed, Father of five, Grandfather of twenty-five, Great Grandfather of ten so far, lifetime Marvel comic book reader, former comic collector and dealer, Marvel comic historian, former Dungeon Master, gamer, artist, writer, editor, pre-press manager and all around graduate of the school of hard knocks. He was born in Hardin County Ohio in 1953, raised in Dunkirk, Ohio, the oldest of six and married his pen pal, the former Joyce Kay Brown of Maysel, in Clay County, West Virginia in 1974, and became a West Virginian at that time too. He is a good guy who would have been a superhero but has never been bitten by or doused by anything radioactive.

Why Marriage Is ONLY for the Faithful Godly

Pass it along

imageMarriage Made in Heaven

Civil unions. Utopia. Ideas that don’t really work. Well, maybe for a short while under the best of conditions, and the most extreme luck. Generally, they are doomed to failure. Marriage won’t last without faith. Like salvation, that faith is not of yourself: it is a gift of God. The book of Ephesians is where Paul says: all things “consist” because they are held together by Christ. Things without Christ, natural law of entropy tells us, will eventually break down and fall apart. Before I get a bunch of hate-mail or angry debate, let me validate my point.

The Path Least Taken

The easy path doesn’t exist. Marriage is messy business. I mean we make wedding vows that seem easy to keep. Everyone loves to “have and to hold” and we like to be “obeyed”. Harder still are vows to “love and honor and cherish, forsaking all others”. Sheer will power might keep that alive for years, even if in appearance only. But the love of Christ makes even those so much easier to accomplish, when real love and charity is involved. But the two things hardest on that list of vows are (1) “in sickness and in health”, and (2) “till death do us part”. These two things I contend cannot be accomplished without the power of commitment through Christ. And, sadly, some totally committed Christians don’t keep these, even though Christ repeatedly assures us, we can through him.

I Can Do Forever

We all like to think we can do forever in our own power. Meatloaf’s song, Paradise By The Dashboard Light, a song about eternal promises made in the heat of lust ends with this line: “Now I’m waiting for the end of time: so I can end my time with you.” I submit if you had to live in a loveless marriage for a lifetime, that lifetime would be short: without Christ in suicide or in homicide for one of you. That is why divorce exists: so you can part without dying or killing. Marriage by definition is till death. Divorce, which was never part of God’s definition of Marriage, validates my point that marriage cannot be accomplished as a civil union without faith. Christ gives you the power through His love, to bear all things, including the apparent lack of passion on anyone’s part. When you keep your eye on Him, it’s easier to focus on the needs of others and not the lack of your own. Colossians 3:19 says: “Husbands love your wives, and be not bitter against them.” It’s an interesting command (not a suggestion) from God. No matter where your marriage is at, good or bad, if you love and stay your own tongue and thoughts from bitterness, your marriage will improve. Your relationship also improves with Him. God says obedience is always better than sacrifice.

What About My Rights?

It’s always right to do right. If you insist you are right, or that your spouse is infringing on your “rights”, here is another commandment from Ephesians 5:25: “Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ loved the church, and gave himself for it.” Think about how that went. Did your wife spit on you? Beat you? Betray you? Lie to you or about you? Put nails through your hands? Well, even if she did, you are commanded to love her through it as Christ did, sacrificially, giving up everything, even his very life. How do your “rights” or being right stack up now?

Healthy, Wealthy and Wise

We generally marry in our youth. We are young, healthy, if not wealthy, we are full of potential. We have a full wonderful life ahead: homes, cars, careers, children, grandchildren. After all isn’t that a promise of God? Well, wisdom isn’t our strong suit in our youth. No such promise exists. That is why that one dreaded line in the marriage vow is easy to overlook. “In sickness.” (Man, I saw it there but I was thinking ‘flu’ or something). Time does not heal all wounds; neither does chicken soup, anti-oxidants, plastic surgery or Prozac. We don’t enter into marriage thinking about long-term illness or injuries; certainly not those that are till death. Many of us are ill-prepared for this, and again, never without faith. And sickness covers a lot of ground.

A Lot of Job

Remember Job? God let him lose everything: his property, his substance, his kids, his health, his future (some say his mind). He didn’t lose his life. Sometimes we can lose a spouse to grief, mental illness, cancer, loss of limbs, motor skills, hepatitis, aids and more. We watch helplessly as they suffer, even pushing us away. Like Job’s wife we want to say, “Curse God and die.” But death is not part of the plan. Sometimes, since life has changed for us, we selfishly ask, “why me.” But we know full well it is not us who is suffering the greater loss. We’re human, even if we never say it to her, if a wife loses her breasts to cancer we take it personally – those were mine. If she was raped and the trauma leaves her fearful, untrusting and unable to be intimate, we ignorantly say to ourselves, “get over it. Buck up. I have sexual needs.” If she has a mental illness like schizophrenia or manic depression and we watch behavior erratic and unpredictable take her places nobody should go, we get angry. Against whom? The person who can’t control it? Or perhaps the God we think who should? Or maybe the medicine that sometimes works, sometimes might not, and sometimes leaves her a zombie, or worse, intimately and sexually numb. We might be angry at the drunk driver who took her legs, but we might be angry at her too because she is no longer “complete.” God forbid a spouse should actually be the intentional cause of their own ailment: an accident caused while they were texting; an addiction caused by their drug or alcohol use. We will never let them forget our loss is THEIR fault.

Not all ailments are forever. A lengthy hospital stay and a long convalescence at home and things go back to normal. But schizophrenia is forever. PTSD is manageable most of the time but when it rears an ugly head is near unbearable and dangerous to both parties. A life-long illness does indeed change life. And it can change a relationship. But when God is the glue, there is still grace, gratitude and goodness in your marriage.

Life as a Zombie

Sadly, I think the greatest cause of divorce in this nation starts with the inability to cope with sickness in a marriage. Rights, needs, abilities, all become insurmountable issues. Whether because of inability or feelings of guilt, one spouse or the other ‘releases’ the other from the promised commitment to God. (As if either had that right or power). Like the undead, the injured often then, live in a perpetual state of limbo: too sick for life and love; too healthy for eternal rest and peace. The healthy party often remarries as if they were widowed. Christians too, are counted among these heart-breakers. This too, was never God’s plan. What if you had been the one injured? Would you still be happy with the outcome? Could you live life like a leper while your spouse goes out to find someone new to meet her needs?

To Everything There Is a Season

“Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations: That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honor and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ.” 1 Peter 1:6-7. I used to ask, what does he mean, “if need be”? Why do I need to go through heaviness and temptations? Why do I need trial by fire? Sometimes we don’t know those reasons. Remember Job? God never told Job that he was teaching a great lesson to all his angels (especially Lucifer) by the testing of Job. And Job proved himself faithful and thus he ended up at the end of his life with more than he ever lost: property, stock, children, wealth, health, respect, reputation and a reserved spot in Heaven. Perhaps his greatest honor was that his story would fill a whole book in God’s greatest work: the bible, where it is promised to stand forever, long after Earth is gone. I no longer ask why. I just weather the seasons. Though “now for a season.” How long is a season? Well for some, seasons are short, and perhaps mild. For others, seasons are many months, even many years. For a few they seem a lifetime. But like the Apostle Paul, all true followers of Christ can echo that “I am content in what ever state I find myself.”

Making the Bed and Laying in It

Life, they say, is no bed of roses. But then it is not a bed of thorns either. Those who have Christ and the experience of weathering many seasons of trials and tests can smile with genuine joy and gratitude that marriage even in long-time sickness is well-worth the effort for all parties and reaps benefits few others could know. Ask Job.

So now I am back to my original statement. Marriage is for the godly faithful. Marriage is not for the faint-of-heart, the fair-weathered soul and certainly not for “same sex” couples (God certainly cannot bless that which He calls an “abomination” by the disobedient). The godly faithful are the only ones capable of fulfilling the life-long commitment no matter what the state of circumstances. And why not? Marriage is God’s picture of His relationship to us: a relationship he is capable of keeping regardless of our failures to him. Remember Colossians 3:19? He is the perfect husband who is never bitter to his bride.

Pass it along

The New Wolverine Role Could be the Ultimate Marvel Cinematic Movie Prize

Pass it along

The Beginning of the End?

imageHugh Jackman has played Marvel’s Wolverine for eighteen years  since Logan came out in 2017. He appeared briefly in X-Men: Apocalypse in a story set in the early 70’s before he got his admantium skeleton or was officially part of the team. “Logan” was his last contracted movie with Fox Studios.

Old Men and Retirement

imageLogan was to be based on “Old Man Logan” which is in the future in a post-apocalyptic world (not created by Apocalypse, by the way) where superheroes are outlawed and super villains have divided up the country. At the end of the 6-part story Old Man Logan is coaxed out of retirement as a hero and picks up the Wolverine mantle again. To many other Marvel characters not licensed by Fox made this story impossible. That was Jackman’s last appearance as Wolverine. He says he is ready to move on.

Is he? Wolverine was his first Hollywood role and has been good for him. If he’s ready for “something else” what do you call the nearly two other movies per year since that he has been doing? He’s done everything from sci-fi, to drama, to romance, to Broadway musical turned movie. What “something else” is there to do in Hollywood? Direct? Produce? Retire? Maybe, like Logan, he will have a change of heart  Or . . .

A Bigger Plan

I think Hugh Jackman, and it is my hope that this is part of a plan to get something bigger, is a smarter man who has no intention of giving up his first truly great role. He expressed interest a few years ago about Wolverine taking on Iron Man. And for years in Hollywood this was impossible. Marvel Studios owned rights to Iron Man and the Avengers. 20th Century Fox Studios owned the right to Wolverine and the X-Men and NEVER the twain shall meet. Fox would never consent to giving up an ounce of its blockbuster making superhero, not even for a cameo in the Marvel films.

A Bigger Prize

imageSo, hell froze over. A shrewd Disney negotiator made an agreement with Fox and the world changed. Something once thought impossible, is now only years from materializing: X-Men and Avengers sharing the screen. A win-win for the studios, a win-win for fans, a win-win for Jackman who could indeed reprise that role. For OMG the unthinkable: the Canadian wilderness battle of the century against Wendego and the Incredible Hulk! A very shrewd negotiator could get this dream done.

All Is Not Lost

But let’s say, just for argument sake, it’s not the beginning of the world’s greatest bluff but that Jackman really does want to retire. Is Wolverine done too? Why? I know the PERFECT actor to take on the role of the berzerker Canadian.

Jackman
Jackman

Continue reading The New Wolverine Role Could be the Ultimate Marvel Cinematic Movie Prize

Pass it along
Gary's Incites

Allow Me: Vets React Better to Respect than Assistance

Pass it along

imageA couple of years ago I stopped at the local high school in Clay County, West Virginia, on the way home from church to indulge in a free dinner offered to veterans by the local Boy Scout troops for Veterans Day. Roast beef. It was great. The scouts did a great job serving, cleaning and each with poise and manners. I had been a scout in my youth and I still remember my oath, “To do my best, to do my duty to God and my country.” They did a great job and were ready and willing to assist. In fact, I could have used their help. I was carrying one of those old type wide cafeteria trays full of food and could have used a hand I was using for my cane. A polite young scout approached me and asked, “Can I help you carry that?” My answer was quick and decisive. “No.” I insisted, “I don’t need any help.” Later, while I was eating it occurred to me that I really could have used a hand. Instead I let my pride keep me and the young man from a mutual blessing muttering a “no,” before I even thought about it.

I began to wonder what it was that made my initial response so reactive. I watched other older veterans wave off help as well. I began to realize that was it. Help. If he hadn’t said “help.” Like I was some “helpless” old man who actually needed help. Well, maybe I actually was. But. That word ‘help’ that was what did it. I began to wonder what it was that the young man could have said to me to make me comply. Yes, maybe I am a hobbled old man. But I don’t want to be seen or treated that way. I want to be seen as, well, as an elder. As a “sir.” That’s it. Respect. That was what I was really looking for. His question of ‘help’ felt more like pity than respect.

I hopped up and found the Scout Master and I immediately related everything that occurred to me. I finished with this: “These men fought and stood when others would not. Most of us still imagine that we can still do everything we need too. We reject helplessness. So, if you really want to assist these men carrying their trays do it this way: say, ‘Sir. I would be honored sir, if you would allow me to carry your tray to your table. Sir?’ I think you’ll get more takers.” He thanked me. He related some of what I said to those scouts that weren’t in earshot. I sat down and finished eating as I watched more and more veterans ‘allowed’ scouts to carry trays. I think everyone got more respect that day.

Pass it along

Marvel’s Sub-Mariner Under the Sea Movie Adventure? Don’t Hold Your Breath!

Pass it along

1968

Alpha and Omega: First and Last

Is Marvel crazy? Have they overlooked one of their oldest, most popular characters among all those they have introduced into the MCU movie universe? Where is Namor also known as Sub-Mariner? Technically, Namor might be the FIRST Marvel Comics hero. In his appearance in Marvel Comics #1 in 1939, the comic that ushered in the Marvel Universe, the Bill Everett story and art was actually a reprint from Motion Pictures Funnies Weekly. It was a black and white newsprint throw away comic given free with the admission to the movie theater. This original predates Marvel Comics #1 by six months. Yet, Namor has moved to the back of the line. The LAST story to be told. IF his story EVER gets told.

April 1939
April 1939
Nov. 1939
Nov. 1939

Misunderstood Rebel WITH a Causel

Namor’s story, these days might actually appeal to liberals. He was a half-breed, shunned initially by both races, the son of a deep ocean native warrior princess, who had to fight his way to the throne. There he fought climate, pollution, ocean animal killers, modern weapons of war and his every heroic deed was mischaracterized as evil. So what’s the hold up getting him to the big screen? Corporate greed? Capitolism? Conservative’s agenda. Something more dramatic. He’s owned by two different Hollywood Studios. As one of the characters “shopped out” during Marvel’s bankruptcy 1999 B.D. (Before Disney) Marvel sold the movie rights of X-Men to Fox, the Fantastic Four to Columbia/Sony, and Hulk and Namor to Universal. Now Namor the half-bred human and Atlantean Merman is truly got half his body at Universal Studios and half at Marvel Studios. Just enough rights are owned by both to keep Namor off the screen for many more years.

Namor took on the Axis powers on the sea, sometimes all by himself.
Namor took on the Axis powers on the sea, sometimes all by himself.
Namor returns to the comics after an 18 year hiatus, this time as a villain.
Namor returns to the comics after an 18 year hiatus, this time as a villain.

Hero to Villain: There and Back Again

Sub-Mariner (pronounced “sub-MAH-rain-er”) has had a roller-coaster career of good guy, bad guy, good guy again. After all what do you expect from a social outcast? The love child between a human sea captain and the beautiful (and blue) royal warrior princess mermaid people who are the remnant of the lost city of Atlantis. Namor gets his Caucasian color and handsome rugged features from his human father and his pointy ears, gills and winged ankles (they look like wings but are actually webbed flippers propelling him faster in the water) from his mother, Fen. Raised by her in the depths of the ocean in the kingdom of Atlantis, he was groomed for the throne, but literally lost it. Being raised in the great depths of the ocean under such water pressure gives him great super strength when standing on the surface, where he can breathe air, due to his dual biological nature. During World War Two, Namor watched surface men attack one another sinking great ships, airplanes and submarines (different pronunciation) into his ocean home, including bombs, radioactive material, garbage and various human pollutants. Kind of ticks a guy off. Fortunately, he teamed his wrath against the axis powers aiding Captain America, Whizzer, The Android Human Torch and others to battle the Germans and Japanese with the All-Winners Squad. That alliance ended with the war. By 1954 all of Marvel’s superhero comics had faded into oblivion. Marvel’s first hero was also the first to lose his own title. Then, in 1962 in the beginning of what was later to be known as the Silver Age of Comics, Namor was the first of the WWII heroes to be revived. Marvel and DC comics were in the beginning of a great revival of superheroes. DC had a bit of luck bringing back the Golden Age Flash, so Marvel was eager to see how fans would react to their old heroes. Marvel had introduced their first title in November 1961: The Fantastic Four. It was a hit. So in the fourth issue of that series in early 1962 Namor re-emerged, and this time as an opponent.

Golden Hero; Silver Age Villain

imageTo explain away 18 years of Namor’s dormant activity the Stan Lee and Jack Kirby story made him a transient living in men’s shelters in New York, living on the streets. He had grown a full mane of dark hair covering his pointy ears, and a long beard and mustache. He had no memory of who he was. That is until a meddling Human Tourch thought he recognized him from a stack of old comic books he was reading. Johnny Storm burned off Namor’s beard and hair exposing him for who he was. A defensive battle began and being close to the docks they ended up in the water where Namor’s gill’s drew in sea water and his mind cleared. Namor’s first act was to search for his kingdom. Finding it destroyed and his people missing, he declared war on all surface dwellers. Soon, Namor was in a full on battle with all four of the FF. they drove him back into the ocean. Not before Namor was smitten with the beauty of the invisible girl, Sue Storm.

Reed and Sue would argue a number of times over her crush on the handsome Atlantean.
Reed and Sue would argue a number of times over her crush on the handsome Atlantean.

imageA half dozen times over the course of the next thirty issues and their first double-size annual, Namor would battle the Fantastic Four as a villain. Sometimes teaming up with their arch enemy Doctor Doom. He teamed with Hulk against the Avengers in Avengers #3, and in the very next issue, brooding over the defeat he encounters some native Eskimos worshiping a figure frozen in ice. Cursing the ignorant surface dwellers for worshiping idols, he throws the block into the North Atlantic where it drifts down to New York where the Avengers thaw out the second WWII hero, Captain America. He even was approached by Magneto recruiting mutants for his brotherhood in X-Men #6 where Charles Xavier proved he was a hybrid rather than a mutant and thus had no skin in the game.  Namor would be a villain in the Marvel Universe until 1965 when he would be redeemed.

Prince Once More

imageIn 1965 after a long run of Ant-Man turned Giantman in Marvel’s Tales to Astonish, Marvel retired Hank Pym from his own series, kicking him back to the pages of Avengers where he would remain a regular. In his place, Marvel gave Namor his own series, sharing half the book with the Incredible Hulk beginning with Tales to Astonish #70. There they would remain until 1968 when Marvel broke the book into its own independent comics and the Submariner after 23 years would have his own title again. (That is why two #1 issues exist. One in the Golden Age and one in the Silver.) during this tumultuous time Namor for at least a third time had to defend his throne from the evil (and bigoted Krang and/or Attuma) and rescue his blue beauty Lady Dorma from their clutches. No longer a villain nor disrespected, the Prince of Atlantis took his rightful place on the throne, protecting his own from all villains, circumstances and would be enemies of the ocean (Polluters, whale killers and bad guys beware).

Lost with Atlantis

Now perhaps, you can see why Namor appears to be lost in limbo. Sony currently holds rights to the Fantastic Four so his Silver Age roots are out of the mix. Marvel owns Captain America and have left the All-Winners Squad out of its history so his days as a WWII hero are out, as well as his “thawing” of Cap in the modern age. Continue reading Marvel’s Sub-Mariner Under the Sea Movie Adventure? Don’t Hold Your Breath!

Pass it along

The Day God Turned Back The Clock: A Miracle of Faith

Pass it along

image

I have been witness to more miracles than a man is entitled to in his lifetime. More, indeed, than I can count on fingers and toes. But this event holds a certain fascination for me more so than some of the others. I have always been fascinated by the constraints of time; its unbending, immobile motion always forward. Those fictional characters who escape its confines draw me like a moth to flame. And while I’d like to believe H. G. Wells, Arthur C. Clark, Jules Verne and others, my God says, “It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgement.” Hebrews 9:27. In other words, there are no ‘do overs;’ no matter how much I want to Quantum Leap certain events differently in my life like Sam Beckett. So I was completely taken by surprise when God answered my prayer one day and turned back the clock a full hour.

The spiritual lesson I learned that day was that God is true and faithful to his promises and that when we have faith and press on in that faith no matter what setbacks or discouragement we face, He delivers. The event even now, sustains my faith; a moment in time that proved to me things are different with faith than without it. Let me tell you about the ‘event.’

I had been going through a reformation. A spiritual revival after years of being a ‘dormant’ Christian. I had gotten my children under their own will and power to consent to attending church every Sunday with me. I was growing in wisdom and knowledge daily In the word of God. It was a time of testing and encouragement. It was also an appropriate time to do something about my body.

I had lost some weight by running and had been encouraged to set goals. I had registered for the Charleston Distance Run in 1992. I was weeks away from the event and was stepping up my game. I discovered that the distance between the Elkhurst Bridge (a quarter mile from home) and Hartland Bridge, both in Clay County, West Virginia, was three and a half miles. The same distance exists between the Hartland Bridge and the Pisgah Bridge at the town of Clay. Seven miles one way, seven miles back: fourteen miles; the same length of the Charleston Distance Run held annually in Charleston, West Virginia. While I had been doing the Hartland and back run, daily, I had yet to double it to Clay. I thought if it took me about an hour to cover seven miles, it should only take me two to do fourteen. Boy was I naive.

I had been using these runs to be in perpetual prayer while I was jogging. It was my quiet time with Him. As I started out from the house I was full of energy, and hope and encouragement. I felt like there was an unvoiced promise between me and the Lord. If I didn’t give up he would meet my goal. I would have to return to the house within three hours. On these runs in the past, the Lord and I covered a lot of ground, figuratively, as well. With fresh air and endorphins pumping through the body you have a lot of thoughts running through the mind. You can lose yourself completely in prayers, and lists of things you’re thankful for as well as pondering texts you studied that morning. After a time you look up and wonder how you got as far as you have without noticing. The other thing you lose is a sense of time. Even though your body and mind seem to be covering miles it feels like hours. And when you realize that you haven’t made the halfway mark a little panic begins to set in. Why didn’t you bring that watch? You try to pick up the pace but this is the place you are used to reaching your goal. Your body is beginning to believe it is done but your mind knows this is only the half-way mark. You need to summon more than courage and strength. You need endurance and determination. Now, all thoughts, even prayers escape you; you’re just breathing and a throwing one leg in front of another trying to hold the energy level.

Some encouragement came when I got back to the Hartland Bridge and I knew I had a little more than three miles to go. That’s when I saw them pull up behind me and slow down. It was my wife in her station wagon and my daughter was hanging out the window, “Daddy. Daddy,” my fifteen year old daughter yelled at me. I pointed to my wrist, yelling back, “What time is it?” As they pulled away she yelled, “Ten till eleven.” As they disappeared in the distance I tried to run and do math in my head. “Eight to nine, nine to ten. ..” Then it occurred to me: I had three miles to cover in ten minutes or miss the three hour deadline. At first the shock gave me a burst of adrenaline. But as I struggled to clear a thousand feet in what seemed like five minutes my strength left me. My disappointment was physical and as my hope evaporated so did faith. Now I know how that little freshette got there a quarter mile from the Hartland Bridge. The Devil put it there knowing I would be by.

The small waterfall stream coming off the bank looked so inviting to a weary runner so tired, so hot, so defeated. As I stood under the water, feeling sorry for myself, and letting the cool relief pat on me. My thoughts turned back to the Lord. How about our understanding. I do my best, and . . . What? Was I REALLY doing my best? What was this pity party. Was I doing my best? When Abraham thought he was defeated he went down to Egypt. So did his son. The Bible is full of examples of people who gave up instead of plodding along in faith. What was I doing in Egypt? But then can God REALLY stop time? Can he really turn the clock back? I had to decide if he could let me cover three miles in five minutes by foot. I thought: would Abraham have died of starvation if he stayed in Israel? Would Ezekiel have been caught and killed by Jezabell if he hadn’t fled away in fear? Do I REALLY believe God at his word?

A new energy rushed over me once I decided I did believe God could somehow miraculously meet every need, even turning back the clock. I prayed that He would, believed that He could and got up with new vigor. I would later read in His word: “But they that wait upon the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint.” Isaiah 40:31. I didn’t run like the wind, but as every minute ticked by I was not discouraged. God would deliver if I did.

I ran. I ran. I ran. As I got close to my home the dogs announced my arrival to all who were in the house. My daughter Leona come bounding out of the house, jumping off the porch and running to me. “Daddy, daddy I’m so sorry! I read the clock wrong! It was only ten to ten when I told you eleven. It’s only ten thirty now.” Before she got to me I dropped on my knees with tears of joy. My daughter at that time did not see a miracle. But I surely did. I guess it is in how you define miracles. A miracle is the supernatural intervention into the flow of natural laws that generates a conclusion hoped for, even prayed for, that should not be the expected end by natural course. Even if He did not really turn back the hand of time, if it was all just the devil trying to de-rail me, it was a miracle indeed, that believing myself defeated, God could change the outcome if I chose to believe him. It’s as if he were sticking it to Satan, “See! So there!” Whether time changed accidentally or intentionally, either way God delivered on his promise that he would meet me where my faith was. He proved to me that he rewards faith in kind. I still live by that lesson he taught me that day: in faith I believe he will provide even in times of apparent hopelessness. Now, I never give up. Between the two of us, I am the only one capable of letting me down. Praise God.

Pass it along

Top 5 Reasons Retirement is Anti-Epic

Pass it along

image1. Great Sagas Told.
When our five children were very young I would come home to my stay-at-home wife and the conversations would be strange. Her conversation would be interjected with gurgles and one syllable words. Her inflection would rise and fall like a roller coaster. Her eyes, unblinkingly, would follow me everywhere as if darting them away would be hazardous. That what happens to stay-at-home moms whose conversation all day is limited to a two year-old vocabulary. We even got new names for previously familiar things. Doll baby became Dobby. All meals became “lesseat.” Nodding turned any noun even “lesseat” into a question. Language was simple. This was hard for someone who loves to paint great word pictures. Ever since Nathan told David that great word picture in the Old Testiment and recounted by Sunday School teachers that Nathan was painting a vivid picture to make his point to the king, I had been fascinated that even small but complex points could be made if you could get your audience to common familiar ground. Arguments could be won from your opponents mouth if they deduced it for themselves from your illustration and voiced it before you spilled the truth in plain words. Over the years life had allowed me to live through some of the funniest, most unusual moments and I developed them like a master sage so that mere conversations could translate the most mundane into gems of delight and wisdom. I shared generously with fellow employees, co-workers and those in my charge. I’m sure that some thought me wise, some thought me weird, but few found me boring. This however changes upon retirement. When you spend all of your time in the presence of a spouse you have been married to for 41 years there are no tales she does not know, no matter how creatively changed up. She too, lived through those. Worse, when she has no ear for lengthy illustration: “Cut to the chase! Get to your point!” I miss the great opportunities to oriate. The bard has lost his tongue. He is so still. Is he dead? Far worse than death: he is retired.

2. The Battles
I became a great warrior. When you are thrust daily into the battlefield it is conquer or die. I may not have won every battle but I never lost a war. Some of my conquests have become stuff of legend. I’m sure even now, somewhere, a former charge of mine is recounting in great delight how they were present when “…that happened! I swear it!” They finish with a smile, proudly remembering their role in it. The audience is either awestruck or completely unbelieving. I feel grateful to having been successful in some of those wins over what seemed like impossible odds. And while many times during the battle I moaned, or cried, or cursed, or swore I would quit and never come back, inside I secretly must have loved it. Because everyday I showed back up on the battlefield. Even scars became badges, and more often than not, impetus for some great illustration or cautionary tale. Many, many day after a long and weary battle I would drag into the house, lie down on the couch and stare at the ceiling. One of my children would caution another with the words of their mother: “Leave daddy alone. He’s playing coma, again.” Battles get easier when you become a great warrior. The rewards too. I read once, and recorded these words from a motivational speaker, Phillip Updegraff, “Thank God for the difficulties on your job: the hard work, the difficult people you must deal with on a daily basis, the impossible expectations. These things count for more than half of your salary. Because if someone could be found that would do these things for half of what you make, they would.” And here is a testimony that the warrior loves his craft: he misses it when it ends. Unlike Alexander the Great on that final day when I left work for the last time, never to pick up the sword again, I did not weep bitterly. But: I sure felt like it.

3. The Hunts
I became a sharpshooter in the Marine Corp. Since I left the Marines at the end of the Vietnam War I have rarely picked up a gun. I have never, sadly for a West Virginian, shot an animal. My sons have kept our freezers filled, however. But that doesn’t mean I haven’t been a great hunter for the last forty years. In an era before Google or Wicipedia, there was no fact, address, picture or audio file sequestered away from me, hiding in the country. The reference hotline to a number of local, state and federal libraries were on speed-dial on my work phone. I had elicited favors from many in the field of information: universities, newspapers, state and federal government. I also hunted paradoxes. I hunted down parts, pieces and programs as well. Sometimes inventing something new from parts of existing older equipment: this is the necessity of those living on the outter edge of the technology of their profession. I have also hunted the vast domain of imagination pulling out of that realm into our own great pieces of printed art and words propelling me to the forefront of my profession in this region. My trophies made me sought after by all those competing against my employer. My work still hangs on walls everywhere, is filed away in libraries, museums, the drawers, file cabinets and even hope chests of thousands. (I Googled me once and found my name in a reference of the Supreme Court). But while trophies are nice, that’s not why men are drawn to the hunt. The work, the preparation, the venturing into virgin territory, the sight, smell and memory of those moments where in the place that no man has gone boldly before you suddenly see, give chase too, and drag back into this world a prize that amazes and inspires many that see it. But you, and only you, know that the chase was more satisfying than the trophy. When you get to that place where all hunts are small game and your name is not mentioned among the big game hunters in the jungles, and your great hunts are told among others with this lead: “Once upon a time…” Then, you know your days as a hunter have passed. These days even my grandchildren can find anything on Yahoo. Sadly, most will never know that it’s not what you can find that makes for great trophies. The secret is what you DO with what you know is what changes the world.

4. The Great Feasts
I live in retirement in a small house on a beautiful river in the quiet and isolated mountains of West Virginia more than sixty miles from where I worked in the Capitol city for more than forty years. The epitome of most men’s dreams. Hey! They might say, if retirement doesn’t give you the funds to eat well, you can fish all day or hunt from the front porch! Dream indeed. I’m with the Iraelites whom after forty years of eating Manna, God’s bread from heaven complained to Moses that they missed the leeks (onions) and meats back in Egypt. Problem is: Egypt is sixty some of miles from here. Back when I needed to drive there every day I also had the income and thus the incentive to do it. I passed literally hundreds of grocery stores, convenience marts and restaurants going in and coming home. There was no fast food chain in the country that I did not pass at least one on my journey (and was often only blocks from a number of the same chain along my trip). And while I also happened to be primary breadwinner at my house I was also the chief cook. (Some of my grandchildren have never seen my wife cook. “Mawmaw, you can’t cook!”). As a versatile and often adventurous cook I had the world as my pantry. On a sixty mile journey home there is no ingredient: fresh, canned or archane that I could not purchase (and had the income to buy it). And on those days that I was too weary for the joy of cooking, any meal I fancied was available for purchase! (Thanks to Shoney’s my family could even eat fresh strawberry pie out of season in the middle of the winter at the house!)
Feasts were not uncommon. I discovered in a thirty-minute lunch I could eat chicken McNuggets, a small Wendy’s chilli, a Rally Double Fish sandwich, a Taco Bell chalupa and still have time to swing by Dairy Queen for a milkshake to nurse the rest of the afternoon at work. My frame for forty years bespoke both my love of food and my talent for preparing it. My retirement came nearly the same time as my diabetes so my frame is smaller these days so that my lifeline is longer. That doesn’t mean I don’t still love food. It’s just harder to get. Paydays don’t come every Friday now. They come once a month at the beginning of the month and nowhere near the girth of previous paydays. More often than not that means once or twice to a grocery store in a single month. Perhaps a treat to a restaurant once a month. If you only go once, what do you choose? Can you choose? You are left longing for things you can’t get! (Remember you are sixty miles from most everything!) My wife does not understand why I groan when I see an Arby’s commercial on television. “You just ate supper!” (probably Mac and cheese) she’ll say, “You can’t be hungry.” Moses! Bring on the leeks!

5. Master and Commander
As I have mentioned already I was pretty much a champion, bard, warrior, hunter and sought after master-of-my-craft. If I was not master and commander of my own destiny where I was at I had options to choose that road somewhere else. I knew I was a pretty important cog in the machine. But until recently, until reflection, I did not realize how important. Since 1979 I worked only three places. Each a step up in my career. In 1982 at the first of these places I ended up in the hospital for a week. It was later that I discovered that my employer had to hire three temp people to get through the week and had to do much of the work himself. He never told me this. One of the temp workers decades later would tell me. In 1994, at the second workplace, I took a four day leave when my father died and I left for northwestern Ohio. Upon my return, my employer told me I could never take a day off again. I supervised two individuals while doing a third of the work myself and during the time I was gone the whole department “was in crisis” I was told. (Actually it was a matter of another person interjecting himself into my department and trying to compel his authority on the unwilling). At my last place of employment the owner (who had been my boss at place #2) purchased the business “only on the condition that you come with me as my pre-press manager”. He did not buy the business from the retiring printshop owner till I consented. My first year I worked 16 hours a day six days a week in the busiest commercial printshop in the state. I was committed for a first year to this ridiculous schedule, but my employer gave me a single day off after the stress got to me and he noticed. I got a call that night. All hell broke loose on my only day off and I would be needed back early tomorrow and now, workload doubled. Forty years are filed with incidents like these. My paycheck and benefits and perks often reflected my importance on a day to day basis. Family and friends could never buy my argument: “I have to work today. It won’t get done if I am not there.” I worked the day after I nearly broke my knee in 1997. I worked the day after I broke my leg in two places in 2007. I worked the day of (and day after) my Bell’s Palsy stroke). I did not stay home for flu or fevers. The work was important. I was important. Retirement however, means you lose your importance. I miss being important. Socially, retirement is like death. Your kids know where your headstone is, even if they never visit it. They can always assume you are in your place if they should suddenly want to visit. After all, what have you got to do? Nothing important. Besides, visiting is not really necessary. We all have more important things to do! That is, all but the dead and the retired.

Pass it along