Making A List...

Should every guy have a "bucket list?" Seems like it's a concept for older guys, but maybe, like the inverse of youth, this one's wasted on the old.

I was sent a link to a recommended list. Of course, there are as many suggested bucket lists as there are people getting close to their bucket. This one is interesting to me however, for a couple of reasons: one, it is from Esquire magazine, a self-proclaimed magazine for young men; and two, it is one of the longest and most creative I've seen. You would have to start as a young man to check all the boxes on this one. But as I said in paragraph one, that's who ought to be working through a list anyway.

Esquire magazine didn't consult me regarding the title of this list, but if they had, I would have told them the title was all wrong. Men of their "young" target audience don't even have death on their radar. Plus, I don't know many young men that will read a list that's 83 items long, if they read at all. Most of the lists they seem to read are more like: "3 Steps to a Firmer This" or "5 Sure Fire Ways to a Stronger That."  

Well, on to the list. For each item on the list I've included the wording pretty much as it was printed in Esquire. Then I've included my comments, if any, in a bolder typeface.

83 THINGS EVERY MAN SHOULD DO BEFORE HE DIES
Experiences, endeavors, opportunities, journeys, and fantastically bad ideas you might want to give an honest try.

1. Apologize. Now, apologize isn't a thing you'll find on most life lists. But then, most life lists require you to exit your life, or your good sense, to execute the list items—parachute from outer space, visit the Titanic, sit through a whole season of Girls. Not that you'd be tempted, but don't do those things. Do these.

2. Take down that wall. Rip up a floor. Fell a tree.

All but the tree.

3. Lose 15 pounds without talking about it.

Done it, but it took heart surgery to make it happen.

4. Take one stunning train trip. The more nights, the better.

I've taken a few train trips, but none over night. I have spent a lot of nights sleeping in the luggage rack of a tour bus.

5. Preemptively say, "I'm sorry, too" when in the midst of a vicious argument with a loved one. Works only once per relationship. But it works.

Check.

6. Spend an uncomfortable amount of money on a really good suit.

I have spent a relatively uncomfortable amount on a suit, but I'm not sure it was for a "really good" one.

7. Leave a tip big enough to upset you.

Does leaving a tip at all when the service didn't warrant one count?

8. Make a pilgrimage to Bonneville Salt Flats, site of land-speed-record attempts for more than fifty years and a big piece of gorgeous nowhere. Go there to drive very fast. Go there to camp. Go there for the sunrises and the sunsets and the stars at night. Go there to be alone.

This won't make my list. I remember pictures in Hot Rod magazine and it had no appeal then or now. 

9. Take a little girl to see The Nutcracker.

I do this annually.

10. Nearly die, then don’t.

Did I mention heart surgery? Not sure how close I came.

11. See a band’s last show ever.

I played drums in a couple of bands and was there for the last show ever. Does that count? I've also been to shows that should have been the band's last.

12. Selectively run red lights.

Who hasn't?

13. Have yourself a little cannonball run. Different teams. Different beat-up used cars, procured specifically for this occasion and each costing less than $700. A race for time across 278 miles of road (and 90 degree desert heat) between Los Angeles and Las Vegas, and no rules about T-boning, rear-ending, or winning at any cost.

We drove from Tulsa to LA ONCE when I was thirteen. That was enough.

14. Volunteer.

Check.

15. Fly in the Beaver. You know the Beaver. Around since the forties and looks it. It has a big round radial engine, an oily, primitive thing the size of an old Volkswagen. But it flies, and lands anywhere covered in water.

Although it wasn't a Beaver, I've had my share of small plane experiences.

16. Love something other than yourself. Like a dog. Or even a person.

Check.

17. Shoot a Glock. Do you know what it’s like to have a heart bursting at the end of your arm? Didn’t think so.

No interest. I have shot a 12 gauge at clay pigeons.

18. Write a poem. Make it about whatever you're feeling about whatever you're seeing in your mind's eye. A person. Someone you love. It's a poem; why waste it on anger or fear? That stuff is what prose is for.

Check. I know what you're thinking: he doesn't want to shoot a Glock, but he writes poetry. I also have a motorized two-wheeled vehicles in my garage. It's a Vespa, not a Harley. Let's say I'm confident and comfortable in my own manly skin.

19.  __________________________

I'm skipping this one as it was printed. My 86 year-old mother reads this blog.

20. Try as many drugs as possible. Also, if possible, before 9:00 P.M. on a Tuesday.

Did I mention heart surgery? I now take a medley of medications with enough side-effects to make me strip naked and howl at the moon. Put that on your list, Esquire.

21. Make an incredibly important decision very quickly. One example: go from single to married in six whole days.

My Amazing-Missus and I had our first date on a New Year's Eve, we're engaged on Valentine's Day and married in June.

22. Coach kids. Not necessarily your own.

Check

23. Pick two to four friends. Go on annual vacations. No significant others allowed.

Why?

24. Develop a personal uniform.

This is one I really want to do.

25. Learn to tell a joke. When in doubt, mock the powerful, not the powerless. And focus on the things that everyone hates or loves. One tip: Everyone hates Congress – even Congress.

I've been doing this successfully since childhood. My fourth-grade teacher said so.

26. Hold a newborn’s hand.

Check. And I will get to do it again in June when our third grand-girl is born.

27. Get lost in the world. Because when you don’t know where you are, you just might end up in the place where you most want to be. You don’t have to go to the Atacama Desert in Chile either. But it helps.

I've been lost in Chicago and St. Louis.

28. Change someone else's tire without having to be asked.

Check

29. Offer a stem-winding toast to your father, in the presence of your father.

My Dad's a Baptist pastor. The only toast in our house had jelly on it.

30. Write a country song.

I wish I had written "I'd Rather Have A Bottle In Front of Me Than A Frontal Lobotomy."

31. Build an irresponsible fire.

My maternal grandmother warned us that boys who do this also wet the bed. Why risk it?

32. Shovel soil onto a casket.

Check.

33. Take a month off.

Off from doing what?

34. Face your own mortality by taking a physical risk.

Did I mention I took one of those $50 heart scans and that led to surgery?

35. Drive cross-country the other way—from Great Falls, Montana, to Austin, Texas.

Does Tulsa to Winnipeg, Canada count?

36. Walk somewhere at least fifty miles away.

All at once?

37. Climb Angels Landing in Zion National Park.

Not interested.

38. Drive the Going-to-the-Sun Road in Glacier National Park.

We've driven the Pacific Coast Highway.

39. Hondle. It's about shamelessness, about asking and asking and not caring when you get shot down. Once you achieve shamelessness, the world opens its arms to you.

"Hondle" is apparently a version of haggling over price, but with the added dimension of shamelessness. To do something shamelessly is a good addition to the list.

40. Quit your job. Especially if you are miserable.

Sort of did this, but not until I had a new one lined up.

41. Kill your dinner. No store-bought stranger-killed meat will ever taste so good.

Does fishing count?

42. Put your phone down. Seriously, just put it down.

Done.

43. Make enemies! Stand for something.

Done more times than I care to admit.

44. Sleep outside, next to a fire.

Check.

45. Sleep outside, in a public park.

Check.

46. Try really @#$%^& hard to be great at one thing.

Time will tell.

47. Help to bring life into the world.

Check.

48. Switch your lights off, even if just for a second, while driving late on a moonless night on a two-lane road.

Does just forgetting to turn them on count?

49. Reach or explore your peak performance levels while stinking drunk.

How would you know? Is there a meter or a buzzer that goes off?

50. Live your nightmare. An example was doing standup comedy.

I have been talking about doing the standup comedy, once, at an open-mic night. I've been working on my routine.

51. Learn how to make an Old-Fashioned at the drop of a hat.

Not interested.

52. Ride a horse. At full tilt. Across a field.

Done that. The horse was in total control. I was just an unwilling passenger.

53. Make something with your hands. We know a guy who makes violins in a little shop, which he also made. We know another guy who makes large abstract sculptures: blocks of stone that weigh tons. We're happy they make these things and are sort of in awe of their process and results. But we're talking about something more useful. Make something useful with your hands.

My handmade stuff tends more to the aesthetic than the utilitarian. 

54. Make a sandwich at three in the morning.

Probably have.

55. Swim naked. (At least 30 minutes after that sandwich)

Check.

56. Sing for your supper. Like literally sing to strangers in the hopes they toss change and maybe even some bills in your hat.

While I don't want to be the singer, I do have on my bucket list to be a part of a street-performing group.

57. Meet your hero, if you have one.

I have several and have met most of them.

58. Have a hero.

Check.

59. Spend an afternoon reading in the Rose Reading Room of the New York Public Library.

Check. It was a cold, rainy day. I would do it again.

60. Walk away from a conversation you aren’t enjoying without explanation.

Done.

61. Get fired, for cause.

Done. Apparently, I just wasn't cut out to be a school bus driver.

62. Talk to your father. About his life before you knew him. Sooner rather than later.

Some, but not enough.

63. Sail continuously for three days and nights on the open ocean.

I am actually certified in Coastal Sailing and Navigation. Part of the certification was a multi-night sail.

64. Master a skill with your non-dominant hand, like shaving or brushing your teeth.

I can chord my ukelele with my non-dominant hand.

65. Get married at least once.

Check.

66. Hire someone.

Yep.

67. Fire someone.

Ditto.

68. Watch a kid's show. Figure out its message. Incorporate that message into your general outlook.

No doubt, Captain Kangaroo had a huge impact on my worldview.

69. Attend the launch of a rocket.

Mostly bottle-rockets.

70. Believe in something fervently, with every fiber of your being; then believe in its opposite.

Yes, but that's a whole other post.

71. Eat at Roscoe's House of Chicken 'n Waffles, Los Angeles.

I have eaten at Sear's Fine Foods in San Francisco--the best pancakes and waffles I've even eaten.

72. Walk around New York City all night. Because a walk like this is not possible in any other city in the country. You can't plan such a walk. You just have to be ready for it.

Pretty much all night.

73. Commit a petty crime.

I was involved for a very short time in an organized crime ring. We were all in the 7th grade. I won't go into the sordid details.

74. Read any novel you “read” in high school. Be amazed.

I regularly reread a novel we were not allowed to read in high school-- "Catcher In The Rye", and it is amazing.

75. Read Huckleberry Finn.

Yes.

76. Read Fifty Shades of Grey.

Check. Don't judge me.

77. By the way: you need not do any of these things no matter what anyone says: Learn a foreign language. Watch The Wire. Run a marathon. Develop character by setbacks. Fast for longer than theologically necessary. Have a picnic. Work at a standing desk. Visit a sex club. Attend the Super Bowl. Join any given social-media platform. Count your lucky stars. Drink absinthe. “See the world.”

Noted.

78. Do something incredibly interesting and refuse to monetize it.

Several times.

79. Have a pair of shoes made.

Can't even imagine it.

80. Run for office, win.

Done with politics.

81. Run for office, lose.

Check. I once ran for local school board. I lost, which in retrospect was actually a win.

82. Spend some time in Detroit, where you can do most of the things on this list with impunity.

Check.

83. Don’t have a life list. Keep on like before—travel, eat, go places—until the things you’ve done, rather than the things you’ve yet to try, define the man that you are.

Advice taken.

So, what's on your list?

Can You See From Where You Are?

I HOPE YOU SAW the segment on 60 Minutes last Sunday night, reported by Wynton Marsalis. The segment was called The Virtuoso: Marcus Roberts. Here's a link to the video in case you missed it.

Marcus Roberts (CBS News)

Marcus Roberts (CBS News)

The story begins:

Marcus Roberts lost his sight as a child, but gained incredible insight into American music -- inspiring a generation of jazz musicians. Marcus went blind when he was 5 years old. And soon began trying to make sense of life in the darkness. He was unusually curious, and even tore his toys apart just to find out how they worked. Roberts developed a powerful, analytical intelligence, capable of producing music that will move your mind as well as your body. The story of his genius begins with a precious gift from his parents: a piano. His mother Coretta is sightless too, blinded by glaucoma. She remembers the pain of having to leave school in the seventh grade because she couldn't see the blackboard.

Don't you marvel? Think of these people who are sightless, but have such keen insight. One of those people, Helen Keller, reminds us that there is something worse than being sightless:

It is a terrible thing to see and have no vision. -- Helen Keller

I couldn't resist adding this photo of our grand-girl Harper. I don't know what she is imagining seeing through her "binoculars" (upside-down, no less), but clearly, whatever it is, is magnificent.

As we age, we seem to lose our vision. I'm not talking about our eyesight, although that happens too. But let's face it; we do NOT see the things a young child or a blind jazz musician does.

My dad will be 90 soon. He has lost most of his eyesight, but it seems to me like he "sees" more than he ever has, and he has always been an insightful man. So maybe there's hope for me. Maybe I won't become visionless. I want to look through the binoculars, or the camera, or the lament of the Blues, or a quiet Saturday morning enjoying a good, strong cup of coffee and the company of my Amazing-Missus, and SEE something I've never seen before.

And ultimately, there is that promise. Remember the verse? “Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love Him.” 

Several years ago now, death came way too soon for my cousin, "Bobby." He always had a toughness and swagger than I admired as a little kid looking up to him. He seemed to see things I couldn't. At his memorial service, he wanted a certain song played. I've never heard it played at a funeral since. Maybe it was just apropos for Bobby. It goes like this:

I can see clearly now, the rain is gone, 
I can see all obstacles in my way 
Gone are the dark clouds that had me blind 
It’s gonna be a bright, bright 
Sun-Shiny day. 

I think I can make it now, the pain is gone 
All of the bad feelings have disappeared 
Here is the rainbow I’ve been praying for 
It’s gonna be a bright, bright 
Sun-Shiny day. 

Feeling Pretty Self-Actualized If I Do Say So Myself

I'LL ADMIT IT. One of the scariest aspects of being a "man of a certain age" is the fear that I've reached THE END. Not the physical end, but that place old guys seem to come to where they stop growing; again, not in a physical sense, but as a person. You know what I mean: they think they've seen it all, heard it all and know it all. They "arrived"!

Maybe what's so scary about that for me is thinking that if I have arrived, then this is all I have to offer--that I've become all I can become except a cranky, old, dogmatic, Fox-News watching, horses's a-double-s.

When I was first introduced to the idea of "self-actualization" (especially Abraham Maslow's take on it) back in college, it rang very true for me. Without going in to the whole concept, let's overly narrow it down to this: Think of a continuous line, like a ruler. On one end is our Potential. On the other is our Actual. So, if I become a healthy self-actualized adult, it means, very simply, that I've moved along the scale from potential to actual. By the way, Maslow speculated that less than 1% of the population ever becomes fully self-actualized.

I hope, I HOPE, that during this era that I like to call my "second-coming of age", I will realize brand new, deeper and more significant potentials I can pursue.

But wait. Let me get my horse and cart in the right order. There are a couple of issues I need to clarify.

One: for those of you who are saying to yourself (as if anyone is still reading this), "I knew this guy was a 'secular humanist' all along. Just listen to this drivel," you're not the first.

Back in the day, I had a job as a teacher/consultant of sorts for people who worked with adolescents in churches. I would frequently use Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs to talk about what can happen as a teen develops. One time I was leading a conference for youth leaders in southeastern Oklahoma. A man came in to the conference wearing a snappy pair of white patent leather loafers and matching belt (think: Cousin Eddie) and introduced himself as "Pastor Roy Somethingorother." When I asked Pastor Roy why he had chosen to come to a conference for youth leaders he told me that he was only there to monitor what I had to say, to make sure I was not a "humanist."

All during the meeting I noticed him making notes in a miniature stenographers notebook like a reporter at a Whitehouse briefing. I expected at any moment for him to jump to his feet and shout, "Bingo, we've got ourselves a heretic!" He never did, and I never heard anything from Roy or whomever he was representing. Maybe he was just taking notes for his next sermon.

I do believe that we are created in the image of a creative God to be fully human. If that makes me a humanist, so be it.

Next: there is the big question of knowing what our potential is. Remember that line, our continuum, with POTENTIAL on one end and ACTUAL on the other? Before we can actually reach our POTENTIAL we need to know what it is. But where do we find that out?

Back when I was a kid, our report cards from school had a place for the teacher to record, in her opinion, whether or not we were "performing up to our potential." There was a consensus among my teachers that I was "NOT." There may have been one exception to that, my fourth grade teacher, even though she did check the "needs to improve" box.

Recently around our house, we've been going through some old stuff: treasures, photos, heirlooms, etc. In one of the boxes I ran across old report cards my mother had saved; although I'm not sure why unless she wanted to show them to parents of troubled kids to demonstrate there's always something to hope for.

Attached to my final fourth grade report card was a note from my teacher to my parents.

[If you can't read the letter in this image, I've included the text of it below.]


I'm glad that I didn't see this letter until 50-plus years later. It could have become a self-fulfilling prophecy of sorts had I seen it at the time. Instead, I like to imagine it as some sort of destiny.

I take heart that I helped make my teacher's career more pleasant. I like that she picked up on and commended my "gay outlook to everything," (I'm taking that to mean the 1960 definition of the word. Not that there's anything wrong with a more 2000s definition.) I am also relieved to note that my teacher apparently only owned a red ink pen and it wasn't just that all of my papers were graded in red. I liked the way she pretended to struggle with the proper use of  the are/is  verb form and its agreement with "Boys" or "David" just to make the rest of us feel good.

But I am most proud that Mrs. Burchette noticed, early on, a POTENTIAL for a sense of humor and that even THAT could take me "far in life." And, although I'm sure my parents had rather read something like, "He has the intellect of a rocket scientist", I feel SO self-actualized.

So, when my Grand-Girls say, "You're funny Pops," I think to myself, "Yes! Yes I am!" Thank you Mrs. Burchette, wherever you are.


Text of the letter:

The Fullers,

It was a pleasure having David in my room this year. Boys like David are what make a teacher's career pleasant. He always seems to have a gay outlook to everything.

It was also nice meeting and talking with you. I want to thank you for all the help you gave me in working with David.

He is a boy to be proud of and with his sense of humor he will go far in life.

Mrs. Burchette

Path or Trail?

IN THE LAST POST, A Baron, Fried Chicken & Trailblazing, I quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson:

"Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail."

A little background refresher: remember Emerson was a good friend and mentor to Henry David Thoreau. It was on Emerson's land near Walden Pond where Thoreau lived his two year, two month and two day experiment in roughing it for self-reliance sake. As a result, we have Thoreau's book Walden--one of my favorites. Here's an abridged line from the book:

356px-Walden_Thoreau.jpg

"I went into the woods because I wanted to live deliberately. I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life... to put to rout all that was not life; and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived".

Maybe this adventure was inspired partly because of his mentor's talk of paths and trails. Maybe it was partly because of his own observation that "most men lead lives of quiet desperation."

In that last post I mentioned a few things I hoped people might say about me, if they say anything at all... someday... One of the things I don't want them to say is "he lead a life of quiet desperation." Let me clear something up: my objective in life is not to live in such a way that people will have good things to say at my funeral. Hopefully that will just be the honest summary of the reflection, sprinkled with a dash of our tendency to remember the newly departed a little better than they were. (Okay so you can add, "and he was cynical.")

While we're clearing things up, please don't assume that I count my life to this point as hollow and desperate just because I'm intrigued about trailblazing. At this point, I take a look back and say, (with all humility of course) "So far; so good." In fact as I look back and count my blessings I can even say, in the words of my friend Grady Nutt, "So good; so far."

Back to this whole Trail (slash) Path thing. I researched (googled) the difference between the two and found this:

Definition

"A path is a trail in which all vertices (except perhaps the first and last ones) are distinct. It seems at first glance that a path could also be defined as a walk in which all vertices (except perhaps the first and last ones) are distinct.
By this definition it would appear that a path is automatically a trail, because if an edge were to be retraced in any walk, then the vertices at either end of it would necessarily be visited more than once. However, under this looser definition, the walk u→v→u for two adjacent vertices u and v, for example, would fit the definition of a path, and therefore be a cycle. But such a walk is not a trail, as the edge uv would be traversed twice. Hence the insistence that a path is a type of trail." http://www.proofwiki.org/wiki/Definition:Path_(Graph_Theory)

What the What?

I guess we're on our own to decide the difference and get at what Emerson was saying.

In the last post, I mentioned that I had an issue or two with Ralph's rhetoric. Here's my main objection. He seems to be implying that there is only one trail and one path. I hope he's wrong. I think I can prove he is.

We'll take up there in the next post I'll call: "WHERE IS Ralph WALDO Emerson?"

TO BE CONTINUED...