What’s It Gonna Be?

The Supreme Court ain’t so supreme, of late.

Maybe it has always benefited from a certain undeserved mystique- its members aren’t gods, after all, just human beings tasked with important work. Justices over the years have produced many landmark decisions seemingly based on a sincere and fair treatment of testimony and applicable law, even charting new ground from time to time, especially when it comes to human rights and bodily autonomy.

Lately, though, there seems to be some backsliding. More suspicion, more doubt, more finger pointing in the direction of a hand-picked conservative majority on a mission to, oh, I don’t know, tighten things up, bring us back to a “better” place that pleases straight, white Christians everywhere.

In the midst of the Trump mess, the court seems to not want to stick its neck out and abide by the 14th Amendment provision of forbidding insurrectionists from running for office. Though he hasn’t been accused yet, many know what Trump did and who and what he really is, and how dangerous he has become.

So maybe it comes down to how closely the court adheres to the letter of the law, along with its efforts to reel in the temptation to react to certain public sentiment, and to what many are seeing with their own eyes: Trump running roughshod over, and even making a mockery of certain norms that have long served as guardrails.

Sometimes it looks like nothing can be done to make him go away.

Get It Right The First Time

We’re having doors replaced at the front of our house. At one point, there was talk of tackling the job ourselves, but after yesterday, we’re glad it didn’t work out that way. We’re glad for the guy who’s actually doing the work—he appears to be something of a perfectionist and put in a long day prepping the opening and getting the main door installed and square before he went home.

Hanging a door is, I guess, something that can be straightforward and relatively easy when compared to other aspects of home building or renovation. But there is still a list of things one has to take into consideration and get right, including squareness within the opening—assuring that when one looks at the closed door a few days after installation, there is still equal amounts of light showing around the top and sides.

A shim here, a shim there, no small amount of tweaking. Details, details, but who wants to look at a crooked door for the next 25 years?

Soundtrack

Daily writing prompt
What’s a song that always puts you in a good mood?

Song names aren’t coming to me yet, but probably something singable, tuneful, maybe with a beat and some now-familiar riffs that strike a chord within, and maybe get the body moving and toes tapping.

Nothing current, probably something from the late 60s, early- to mid-70s from The Beatles or Steely Dan or Chicago– Here Comes the Sun, Bodhisattva, Beginnings, respectively. Maybe Your Mama Don’t Dance, from Loggins and Messina, or Crazy Little Thing Called Love, from Queen, released in 1979.

Something like that.

Quite A Show

Daily writing prompt
What’s a fear you’ve overcome — and how did you do it?

Thunderstorms. I think I’ve just outgrown the fear and understand them better. Anymore and for quite a while now, I’ve found them intriguing and awesome, but still something to be respected. It’s not wise to be cavalier when lightning is involved.

Because He Could

The official line is that Trump attended the game because he got invited by the Knicks owner, and he used to have courtside seats, and he’s always been a Knicks fan. I imagine this explanation to be somewhere in the ballpark of what Fox News and others reported.

The “fake” news of course offered a different take– that this was just Trump needing to be seen, having no regard for the upset he’d cause when it came to security protocols, including massive wait times, long lines, closing down blocks around the site, and shutting down the public watch parties outside Madison Square Garden.

I’d say that it probably leans toward the latter scenario, mainly because a sitting President had never gone to a Finals game before last night. Trump may have needed another thing to brag about, another distraction, he indeed needed to be seen, and he simply has no regard for anything other than what makes him happy or pisses other people off.

There were clips of his motorcade coming into town, him sitting in the owner’s box at the arena, and getting booed the whole time and smiling away, either putting on a good face or just reveling in the attention, whether the reaction was boos or cheers.

Probably more lingering boos than cheers, seeing that the Spurs ended up crashing the party and prevailing in Game 3.

He’s a bona fide asshole. And a bad luck charm, to boot. Sounds about right.

No quarter, eh?

If all we ever get from our government are promissory notes and lies, and the only action we ever see involves an administration that’s constantly engaged in circumvention and cover-up, then we can be forgiven for lacking trust, and even hopefulness.

The Trump debacle has been a gigantic and shameful waste of time since the beginning, since 2016. Even during the Biden term, Trump couldn’t not be in the limelight somehow, couldn’t walk away and keep his mouth shut. He had to find ways to remain visible, to agitate his base, harp on The Big Lie, campaign for the 2024 nomination even as he was appearing in court and getting his very own mug shot.

My word, America! How much more of this shit show are we going to stomach?

At one level, society hums along and gets on with its day. But running in the background for the past 11 years has been this cackling voice and a person up to no good. Donald Trump is needy and useless, worthless as a leader and maybe even as a human, and he is doing his best to leave deep wounds and scars that are going to linger for a long time. He is sick, and damaged.

How can we stand for this anymore? He’s not good for the country. He’s a pox, a cancer, an aging pile of visceral fat taking up space. And it’s very difficult not to feel like he deserves every derisive, cutting comment we can summon.

It’s too late for rehabilitation. Or redemption. He’s burned too many bridges.

Perspective Shift

Daily writing prompt
What’s the best way to build self-confidence?

I think it takes a certain fearlessness, a bit of determination, and finally just saying to oneself that you can’t live your life fearing mistakes or a cold shoulder. No one is perfect, and the ones who look like they are have taken a few falls along the way, have put in the time and effort, and have simply decided to engage rather than withdraw.

It sounds a bit clinical, but there is trial and error involved, whether it’s learning a skill or simply interacting with other people. A certain level of trust begins to replace fear and suspicion, and confidence grows. One also hopefully learns that a good mentor is a gift, and that losing or failure are definitely not the end of the world.

It’s the old cliche about putting oneself out there, and being mindful of an Albert Einstein maxim: “Failure is success in progress.”

Truth Be Told

Daily writing prompt
How do you build loyal subscribers?

I initially joined WordPress because I felt I needed an outlet for the observations and opinions rattling around in my brain. I wasn’t giving much thought to having people who, on a regular basis, actually read what I wrote.

But there is something wondrous, something rewarding and seductive about publishing entries that people from all over the world respond to, seeing the Views and Likes spike, relatively speaking, every now and then, and getting an occasional comment.

I’d be lying if I said that a loyal and growing subscriber base isn’t something I occasionally think about. I do appreciate and have become familiar with some of the names of folks who check in on a daily basis and click the Like button. Thank you!!

But a larger scale development of readership isn’t going to happen without much more effort on my part to improve the look of my site, or improving my writing, which is not something that happens overnight.

Other than being consistent– trying to contribute at least one post every day– I don’t take advantage of the graphics or layout options available, doctor up the presentation, or spend any time making my site more appealing in a visual way.

It is the written content of the posts themselves that I will always be more concerned about.

My goals, such as they are, are modest. I simply appreciate this platform as a space in which to express myself. I’m not that interested in, or perhaps not that motivated by the packaging.

In my perfect world, the writing would be enough to interest and sustain anyone who visited the site. That is the ongoing inspiration and challenge.

A Stake In the Outcome

On the Newshour last night, Brooks and Capehart were asked about the Graham Platner conundrum in Maine, and all I could envision is a scenario similar to when Donald Trump put his name in the ring in 2015.

Back then, people started talking about how Trump was “refreshing’ and “not a stereotypical politician” and that they were willing to give him a listen and maybe even vote for him—because there was some logjam that needed to be broken; someone needed to come along who could “shake things up…”

I found myself resonating with what David Brooks said about the pool of people available to run for important office. His was more a lament that we couldn’t do better than Trump or, perhaps, Platner. Baggage galore in both instances, questionable temperaments, checkered pasts that are following them into the present.

Does Platner deserve a shot at redemption? Mainers will have to decide.

This all got me to thinking that our role in all this, our responsibility, is not to be taken lightly. We need to do our homework on these candidates, listen closely, take seriously our responsibility as voters, and not just settle for or rubber stamp people on the chance that they’ll work out, that we went to the polls and did our duty, and now we can wash our hands of whatever comes next. History has repeatedly told us that it doesn’t work that way.

As much as “evolution” may be a four-letter word for The Base, the electorate in this country would be better served if everyone who votes also works on nurturing their own intuitive hunches, their own spidey sense– some unavoidable feeling in the gut– that causes them to hesitate before leaping, to further evaluate and question before jumping on a bandwagon and electing the next ill-suited and disappointing candidate. Or, in Trump’s case, the next devious circus clown with creepy make-up.

Not Always

Daily writing prompt
Share a proverb you think is completely wrong and make your case.

Every cloud has a silver lining… It’s not completely wrong, but if one finds him- or herself often searching for meaning or an upside in the midst of trials and tribulations that come with a certain regularity, I would think it becomes a tedious chore to always have to be looking on the bright side. It’s more honest just to say “this sucks” and call it what it is.

And two heads are better than one…? Not if you’re talking about the Trump administration, where it’s more often a doubling of the trouble.

Whatever Gets You Through the Door

Daily writing prompt
Do you believe in soulmates? Why or why not?

My take on this is laced with skepticism bordering on cynicism.

If I’m grasping the concept properly, it sounds like destiny is in play. It is difficult for me to read that much into anything, to believe that there is only one person out there– on this entire planet– with whom one could make a life. It’s romantic, I guess, and it might add staying power and poignancy to a relationship. I’ve always felt, though, that it seems a bit over-the-top, too cinematic and starry-eyed and unrealistic.

If people feel this way about each other, more power to them. I just wonder how long the head-over-heels feeling can last, and if sustenance and long-term commitment aren’t made of sterner stuff.