It is January (big mystery there!) and for us here in western Maryland, that means frequent snow. At the present time as I am writing this, we have a ground cover out here of a couple of inches now, and that is forecast to increase this weekend. I am also still recovering from the effects of a cold - I have a persistent cough that doesn't seem to want to go away at this point, and that can be unnerving, especially when on occasion I have had some bad episodes of windpipe constriction (that is a terrifying experience I would not wish on anyone, but thankfully those are rare, although ideally, I would love them to be nonexistent). With the weather being somewhat iffy for snow and being about 3 weeks out from the holiday season now, one observation about this is one I don't like to make, but it is what it is - it is dry as far as activity is concerned. Mail has been slow, and I am waiting to get back to my contract work, and it seems like the waiting is eternal for a lot of things. But, it will change soon enough. These "dry spells" have happened before, and at times they can be depressing, although this one isn't because I have plenty of other projects to work on to keep myself busy in the interim. It is important to be able to transcend these periods of time, and how one does that is up to one person - yourself. I want to just talk a bit about that today, as it is something that perhaps some other folks could benefit from.
Winter - especially here in the northeast - can be a challenging season. Bouts of rough weather can be restrictive, and in a worst-case scenario, you can be walled up in your house for days at a time. When that happens, an undesirable condition called cabin fever sets in, and when it does, it can stretch your resolve to its limits. For the 27 years we lived in Florida, it seemed like the opposite was the case there - insufferable heat and humidity in the summer months made it almost impossible to go outside, as heat stroke and other dangers caused problems there. A type of hot-weather cabin fever can result from that as well. The weather is unfortunately beyond human control or manipulation, and both winter and summer exist for a reason - the earth needs changing seasons in order to replenish itself, as that is the way God created it to operate. Although we cannot change the weather - snowstorms, hurricanes, and hot weather will all come whether we want them to or not - we can change our own way of dealing with weather issues. I want to talk about that today, as I have this feeling that there are people who could benefit from some good insights.
I have spent much time in my writing over the years talking about the art of self-discovery, and how to use what God gave you in the form of brains and ingenuity to your advantage. Instead of viewing that immanent winter storm with dread about being shut-up in your house for days on end, what you should do instead is to find ways to channel your creativity, intelligence, and other assets to make the best of it. For some of us, it can be catching up on some reading - I have books I have gotten in the past year I have not even cracked open yet, so I intend to maybe start doing that. For others, you have those projects to work on - that curio cabinet you bought for your wife about six years ago, for instance, but haven't had the time to assemble. Get those tools out and start building! Or, the Christmas presents your wife has gotten you that require some creative ability - you know, like that Venus flytrap plant you haven't opened yet, or a model airplane she may have gotten you because she felt you needed a better hobby. It's a good time to work on those things. Also, just some good practical organization - that stack of crap you got in the mail (some of which you haven't opened yet) needs to be dealt with, or you may have a stack of personal papers to go through, some pictures to organize, etc. You will find that engaging in any or all of these endeavors will make the time pass faster, and in some cases, you may not want to stop. If that is all too ambitious for you though, here's a thought too - if you are like us, you have a towering shelf of hundreds of DVD's you have purchased over the years, and this is a good time to kill two birds with one stone. First, some you may have wanted to watch but it slipped your mind as other responsibilities diverted you from it, so now you have an excuse to watch them. Second, there are those people like my wife who buy DVD movies without knowing what they are - they see a pretty package, think that "this might be good," buy it, and then it sets on the shelf in its original cellophane. If you are one of those people, time to check out those impulse purchases and find out if you really like that movie after you bought it. If you did, it's a nice addition to your collection. If you didn't, then you can set up a box, throw it in, and then take it to your local Goodwill when the weather clears up. Again, you will be surprised to see how much time flies once you do that.
If you are the type of person who likes to cook, and you have the creativity to come up with new stuff, this is a good time to experiment too. On my food blog, I have countless recipes posted that I came up with on a whim, and they turned out great. You would be surprised what you can do with some flour, a few things from the spice rack, and a couple of eggs - a masterpiece awaits conception, in other words.
Another benefit today that I didn't have the luxury of when I was a kid is the internet. Even in a snowstorm, you can still have unlimited access to the outside world, and life isn't so isolated anymore. You can chat with your old friends on Facebook, entertain yourself with cat videos or political satire on YouTube, and also if you need to conduct business there are ways to video-conference and other opportunities. You can even work from home now despite the weather so that even being snowed in generates income. Being teleworking is becoming more of a thing, it means that companies can benefit from winter storms as well as workflow will be intact and without interruption, and subsequently, it means no loss in pay for employees. Good idea, this internet.
Outside activities are not out of the question either, although if you have 40 mph winds and blinding snowsqualls it would not be advisable. Regular preventative maintenance, therefore, is vital in that keeping those walkways clear of snow and ice, keeping your porch steps salted down, and also making sure the snow is shoveled from around your car so you can get out easier are vital things. Also, keeping the snow and ice off the windshields will make it easier for when you are able to venture out. Kids, of course, can have a blast - snowmen and snow forts will populate the yards in your community if a lot of kids are in the neighborhood. These things too can aleve boredom and make the time go faster.
I guess in summary I am saying that winter doesn't have to be dead and depressing, but can be as busy and exciting as you care to make it. So, don't let a visit from the "Snow Queen" keep you down, and don't let it slow you down either - life must go on, although it will require some creativity on your part to make that happen. And, before you know it, the snow will melt away, the temperatures will warm up, and you will hear the sounds of birds chirping in the air as Spring arrives. One other nice thing about winter as well - it means you don't have to mow the yard unless you are an altruistic masochist who feels guilt and is deluded into thinking you can run a lawnmower in 5 inches of snow accumulation, in which case you have other problems to address! Have a good week everyone, stay warm, and mostly keep yourself busy.
I am David Thrower, and this is a collection of snippets of my life. On this page you will find articles about Appalachian heritage, family history, music, and other good stuff. It is a lighthearted page, so hope you will visit often as this is like my virtual homestead, front porch and all.
Thursday, January 17, 2019
Thursday, January 3, 2019
A Few Perspectives On Fantasy and Imagination Through Literature
It is now a new year, 2019. This is my first pontification of the new year, and there are many things to cover. I wanted to first recap a couple of things before moving forward though.
Christmas in the Thrower house went nicely this year - it wasn't an elaborate holiday, but it was a good one, with the possible exception of catching flu a couple of days after the holiday. I am still getting over that as I write this, but we're coming along. Flu season is not a pleasant experience, although honestly, I am a bit iffy as to vaccines. On one hand, it seems to benefit having a vaccination done, but on the other, it is also risky in other areas - we have all heard the horror stories about vaccines and such, and my personal verdict is still out on that yet. One day, I may actually tackle that very subject on here, as it is something important that needs to be discussed.
2019 brings with it many new challenges - as I am writing this now, I am about nine months out from starting my Ph.D. program at Catholic University of America, and I am also at this point waiting for my next work project to start soon. As we are only a couple of days into the new year, it remains to be seen yet how it will come together, but so far it looks like a good year starting at least.
Over the past couple of weeks, Barbara and I have been watching a series that aired on ABC over the past several years called Once Upon a Time, and I wanted to talk about some things watching it has inspired. A combination of watching this as well as strong cold medication has led to some pretty bizarre dreams at nights over the past week, but that is beside the point. In this day and age, I have noted a few observations in regard to how kids foster literacy today, and this series sort of inspired me to reflect on it some. When I was growing up, you learned to cultivate literacy at a very young age - nursery rhymes in your toddler to pre-school years, followed by a curriculum of fairy and folk tales, fables, mythology, and Bible stories in your early elementary years. By the time one gets to fourth grade, then stories such as Dickens' David Copperfield or Thackeray's The Rose and the Ring get introduced, and then by middle school years you begin reading more ambitious material into high school - in my case, that meant classics such as Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo, Huxley's Brave New World, and Hemmingway's The Old Man and the Sea. In between Dickens and Dumas were some lighter reading, such as the works of William Saroyan, Robert Newton Peck, Beverly Cleary, and other authors who cater to the late elementary/pre-teen reading levels. And, as one crosses into adulthood, then you begin to take on the real heavyweights - Shakespeare, Tolkien, etc. The popular term for a reading regimen like this today is "classical education," and that is perfectly fine, as it does follow a classical path as far as literature goes. However, this is nothing new, as an educator named Olive Beaupre Miller was pioneering this as far back as the 1920s. Much of my own exposure to classic literature is due in part to Miller's seminal multi-volume work My Book House, which my mother got for me when I was still in the womb and which I started reading when I began to learn to read actually. It is in this context I now want to discuss a few insights I have had in recent years as I have seen classic fairy tales recast because there are positives and negatives to what I have seen.
Christmas in the Thrower house went nicely this year - it wasn't an elaborate holiday, but it was a good one, with the possible exception of catching flu a couple of days after the holiday. I am still getting over that as I write this, but we're coming along. Flu season is not a pleasant experience, although honestly, I am a bit iffy as to vaccines. On one hand, it seems to benefit having a vaccination done, but on the other, it is also risky in other areas - we have all heard the horror stories about vaccines and such, and my personal verdict is still out on that yet. One day, I may actually tackle that very subject on here, as it is something important that needs to be discussed.
2019 brings with it many new challenges - as I am writing this now, I am about nine months out from starting my Ph.D. program at Catholic University of America, and I am also at this point waiting for my next work project to start soon. As we are only a couple of days into the new year, it remains to be seen yet how it will come together, but so far it looks like a good year starting at least.
Over the past couple of weeks, Barbara and I have been watching a series that aired on ABC over the past several years called Once Upon a Time, and I wanted to talk about some things watching it has inspired. A combination of watching this as well as strong cold medication has led to some pretty bizarre dreams at nights over the past week, but that is beside the point. In this day and age, I have noted a few observations in regard to how kids foster literacy today, and this series sort of inspired me to reflect on it some. When I was growing up, you learned to cultivate literacy at a very young age - nursery rhymes in your toddler to pre-school years, followed by a curriculum of fairy and folk tales, fables, mythology, and Bible stories in your early elementary years. By the time one gets to fourth grade, then stories such as Dickens' David Copperfield or Thackeray's The Rose and the Ring get introduced, and then by middle school years you begin reading more ambitious material into high school - in my case, that meant classics such as Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo, Huxley's Brave New World, and Hemmingway's The Old Man and the Sea. In between Dickens and Dumas were some lighter reading, such as the works of William Saroyan, Robert Newton Peck, Beverly Cleary, and other authors who cater to the late elementary/pre-teen reading levels. And, as one crosses into adulthood, then you begin to take on the real heavyweights - Shakespeare, Tolkien, etc. The popular term for a reading regimen like this today is "classical education," and that is perfectly fine, as it does follow a classical path as far as literature goes. However, this is nothing new, as an educator named Olive Beaupre Miller was pioneering this as far back as the 1920s. Much of my own exposure to classic literature is due in part to Miller's seminal multi-volume work My Book House, which my mother got for me when I was still in the womb and which I started reading when I began to learn to read actually. It is in this context I now want to discuss a few insights I have had in recent years as I have seen classic fairy tales recast because there are positives and negatives to what I have seen.
Olive Beaupre Miller (1883-1968)
In recent years, I have noticed a certain new perspective on classic tales as portrayed on the big screen. In many cases, classic villains are often recast as "unsung heroes," as is the case with the recent movies in the Shrek franchise as well as with the film Maleficent. Concerning the latter, you will remember that Maleficent was the antagonist from the Sleeping Beauty story, and her signature two-horned black headdress, as well as her abilities to change into a nasty fire-breathing dragon, were integral to the plot of the story. In the recent movie, Angelina Jolie (who is a cad as a person, and not a favorite of mine) to her credit did bring the character of Maleficent alive, and in the movie, Maleficent was the victim of a king's betrayal that transformed her from a beautiful fairy queen to an evil monster. There are a couple of observations about this I wanted to bring up though, for better or for worse. In the original Sleeping Beauty story, as in all classic fairy tales, a lesson was always communicated that the ultimate good triumphs over the worst evil, and in that aspect thankfully the fairy tale became a moral lesson that harmonized with a classic Catholic understanding of the true, the good, and the beautiful always prevailing over the false, the ugly, and the bad. In such tales, one also sees the struggles of life too - we battle things on a daily basis, as of course the Apostle St. Paul tells us in Ephesians 6. Life has challenges in other words, but to overcome the challenges we have to look beyond them and see the bigger picture. This was a great encouragement, especially during some dark times in human history when plague, constant barbarian incursions, and other calamities bombarded many of our forebears. It was one reason many civilizations that generated such stories were able to possess a degree of resiliency in the face of tremendous adversity. And, we need that frankly. In the newer interpretations of these tales though, a new virtue is introduced that is more reflexive of more "advanced" societies - the bad guy has the potential for redemption, and there is a story behind why the villain became bad. Such is the case with Maleficent in the newest movie. Is this a good thing? It's certainly not bad and doesn't really conflict with a Judeo-Christian view of sin and redemption. Also, Maleficent was actually not a bad movie either. However, there could be potential problems with this idea, and let's talk about one of those now.
In movies such as Maleficent, as well as in the series Once Upon a Time (in which the villain, in this case Snow White's nemesis the Wicked Queen is reformed into a "good guy"), there is a good message in that even the worst of villains deserve a happy ending, and I don't think anyone would argue that no one is beyond redemption - after all, the big part of the Christian message is that Jesus died for all, even the vilest, right? However, there is a fundamental flaw in these new renditions, and oftentimes it paints the traditional "good guys" as being the real villains. In Maleficent, for instance, Aurora's dad King Stephan is painted as a psychotic, paranoid nut, while in Once Upon a Time traditional "good guys" such as Peter Pan are painted as nasty cads. There is a danger in this, in that, a postmodern agenda is at work which seeks to essentially engage in a sort of revisionism that does exactly what Scripture warns against - calling evil "good" and good "evil." While on one hand, it is good to see horrid villains such as Queen Regina and Maleficent reformed, my question is why does it have to come at the expense of making the "good guys" into nasty people? In other words, why not let Maleficent find redemption, but also let King Stephan find it in his heart to forgive her instead of turning him into a deranged lunatic? And, maybe the protagonists can have a human side, but let's not turn them into villains - instead, a better way to do this is by showing that both the good and the bad guys in the story have their own struggles, but in the end they both find resolution and reconciliation without one having to vanquish or destroy the other, right? Of course, vanquishing the evil is a part of the original story, and its message is that the good triumphs over the nastiest of evils, hence the lesson in the stories themselves. But, if we are going to reform that, why don't we do it another way rather than flipping around the heroes and villains? For instance, what about this - may be the protagonist and the antagonist are both victims of the same evil, and the plot of the story shows how each overcomes that evil. If the recent Maleficent movie would have done that, I think it would have been perhaps a more balanced perspective. That way, the plot would have been true to the original story, thus communicating the same virtue the original tale intended. That is just a thought on my part.
Despite the technological age, and the growing "enlightened" mentality we often see with the nonsense of agenda-driven entertainment and "political correctness" (which is a curse in itself), the fact is those old fairy tales, legends, and fables of years past speak to something that modern (and post-modern) gibberish-speak cannot shake us away from. The role of the imagination, as well as the core properties of being as embodied in the True, the Good, and the Beautiful still drive us. It is one reason why the resurgence in popularity of Tolkien's works to a wider audience, as well as even science fiction such as Star Wars, somehow leads back to those core things. Children, in particular, need a rich imagination, as often the values learned from classic literature and folklore lead to a more cohesive worldview later as the child grows into a functioning adult. It is also one reason why at times technology tends to rob kids of that, and why despite the wide availability of more convenient forms of technology (for example, the smart-phone) that desire to engage the imagination is still there. Imagination, honestly, is often the genesis of creativity, as the imagination can drive the hungry mind to research and explore. So, reading Snow White to your 7-year-old should then lead them at age 10 to start exploring Western civilization and its history, and it also should lead to other outlets of expression - the Pinnochio story, for instance, can foster a musical passion when the kid who read Pinnochio at age 7 then discovers Stravinsky's Petroushka at age 13. There is, therefore, a coalescing within the young mind of all these things, and thus it births a drive to explore other areas. I know, because that is how practically every interest I have now started, and I am now moving towards 50. It, therefore, shapes the person you become when one is exposed to different stimuli at a young age, so that is why we choose carefully what we allow children to be exposed to.
I say all of this today to summarize in this way - Maleficent was a good movie, and as far as TV series are concerned Once Upon a Time is one of the best in decades. But, if you watch them with your kids, do this first - encourage them to read the original stories. If they do that, then they will have a better appreciation for what they are watching while also having the ability to sort out the original story from new interpretations, be the latter good or bad.
That will, therefore, conclude my first insights for 2019 and hope all of you who take the time to read this have a good year ahead with many blessings.
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