Friday, February 25, 2011

Gots to "Hab" the Rehab


"You can look like me after rehab. Without the leopard
Speedo thing and fab gold boots of course."

After the general mental malaise went away, I went back to the my cardiologist and asked about rehab. Initial calls to rehab from her office not successful. No call-backs or lines were busy. Totally irony here because my cardiologist HEADS up this program. Ah, the battles of bureaucracy never end. A week or so passes and I get the call that, yes indeed, I am in. her office

I get a letter in the mail telling me to preregister (standard) and to expect no exercise on the first visit. This is consultation. I meet with a rather pleasant young man who walks me around the place, which is smaller than I expected, and shows me how to weigh myself, hook up a heart monitor and what I can expect. I am immediately impressed by the causal and friendly way this is being done. I also sense that there is an efficiency to this place.

I then meet with a nurse and we have a closed door talk. "Hmm...,"methinks, "To what purpose the closed door?" I am then answering questions about my medical history. Now, it makes sense. We have a pleasant chat about all these things and then the "How are you feeling" stuff comes.

I want to say, in my best Hannibal voice, "Oh Agent Starling, are trying to dissect me with that blunt little tool?" I resist all temptations (though I am vain enough to let a psychologist or a psychiatrist into my head to truly understand what makes me so offbeat), but best not tempt professionals on their own turf. I tell her honestly about the mental stuff immediately following surgery. I did joke at the end about the voices in my head spoke Spanish and since I have a limited vocabulary in this language, there was no danger of any rooftop jumping. She took this in the spirit I intended. Hopefully...

A colleague of mine, a man who used to intimidate the hell out of me, went through the same surgery years ago. This has become our bond as he usually comes in at least one or two days a week to chat about this very subject. He told me, "You don't realize how weak your body is right now." Those words contain both truth and wisdom. As I finish week three, I am beginning to glimpse this.


CAMC Cardiac Rehab has the latest in high tech exercise
equipment.
 I enjoy the hell out of it. Here I can focus on my body, leaving all other concerns outside the door. I carry nothing on me except a watch which can read my pulse. Cell phone, wallet, keys and all other annoyances are left at home.

I was talking to a fellow musician who is having heart issues. I gave him my take on this: "For years I have dedicated my time and life to the guitar and music. Now, it's time to dedicate the second half to taking care of my body." He agreed. It's a new game in an old body. Exercise is not optional, it's mandatory.

Coming home, there's always a point where the endorphins kick in. That painkilling feeling of well-being, peace and a quiet place well nurtured inside of me. It's a sacred place.

And it's about damn time.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Re-enter the Light

They Tried to Make Me Go to Rehab

I was barely out of ICU when a smiling woman came into my room one afternoon and introduced herself. She informed me she worked for Cardiac Rehabilitation. She told me, "I know you're not even thinking about this yet, but I wanted to leave this pamphlet for you." I smiled and exchanged pleasantries and said pamphlet was left for my perusal.

I really didn't have any doubts or issues with the idea of Cardiac Rehab because my cardiologist had told me before surgery: "Young men like yourself (She's really stretching the definition there, yes?) go through the surgery just fine, but often have trouble more 'from here up' (indicating from the neck up). In other words, patients of my age are likely to have depression post surgery.

My cousin Norman had warned me about this in typical family style - blunt, no frills, and to the point: "They knock the shit out of you. You go around thinking that you're this alpha male and then you realize that you can't do what you used to and you have to rely on other people." Well, I have never considered myself an alpha male by any stretch, but nothing prepares you for the post surgery experience.

Leave some body parts alone, ok?

A feeling of helplessness was never an issue in the three weeks following surgery, it was more the shock of seeing my battered body in the shower for the first time. I had bruises, wounds all over (Remember I had my appendix out, then a heart cath, then the bypass all within a three week span.) topped off by long scar running from my neck down past mid-chest, held together by metal staples.

In short, what the fuck was I? Man or surgical experiment?

People often spout that empty platitude of "it only matters what's on the inside." Bull fucking shit.  Once yours is a bit torn up, it shocks the system.

I never experienced straight out depression, but rather a deep sense of confusion and shock was my post surgical state of mind. People or socializing were unwelcome. I had a deep sense of mistrust. I didn't want anybody to see me in such a state.

 The pain meds have to go or you are hiding in a frail shell, delaying your coming back into life. And coming back into life is precisely what is happening and little glimpses of it begin to appear in very small ways.

It wasn't until about 8 weeks that I began to get back a sense of my old self. A sense of humor, a freeness, a lightness and with purpose and continuity - all these things I fel had been stripped away with the surgeon's blade.

Next: Rehab Just Ain't For Druggies

Wednesday, February 23, 2011


Plenty of the old ultra-violence my droogies.
 Last year, Andy Whitfield's star was on the rise. He was the focus point of Spartacus: Blood and Sand, an in-your-face bloody brutality fest about gladiators who are slaves in the house of Batiatus. These poor bastards work out and train from dawn until dusk, all awaiting their chance of glory in the arena. Glory means slaughtering their opponent and winning the hearts of the blood crazed crowd.

Though the series had the look of the film 300 and redefined "over-the-top" on a weekly basis, it ultimately was the acting that saved this series from being more of a cartoon than a drama.

This season's Spartacus: Gods of the Arena had to take a prequel direction because of health issues with Whitfield (God love him, but Starz has replaced him for next season). I thought that this might be a real stretch with last minute scrambling by the writers, but I was wrong. This season is sharply focused on Lentulus Batiatus (played perfectly by John Hannah) and his determination to get his fighters a prominent place in the arena. Of course, his path blocked by real scoundrels like Tullius, who is so despicable, he makes even the coarse and ruthless Batitatus seem sympathetic.

Plenty of twists and turns in this season and no character seems immune to misfortune. Ahh....humna nature. Hast thou changed?

Tullius: thy name means bastard.

Monday, February 21, 2011

The Doctor is "In"

I am recent convert to the instant gratification that is Netflix. I usually come to just about all parties a little late, so bear with my obvious revelations.

Every 12-year-old's sci-fi fantasy was Leela.
One of these recent indulgences is the classic Doctor Who series featuring the greatest Doctor,  Tom Baker. I suppose every fan of the series has a favorite Doctor, but I came to the series in the early 80's and he was the man.

Doc talks some sense into an alien snot ball.
I was living at home at the time (a big mistake) and as Robert in Everybody Loves Raymond says the food is incredible, but like a bear in the zoo, "they keep you doped up on the sauces." It was part of my pre-dinner ritual to watch the good Doctor romp through these silly, ultra-low budget sci-fi episodes. Looking back at the visual technology of the '80's, now it all seems prehistoric, but it's the story lines (however thin) and Baker's quirky performance that makes this worth a watch.

The first one I watched was The Androids of Tara. Well, it was like they mashed up the Middle Ages with hack stage (over) actors all to find some crystal to aid in time travel. Or something. It did not play well. Even Baker could not save this from dullsville.

Much better, though some CGI might have helped some scenes, was Horror of Fang Rock. Give me some fog, a lighthouse and an alien and I'm suspending disbelief like a bitch. Leela (as if you didn't see the picture), the series siren, was not in her now famous leather garb, but was wearing period clothes. Louise Jameson is actually a good actress and not just eye candy. One lone bummer in the cast, the woman playing Adelaide, was way over-the-top, but she doesn't ruin the good fun.


The 12 year-old in me wants to own all the Tom Bakers, but prices are still high. An episode is broken down into three parts of a total 1:35:00 minutes of Who. Not bad.


Next: The Pyramids of Mars.

Friday, February 18, 2011

Old Creepy Things

From Boing-Boing: creepy playground figures.

This is on a kid's playground? Hell, I wouldn't go near it.

"Figure" It Out, Dinosaur

February 16, 2011

Borders files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

By The Associated Press

"Internets? What is internets? Internets not hurt me."

NEW YORK -- Bookseller Borders, which helped pioneer superstores that put countless mom-and-pop bookshops out of business, filed for bankruptcy protection Tuesday, sunk by crushing debt and sluggishness in adapting to a rapidly changing industry.

Who didn't see this coming? Their prices are outrageous at best. The last time I was in the Borders in Barboursville, I must have silently cursed a dozen times. I could not believe the jaw dropping audacity of their prices.

If Borders wants to be consumer friendly by selling coffee and playing smooth jazz promoting a community coffee house atmosphere, then they better get more competitive. Barnes and Noble is next if it hasn't happened already. I have nothing against them and I want the Borders to stay, but if no executive could see this coming, then the ship has already run aground. It may not even be a price problem. Maybe book stores are dinosaueric after all.

The 40-year-old company plans to close about 200 of its 642 stores over the next few weeks.

None of the five Borders-owned stores in West Virginia -- including Borders stores in Barboursville and Vienna, Borders Express stores in Charleston and Bridgeport and a Waldenbooks store in Mount Hope -- is on the closure list. All five stores are in malls.

All of the stores closed will be superstores, Borders spokeswoman Mary Davis said. The company also operates smaller Waldenbooks and Borders Express stores.

Borders Group Inc. President Mike Edwards said in a written statement that cautious consumer spending, negotiations with publishers and other vendors and a lack of liquidity made it clear Borders "does not have the capital resources it needs to be a viable competitor."

Borders plans to operate normally and honor gift cards and its loyalty program as it reorganizes.

The company will receive $505 million in debtor-in-possession financing from GE Capital and others to help it reorganize.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Telephone Hell

We create our own devils sometimes.
Good old Captain Beefheart called the telephone "a plastic horned devil" and damn, if he wasn't right.

Having done a post yesterday on the Morning Sitting, I resolved to integrate this as much as possible in the morning rituals.

I got about 12 minutes into it, feeling very relaxed and trying to experience mind-body union when the hellish sound began.

Without revealing details as to "who" was the rude person, I will say that there are some people for whom drama is a way of life. This is indeed the case of the person who called. Lie cannot be normal, stable and happy-the shit has to be stirred. This person has deep issues, a baby to care for and an unstable environment and therefore, does not have the luxury of a quiet home to sit idly, working on something seemingly so frivolous and abstract. I get that, but choosing to repeat one's mistakes again and again, hoping as Einstein said, for a different outcome, is insanity.

We can all understand this, because who doesn't enjoy a little excitement even if the excitement comes with a heavy price tag? Excitement is a condition which doesn't last. Emotional states, which seem so powerful and overwhelming at times, come and go in a tidal fashion. This also ties into the lack of mind-body union that Sandra Bain Cushman speaks about in her blog. I have met Ms. Cushman and wish that she lived closer so that I could study with her because she is a marvelous, down-to-earth teacher.

"When one first hears the Alexander Story, it seems remarkable that an individual spent nearly ten years studying himself in order to overcome his vocal problems. Yet after we establish our own practices, and like Mr. Alexander reap the incremental benefits of an ongoing commitment to the integration of mind and body, it might not seem so far-fetched."


Amen sister.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Inviting Silence

This is the exercise (or practice known as the morning sitting) that Fripp introduced at Guitar Craft 2008 in Snowshoe, WV. I have been so lapse in my practice. This morning I had a real urge to do the morning sitting, but other things demanded my attention. It's unfortunate because I feel rather lost without it. Find a quiet place before your day begins and just sit, drawing attention to the body as specified.


Please bring part of the attention to the soles of the feet;

to the top of the head;
and what is in between;
what is in front of us, and what is behind;
what is to our right, and what is to our left;
to what is above us, and what is below.


Returning part of our attention to the soles of the feet;
moving the attention up through the legs, up the spine to the top of the shoulders; the finger tips & the palm of the hands, up the arms to the shoulders; up the neck and to the top of the head.
Then, to the left hand: the palm, the back of the hand, inside the hand itself; into the thumb and each of the fingers in turn.

Another thought:


It not our aim to drive out noise.
It is our aim is to invite in Silence

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Not an "A" Game

Even Liam Neeson can't raise this A-Team above a C.
Guy movies. Where shit blows up "real good", hot women abound, and ass-kicking is a given and destruction to property must be in the millions at least.

Let's go through the list, shall we?

1. Shit blowing up: check. Cool aerial stuff. Action sequences lead pace of film.

2. Hot women: Jessica Biel is the draw. Even dressed in her conservative Fed duds, she's got it in spades.

3. Ass kicking: check. "I pity the fool" ass kicking scene is great.

4. Destruction of property: really fun.

Then why does this flick fall short? In short, it's too damn obvious, plays out every cliche and each character seems to be immune to injury no matter the implausibility. For example, hundreds of cargo holders fall around the A-Team (Are one or two guys inside? Unclear.) and not a scratch. What are the odds?

Patrick Wilson and Brian Bloom do nice turns as the bad guys. Bloom particularly shines an an arrogant asshole assassin. Even still, this film lacks substance.

This A-Team gets a C from me. And here's hoping there's no sequel.

Monday, February 14, 2011

All the News We'd Like To See

February 14, 2011


Charleston man thought about robbing, but life was turned around
The Charleston Gazelle


CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- A Charleston man was nearly robbed Sunday afternoon while walking down the street.

Michael Jonas, 51, of Charleston, was walking along Chandler Drive with another man at about 12:20 p.m. Sunday when the two were approached by a young white man asking for money, according to Sgt. Eric Hodges of the Charleston Police Department.


Jones told the man to "Get a job and get your own money," Hodges said.

The man pull out a knife, but then paused. He then thoughtfully stated, "You know, you're right. I'm a lazy-ass motherfucker that's addicted to meth and my life choices are the reason why I'm such a piece of worthless shit. I'm going to look for gainful employment tomorrow."

Hodges said the man then shook his hand, thanked him profusely and then ran off into the woods.

The investigation is continuing.

Sunday, February 13, 2011

We Gotta Get Out of This Place

Ben's been doing more than just Jennifer.
The Town, directed and starring Ben Affleck, is one of the best films of this genre that I've seen in quite a while. Usually these type of movies have hard-ass badasses banging, beating and dropping the F Bomb every other word and all the while you sit and wonder where the hell the plot went. Not so for Mr. Jennifer Garner's excellent film.

From top to bottom, this film holds up to the most jaded of cinéastes. Affleck plays a long-time street criminal from Charlestown Mass., evidently the bank robbing breeding ground of the US, and his struggles with his criminal-cum-jailbird lifer and what he sees as his bleak future.

What I liked about this film is that it didn't preach at me, no characters were over-the-top tough guys, the plot was clear and the action was dynamite. Plus, Jeremy Renner is in this and he is just aces. John Hamm plays the relentless prick FBI agent with perfect pitch. Excellent. I give it Five Boxes of Popcorn (air popped, no salt or butter please.)

Friday, February 11, 2011

Get Thee Behind Me, Satan

An obvious story, but good shocks and scares.
We love Netflix. Though Blockbuster has a superior collection of the newest films, their mailing service in Charleston is glacial as it took nearly a week for their mailing service to send another movie. Unacceptable. There's always a quid pro quo, isn't there?

We devour all horror movies that come out. Most are low budget and not worth a shit. I had heard that M. Night Shyamalan's Devil had gotten some mixed reviews, but I am always interested in Night's work as I believe he has been a breath of fresh air in the film making world ever since he kicked my ass with The Sixth Sense. That was brilliant and original.

Devil is a well done little shocker. Reviews on the web (Not a good place to read nor trust reviews. Except here and Film Geek's site.) have been hard on the "obvious" plot - people trapped in an elevator and their consequent panicked and dangerous behavior. The small twist is that one of them appears to be the Devil. If that whole concept really bothers you, then this film will not sweep you away and you've missed a good experience.

The film has a solid cast, well acted, and delivers some good scares. To say more would ruin it.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Other Photographs


WTF Report


"I carry a caddle prod everywhere I go. Kinda like a Swiss Army knife."
 Man Arrested After Allegedly Using Cattle Prod on Hot Spot Employee


Kenneth Scott Samples

Shoe impressions led to 30-year-old from Elkview.

An employee of Patty's Hot Spot #2 in Jefferson called police at about 2 a.m. Thursday to report an assault with injuries. The employee reportedly told Kanawha County Sheriff's Department deputies that man entered the business at about closing time and she asked him to leave, but when she turned her back, the man grabbed her in a choke hold from behind and used a cattle prod on her neck, then demanded she perform a sexual act on him.

The victim told police she fought with the man until he fled the business. The woman also told police the man was in Patty's Hot Spot #2 earlier Thursday night and said his name was Kenneth and he was staying at the Jefferson Motel.

Police located shoe impressions in the snow and tracked similar footprints to room 12 of Jefferson Motel where they confronted a man in the room who told them he was Kenneth Scott Samples, 30, of Elkview.

Samples was wearing clothes that matched the victim's description and also the shoe impressions in the snow, according to the Kanawha County Sheriff's Department. Samples reportedly apologized and said he did not want to go back to jail.

He was charged with attempted sexual assault and also assault during the commission of a felony. Samples is a registered sex offender because of a 1999 conviction for attempted first-degree sexual assault. He served 13 months in a correctional facility and five years of probation.


Tuesday, February 08, 2011

When Ugly is So Beautiful

Some people shouldn't go near paints.
I love MOBA- the Museum of Bad Art. Actually, it should be the Museum of Really Bad Art because it is farking hysterical. I know I have blogged about this, but today I needed a laugh and went to MOBA for one. I got more than one.

Here is very confusing collection of symbolic paintings. "http://www.museumofbadart.org/."

Monday, February 07, 2011

On Sale in the Lobby

It looks so harmless.
You may notice something different on my page. Yes, I have added a Amazon widget.

Was it Satan who compelled you to such shameless commerce?

No. Money runs from me. No, seriously, any extra cash goes to plumbers, dentists, or mechanics. Besides, I'll never make any true cashola from becoming an Amazon associate. This is about feeding my Amazon addiction.

When I'm in couch lounge mode at home, I check email, Facebook and the like, but always return to look at movies that I might want on Amazon. I go back over and again in an obsessive compulsive manner, often looking at the same DVD, checking the price to local stores (If they even have anything of my eclectic, odd taste in film.), then back again. It's almost pornographic.

My DVDs are handled with the utmost care. I never, ever touch the edges and surgically insert or take them out of the player. Most of my life is complete chaos, but DVDs? Pristine and although not precisely organized, I can find you any title. I love getting and giving them. I'm also very picky about which I buy. It has to be what I feel is necessary to my collection and even if it has been deemed worthy, it still has to be at the right price. I'm a bit of a pincher on that one.

I was inspired by the new additions to my blog roll- the Horse Stick Girls. Hell, if they take the time to write such extensive reviews, then so can I. Besides, traffic on my site is very small. While I enjoy purging myself through words, I read only about four blogs on a regular basis. To get read, you must read. It's a community, but that takes energy and that has gone into making words dance (or mambo) on my page. By the time, I'm finished writing, I'm finished with reading as well.

We just started watching season one of Breaking Bad via Netflix. Thanks to Uncle Bill's recommendation, I am hooked on this strange story of a high school chemistry teacher who goes the dark path of cooking meth in order to pay for his chemo treatments. We just watched the first three episodes, so no review right now. Just a teaser.

So, judge not me too harshly. It's got more dignity than pan handling saying, "Pardon me sir/mam. Do you have $11.99 for a DVD from Amazon?"

Sunday, February 06, 2011

God on the Big Screen

The spirit may move upon you. 
Last night, I had a most interesting experience. I stepped outside of my comfort zone (It was not exactly willingly, mind you. An attempt at a well-deserved nap was thwarted by numerous phone calls until I finally gave up.) and went to a church to "witness" a baptism. This church was outside my normal denomination. Way, way outside.

Having been in the music "ministry" business for a long, long time, I figured I had seen, if not all, most of what happens during a service. I have never seen such a display. Eee-ow. I had heard that this church is loaded and mine eye$ hath seen the glory.

This church had the most advanced audio and video equipment I have ever seen. A rack of speakers hanging from the ceiling reminded me of sound equipment seen at rock arenas. Combine that with both seated and roving videographers, complete with headphone mics, I was truly impressed by what had to be a very generous music budget. These people are serious about their presentation. The sanctuary felt like a cross (No puns here.) between the Clay Center, the Civic Center and more than a dash of community theater.

Am I envious? A big yes to that query. For 14 years I worked for a small and neglected church on the West Side who couldn't afford to upgrade our aged sound system. Yes, I am envious of the equipment, the players and the huge choir. The presentation? Not so much.

The evening began with two songs, the first led by one singer who hopped about like he was an evangelical, but goofy, Mick Jagger and the second song was led more capable singer led song two for what seemed ten minutes. A large mixed chorus swayed and joined in the singing. Two large screens displayed the lyrics, plus adding visual MTV-like effects such as scenery (all religious in nature of course). At one point, images of Calvary were superimposed upon the sweaty singer's face all to great effect. Well, great effect if you're Trinity Broadcasting or Mike Murdoch. This is a serious production.

Two huge screens on either side rolled the lyrics of these songs. This removes all the clutter and the cost of hymnals while serving the more poorly sighted among the congregation. Very smart indeed. Words repeated in the chorus of one song included "enlarge my territory" and "no limits." While I agree that if God loves us, then his love must be generous, but that choice of words seems poor. Are we saying, "Enlarge my bank account?" Or a more puerile choice?  Call me old fashioned, but I prefer even the old and moldy hymn lyrics to words sounding like mantas from a motivational seminar.

With all the singing and praising God, I secretly wondering what God thinks of all this weekly praise he receives. Do we do it to curry favor? Does he find it annoying? The one burning question that came without bidding: why does an infinite being need praise in the first place? I have struggled with who the Almighty is for most of my life. The Bible speaks of God as jealous. This I have never been able to fathom. Wrathful-probably, but jealousy of what?

Most of the time, when I go online and read all this disagreement (also called heresy) about how to interpret the Scriptures or read/hear cracks about my faith - Catholicism, I begin to wonder if at the core of our being we are too much monkey to understand divinity in any form. In short, religious teaching is cannot be held within a mind that is constantly being overwhelmed by an animal nature. No sooner are we done reading the "word" that we begin arguing about it. We are contentious by nature because we want to be seen as higher on the social strata or the "banana tree" as my friend calls it.

Inevitably, after the music comes the preachin'. I liked the down-to-earth, good old boy who took the mic and talked about salvation being a rough road. Yep. The Buddhists already know this, but Christians act like it's solely from their tradition.

The Boone County boy preacher's styles ran from homey to crazy outbursts. Quiet moments would suddenly be broken with him rushing and screaming al la Sam Kinison. His voice cracking into a high squeal, clenching his hands as if tearing the life from some invisible demon, yelling: "and then Jesus is coming down on a white horse with a sword to cleanse the world. Amen."

Oh boy.

Perhaps if Saint John could see the resultant hysteria about his Revelations, he might have thought twice about committing them to papyrus. I remember my granny talking about the end of the world to me. I had heard the preacher' sermon on her radio which she slept to each night. Little Jimmy laid there in the darkness listening to the mad exhortations about salvation. I wanted Jesus to love me and save me from the pit of fire. "Jimmy, they have been taking about the end of the world since I was a little girl." She reassured me that there was nothing going to happen. I never forgot her small remark on all things eschatological. Jesus on a cloud or a white horse flying down from heaven? I sincerely hope so, but my doubts are substantial. The end of the world is likely, because we are frightened monkeys hell bent on killing one another. It's the primal blood lust rising to the thin surface of civility. Rather than live in doubt and fear, pound somebody. The body is released, the mind is cleared. Doubt me? Watch a sporting event with a crowd and watch how quickly we transform. It's what we are.

Mr. Screamy was enjoyable, although he did take one small shot at Catholicism. Duly noted and I will say that the entire 20 some years I worked at St. Anthony's I never heard one disparaging word from a priest, nuns nor anyone in the congregation. Not one. He worked the crowd very well, bringing them near a frothing frenzy, but never quite getting everybody burning with faith. Oh people danced and jumped up and down, the house was never brought down. Good try though. I enjoyed his sermon, despite the style.

At the end of his act, he brought people down to be saved. That is, saved from the pit of fire of eternal damnation.

During all this, people yelled out, waved their arms heavenward and swayed out of time with the music. I saw a woman near the "stage," kneeling and rocking back and forth, lost in her prayers. All these outward displays of faith may be engaging to these people, but ultimately I feel that God is a much more intellectual experience. When I experience what I believe to be of "the other" is always a feeling that evades description or it is a revelatory moment in which I see the humanity of another person, recognize my own lack of humanity or see my own acts of humanity. It's both inward and outward. I'm not going to run around a church speaking in tongues. That's not me, babe.

The other thing that I recognize about myself is a propensity to be an outsider even if there's no evidence to support that supposition. There's that nasty habit of being a smart ass as well. That guy just wants attention. Put to the highest use, I can smell hypocrisy, especially my own, like a bloodhound.

Now we got to the dunking. Er...the baptismal rite if you prefer. In my tradition, water flowing on the head while words are spoken suffices. Here, in the land of Internet broadcasts, high tech cameras and lights, not so. The person who wants to be baptized must go completely under. Under the big top!

This, as you can imagine, was done in a dramatic style that combined elements of a Bingo game, theater and MC'ed in the style of a beauty pageant. Two guys stood in a nearly waist-high tiled pool and brought the undunked into dunkdom. It was a hammer to my head honestly. One dude had the Evangelical hair so common to the Televangelists that we all know and revile. Seriously, a few points:

Why is it that men of the word, both local and national, are usually the ones so vain about their hair? Doesn't it say, "Vanity, vanity, all is vanity?"

Why do the fundamentalists chastise long hair when every picture of Jesus has the Lord with abundant locks complete with beard? Very funny that. Been tough on women too. Sorry, ladies, no braids or jewelry.  Biblical blame throwers seem more about condemnation and less about redemption, let alone something naive as love.

When I sat among these seemingly warm and wonderful people, a feeling came upon me. Not one of alienation, and most likely not God, but perhaps it was that ineffable feeling of community even among strangers. We are social creatures after all and among our own, we can feel a certain lightness, an unburdening perhaps. A commonality of emotions, desires and a certain mortality. Church, any church, helps us deal with our sense of isolation. The deeper the sense of isolation and hardship, the deeper the fall into dangerous harbors such as cults. But, without people, we would go mad and life would be pointless.

Methought I sensed some teenage girls giving me the eye in the lobby as I waited for my group to file out. I silently laughed at one girl's jeans which were so tight that they looked painted on and of course, they had St. Alban spangles places in strategic places. I guess she missed the whole point of the nearly two hour service. Maybe not. Maybe despite our best efforts, hormones override spirituality with such force that all we do is make empty promises to God, go ahead and sin with mucho gusto, and then ask for forgiveness. I don't know, but God was surely tired of my late night "Oh Lord, don't let me get sick and I'll never drink again" petitions.

What has become of the person who is now baptized? Well, she isn't exactly following the straight and narrow per se, but she is doing better with her life and we were there to support her efforts. Even if they are misguided and glaringly hypocritical.

But, hell, who isn't a hypocrite? There was a very wise man (with long hair?) who said something about casting the first stone? I like that part.

He stopped those monkeys right in their tracks.