Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Fantastic Feasts (and Where We Found Them)

Thanksgiving happened last week! Perhaps your heard?

This was our year (yay!) to gather as a family on the actual Thanksgiving Day, and everyone came together to make and excellent meal and even-better company. And, to boot, there was football, board and card games, and karaoke. So, basically, it had everything you could want in a family party.

It was seven-month-old (eight months tomorrow!) Graham's first Turkey Day, and his attire reflected that fact:


And so, we move on to the Christmas season. Twenty-month-old Kate was already in the spirit, posing next to the grandparents' tree, which had already been put up:


Turkey leftovers all week are actual a wonderful thing. Even better, the Most Wonderful Time of the Year is upon us.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

The Dementors of Tryptophan

Following the conclusion of Thanksgiving dinner, the last football game of the day, and my tryptophan-induced nap, I settled down to get a little reading done Thursday night. I'm currently making my way through the Harry Potter series for the first time ever.

(Insert here reaction of horror and/or dismay and chants of "Unclean! Unclean!")

The initial waves of Harry Potter mania passed me by for one reason or another, possibly because I was technically already an adult when the books began to take the world by storm. I did, however, often attend midnight premieres (this is a thing we did Back in My Day, kids) of the movies with my siblings and their friends, and I always enjoyed them even though I did not necessarily understand the cause behind all of the jubilation. Likewise, I had a enjoyable experience seeing the spin-off film Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them last week.

Once upon a time, I also researched and wrote (and published) a brief biography on J.K. Rowling for a work project. I remain rather impressed with what she has been able to accomplish as an author and as a philanthropist, overcoming some rather difficult circumstances to get where she is.

Anyway, I'm a filthy Muggle, but I've been trying to atone for that. Currently, I'm onto the third entry in the series, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban. The books have not quite yet reached Lord of the Rings or Star Wars levels of symbolism for me yet; nevertheless, I did find myself empathizing with the characters when they first meet the dementors of Azkaban on the Hogwarts Express. These are the characters who, in their initial encounter with our heroes, bring only despair and misery.
Here are a few passages that describe their encounter:

"The thing beneath the hood, whatever it was, drew a long, slow, rattling breath, as though it were trying to suck something more than air from its surroundings."

"The cold went deeper than his skin. It was inside his chest, it was inside his very heart. . . . He couldn't see. He was drowning in cold. He was being dragged downward."

"'It was horrible,' said Neville. . . . 'Did you feel how cold it got when it came in?'"

"'I felt weird,' said Ron, shifting his shoulder uncomfortably. 'Like I'd never be cheerful again.'"

"He felt weak and shivery, as though he were recovering from a bad bout of the flu; he also felt the beginnings of shame. Why had he gone to pieces like that, when no one else had?"

One thing I learned about J.K. Rowling in my research was that she had lived through periods of major depression, and that she created the dementors as a representation of what the illness feels like. Having been through more than one episode myself, I concur wholeheartedly that the dementors very accurately represent what depression is like.

I've heard more than one person (including one in a sacrament meeting talk Sunday) remark that 2016 has been a really tough year. That's certainly been the case for me. I've learned or re-learned the lesson that problems and trials don't really ever go away completely; they just come at you in different forms. One month it's dementors, and the next it's three-headed dogs or Mandrakes or what-have-you. And I've also been reminded through an extremely difficult period of time that my own personal battle with my own dementors is not over, and it's not something that's "cured" like other illnesses; it's a fight I'll have to continue every day for the rest of my life in one way or another.

Even so, as I took in this message on Thanksgiving Day, having also had my parents (one of whom was not home for the holidays last year), my siblings, my nieces and nephews, and even two of my three favorite puppies around me for a good portion of the day, I couldn't help but realize how immensely blessed I have been this year, too. They are my favorite people in the world. In fact, my cup runneth over in many, many ways.

There are parts of my life that remain incomplete, but though the dementors would have me focus on those, I am trying to choose instead to focus on what I do have, and to control the things I can control. If my own experiences with the dementors haven't helped me to be more understanding, more patient, more kind, and more grateful, then those lessons have been wasted; but I'm trying to make sure they are never lost.

Another message given in the book, once the attack has been thwarted, is that eating chocolate helps you to feel better. Which is also 100 percent correct.

Wednesday, November 23, 2016

"Give My Regards to Bad Guys"

Yet another member of the family has been bitten by the acting bug!

My 16-year-old nephew Dallin participated in CenterPoint Academy's Give My Regards to Bad Guys performance last week at CenterPoint Legacy Theatre, and he was phenomenal. (So what if I'm a bit biased?)


In addition to providing backup vocals and dancing to a host of numbers from The Lion King, The Little Mermaid, Xanadu, and (of course, the one that everyone's talking about) Hamilton, Dallin sang solo on "Gaston" from Disney's Beauty and the Beast and hit it out of the park.

The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.

Wednesday, November 9, 2016

Sounding of the Trump

I stayed up late last night watching the election results come in. Here are some thoughts I composed on my Facebook account:

"Well, folks, Trump just gave his victory speech. Hillary called him to concede. It's over. And it's just beginning, too. I left my showing of "Doctor Strange" tonight and feel like I walked through a portal and into one of those multiverse alternate worlds in the film.
"With all of the sincerity I can muster, which I don't always do here on FB, I'm floored. I know many of you if not most of you are, too. Some are angry, saddened, or just in shock. I don't blame you.
"For the third straight presidential election, the ticket I voted for did not win. I supported Scott Walker and Carly Fiorina till they dropped out, then Marco Rubio, ultimately Ted Cruz in the primaries, and then Evan McMullin and Mindy Finn in the election today. Many of us on the right saw the rise of Trump and said, "Not on our watch." He won anyway. #ThatHappened
"Along with the Challenger disaster of 1986 and the terrorist attacks of 9-11-01, I believe tonight will turn out to be one of those "Where were you when . . . ?" moments of our lifetimes. It's historic, but in the way few expected. I honestly expected a Clinton landslide.
"When people threaten to leave the United States if a certain candidate wins, it's silly and childish, though. Dollars to doughnuts, if you think other nations have it better than we do here (with apologies to my cousins in Great Britain and my many friends in Peru - my two other favorite nations of the Earth), you've not spent enough time outside of its borders. In my experience, I've lived in and traveled to countries over three continents, and there's still nowhere on Earth like the USA. That is why everyone wants to come here. That is why we have the phrase "the American dream." That's what my Danish ancestors fought to give me here and what my mother dreamed of as an immigrant herself.
"To paraphrase a friend of mine, back when Barack Obama won eight years ago: We should now root for Trump to succeed. His country is our country; and it's the only one we've got. If he succeeds, we succeed; if he fails, we fail. In four more years, we have another chance to hold him accountable for his successes or failures, as our Constitution outlines. We have a system of checks and balances that will hold him accountable until that time comes, through the men and women of Congress we also elected today. The Founding Fathers were wise, nay, inspired in the system they created. The ball's in your court, GOP: For all the criticisms levied at Obama for the past eight years, here's your chance to put your money where your mouth is with the trust now handed to you, or you could lose it again soon.


"If you don't like the way things are, get involved. Don't "boo," as Pres. Obama said recently. If you're already involved, keep at it. Speak your mind, and not just on Facebook or Twitter. Get out and run for office, or campaign for those who share your values. Hand out fliers, go door to door, or go to rallies. Show those who might foolishly and carelessly use the label "sore loser" that you are not one; that you accept the will of the people, just as you would have done had your candidate won and you would've been a gracious winner.
"If you're frustrated or upset, and those feelings *are* valid, consider how others have been frustrated or upset on occasions when your candidates have won and theirs have lost. Are their feelings valid, too? I know several people who voted for Trump, and none are racists nor sexists nor a handful of other terms they've been labeled. They're not. Like you, they've tried to follow their consciences and just do the right thing, or at least the best they could with the options they were given. This is no more the end of the world than some people on my side claimed when Obama was elected.
"This is not perfectly written, but these are my thoughts at this time. I'm not looking for an argument. I sense an epic (improv) game of "Rant" on social media tomorrow. If you want to discuss any of these points, let's talk soon. You name it, I'll make time for it. I've prayed several times today for my country. Ultimately, our only hope lies not in Trump nor Obi-Wan Kenobi but in Almighty God. How wonderful that we live in a land, a place I believe God our Father had a direct hand in founding, where we can have these discussions, learn from our mistakes, build on common ground, and strive both collectively and individually to be better.
"Onward we go."

Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Family Dinner/October 2016

Sunday's family dinner was also our family birthday party for five October birthdays: Kira, Jana, Steve, Ben, and yours truly!

In addition, many of the kids came dressed up in their Halloween costumes, mainly for the benefit of the grandparents but also for the cousins who wouldn't get to get Trick-or-Treating with each other Monday night.


Costumes included two Links (Luke and Jackson) from The Legend of Zelda games and two Snoopys (Jake and Graham) from the "Peanuts" comics:


Kate was the cutest Ewok this side of the forest moon of Endor:


And so, here we are now in November. 2016 is going by way too quickly.