Of course, my favorite drink and the drink I drink EVERYDAY would have to be Adam’s Ale or good old H20 (water) often with some ice but not always. I think it very healthful to drink water with meals.
After drinking water I drink some coffee with milk every morning. In the winter I make a pot of Earl Grey with some lemon juice and Splenda and fill up a thermos and then sip all afternoon. Sometimes I add honey. In the summer I add ice and make a pitcher of iced tea. So if I were to add it up the drinks I habitually drink and like are in this order: WATER, TEA, COFFEE, MILK. I like fruit juices and drink them occasionally but they have too much sugar and too many calories so I substitute a vitamin C power in water each morning. I will drink a Coca Cola if on the road but rarely drink that anymore. Generally I avoid sugarly softdrinks.
I am not and never have been a a teetotaler however. But I am aware very aware of the dangers and temptation of “demon rum”. There is an old Spanish saying : If you ever know a man who tries to dr own his sorrows, kindly inform him his sorrows know how to swim. Drinking is one one to forget but it takes a toll on the mind and body. If one only drinks in moderation and occasionally one enjoys them more.
I just drink alcoholic beverages in moderation occasionally. In the summer I enjoy a cold glass of Spanish sherry now and then.
Of course, I enjoy a glass of cold beer now and then as well.
I am not too particular about my beer but enjoy draught beer.
I enjoy whisky also from time to time. If there is nothing else available I will have a bourbon whiskey or a rye whiskey but I never keep any of that stuff in my house. But my preferred hard drink is a nice Scotch blend or for special occasions a nice single-malt.
I like Irish whisky also and will have it from time to time. I really don’t like other hard drinks (tequila, vodka, rum, gin) and probably will go 10 or 15 years without drinking those drinks. In 2016 someone bought me a Bloody Mary and to be hospitable I took it. I liked it but haven’t had one since. It is 2024 and I haven’t had a Scotch since New Year’s Eve! If I am out I will have a Manhattan cocktail (made with whiskey sweet vermouth and bitters). If I can I would prefer a Rob Roy but in my experience a Manhattan is usually a more avialble cocktail. I never make fancy cocktails at home though sometimes I will make a hot toddy or a lemonade punch spiked with whisky.
I enjoy wine and usually we drink Spanish, Italian, Portuguese , Chilean, Californian or German wine.
In my youth I used to like pitchers of Sangria but rarely have it now. We all must drink both for our health and enjoyment. But drink clean water (I have a filter at home) and boil it if you must. This is why the British soldier of old drank tea. It was a safe and satisfying drink. That’s the way I feel about it today. I enjoy a coffee but find it can make my stomach upset. Tea always seems tasteful and salubrious to me so next to water it is my favorite drink.
“Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker.” said Ogden Nash.
As a kid I loved Baby Ruth bars and Snickers. Now I find them too sweet. But I still love chocolate.
\My favorite is probably Swiss chocolate but I enjoy good old Hersey’s with Almonds. The reality is I rarely eat candy today. The closest I get to it is hot chocolate in the winter or a glass of chocolate ovaltine. But if I am on the road and need a snack I probably will get a Snickers bar to tide me over!
A hummingbird in our garden in January 2024.OUR PALS: LANEY AND LEO IN OUR GARDEN JANUARY 2024. We just adopted Laney as his mistress, our neighbor had recently died.
“Dogs are our link to paradise. They don’t know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing was not boring–it was peace.”
(Milan Kundera)
I recently read a horrendous article about dogs being dumped over the outskirts of town and left to die. There was a redeeming characteristic to the article: two volunteers pledged to bring the dogs water and food. Like me, they were saddened at the cruelty and selfishness of so many humans and wanted to help the dogs.
Dogs are fascinating. They vary immensely in size and color more than any other mammal, so they are unique.
Dogs are, of course, Man’s Best Friend. They are probably our oldest animal companion the very first domesticated animal. In fact, without the dog our civilization may not have come into existence at all!
My father had a dog. My grandfather had a dogs almost everyone had a dog at one time or another. They were part of the family and part of the family history.
Lincoln loved dogs. He had a dog named Fido. Stanley Coren tells us:
“This dog was almost always with Lincoln and the people of Springfield would report that it was a common sight to see Lincoln walking down the street with Fido walking behind, carrying a parcel by the string tied around it. A regular stop for Lincoln was at Billy’s Barbershop for a haircut. Fido would settle down to wait outside patiently, although he could easily be lured into a game involving jumping and twirling when young children came by and paid any particular attention to him.”
Dogs have their flaws, however, They need attention and can be expensive to maintain. I think dogs tend to be dirty and greedy (for food).
And dogs have been known to fight over food.
Dogs who have been abandoned generally speaking are the most aggressive about defending their food. Having a bad master or none at all is bad for dogs. Through neglect and through the fear of hunger dogs can become aggressive. They say a hungry dogs forgets his training, forgets his master and believes in nothing to his bones and his meat when starving. So bad behavior is not really the dogs fault.
Sadly, very aggressive dogs have to be put down sometimes. So dirtiness and possible danger and aggression (particularly in large dogs) are a problem.
But are they any worse than human beings are in this flaw? Many poorly raised and marginalized people have poor hygiene and are thieves and aggressive bullies.
But given half a chance the average dog has one purpose in life: to be a loving companion to his master or mistress and loyally give his or her heart.
There is no friend like a dog. He will always welcome you home with affection and a jolly wag of his tail and a happy glint in his eye! He will warn you of danger, of strangers or intruders. If he doesn’t he is telling you something as well.
I remember the famous Sherlock Holmes story, The Silver Blaze.
“Is there any point to which you would wish to draw my attention?’
‘To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time.’
‘The dog did nothing in the night-time.’
‘That was the curious incident,’ remarked Sherlock Holmes.”
The fact the dog communicated was whoever came to see the horse in the stable was NOT a stranger but a well-known and trusted individual.
If there is a leak in the laundry room he will tell you.
If there is smoke he will sound the alarm.
Poor fellow! he is confused and frightened by the 4th of July as well as thunder and lightning.
But when you comfort him he brings you delight and more than ever is glad YOU ARE HIS MASTER and YOU ARE HIS FRIEND.
You are glad he is by your side.
And of course we talk to our dogs and wish they could talk to you! Sometimes it seems as if they try!
I genuinely love dogs and do not want to see them suffer or be harmed in any way. I love animals in general and am fascinated by them. I love the birds who visit our garden and who make their nests and lay their eggs in our eaves.
But my favorite animal is the dog because they are our link to paradise.
The saddest thing about a dog is we know he will be with us only for a short while. We get a dog and we know we will probably have to say goodbye to it long before we die because their lives are short.
But perhaps this is one of the greatest gifts a dog bestows to us.
The dog teaches us not to worry too much about tomorrow. We are all mortal.
The dog teaches us to be happy and grateful for small things that each day of life provides.
A warm blanket. A satisfying meal. A full water bowl. A scented garden. A cool summer breeze. A sweet breath of clean air.
A quiet evening.
And the love and companionshp of a true friend.
“And all I ask is a merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover,
And quiet sleep and a sweet dream when the long trick’s over.”
(John Masefield)
“Your days are numbered. Use them to throw open the windows of your soul to the sun. If you do not, the sun will soon set, and you with it.” MARCUS AURELIUS GARY COOPER IN GARDEN OF EVIL (1954)
Ah, moon of my delight, [who know'st]1 no wane, The moon of Heav'n is rising once again: How oft hereafter rising shall she look Through this same garden after me - in vain!
And when Thyself with shining Foot shall pass
Among the Guests Star-scatter'd on the Grass,
And in thy joyous Errand reach the Spot
Where I made one - turn down an empty Glass! orship:
by Edward Fitzgerald (1809 - 1883), appears in The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám, First Edition, no. 75, first published 1859 FROM THE PERSIAN
LISTEN TO PODCASTS OR AUDIBLE BOOKS DURING BASEBALL SEASON LISTEN TO BASEBALL GAMES ON THE RADIO OR MLB AT BAT YOUTUBE NEWS (London TImes/Sky News/etc).
WORK IN GARDEN clean the pool. ENJOYING NATURE OR GO FOR WALKS IN THE PARK SWIM WHEN WEATHER IS GOOD
STUDY LANGUAGES ON DUOLINGO AND ALSO WITH SUPPLEMENTARY DICTIONARIES AND READINGS WHILE LISTENING TO CLASSICAL MUSIC AND SIPPING ON THERMOS OF TEA
READ X (TWITTER) AND POST ON BLOG OR FB read books.
(I USED TO LOVE TO GO TO THE MOVIES BUT HAVE ONLY GONE OCCASIONALLY RARELY SINCE 2017. LAST MOVIES I SAW IN THE MOVIES WERE BARBIE 2023 (ok) 1917 and Darkest Hours.).
I like old movies and will see one now and again. Most TV series are too much for me. I enjoyed REACHER. But it was a limited series and not too long.
“One ought, every day at least, to hear a little song, read a good poem, see a fine picture, and, if it were possible, to speak a few reasonable words.” ― Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship
That’s certainly is my motto FOR THE GOOD LIFE.
And this shall be for music when no one else is near The fine song for singing, the rare song to hear! That only I remember, that only you admire Of the broad road that stretches and the roadside fire!
(R L STEVENSON)
***
O I had ance a true love, now I hae nane ava; And I had three braw brithers, but I hae tint them a’. My father and my mither sleep i’ the mools this day – I sit my lane amang the rigs, aboon sweet Rothesay Bay.
It’s a bonnie bay at morning, and bonnier at noon, But bonniest when the sun draps and red comes up the moon. When the mist creeps o’er the Cumbraes and Arran peaks are gray, And the great black hills, like sleeping kings, sit grand roun’ Rothesay Bay.
Then a bit sigh stirs my bosom, and wee tear blin’s my e’e, And I think of that far countrie wha I wad like to be. But I rise content i’ the morning to wark while I may – I’ the yellow har’st field of Ardbeg, aboon sweet Rothesay Bay.
This old Scottish song, which I have known for most of my life, reminds us there is beauty in this world but also sadness, loneliness, loss, and separation. But we should rise content each morning to work and study while we may and if we have lost loves and homelands we should be grateful that we have known friendship and love.
Working as a tour guide in Segovia Spain in the early 1980s. AMOR BRUJO TOURS and TRANSLATIONSI don’t have a lot of cash on hand but I always have a leather purse with $20 worth of half dollars at hand and I have a bag with about $150 of change hidden away. I don’t normally carry a lot of cash. Most of my purchases are by credit card. I never use a debit card.
I have a chance for a long life.
Already I am grateful for the years I have lived (mostly in good health). I am 68 years old and older than many people I worked with, studied with or loved. I have known people who died in their teens, in their twenties, in their thirties in their forties, in their fifties, and in their early sixties. I once saw a Sea Knight Helicopter fly away and cursed the fact I was not on it. It hit bad weather and crashed about 15 minutes later 23 Marines were killed including some people I knew. Our company commander canceled our trip and we had to march more than 20 miles back to camp in bad weather. Sometimes as Auld Pop used to say your number is up.
One lesson I have learned in life is that the body is a fragile vessel and that we are all mortal. Every day of good health is a gift. I think being married has kept me reasonably happy and healthy. Choosing a good spouse is one of the most important decisions one can make for one’s happiness and health. I have been married for almost forty-two years to my best friend of the last fifty years. John Joseph Powell in The SECRET OF STAYING IN LOVE wrote: “It is an absolute human certainty that no one can know his own beauty or perceive a sense of his own worth until it has been reflected back to him in the mirror of another loving, caring human being.”
Yes, no one can know true happiness unless they know the love of a husband and wife or of a child. I know when I first saw my grandchildren it was love at first sight! I do believe in enthusiasms and love at first sight.
Yes, no one can know true happiness unless they know the love of a husband and wife or of a child. I know when I first saw my grandchildren it was love at first sight! I was happy the day I was married -but not as happy as my parents I think and I was happy when our children were born -a very special gift for which I am eternally grateful- but there is no joy like the surprise or extra-inning gift of grandchildren. Children mean sacrifice and a lot of hard work but they pay dividends a hundred times over. Hugh Heffner with his multitudinous and mostly sterile dud in the mud sex was really a chump, not a champion. He thought he knew what life was but wasted most of his life in hedonistic trivialities. He thought he knew what love was but he knew only a fraction of the Four Loves.
This is the actress MAUREEN O’ HARA (1939) as Esmeralda in the film HUNCHBACK OF NOTRE DAME. Who with eyes and heart in breast could not fall in love with such a smile?
To be happy one has to be in reasonable health. One has to have something to do with your time. So it is important to have hobbies and intellectual interests and a few good friends. One should be loved and have someone to love, have a roof over your head, some soup at the boil, some tasty food to eat, One needs plenty of water to drink and wash, One thing l learned is that one can go days even weeks of light eating but one cannot go very long without water. So water is my favorite beverage!
To be happy one has to have some dreams and something to hope for. Many of my personal dreams are unrealized but I had fun trying to achieve those dreams. I hiked many mountains I climbed many ruins in Sicily, Crete, Madeira, in Portugal, Spain, Scotland, Greece and Italy. I kissed a few pretty girls and they kissed me back. I have gone deep sea fishing in the Atlantic and Pacific. I played a lot of baseball and became in the words of a local athlete “decent”. I served honorably in the Marine Corps. I have published a few articles and one-act plays but never have written (a published book). I have written (privately) three volumes of essays and personal recollections that my daughter published. They are primarily for my grandchildren. I have taught many classes in history, literature, and languages and helped many students. I have coached sports teams and seen great athletes at play. All of our children and grandchildren are bilingual and were or are being raised as native speakers of Spanish and English.
I love monumental public memorials and sculptures though Shakespeare sang in the Sonnets of the immortality of literature:
“Not marble nor the gilded monuments
Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme,
But you shall shine more bright in these contents
Than unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time.”
When I visit the cemetery or war memorials, I walk past hundreds or even thousands of names that represent life stories now silenced forever.
Oh, they are the Silent Ones. May the many monuments that abound around the globe to those who have fought to protect our freedom and national independence remind us of duty, the cardinal virtue of courage, the inestimable value of valor, the honor evoked by such sacrifice!
Look at and contemplate {those}
” names …inscribed on the parchment of fame;
Heroes whose seeds were a noble example
That others might follow and honour thy name.”
I know that recorded history holds the adventures of a few who managed to be inscribed in the parchment of fame.
I have never thought I needed to live a life worthy of being recorded.
I never really sought fame or wealth but contentment and the quiet and security of a nice house and library. ] I enjoy quiet cafes, quiet rivers, quiet museums, and quiet walks in the park or in a forest. I have always wanted to live an honorable life of service to my school, my country, my family, and my God. “non mihi non tibi sed nobis as the Romans said, “not for me alone nor for thee all but for the common good of all.”
I knew all about the world of books. For most of my life, they were my biggest adventure. Books could take you into a better world. A world where there were fine songs for singing, moving laments, sports heroes, romance, adventures, tragedies, military adventures, explorations, mysteries, prayers, legends, and yes, even magic. Of course, the articles, stories, songs, and books ended eventually. Then you had to go back to being yourself.
So in the final analysis bookish adventures are not enough. A man craves the freedom to see places and do things. And when you are old you can look back and remember. This is one of the reasons I enlisted in the Marine Corps , worked in construction as a laborer (I helped build Bill Gate’s home in Bothwell, Washington), and why I lived and traveled in Latin America, Spain, and Europe as much as I could. I knew my time, my health, my freedom, and my financial independence were limited. My father always said, “You have to take chances in life. The door of opportunity opens and then closes. If you don’t move ahead when you have the chance you can lose out forever. You have to decide if it is worth taking the chance.”
I realize I am the biggest threat to my emotional, financial, and physical health.
So what do I do?
Number one I have a wife, children, life insurance, some savings, and some property. I am not a doomsday prepper by any means but I believe in having emergency food, water, and medicine just in case of some natural catastrophe. I have a solar crank radio, a solar charger, flashlights, batteries, candles. a first aid kit, an emergency stove, extra medicine, and spare glasses. That is not excessive. If one wants to have a long life one must be prepared to take care of oneself in case of an accident or an emergency.
One thing I hope is that I do not outlive my wife, my children, or my grandchildren. I hope I live long enough so that my grandchildren have memories of me and get to know and love me. That is an important goal in my life. I look forward with joy to every spring. I love the birds who come to visit and feed in our garden. I love the plants and flowers that bloom.
Leo and Laney enjoy our garden too Jan 2024
I do a lot of serious reading (classics, non-fiction, biography) but I enjoy lighter fare such as adventure tales, mysteries and westerns. I enjoy reading jokes and joke books.
I love reading about baseball and listening to games (chiefly) via MLB at Bat. I listen to games in Spanish and English. I first listened to baseball games in Spanish in the 1970s and it helped develop my Spanish.
Otherwise, I don’t spend a lot of time on spectator sports. I glance at the newspaper but that’s about it. Most of the time I am happy to read about the final score.
I try to set time aside for PHYSICAL EXERCISE and JOY ( I try to walk daily in the park and clean the pool and garden). When the weather is good I swim once or twice a day. I love reading and listening to classical music so I have CD’s and a nice BOSE player, plus SPOTIFY plus ITUNES for my phone.
I love to read the papers -The Wall Street Journal and our local paper every morning or Commentary magazine. I listen to LONDON TIMES radio reports as well as the Daily Telegraph and some Israeli news as well.
I spend some time on PERSONAL GROWTH. I love studying languages and spend about 2-3 hours a day studying new languages and reading ones I know. I have taken up a new hobby! Drawing. I always have drawn a little bit in my language studies but I have decided I can improve the quality of my notebooks! I enjoy singing or humming songs. I enjoy reciting poetry by heart just for fun. I also set aside time for relaxation. If I am tired or have a headache I rest and have some tea with lemon, Splenda or honey. I make a thermos of it to sip all afternoon.
I love doing FACETIME with our grandchildren it is so wonderful to talk to them and see them so full of joy and happiness. It feels good to hear them say “YAYO, WHEN ARE YOU COMING TO VISIT?”
I enjoy phone conversations with a few friends but am not really a phone person. I have to plan to call someone. Basically, I think calling can be an intrusion. And I know some people don’t like long or serious conversations. So my conversations with books are more satisfying than most phone chit-chatting. But I call people who call me. People who don’t call me or write to me I pray for but don’t worry about. It’s sad when old friends drift away but the truth that’s life.
So I prefer to write on my blog,The Spirit of Cecilia or THE GILBERT HIGHET SOCIETY on FB or email people. I text some family and friends and share book titles via Audible.
I try to be moderate in what I eat and drink (I primarily drink water coffee and tea). I have a physical once or twice a year and take my medicines.
I know that if one is to enjoy a LONG LIFE one has to do what one can to stay as healthy as possible. Then the chances for a happy long life are better.
As a young man and in middle age I traveled a lot so I am happy that I had that experience. But now I really have lost my wanderlust. I only want to travel to visit our grandchildren. Most days I am at home, on the porch, in the garden, in my library, in the TV room , or listening to podcasts or books on tape in bed. My wife and I enjoy JEOPARDY and British mysteries and shows on Masterpiece Theater. I don’t drive very much anymore perhaps once a month or less! I spend some time on Twitter (X) and Facebook and check my email at least every other day. I enjoy corresponding with people in Italy, Scotland, Israel , and throughout the English-speaking world.
I have always had the Munro motto in mind which is Dread God (and obey his commandments because that is the whole duty of man). BIODH EAGAL DHE OIRRE in Gaelic or Reverence you unto God. It is a very ancient motto and reminds us that Munro is a Christian name -it means the descendant of the Men of the Halo River the Roe (the Saint’s River) a place name in Ireland. That is probably the first Bible quote I ever knew and I heard it at least from 1959. I think It helps to have God and a little religion in your life. But that’s just my opinion. People should have freedom of conscience and choose their own paths. The only thing I go do is set a good example and invite people to consider the Good Life as I see it and seek it.
An ancient motto I have known since at least 1960 is NE OBLIVISCARIS do not forget. This was the Regimental motto of my grandfather’s old Regiment 1914-1919, the Thin Red Line of Heroes (The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders) At Balaklava in the Crimean War, the Argylls were called the Gaelic Rock. If they had failed the entire British and Allied army may have been destroyed but they calmly spread out in a thin line of two, fixed bayonets and fired aimed volley after volley from their Enfield Rifles. Their commander Sir Colin Campbell said, “Lads, we have to stop them or fall in the effort.” The Argylls near him said to him laconically, “Aye, we’ll stand until you give the order.” The war correspondents who were present were astonished at their discipline and cool courage. The Thin Red Line of Heroes became a symbol of the courage and professionalism of the British Army but especially the Scottish Highland Regiments. Many of my ancestors served in Highland Regiments.
And of course, I am a loyal man so SEMPER FIDELIS (always faithful) is a motto also. This is the motto of the US Marine Corps.
Another motto is CUIMHNICH AIR NA DAOINE BHON TAINIG TUSA (REMEMBER THE PEOPLE YOU CAME FROM).
I believe marriage is a sacrament and I have always been loyal to my wife and family putting their security and happiness above everything else.
I face firmly towards the future but never forget the past. I know in a long journey some things have to be left behind.
I only wish for my granddaughters and future grandchildren that they will have strong faith, good values, a good education, and the warmth and security of a good family.
For that is the duty of a good man, a good father, and a good husband. If you live a good life you will want to live a long life and I think you have a better chance for achieving a long life.
Daily writing prompt
What are your thoughts on the concept of living a very long life?
Richard K Munro, Thomas Munro and Ruth Munro in Spain circa 1980
If I had a freeway billboard I would post this famous quotation by EPICTETUS. For many years I had this quote reproduced in many languages including Spanish, Arabic and Chinese (made for me by students).
“We must not believe the many, who say that only free people ought to be educated, but we should rather believe the philosophers who say that only the educated are free.”
Elastolin dioramaThe Discus ThrowerSanta Maria model circa 1992 made by RUTH, IAN and RICHARD MUNRO at CHRISTMAS
The perfect Book Nook or private library has at least one plush leather chair preferably with a rocker and nice padded as I have in the corner. It is an old friend I have owned it for over 30 years and my father enjoyed using it. I always let my father have my best chair and I would sit in my mother’s chair, my second-best chair. It is a carpeted room. My chair has its own special lamp. I have a ceiling fan for the summer plus some built-in lights. My room has a table for study plus two desks and many bookshelves, some decorated with fossils, busts, baseball memorabilia, and toy soldiers. I have an electric pencil sharpener I use almost daily. I have over 60 composition notebooks filled with language notes and about 20 blank ones for future use. I have windows that look out towards the garden and in the summer, I see many birds and squirrels dancing about. We live in a very quiet neighborhood next to a nice park with trees, a pond, and paths to walk. To the left of my desk, I have a French door that opens to the covered patio which has chairs and a table on which I study on find days in the spring, fall, and early winter. It has a screen door from which I can hear music in my rooms. I have no TV in my book nook but I have a radio on my BOSE CD player and many CD’s chiefly classical. And of course, I sometimes watch YouTube videos on my laptop (but not often). My music is chiefly from SPOTIFY, but also via my phone and BOSE Microlink (Itunes) . In the Spring summer and Fall, I often listen to baseball games on the porch or in the library while reading or doing language studies. I used to listen to the radio a lot but now mostly listen to Audible books or podcasts.
There is plenty of storage for paper. I have a printer connected to the laptop. In my library I have about ten reems on the shelves and two in a drawer under the printer. I have a larger supply in reserve in the garage. I have three chairs besides the leather chair. Next to the leather chair, I have a side table that belonged to my father with a drawer. Another chair belonged to my mother and is about 65 years old. I have boxes for index cards and coffee mugs filled with #2 pencils, colored pencils Bausch and Lomb magnifying glasses. In a wooden box, I have a chrome Cross Pen that belonged to my father. The box has a spare cartridge I use the pen to sign personal letters or important documents. I have a phone next to my laptop and a brass hand winding, Tiffany clock, hydrometer, barometer, and thermometer. It is my backup case of a blackout, and it serves as a paperweight. I have two staplers on my desk It was a retirement gift to my father in 1976. Next to the phone is a reproduction of Myron’s Discobolus or “discus thrower”, Greek: Δισκοβόλος, Diskobólos). I picked this up at the Vatican circa 1972; they have a wonderful full-sized marble Roman copy found, I believe, at Hadrian’s Villa. The Greek original in bronze is lost but we know the work from numerous Roman copies. Munich there is a fine Roman bronze reproduction of Myron’s Discobolus, 2nd century AD. I have several busts of famous historical figures some American but mostly Greek, Roman, classical composers or literary figures.
I have a tall glass display case filled with a model of the SANTA MARIA, that my mother, my son and I put together one Christmas before her death (1992 I believe). My mother did the rigging. There are also “ruins” and dioramas of charging Elastolin Roman soldiers on food and horses, Huns, Goths, and Normans (the “Barbarians”. They date back to 1963-1971. There are a few I/R figures and French Starluxe mixed in. There are two chariots and some Roman siege weapons. On the mantle of my fireplace, I have cards, models, and toy soldiers. I have a Lewis and Clark Diorama I bought at a museum in Iowa in 2004 (it includes Sacagawea and York). I have followed almost the entire trail of Lewis and Clark starting in 1982 and finishing in 2004. On the walls I have art reproductions and historical photographs I have collected over the past 60 years such as Churchill holding a tommy gun I have for example a full-size museum replica of ATHENA MOURNING. At my main desk, I have books of quotations, reference books, and dictionaries. I use the Internet and electronic dictionaries but find book versions easier to study and for annotations. I have a variety of English dictionaries. The one I use the most is the 4edtion American Heritage. One of my favorites is the Oxford Companion to English Literature – a nice leather-bound edition. It is the 5th edition edited by Margaret Drabble which is the last edition to have complete commentaries on Walter Scott and other classic authors. I have an extensive library of English language books chiefly classics, biographies, and histories but also baseball books and large-sized art reproduction books. I also have a modest library of Latin books (many bilingual), Greek books including the Bible (I am studying Greek presently, Gaelic books (chiefly song books and poetry but some history and nonfiction), many (hundreds) of Spanish books, some Portuguese books, some French books, some German books. I have a German-Spanish dictionary for example and a Latin-Spanish dictionary. One of my favorite reference books is MAMMALS of the WORLD (1964) which is very useful for ascertaining the indigenous names of mammals in many languages and of course which has curious animal facts and thousands of black-and-white photographs.
I can’t say I have been EXTREMELY productive as a writer in my life but I have read and studied much and been able to teach many. Review reading via rote rehearsal is effective but it is always better to note take and create study cards from notes and use colors and pictures whenever possible. ’
I know Spanish very well, for example, and often speak it but I read and review Spanish at least 20-30 minutes a day (I don’t usually take any notes). For new languages such as Italian or Greek, I take notes sentences dialogues, and translations and write new vocabulary, I draw colored pictures and copy words that give me difficulty three times over and highlight them with yellow. I probably practice 5-7 languages a day. I read Portuguese very well but found I speak it less well since I have not used it daily for more than 40 years. But I practice listening and speaking via Duolingo and so have regained most of my former fluency. I never lost my ability to read but found my writing had declined due to lack of practice and when speaking I tended to fall into Spanish. My book nook is my quiet refuge from the world.
Thomas Munro, Jr and Richard Munro at Camp Watonka circa 1967 with our dog Albert II.WINSTON CHURCHILL DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR IN THE UNITED KINGDOM The Prime Minister Winston Churchill poses outside 10 Downing Street, London, England Churchill retired in 1955.famous scene from 1955 film THE SEVEN YEAR ITCHHank Aaron’s 1955 baseball card. Ironically it mentions Babe Ruth under the T/F1955 D uncirculated Washington quarter.1955 Hank Aaron TOPPS baseball card.
Richard K. Munro (That’s me!) was born in New Jersey, Dec 12, 1955 just after midnight. I was named after Richard Strauss, the famous composer and one of my mother’s uncles whose name was Rickard. As a boy I was often called Rickard, Ricardo or Ricky Ricardo. My sisters had both been born in Brooklyn. We moved to Livingston, NJ in 1958.
1955 Brooklyn Dodgers won their first and only World Championship against the Yankees. My mother was pregnant with me and my grandfather (Auld Pop) said, “Ruthie, it’ll be a boy for sure!” (all my cousins and siblings were girls). I went to Ebbets Field in 1955 in utero.
1955 was Hank Aaron’s 2nd year and first big homer year (27HR, 106 RBI and .314 average). He later became my favorite player. I first saw him play at the Polo Grounds vs the Mets in 1962.
1955-D quarter was fairly rare. Mintage at Denver was only : 3,182,400 I know this because in the 1960s in order to complete a Boy Scout project I had to have all the coins of 1955. I tried all summer to find a 1955 D but in the end I bought an uncirculated one. I have all the years of silver quarters from 1932-1964 but lack some of the 1932 S and D coins. I lost interest in coin collecting when they switched to cupronickel coins. After 1966 it became harder and harder to find old coins in circulation. I still like silver coins but do not actively collect coins in a serious way anymore but I give half dollars as gifts or tips for fun.
Rosa Parks was arrested after refusing to give up her bus seat to a white passenger…this I know from history books.
I know Eisenhower was the US president in 1955. In 1955, President Eisenhower planned the interstate highway system. It would begin in 1956. Initially planned as a way of moving troops and military hardware from one end of the nation to the other. Gas was very cheap less than 30 cents a gallon.
In April 1955 Churchill retired as Prime Minister. The leaders my parents and grandparents praised and talked about the most were FDR, Churchill, Eisenhower, MacArthur, and John F. Kennedy. My father met MacArthur in the war and my uncle served under Eisenhower in ww2 and met Ike while Ike was president of Columbia University.
The St. Lawrence Seaway opened I always loved maps and geography and this was always mentioned by my elementary school teachers just like the Panama Canal or Suez Canal.
The USS Nautilus became the first operational nuclear-powered submarine I know this because I made a plastic model of it as a boy. I also know the name because it was the name of Captain Nemo’s submarine in the 1954 film 20,000 Leagues under the Sea based on Verne’s work. One of my favorite films as a boy.
Jonas Salk’s polio vaccine is declared safe and effective I was inoculated with the polio vaccine in elementary school.
The Soviet Union and its Eastern Bloc allies signed the Warsaw Pact I know this because NATO was founded in 1949 and I taught World History for many years. Every year we made maps of the Warsaw Pact/ Nation and East and West Berlin. I know it ended in 1991. I know Germany became fully independent in 1955 and joined NATO in that year.
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. became a leader in the first major event of the U.S. civil rights movement, a bus boycott in Montgomery, Alabama. I heard a lot about him as a boy and remember his assassination in 1968 and Robert Kennedy’s famous speech.
World War II Allies signed a treaty restoring Austria’s independence.
Murder of Emmett Till This I did not know until many years later, It was never mentioned in school or in AP US history as far as I know. I was aware of JIm Crow and lynchings in the Old South, however. A horrific tale really.
BAD DAY AT BLACK ROCK with Spencer Tracy was a notable 1955 film.
The Desperate Hours by William Wyler Humphrey Bogart and Frederic March
THE LADY and THE TRAMP was one of the great Disney musical cartoons
12 Angry Men and Inherit the Wind were famous plays that opened in 1955. I later saw the film versions.
Lord of the Rings by Tolkien was published.
Surprised by Joy by CS Lewis was published.
The Wasteland was published by T S Eliot
Mister Roberts (John Ford) starring Henry Fonda was a notable film one of Jack Lemmon’s early films
“Seven Year Itch” was a notable Marylyn Monroe comedy by Billy Wilder one of my favorite directors. Marilyn Monroe famously appears in a scene where her white dress is accidentally blown up around her legs when she walks over a subway grate in New York City.
I know I LOVE LUCY was one of the top TV shows in 1955 because my parents mentioned that was their favorite TV show of the 50s. Later I saw it in re-runs.
There are numerous individuals who have positively influenced my life but the one who led to a dramatic change in my future prospects personally and professionally was Mr. Eli Gorelick of Livingston High School. He was my AP Spanish teacher 1970-73. He was born in Cuba of Sephardic Jews who had lived in Salonika and Constantinople. So his people were Ladino-speaking, originally. He was a Korean War veteran and passionate for music, literature, plays and sports. He transformed me from a mediocre Spanish student more focused on Latin and history than Spanish. He did it by incorporating authentic Spanish culture via music, sports, movies, and cuisine. I was fascinated by the history of Spain including the Arab conquest and Jewish Spain during the Convivencia. It was he who recommended the (then) wonderful and challenging University of Northern Iowa program in Spanish. I was a strong AP Spanish student but Mr. Gorelick felt there was no substitute for living and studying in Spain to gain authentic Spanish fluency. So I did and it changed my life. Spanish (along with typing and authentic bilingualism) ) was my one real expertise and it always helped me get job opportunities. Spanish was and is a very practical language second only to English. Along the way, I married a Spanish woman. We have three children and so far four grandchildren. All of them are bilingual and native Spanish speakers. From my early years, I realized what it took to cultivate children who were authentically bilingual (indeed potentially multilingual). We made many sacrifices but I believe it has paid off and will pay off. Two of our children are teachers (one is a k-6 Dual Immersion teacher and another is a high school AP Spanish teacher as well as a tutor/mentor for a professional Sports team. When he interviewed for his job the people were astonished at his total fluency in Spanish and his complete command of sports and particularly baseball terminology. The roots of that fluency were with Mr. Gorelick who had us read EL DIARIO sports page in Spanish and listen to Buck Canel broadcast Yankee games and the World Series. Mr. Gorelick is no longer with us but I will never forget him and he is a great example of how a teacher can change lives for the better.
Since I retired I have reviewed LATIN by completing two books of Latin readings and then by studying MODERN GREEK and ITALIAN. I also review Scottish Gaelic, GERMAN, SPANISH and PORTUGUESE about 10-15 minutes each. Those languages I have studied formally and know reasonably well. It takes me about 25-30 minutes to do a Greek lesson and only about 10-15 minutes to do Italian so I figure Greek is twice as hard as Italian. I find language study engrossing. I lose myself in “Grammar Land”
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