My Siblings

How grateful I am for my siblings. One would never think of having ten kids....now-a-days. Thank God for the gift to me of each of them. I love you.

Rosie, Joanne, Richard, Elizabeth, John, Tom, ME, Bernadette - Jim and Marge previously deceased

Rosie, Joanne, Richard, Elizabeth, John, Tom, ME, Bernadette - Jim and Marge previously deceased

This is the last time we all got together - 2013, celebrating Richard's 80th birthday. Joanne the magnanimous , the oldest at the time, has moved on to bigger and better places since. I look forward to a big reunion (but not too soon) of all ten of us together again.

In the meantime I am grateful to have some good one-on-one quality time with each sib, that I am lucky enough to have time with. May I live my mantra, as time will run out - Love in the moment and the energy therefrom will spread beyond my little fxxxxxx imagination!

A Taste of Teraormina, Sicily

All the senses are aroused in Teraormina. What a treat to visit and photograph, for ten days, especially with the McGinty's!

Maui Maui at Nick's Fish Market (Chicago, San Diego and Hawaii) has been my favorite meal for thirty years - Now it is Grouper at Gioli's in Teraomina (3 visits in 10 days).

The fish market in Catania, down the road a short distance from Taormina, is a cultural and visual bonanza to stroll and photograph. I could have photographed there all ten days.

But, there was more to see, hear, smell, taste and touch (and photograph) - collectively reaching a good place in my soul. 

We have been to Italy to visit the McGinty's five times, and the most delightful part of our visits is always the three hours around the table sharing good food, wine and conversation. Patty would make the trip just for the conversation. I can't lie, I also delight in the food, wine and visual beauty.....and the potential to capture a great image that reaches my soul, as I re-visit the feeling of the capture, while viewing the image on my wall. I continue the hunt for "the image of a life-time"! If you are interested in seeing beautiful Teraomina, check out www.mesipe.com, menu, new prints and Teraomina, Sicily.

Thank you John and Elizabeth. Our visits with you are very special. Love to you and yours. May you continue to scg, I know I have while with you.

Do you have an Opportunity Fund?

We hear, from everyone, about having an Emergency Fund of 3 to 6 months of living expenses - great, it makes sense, but do you hear about the prudence of having an Opportunity Fund - a fund of 5% to 10% of your investments, available for opportunities you'd  love to take advantage of - It may be a trip of a life time that comes up all of a sudden, or a private investment with relatives that impassions you, or a public company that you are convinced will be the next Apple! 

I have seen great opportunities often, only to pass them up because funds weren't available, -  they were in long-term investments that I didn't want to sell now because the markets were off, or would upset my investment strategy. 

When you have an opportunity fund, you will be open to opportunities, and they will present themselves to you - your reticular activator will kick in, and you will love the fact that you took the risk to do something (with a relatively small amount of your investable dollars) that turned you on ..... and who knows ... could turn out great.

Take a ride and love it. 

Spotlight on A Secret World

Have you seen the best-picture Oscar nominee movie Spotlight yet? If you haven't, I highly recommend it. It is an emotionally charged, well played account of the ugly true story of sexual abuse and cover up in the Catholic Church; a sorry story that needs to be amplified and understood by all, especially Church hierarchy, if there ever is going to be reform. It took the scandal to involve a corrupt Cardinal, hundreds of pedophile priests, the Boston Globe and my brother Richard (yes, and others) to crack open, in a wide scale manner, the horrific Secret.

Richard Sipe www.AWRSipe.com with authored books on celibacy

Richard Sipe www.AWRSipe.com with authored books on celibacy

I remember, being at Richard's and his wife Marianne's house in Baltimore, over 25 years ago - in the late 80's, and hearing Richard factually, and rather clinically talk about his soon to be published (1990) book A SECRET WORLD, Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy. The facts were shocking. And .... that Dick was willing to confront the powerful Church, including many clergy he befriended, while a priest (he left the priesthood in 1970) and with his counseling practice, over many many years, was courageous and life purpose driven - more than I realized at the time. I remember Dick talking about Andrew Greeley - priest, sociologist and popular novelist -  Greeley dismissed Richard's statistics as anecdotal and meaningless. "Sipe's not a sociologist". No he is not - his pedophile statistics, albeit high, were too low for Boston. Richard is a psychotherapist, an advocate for the sexually abused and a church reformer.

After seeing the movie Spotlight, I dusted off the quarter century old book - A SECRET WORLD and looked up Pedophilia in the Index. There were many references. I started reading at the longest reference, pages 168-187. The secret was clearly out - more than ten years before Boston. It's taken this long, twenty-five years, and an important movie, to have impact (or should have impact) for real positive change to materially reduce sexual abuse and covering up thereof in the Church!

Don't let Richard's matter-of-fact talk in Spotlight or in his books fool you. His passion-driven love priority to help the abused and cause positive change is very personal and very emotional for him - more than I can image.

Congratulations Richard. You deserve an Oscar.  

 

A Universal Truth - Love is Good

"Success" in life is the realization of our unique good (love) - a personal feeling that each of us carries with us through life, and is best manifested by living our natural, God-given passions and talents. I tell life-wealth planning professionals to not be afraid (as I was) of advocating for your clients LOVES and PASSIONS - it is the "crux of the (planning) matter." Promote the passion and the money will follow, because drive, to do the actions to live the passions, will be important enough to get it done, one way or another. After all, it's a passion.

According to Values.com, Picasso once said "The meaning of life is to find your gift (God-given passions and talents). The purpose of life is to give it way." I agree with this ideal, strive to practice it, and plan to promote it, where I can. One of my heroes, Jim Tures, born 012345 (cool), continues to inspire me, to understand that "all is gift". My book, ADVOCATE PLANNING: To Do What You Love To Do is all about living our gift and giving it away. It is about love of self and love of others. It is about self-realizing, connecting and giving. Set up a simple process for yourself to make it easier to order your priorities to do your passions. Read ADVOCATE PLANNING: To Do What You Love To Do. It's free, under "book" from this site. 

 I now realize, after 30 blogs and nearly a year of blogging, learning, that I should have named my book, on life-wealth planning, THE LOVE TRIANGLE, self-realizing, connecting and giving. Readership of the 337 page free down-load book would be more enticing with talk of passionate love, hard struggles and happy endings, rather than the mondane topic of "planning". Life-wealth planning is all about real stories and real passion. Love.

My planners at AIS Planning sent their clients a copy of Financial Intelligence, by Doug Lennick as  a Thanksgiving gift. The book is about aligning your ideal self with your real self in all financial decisions, by better awareness of your values, emotions, thoughts, physiology and decision making process. The concepts are good. I reference their exercises in ADVOCATE PLANNING. They have a heart, formed with money on the cover. I read that as - use your money resource to do what you love to do - one of the  premises in ADVOCATE PLANNING. Interestingly though, there is no mention of love or passion in the text. Is that a sensitivity to talking about love and passion in the same sentence with financial planning? 

What was more sticking to me, though, was their research, which concluded that principles and values overlap, and principles differ from values in that "principles are virtually universal: people everywhere tend to believe in their importance.... Where values tend to be an expression of what's important to us individually. (Furthermore) the research on universal principles identified four primary principles held in common - Integrity, Responsibility, Compassion, and Forgiveness". My observation is that they are talking about love being a universal principle - love of self and love of others. Integrity and Responsibility are matters of self-love. And, Compassion and Forgiveness are matters of love of others.

Why is this important? Because my personal study and development of the Advocate Planning Model was based on the premise that of all the "zillion" of values to consider in the priorities planning process, the important values to focus on, to make it simple and effective for life-wealth planning, boil down to love of self and love of others, which I understand now, are actually principles, universal truths, not just plain old values. Having a priorities planning process based on principles, universally important values, makes it easier to understand why the narrow focus on so few values in my easy to use process. I am now going to refer to the process as "Principle-based" priorities - love of self and love of others; self-realizing by learning, serving and mentoring your passions and talents - connecting by loving yourself, others, nature and God with exploring, relating and playing - and giving by protecting love ones, contributing and transferring your money, values, and principles.

Individual values are not to be ignored in the love priorities process. They are part of understanding your planning "foundation". There are only two fundamental steps to making good decisions in living your passion-driven life: 1. Develop an understanding of yourself by connecting the dots of your history, dreams, values, passions and plans; and 2. Maintain a recurring process of setting priorities and doing activities that result in doing what you love to do! It is in the recurring process that I limit the exercise to the principles of SCG; to make the process effective by becoming second nature, while focusing on what is important for love of self and love of others. Try it.

What is most important to you NOW, in taking your next action to fully live your passion-driven life? Know yourself and set up a simple process which becomes second nature for you and any people, personal or professional, that advocate for your success - the realization of your unique good (love).

 

My Favorite Photos of 2015

I felt prolific with the camera in 2015. I had a hard time deciding on my favorite images. I started with 350 images I liked, narrowed it down to 60, then finally to the 16 I show on my Best of the year page. I had a hard time picking my favorite image of the year - you get attached. I am not  objective. In the end I decide with my gut; how I feel now and how I think I'll feel about the image years down the road - staying power. My favorite is an image I took at dusk, the last day of October, with a particular colorful sky as a backdrop to gold, pink and black mountain tops, with the foreground being bare birch on the Richmond, Vermont property we acquired to build family homesteads and a photo studio. I suspect the personal attachment to the property played a role in my decision. What do you think?

October's End PhaseOne IQ180 240mm 1/6 sec f9 ISO 35

The image I wrestled the most with for my favorite spot was Spring Moon Light, which is Patty's all time favorite, and adorns a prime spot on our condo wall. I love it too.

Spring Moon Light Canon 1DS Mark III 100mm 1/8 sec f14 ISO 100

I made considerable updates and additions to www.MySCGpriorities.com . I now have Note Cards available for you at $3 a card, with quantity units of 25 per card. I hope you visit and find something you would like to have - In any case, enjoy, and may you live your love priorities. 

Christmas and Love Priorities

So much love is expressed at Christmas - It's wonderful. "What a Wonderful World - I see friends shaking hands, saying, How do you do? They're really saying , I love You". 

First Snow 2009-10 Winter - January 10th, 2010. Hope for 2015-16 Winter?

It's unfortunate Christmas is called a holiday; a day away from the norm - "a legal day off, a vacation". Wouldn't it be wonderful if every day were like Christmas, where love were expressed freely? As I grow older and wiser I become more and more convinced that God is the love within us. The message of Christmas just might be - love as you can.....all the time! - A celebration of the birth of true love.

It maybe silly, and telling for me to say, but,....I love to watch the Hallmark station between Thanksgiving and Christmas. I always cry at the end of each movie. I have the theme of all the shows figured out and I watch anyway - there is no mystery (maybe a little magic) - true love always wins out. The theme is: a struggle with a decision that has to be made. It may be a job choice, a living location, a family business struggle. And invariably there is a decision about which man or woman to go with. The movies are always sealed with a kiss, when everyone knows that the "true love", regardless if it had to do with the main characters Self-realizing, Connecting, or Giving, was chosen.

Merry Christmas to you always....and love to you and yours!

Big F Feelings

There are little f feelings like excitement and conquest, and then there are BIG F FEELINGS like Love and Gratitude. Love or gratitude, which is grandest?....I suspect love, but maybe they go hand and hand....with one comes the other. 

William Arthur Ward, a motivational speaker, spoke of gratitude: "Gratitude can transform common days into thanksgivings, turn routine jobs into joy, and change ordinary opportunities into blessings." I love it.

Why can't all in the world see the obvious - It is gratitude and love that will transform the world to a peaceful, coexistent, wonderfully diverse, place to live!

Visualization

The saturday before last, Patty and I meandered south to the quaint river village of Middlebury, to attend a late afternoon opening reception for four well known Vermont photographers, at Edgewater Gallery. Edgewater Gallery is a well regarded New England gallery with great light, high ceilings, beautiful display areas, and generally houses expensive oil and water-color pieces by respected New England artists. I know they periodically display photographers work and I wanted to see these photographers new images, talk to them and "see" if I felt I have what it takes to  exhibit there, with some of my large prints of Lake Champlain and other regional, images. If I may so, I can see it. I really believe it...and  I am happy about that, because that belief will help drive me to get there - This is a little of the "Ali affirmation" I spoke of in the Acadia Adventure blog, October 17th. 

Silk 2 PhaseOne IQ 180 240mm 1/6th sec f20 ISO 100

As Patty and I were walking over the bridge, around the corner from the gallery reception,  about 3:30pm, a half hour before the start of the reception, I looked down at the falls below and said: I love it - I have to come back here and shoot the falls with this late afternoon light - At the right exposure the water is going to look like silk. I returned, to capture the image above, and it wasn't what I was visualizing. I know I need to expect the unexpected, while capturing moments in nature (the people like forms in the shadows above are an example), but I wasn't satisfied with the results compared to what I was visualizing, so I went back another day and captured the image below, which is more like what I was visualizing.

Silk Phaseone IQ 180 480mm 1/5 sec f22 ISO 35

I have the pixels to print Silk 36" x 50". I will do some large proofs to see if the image is what I visualized or if I shoot again. At this point, I love the silk like strands of water....but that's just me - the first hurdle to a gallery wall.

Another type of Rush....and Clarity

I went to my local urologist yesterday for my annual follow-up PSA, as a result of my radical prostate surgery in 2004. The doc said: "How long has it been since your prostate surgery?" I said, with a question in my voice, it will be eleven years this December. He said; "It's unusual for prostate cancer to reoccur after that many years, but yours may have. We will confirm with another PSA, and then we can talk about radiation". WHAT!?

A Rush PhaseOne IQ 180 240mm 15sec f9 ISO 35

I surprised myself with how clear my thoughts became after hearing the doctor mention I may have cancer again. It is clear to me....I will not have radiation. I will live simply, meaningfully, do what I love to do, be with who I love to be with, and be a good person....for as long a time as I am blessed to be given.

I didn't go to the lab to draw the next vial of blood, Kristin, a pleasant young assistant, who is thinking about being a radiology tech, said; "I usually don't draw blood, but I am the only person here right now, so I will try once. I don't want you to be a pin cushion so if it doesn't work the first time I will send you to the lab." She focused and diligently inserted the needle. My questionable blood started flowing down the plastic tube, oh so slowly. It gave me time to find out Kristin was in Vet School when she got pregnant, had to quit, but it was a blessing, she said, because in the last three and a half years she decided to go another route and wouldn't change a thing....she loves her daughter and married the father, who she loves.

I asked when would I find out about the new PSA test. They said 10am tomorrow, but if you register for online records, you may be able to see the results before tomorrow. After leaving the urology dept. I went to the eye specialist dept to see how the images they bought from me looked on the walls. They were impressed and I was happy. They asked for calling cards to give to admirers. I felt good. I then went home, thought more, with much clarity, got console from Patty and registered for on-line access to my records. About eight hours after thinking my remaining time will be short, I saw the results <.01. I cried. Well, what the hell, maybe I'll live with the love that became clear with the thought of death, no matter how many more years I am blessed to have, to live my love priorities!

Fall's End

Of course Fall doesn't end until December 21st... however, the leaves are now coming down fast and furious, and one starts thinking about snow, and a new season, about this time of year. This Fall (I suppose I should say...thus far) has been a "a rush" for me, with images produced beyond my expectations.

Fall's End PhaseOne IQ180 240mm 1/6 sec f9 ISO 35

I am so excited about moving beyond Lake Champlain, with trees and non-Champlain water, I added  Trees, Tree Abstracts, Inland Water and Coastal Water sections to my website www.mesipe.com. In searching my photo data base, I surprised myself with how trees are so prevalent already in my shooting. I love the image above, taken October 30th, from the upper field of our new, Richmond, Vermont, family property. It may be my favorite "image of a life-time" .... to date. We'll see if it has wall staying power.

Exploring the Richmond area, for the first time, this last month or so, has been a pure delight. Fall in Vermont is universally known as great Fall foliage sightseeing ... and who knew... it exceeded my expectations... and only fifteen minutes from our home in Burlington.

Water Rush PhaseOne IQ180 240mm 1/10 sec f9 ISO 35

Take a minute and look at a few of my new images at www.mesipe.com. It is hard to think that Winter can top Fall for delightful image making.... but who knows... I'm open to it!



I Love Birch Trees

I have always loved birch trees and am delighted to discover that birch are prevalent in our soon to be new home of Richmond, Vermont. I will now add birch trees to my photography water fixation. The beauty is ... Lake Champlain tributaries run through the area with birch all-over their banks.

Richmond Backyard Hasselblad Stellar 19.31mm 1/500 sec f5.6 ISO 100

I am new to searching for birch in the area. With just a few days opening my reticular activator to birch, I am seeing birch all over, in particularly beautiful settings.

Richmond Birch 1 PhaseOne IQ 180 300mm 1/50 sec f5 ISO 35 2 stitched images

Birch Fall PhaseOne IQ 180 300mm 1/4 sec f11 ISO 35

I am anxious to look for winter light on snow covered birch and moving water. Maybe my image of a life-time is right in my future backyard! 

Acadia Adventure

After attending my first PhaseOne Camera sponsored workshop, earlier this month in Bar Harbor, Maine and the nearby Acadia National Park, I have new meaning for a passion for photography.

Water On the Rocks PhaseOne IQ 180 120mm 1/3 sec f14 ISO 35

The three independent instructors (there were two PhaseOne professionals present as well) for the ten attending the workshop, are world class Landscape photographers, with the well deserved self-confidence and self-belief for them to say so - a Mohammed Ali like affirmation. Check them out: Tim Wolcott at www.GalleryoftheAmericanLandscape.com, Kevin Raber at www.luminous-landscape.com and Steven Friedman at www.friedmanphoto.com

Clearly passionate about their photography, and possibly obsessive, these three pay attention to every little detail in perfecting their images. They first understand that without good content, composition and emotion, to grab the eye of the viewer, no extra attention to the details will make any difference to entice. But with the objective of producing very large images with the very capable PhaseOne equipment, the attention to the details, once the basics are present, does make a world of difference when you are expecting the best from yourself. 

I made a list of equipment they use to help perfect their images, some of which I will purchase to help advance my photography. They include a 3x12 magnifier to check the focus while taking a picture, a Big Stopper (10 times neutral density filter) to buy more time while taking an image, to add affect of more motion, a sun tracking application to determine the sun's location at any time, a distance calculator to be more precise with the area of sharpness in your image, a top notch monitor calibrator to make sure your monitor is going to reflect how the image prints, a view finder to view a scene to the scale you wish to print, and a twelve foot ladder and tripod to get above the brush to view the image you want. A twelve foot tripod?..... now that's obsessive....maybe a drone though.

The point in mentioning all this "stuff" is that with a great deal of passion in doing what we love to do, we will likely be successful. Success, as I am defining success is - the realization of our unique good; world class, in our own right - a feeling we will only know as it relates to ourselves and our effort in doing our best at what we do.

Grass Birch Berries PhaseOne IQ 180 80mm 1 sec f16 ISO 35

I am grateful to have been able to attend this extraordinary Acadia workshop and learn from not only the independent instructors, but the well informed staff of PhaseOne. Kevin Raber, for me, was the "grand finale" when he presented a twenty minute display of images, accompanied with music and inspirational commentary. I realized, at the end, that he is a great example of what I speak to in my book about Self-realizing, Connecting and Giving.

Thank you Drew for doing the extra details to make for a memorable and learning experience!

Extraordinary Light

Patty said..."you have to see this sky". I seldom run for a camera at twilight to take a picture in our backyard. September 21st was different. I saw the sky and immediately knew this was light to be captured. The next day several people said..."did you see the sky last night? It truly was extraordinary. In processing the image below, I actually reduced the color saturation - It was too unbelievable and looked too intense. As it is, it is hard to imagine...surely, a momentary natural gift from God.

Extraordinary Light Canon EOS iDS Mark III 220mm 1/4 sec f8 ISO 100 4 stitched images

Lake Champlain - Pristine With Improving Water Quality? - Part 3

Still wanting to exhibit a high impact photo related to water quality of Lake Champlain for the All Souls Interfaith Gathering Place exhibit in October, I went to my data base of 10,000 images of the Lake. I found the image below, which I captured on the Burlington waterfront in July of 2012, at the height of the drought. Ugly, yet artistic, right? 

Too little rain, too much rain - nature tests our ability to deal with it's delicate balance - a lesson on balance, relevant  for many natural aspects of life. You name it - too little or too much can cause havoc - not just water....sun, food, drink...even sex.

Drought Affect Canon EOS Mark III 100mm 1/1000 sec f6.3 ISO 100

Lake Champlain - Pristine With Improving Water Quality? - Part 2

Stacy, a friendly clerk at my local post office, said, while asking how her summer was going - " It's been a great summer....except...except for the last month. We are selling our boat and putting in a swimming pool because we are fed up with the Blue Green Algae in the St. Albans Bay and Georgia Beach, where we have been boating and swimming for years. We don't want to fish in the Lake any longer, and certainly can't swim in the Lake with all the algae."

I drove the thirty miles north from Burlington to St. Albans to check the area for myself. I asked the only two  fisherman on the St. Albans Bay pier where the beaches were - "Oh, St. Albans Beach is over there, and Georgia Beach is a few miles south on the Lake Road, over there (pointing to the south). But, you can't swim....there closed"

Closed Today. Closed Yesterday. Closed Tomorrow. Closed. Closed. Closed.

Closed Today. Closed Yesterday. Closed Tomorrow. Closed. Closed. Closed.

St. Albans Bay water quality has been in the news a lot lately. It's problems with the Blue Green Algae will no doubt add fuel for the water quality passionates during the forum with water quality stakeholders at All Souls, Interfaith Gathering Place in October. Knowing my images are going to be on the walls at the Gathering Place, I wanted to capture the ugly algae to catch the attention of the forum participants. I decided on the image below. I have to apologize - I can't capture ugly; I am programed to look for beauty.

 

Blue Green PhaseOne IQ 180 35mm 1/3 sec f11 ISO 35

Lake Champlain - Pristine With Improving Water Quality

In October I will be exhibiting about 20 images from my Lake Champlain project at the All Souls Interfaith Gathering Space, Shelburne, Vermont, in conjunction with an important forum of stakeholders to improve the water quality of Lake Champlain.

Meach Cove Sunlight Canon EOS IDS Mark III 300mm 1/15 sec f22 ISO 640 7 stitched images

I love Lake Champlain and generally, my images depict it as pristine landscape. Yet, it's a real challenge to maintain a high water quality with 18 square miles of water shed and run-off  for every square mile of the lake; this is about six times greater than the great lakes. 

Every time we get a heavy rain I cringe, knowing the beaches will close due to unhealthy coliform counts, at least for a short while. Can you imagine being permanently restricted from taking a dip in this precious Lake on a hot summer's day? Waste water treatment has kept the phosphorous down for now, but with new land development, population growth and desire to improve crop yields, current efforts to protect water quality result in a constant battle just to meet the status quo, not to mention make improvements. 

If a priority is high enough it will get done! That's my belief. One way, sooner or later priorities call our attention either by value or consequence. If improving Lake Champlain's water quality is made a high enough priority it will be done. Isn't it our responsibility to leave our environment as unspoiled as we found it? Indeed, in a better condition than we found it. With everything there needs to be a balance, but spend any time experiencing the natural beauty of Lake Champlain and tell me the weight doesn't fall heavy to  the side that it is our responsibility, our opportunity, to preserve this God-given environment that holds the pride of Vermont.

Meach cove farms 2 Canon eos mark iii 300 mm 1/60 sec f11 iso 640 6 stitched images


Shirley

Shirley

 

 

Shirley was the most significant-other to my father, Walter. She was life-blood for dad, personally and professionally, at Sipe & Gray Oil Co. for about fifty years. She was much more than the secretary/bookkeeper; she was my dad’s keel, under the stormy surface, in stiller waters, keeping the ship afloat, with loving care and concern.

 

And, Shirley was more significant to me than I realized when  I was younger and less wise. She was the guiding hand during my first job at 16, while I helped get accounts receivable statements out on the exact right day, and learned the importance of balancing the books down to the penny. Shirley’s pleasant demeanor and loving care lead me to a career in accounting and financial planning, where I had the honor of returning a guiding hand to her and dad at S&G.

 

I won’t forget Shirley’s warmth, care and love…..and the fishing on Lake Marie, her quiet presences at milestone events when I was growing up, and the screaming love that was manifested with her gorgeous cakes.

 

May you have eternal happiness and love Shirley. I love you.

 

Mike Sipe, protired

Burlington, Vermont

www.MySCGpriorities.com….influenced early by you, Shirley

A Day in the 70th year Celebration

August 9th, Just a day after my 69th birthday I, and Patty, who turned 69 in April, celebrated a  Minnesota "potluck" with our families, serving up Brats and Sauerkraut under the disguise of celebrating a day in our 70th year of life. It was followed by a Saint Paul Saints ball game in their new, wonderful ball park in downtown St. Paul. It was a great day for me; having family come together and spending time reflecting back to my boyhood, including my boyhood love for baseball.

Allis-Chalmers PhaseOne IQ 180 120mm 1/30th sec f22 ISO 100 3 stitched images

I move on. Briefly reflecting back is great, fixating there is not. In Toledo, Ohio, half way back to Vermont, from our wonderful visit to Minnesota, in a Outback Steak House, next to our Marriott Hotel, after 11 hours on the road, I felt a most wonderful feeling. I don't know where it came from or why. I looked over at the table next to us, seeing 8 or so "old" people - gray hair, if they were lucky enough to have some, sagging body parts, waddles, blemishes and bellies and I just smiled, thinking we are they and they are beautiful. I felt a sense of freedom, earned wisdom, light-heartedness, connectivity and time....still time to do more of what we love to do. I am feeling like an old Allis-Chalmers tractor, staying tuned up as well as can be, to plow more fields, not worried about making hay when the sun is shining, but just doing what turns me on, now.