Monday, February 9, 2026
Take Your Medicine---As Prescribed
"Region's Top Cardiology Practices form ONE Exceptional Team"
Sunday, February 1, 2026
If You Ask Me
It is a rare occasion nowadays when I'm asked for my opinion, but thoughts still simmer to a boil in my mind.
At present, there is a Public Service Announcement from the New York State Department of Health flooding the television channels which I find to be disturbing, depressing and essentially useless. There are several scenes portraying an individual, shifting from his healthy childhood to what is apparently his deathbed. Since the message is aimed at discouraging smoking, I assume the man is dying of lung cancer or other tobacco related causes. The images are extremely realistic, invoking heartbreaking recall of actual loss to those watching.
Who is watching? What is the target audience? I would surmise, since the message is anti-tobacco, that the PSA is aimed at discourgaging young people from using it. Apart from the recent statistics that show fewer youths are smoking now than in the past, it is also true that fewer youths watch network television, home to these films. How many teens would take a message away from an ad which they would almost certainly deem irrelevant. The story of a healthy baby and toddler morphing into a sickly older adult is unlikely to register with them.
So the audience for this somber and morose message from the Health Department is destined to be older adults, those who still watch network tv. Speaking for at least one of them, I say we don't need any more grisly reminders of impending death. I despise those ads.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
In sum
Too difficult to consolidate here, but I tried to answer the question in a dream: Ben asked if I'd ever heard of a band called Faulty. I wanted to say the only rhyme would be "salty," but try as I might, I couldn't get myself back in the dream. Probably just as well...
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Frozen Time
Saturday, January 24, 2026
The Big Snow
Way back around 1966 or so (I could look the date up, but not now) , I was teaching at St. Thomas School in Delmar, and driving a 1957 Chevy, which was temperamental at best.I don't recall any warnings of impending heavy snowfall, and certainly no early dismissals, but when I left the school around 3:30 p.m. or so, the snow had already accumulated and was still falling, heavily. It took me almost 2 hours to get out of Delmar. Traffic was backed up all the way, and my car stalled at least twice, during which times I would get out, raise the hood, do something with the carburetor and the car would start. But on this day, now turned to darkness, by the time I got to Northern Boulevard to get to Menands, my car came to a dead stop right at the intersection leading to the bridge. So I was blocking traffic, and everybody was anxious to get home. I had retreated to my car, when a very large and very angry black man appeared at my window, demanding I move my car. I said it was dead, so he said all I will do is move your car out of the way, and he pushed my car with his and drove off. I still didn't know what to do. I thought of going to one of the houses across the street , but the snowbanks were now so steep I couldn't get through to the house. I knew there was a hotel/motel at the end of the bridge; I know the name, but it escapes me now. I am wearing only a fairly light ski jacket and the snow is blinding, but I start out walking on the bridge to the hotel. I am cold and can barely see ahead. I am part way across the bridge when a car stops, a man yells out to me to get in. He seems angry too. I do as I'm told and I get in his car. He drops me off at the motel and drives away. I go in and ask for a room. I am very cold and of course would normally have been hungry, but all I want is to get in bed and go to sleep, only calling my mother before I do so.
The next morning I know I have to somehow get my car started; it's quite a ways down the road, and I go to the front desk to pay my bill. The desk clerk there remarks that he thought I might have frozen from the way I'd looked the night before. He also tells me that Father Bondi, parish priest at St. Thomas, had paid my bill, and had also arranged for my car to have been started and driven to the motel. It seems Father Bondi, whom I had very little contact with, had called my mother to see if I'd made it home in the snowstorm. At the time, St. Thomas, Grades k-8, had only 2 lay teachers employed there. The others were all of the religious order and lived in the convent nearby. He must have felt responsible for all his teachers, even the temporary ones. I can only hope I thanked him for his concern.
I sometimes feel there is too much hype about the present forecast, but I can appreciate the reasoning .