Sunday, June 7, 2026

The Measure of Happiness - 2012


Last month my sister, her husband, and I celebrated my 60th with lobsters, steamers, Pinot Grigio on Watchic Pond. An early evening breeze fended off the mosquitos from the dock. My brother-in-law dressed accordingly; tee-shirt, shorts, and no shoes. Neither of us had shaved for days.

"What you think?" My brother-in-law pulled out a pipe. His health had improved dramatically since his retirement three years ago.

"Nothing much has changed here." The lake shore was covered by tall pines, hiding the numerous summer camps.

"That's what I think too." My sister and he planned to spend the summer here not doing much of anything. David passed the lit pipe. Native Maine bud from Cornish, the nearest town to the west on Route 25. "Change is good as long as it doesn't change the things you love."

"If things don't change, then I feel like I'm aging with the world." A puff of weed helped color the sunset.

"A slow pace makes time stand still." David had been a top headhunter in Boston. Work had been an 8 to 6 race. He loved his new life. Waking with the dawn with his day free for himself.

"In this light you look 30."

I had taken off my glasses. Myopia was a great fountain of youth.

"That's what I like to hear from my guests." David took off his shirt. The sun had tanned him to golden brown hue. My sister admired his physique. He was in better shape than me.

"My pleasure. Only one thing I miss."

"Your kids." My sister knew the way I thought.

Angie and Fenway are on the other side of the world. Talking on the telephone brings us closer. I would prefer to hold my son and daughter in my arms. She's 8 and he's almost 4. I had spoken to both this morning on Skype.

"I'll be there soon enough." I had a flight to Thailand planned for mid-June. I was staying two months, but today's happiness index suffered from their absence and I went to sleep a little sad.

The next morning rain splashed on the lake. New York exerted a tug and I checked the schedule of the train from Portland to Boston.

"You're leaving?"

"I got to get ready for my trip."

"How you getting to Portland?" The station lay below western promenade.

"If necessary I'll hitchhike." Yesterday's plan was for a tomorrow departure. The weather dictated a change.

"No one hitchhikes anymore." My brother-in-law wanted me to stay. We enjoy each other's company,

"Only crazy men." I had seen the ghostly wraiths of rags on highways. No destination in mind. Mime was the other side of the world.

"It's not the 70s." The Seventies were the decade of our 20s. "Hitchhiking is dead."

"I know." I had often hitchhiked across the USA, sometimes for pleasure and sometimes out of necessity. Pleasure and necessity had combined forces in August 1972. A fellow BC student Neil Nepola had been visiting his girlfriend, Vickie, in Tulsa. His BMW was to be our ride to California and I had thumbed through the Midwest spurred by the dreams of driving through the deserts in a fast car.

I arrived in Oklahoma to discover that we were on foot. Neil had rubber-necked a roller coaster in Oklahoma City and rear-ended a Chevy. The BMW was in repair shop awaiting parts. We were stuck in Tulsa without a car.

Tulsa was half-way across the continent. Vikie, her younger sister, Neil, and I drank ourselves senseless in a few of city's BYOB bars before voting to keep on trucking. We were 21. We had long hair. Neil was going to Med school in the fall. In the Philippines. After reading ON THE ROAD. The two of us bade good-bye to Tulsa, Vickie, and her younger sister. Funny I can remember Marilyn's name. She had green eyes.

We reached the coast at the end of Route 66 and stayed with Neil’s cousin in Seal Beach. We smoked more pot, bodysurfed, and drank at a bar next to the Long Beach Channel. A week flashed fast in a paralytic ganga haze. His cousin’s name is lost in that miasma.

Two weeks remained until the resumption of BC’s fall semester. I wanted to see my friend, Wayne Shephard in Pomona. It was far from the coast. He was living with his biker brother. They took us to DisneyWorld. We smoke weed in IT’S A SMALL WORLD. I couldn't have been happier, then again Disneyworld prides itself on being the “the happiest place on earth.”

This distinction has changed locations for me many times since 1972.

Goa, Koh Phi Phi, Bali, Palm Beach, Paris, Bar Harbor.

Sri Racha with Mam and Fenway.

But all places become common the first day you buy a roll of toilet paper, because the daily grind wears down the degree of happiness and you ask yourself, “Who is really happy?"

Several studies have named the Danes as the happiest people in the world. They're family people. They like nothing more than a hoogy or get-together. Danes ride bikes. Pedal . They have no basketball superstars. The USA is 15th in the rankings.

The main source of happiness comes from a feeling of belonging and in western society cars separate us from those we love. Marshall McLuhan says the only time western man is truly alone is when he’s in his car. Cell phones are supposed to bring us closer, except no one answers them. Every man is not so much an island as a desert of feeling.

Drive in the suburbs.

The landscape of emptiness.

Not a restaurant open.

Not a bar where ‘everyone knows your name’.

Only the mall where you’re forced to consume everything you don’t really need.

Friends, family, the pursuit of happiness, which is why I love Thailand.

Not for the sex.

Not for the weather.

But for the warmth of drinking, eating, and talking with your friends and Thais only score 43rd on the list.

Both Thailand and the USA could do better.

Be happy. Mi sabaii.

The other choices are too gray to consider as viable alternatives.

Happiness is more than a warm blanket – Snoopy

As Victor Borge said, "To measure your happiness feel your heart."

We all know where it is.

Trouville 1985

In the late summer of 1985 Candia and I took the train to Deauville for a vacation from Paris. The closest beach was Deauville on le Manche or 'the 'the Sleeve' or the English Channel. The Normandy sea resort was not the Riviera, but it was only a two-hour train ride away. Deauville was out of my budget, so we stayed in the pleasant neighboring town, Trouville or 'city of a hole'. The weather was pleasant and after checking into a small hotel we swam in the shallow sea off the broad sandy beach. The water was cool, but the sun was hot. Candia loved lying in the sun.

The first night I intended on dining at Les Vapeurs, except the famed seafood restaurant on Boulevard Francois Morceaux was closed, so we went to another eaterie. Starting with a bottle of Sancerre I decided to be adventurous and ordered something other than sole for my main course, however the raiee au beure noire was abominable and I sent it back. The cook came out and insulted me as an ignorant American. The waiters took his back. He might have been right, but I stood up, told Candida to leave, and then picked up a fork, asking ,"Oui, veux perde un œil?"

The threat of lossing of an eyeball was spoken in Boston-accented French.

The answer was silence, pobably not udnerstanding what I had said, but the fork in my hand translated my intent.

I dropped 200 francs for the bottle of wine and left the restaurant.

Out on the foggy street Candida asked, "So now where do we eat?"

There was nothing open. We had a crepe from a small stand.

Candida was not happy, but was happier after crepe stand owner gave us cups to drink the wine. We sat on the stone quay and listened to lap of the incoming tide. It was nice to be out of Paris with someone you loved. Actually better than nice.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Ratsach Ratsach Ratsach 2011

On June 6, 1967 the Israeli Air Force launched a pre-emptive strike or sneak attack against the airfields of Jordan, Syria, Iraq, and Egypt. This Pearl Harbor attack caught the Arab MIG fighters and Russian bombers on the ground. Having won air superiority the Zionist Army destroyed the massed tank forces of the UAR and within 6 days a ceasefire was declared by the warring factions.

The West Bank, Gaza, the Sinai, the Golan Heights, and East Jerusalem were occupied by the victors. Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians fled their homes to escape the burned earth tactics of their new overlords. June 6 is a day of infamy for the native of these seized lands and the exiles call this day 'an-Naksah' or 'The Debacle'.

The Israelis have defeated every effort by the Palestinians to attain nationhood. Hijackings foiled by Mossad. Bombing campaigns condemned by the world. The PLO crushed into exile by the Lebanese incursion. The infatidah minimalized by western press. Gaza turned into a ghetto and the West Bank chopped to pieces by Jewish settlements.

Any protests against the Zionists are met with accusations of anti-Semiticism, even though the Arabs are also sons and daughters of Shem.

Not that I believed in the Bible; Old or New.

But I do believe in justice and yesterday Palestinian protesters attempted to awake the world by assailing the security fences in the Golan Heights. The Israeli command responded by warning the hundreds of unarmed men and boys to turn back from the border. Tear gas was fired from the patrol road. The protesters persisted in their plan to fly flags to mark the Day of Infamy.

Someone in the Israeli High Command gave the order to clear the fields with live fire. The dead and wounded bled on the embattled earth. People in America were more concerned with a congressman's sexting to a young girl.

Drudgereport.com filed the following reports; Israel sees Syrian hand in Golan clashes, 23 dead...

REPORT: Protesters paid $1,000 to riot along border.

The BBC soft-pedaled the confrontation by saying 'tear gas has been used to clear protesters'.

The US State Department said that 'it was troubled by the loss of life'.

No signs of condemnation.

Wankers.

Free Palestine.

To view the incident please go to this URL

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7YHLKpeLZY&feature=relmfu

Israel has bought ads against Palestine on Youtube.

Youtube has trivialized the shootings by headlining the banner with 'dog surfing in California'.

Fuck the rich.

Friday, June 5, 2026

D Day plus 82

During the night of June 6, 1944 24,000 Allied airborne troops parachuted in Normandy and the pathfinders seized strategic crossroads to block the Wehrmacht from reinforcing the Nazi Atlantic Wall. Operation Overlord to liberate Europe was in motion.

At 6:03am 156,000 troops from Britain, Canada, and the USA conducted an amphibious assault on five beaches, which was the biggest naval invasion in history and included soldiers from the Nazi-occupied lands; Czechs, French, Poles, and the Norse. The five beaches varied in degrees of difficulty. Utah Beach was taken with minimal casualties.

The US Rangers assailing the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc encountered stiff resistance from the Germans.

Company E, 16th Infantry, 1st Infantry Division waded onto the Fox Green section of Omaha Beach and encountered the newly formed German 352nd Division upon hitting thr beach. During the initial landing two-thirds of Company E became casualties. After defeating a strong defense of Omaha Beach the US Army took the heights, suffering 2000 dead or wounded.

Gold Beach proved tough going as well as Juno Beach and Sword Beach.

My South Shore neighbor Mr. Reddington had been one of the first off the LST on Omaha Beach.

He never said a word about that horrifying experience nor had any of the fathers of friends who had participated in that grand endeavor, but they were proud to have been the best of the best on the First of Days bringing down the Nazi regime. Mr. Reddington did always speak of freedom and its cost, especially for the soldiers of Mother Russia. His smile hid a reservoir of tears for lost comrades.

I salute them all.

The long and the short and the tall.

By August 1944 Paris was free, however the Nazis did not believe in surrender.

Same as today. Never again and those two words include Palestine, the Ukraine, Syria, Yemen et al. End the Endless Wars.

Top Photo - Photo: Chief Photographer's Mate (CPHoM) Robert F. Sargent

Into the Jaws of Death

6 June 1944

This morning on my way to buy the NY Times I asked ten people was June 6, 1944 meant to them. Most shook their head. A middle school student finally said, "D-Day, my teacher mentioned it this morning."

See THE LONGEST DAY and SAVING PRIVATE RYAN.

D-DAY 2025

Eighty-two hyears ago 24,000 airborne troops from Canada, Britain, and the USA parachuted over the Normandy Peninsula to seize strategic positions from the undermanned German occupation army. That morning over 150,000 soldiers embarked on landing crafts from the greatest invasion naval force ever assembled in history. The attack caught the Nazis off-guard and by the evening the Allies had solidified the hold on the beachheads. Over 4000 lost their lives in the attack. More would die in the weeks to come, but Paris was liberated on two months later on August 19, 1944.

Their sacrifice for the cause of freedom shall be remembered forever.

By those who knew them and those who refuse forget their heroism.

Rain on East 77 Street - June 5 1978

Midnight
Outside
Rain
Thunder.
Inside the foyer
My finger
On the buzzer
No reply____
Last winter
Lisa left
To be a model
In Europe
No letters
Since April___
Her face
Never on French Vogue
Nor Italian Vogue
Nor inside any fashion magazine.
Gone___
Inside the hallway
No one
My finger on the buzzer
A last time___
Past midnight
She not here
The last words
In the last letter
Love
Lisa___
Where did the love go?
All I see are ghosts
Of you
All I have
Are ghosts.
Outside in the rain.
Eyes on the dark windows
I walk away
Into midnight.
Into the rain
With
Only one destination
Away from here
To someplace else
And out of the rain.

Death of a Salesman 2026

This week my good friend Tim Challen flew into NYC to attend various meeting at the UN as head of the UN Credit union ions across the globe. His time was tightly budget, but on Tuesday evening we met at the Explorers Club for a drink and dinner with two young Kenyan golfers. Agood time, although I was cautious about invitation to see an Arthur Miller play and with good reason. I had never seen anything by Arthur Miller, one of America's giants. I could recall ever watching Death Of A Salesman and it has been around almost seventy years. Almost as long as me. I agreed to join him at the Winter Garden Theater for Thursday's performance.) Tim was a little late. We entered the theater and sat in the first balcony. The audience was predominantly older. Many older than. p p pp DEATH OF A SALESMAN was based on the collapse of the American Dream mirroring the descent of his family's post-depression descent from success. Unspoken except for the Wasp names of his bosses, is the inherrent prejudice of the upper classes for the parents, who still cling to the hope of gaining suburban nirvana. Powerful, yet Wiilie's blind loyalty to his company contradicts man's preservation urge. A true sell-out left with no way out at the age of 63. Very accurate but the dialogue has not weathered well in the 21st Century. I was annoyed by Miller's refusing Willie anotger chance at life no matter how demeaning. At 74 I recognize the how at a certain age we become invisible to the young. Especially if our lives are geared to bettering everything all the time Otherwise it was good to hold your hand Have fun at the Club Im heading out to Montauk