Blessed Is The Man...
(On Tax Day)

Dateline: 15 April 2015

(click to see larger view)

Today is "tax day." It is the deadline government has set for me to pay "my fair share" of the money they continually extort from the productive citizenry. I am sending in checks for so much money that it boggles my mind. And the money I send, which represents a great amount of my expended life force, will be squandered by the irresponsible, parasitic politicians, who do not work nearly as hard as I do, and do not produce anything of value. 

If I worked for money alone, I would be very depressed. If I didn't have the money set aside, I would be more depressed. As it is, I'm not depressed, but I admit to being distressed by the injustice of it. So I'm going to write out my checks to the government and then get back to the work of my life...

Spring has finally come to Central New York State. The garlic sprouts are growing fast. Yesterday I planted shelling peas. And today I will commence to reroof part of my house. The roof is nearly 30 years old. It is time.

I will put my thoughts on more pleasant, uplifting things. I will try not to think of corrupt government, and hard-earned money lost to scoundrel politicians. I will think on the quote pictured above. 

I have had that quote for many years. Either I typed it, or my mother typed it, back in those days when personal computers were nowhere in the land.

It is a quote worth putting on paper, and reading every so often, because it puts life in proper perspective. At least it does for this man.

The beauty of the internet is that I can do a Google search on "A. W. Ward," and the name, which was something of a mystery to me before, is revealed to be a Christian man who wrote many inspirational things. Things that are well worth reading and ruminating on. Do a Google search of your own and you will discover some of this man's well crafted word-treasures. Here are a couple more...


To laugh is to risk appearing a fool,
To weep is to risk appearing sentimental
To reach out to another is to risk involvement,
To expose feelings is to risk exposing your true self
To place your ideas and dreams before a crowd is to risk their loss,
To love is to risk not being loved in return,
To hope is to risk despair,
To try is to risk to failure.
But risks must be taken because the greatest hazard in life is to risk nothing.
The person who risks nothing, does nothing, has nothing is nothing.
He may avoid suffering and sorrow,
But he cannot learn, feel, change, grow or live.
Chained by his servitude he is a slave who has forfeited all freedom.
Only a person who risks is free.
~~~~
“Before you speak, listen.
Before you write, think.
Before you spend, earn.
Before you invest, investigate.
Before you criticize, wait.
Before you pray, forgive.
Before you quit, try.
Before you retire, save.
Before you die, give.”


I have so much to blog about but, as I said, spring is here. I have much to be doing. Blog posts will be less frequent for awhile.

Happy Tax Day.

:-)





A Family Mystery...
Solved?

Dateline: 12 April 2015

An envelope addressed to Herric C Kimball, circa, 1925.
There is no "k" at the end of his first name.

In August of 1987, Marlene and I drove up to Fort Fairfield, Maine to visit with both of my grandmothers, and other kin. Marlene was pregnant with our first child. It was a 12 hour drive. I can remember that vacation because I kept a journal in those days. I remember we had a little pickup truck, and on the way home it was packed high and tight with all manner of “Kimball” stuff.
 
Part of my objective with the trip was to learn more about my Kimball roots. My grandmother, like all grandmothers, had a lot of family knowledge, and she was more than happy to share it with us.  Among a lot of other things, I learned that my grandfather, Dr. Herrick C. Kimball (who I am named after), was actually given the name of Herric (with no k on the end) by his parents, but he later changed his name to Herrick. 

Herrric Kimball (on left), circa 1919 (17 years old) 
with his friend, Neil Powers.

I asked my grandmother why my grandfather had changed his name. She didn’t know. No one alive knows. It is something of a family mystery.

I’ve written here before about how my grandfather Kimball was born in 1902 and grew up on a potato farm in northern Maine. He did not come from a family of means, but he was clearly intent on making something of himself. He graduated from high school in 1918 at 16 years of age. He then attended Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where, once again, he graduated early. Then he went to Western Reserve University College of Medicine in Ohio, from which he graduated in 1925.

My grandfather, circa 1923, in the medical school "Cat Lab"
(click picture for a larger view)
(Dr. Magnus Ridlon, pictured at right, was his best friend)

My grandfather was an MD, FACS. The acronym means, Medical Doctor, Fellow American College of Surgeons. He practiced medicine and surgery in his hometown of Fort Fairfield for 38 years. He also established a hospital in the town. 

Dr. Kimball was the county medical examiner for 17 years. He was medical advisor to the selective service board. He was a delegate to the 1956 Republican National Convention (they nominated Dwight Eisenhower for a 2nd term). He was 51% owner of the local Rexall drug store (with a lunch counter in the front). He was vice president of the local bank, chairman of the board of trustees for the local library, and a director of the local utility district. 

My grandfather died at only 64 years of age. I suspect he may have worked himself to death. And he took the reason for changing the spelling of his name to the grave with him. But I have a theory…



The Herrick’s Almanac above was published by “The Proprietors of Dr. Herrick’s Family Medicines.” Near as I can determine, Dr. Herrick’s almanacs were published from 1867 to 1920. For a family medicine company to publish an almanac for 53 years, they must have had a large customer base and readership. I suspect my grandfather, Herric, was well aware of Dr. Herrick’s almanac. And I believe that this almanac was what influenced my grandfather to change the spelling of his first name.

As for the Herrick’s Almanac of 1889, it is a very interesting read. I have scanned the whole book and it is now available as a PDF download at Agriphemera.comClick Here to learn more about this unique bit of American medical history.



Dr. Herrick C. Kimball

~~~
Postscript... 
My grandfather was not the only Herrick C. to practice medicine. An interesting side note to this family-name story is that my grandfather's best friend in medical school, Dr. Magnus F. Ridlon (pictured in the cat lab above), named his son, Herrick C. Ridlon, and he grew up to be a Dr. (his 2003 obituary is HERE).

As I understand it, the two friends decided in medical school to name their firstborn sons after each other. But my grandfather did not name his son (my father) Magnus F. Kimball. Perhaps my grandmother did not like the name. In any event, my father's middle name is Ridlon, after Dr. Ridlon.




1 Hour Garden/Homestead Video
By David Goodman
(free to watch until tomorrow morning)

Dateline: 10 April 2015




David Goodman, from over at Florida Survival Gardening, has made a one-hour video presentation titled, 13 Tips, Tricks And Lessons From Homesteading An Acre. It is part of the Home Grown Food Summit that I mentioned here a few days ago. 

If you Click This Link and sign up, you will be able to watch David's presentation for FREE, BUT only until tomorrow morning. After that, you have to buy the Home Grown Food package of presentations to see it. Once you sign up, you will also be able to watch some other presentations for free. 

You don't have to live in Florida to enjoy David's movie, and learn from it. Viewers and commenters have rated it very highly. Check it out. I 'm pretty sure you'll like it. 







Learning
The 10 Commandments
(Part 4)

Dateline: 10 April 2015


In the previous installment of this series I shared the mental picture and phrase I came up with to remember (and never forget) the 9th Commandment. I put my mental picture into a series of actual visual images because, as the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words.

When I came up with the word pictures for remembering all of God’s 10 Commandments, and used them to teach my children, I didn’t put much effort into the art. It really isn’t necessary to have good art to relay the image and, in fact, I don’t think it is necessary to have any art at all to utilize this idea. A simple discussion of the word picture, with a little imagination, is sufficient to secure the necessary image in one’s mind. Our brains are good at this sort of thing. 

That said, I will present the remaining nine Commandments to you with simple line drawings, or no drawings at all. It is up to you to take a few minutes to imagine and “lock” the images (along with their memory-prompting phrases) into your brain. Then, from time to time, mentally refresh the images until you can recall them quickly (without much effort).

I should mention that my absurd mental pictures and memory prompts are not the only images you can utilize to remember the 10 Commandments. You can certainly come up with your own.

The following pictures can be clicked to see enlarged views.

The 7th Commandment



The picture above is a tree with an unusual fruit. The fruits you see are all in the shape of a 7. So when you want to remember the 7th Commandment, your brain needs to bring to mind the odd seven-shaped fruits.

The fruits are actually cucumbers. The cucumbers on the tree always grow in the shape of a 7. And here’s the other odd thing about these cucumbers… they come right off the tree tasting like dill pickles.

If it helps, you can imagine the Vlasic stork picking the seven-shaped dill pickles off the tree, snapping them in two, and stuffing them into jars. Action always helps when remembering an absurd visual image.

You could even imagine the Vlasic stork throwing the seven-shaped dill pickles like a boomerang, and when they come back, he catches them on his long beak. That’s absurd for you. 

But the key word this image needs to bring to your mind is “A Dill Tree,” which sounds a lot like adultery. So it should prompt your brain to remember the 7th Commandment is: Thou shalt not commit adultery.

The 4th Commandment



To remember the 4th Commandment you want to think of an old cast iron claw-foot bathtub. But instead of having claw feet, the tub has four number 4’s for it’s feet. That’s kind of silly.

Please note that the bathtub above is sad. It is a “Sad Bath,” which sounds a lot like sabbath. And you will also notice the bath tub is full of holes. This image should be sufficient for you to remember the 4th Commandment: Remember the sabbath, to keep it holy.

The 8th Commandment



The picture above shows two eggs balanced on a spoon. The word “egg” sounds a lot like eight, and when you stack one egg on top of another (in a spoon) they look a lot like an eight. So this image should first come into your mind when you want to recall the 8th commandment. 

Now you need to use your imagination… imagine that a thief has gotten into your hen house and he has put two eggs onto a spoon, like the picture shows. You discover the thief in the act of stealing your eggs and frighten him off. He runs away, all the while holding the spoon and balancing the eggs. It’s impossible to balance two eggs and it’s doubly impossible to run with two eggs balanced on a spoon, so this is totally absurd, which is what you need. 

The image should prompt you to remember that the 8th Commandment is: Thou shalt not steal.

The 5th Commandment



Imagine that your father (or mother) wants to teach you the 5th Commandment, and to do so he makes a big number 5 out of foam or cardboard. The number is 2ft wide and 4ft high. Your father straps the 5 on his back like a backpack and wears it everywhere.

He has to duck to go through doorways because the five is riding high on his back. When he turns around in a store, the 5 smacks into merchandise and it crashes to the ground. When you and your father are in public, people point and stare. You are kind of embarrassed.

The big 5 is “on your father,” which sounds a lot like, “honor your father” That phrase, along with the visual image, should prompt you to remember the 5th Commandment is: Thou shalt honor your father and your mother.

By the way, this Commandment from Exodus 20 has a promise attached to it: Honor thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which thy God giveth thee.  When I see someone who has lived a long life I think to myself that they must have honored their father and their mother in their younger years.

The 6th Commandment



When you want to remember the 6th Commandment, think about the X at the end of six. 

Then think about the cartoon man pictured above. See the X over his eye? Sad to say, that means the cartoon man is deceased. X’s over the eyes are universally understood in the cartoon world to mean the cartoon drawing has died.

How did the cartoon man die? I’m not sure, but I think a large cartoon rooster came up from behind and bopped him on top of the head with an oversized wooden mallet. That’ll do it.

So the X in six leads to the image of a dead cartoon man and that should be sufficient to prompt you to remember that the 6th Commandment is: Thou shalt not kill.

The 2nd Commandment



The 2nd Commandment should bring to mind two objects… a gray van with a large wooden match on the top, as illustrated above (that's an Ohio Blue Tip match). All the stick people on the ground below are looking at the gray van and match. They are raising their hands to worship the gray van and match.  Now for a little action…

Imagine a dark cloud comes over this scene and a bolt of lightning strikes the end of the match. It bursts into a ball of fire and ignites the gas tank in the gray van. The people who were worshiping the gray van and match are stunned, as their idol is destroyed Ha! Foolish people.

Gray van and match sounds a lot like graven image, which should prompt you to remember the 2nd Commandment is: Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image.

The 3rd Commandment



The 10 Commandments are often pictured on two stone tablets with rounded tops. If you think about it, the shape of the top of the two tablets is like a 3 on it’s side. So there you go—that’s the first image you should get. 

Then you need to imagine that the two tablets are made into a weather vane on the top of your house (there’s an idea). Oh, and God’s name is on the weathervane too.

Now imagine that a bunch of militant secularists are upset with this outward expression of your religious belief. They put a ladder up against the roof of your house and they are intent on taking God’s name off the weather vane.

The secularists are steaming mad. Their faces are red and their teeth are clenched tight, and smoke is coming out their ears. But you and your friends are already on the roof. You put your hands up and shout, “No! you can’t take the name of the lord in the vane!”

It’s a dramatic scene and, of course, it should bring to mind the 3rd Commandment: Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain.

The 10th Commandment


Ten sounds a lot like, “hen.” Perfect. Think of a hen. You own this hen. It is not just any hen. It is a uniquely talented hen. The hen in your imagination must have a tool belt around it, and in the tool belt are a bunch of chisels. With a hammer in one wing, and a chisel in the other, this hen carves the word “it” on everything in sight. People come from miles around to see this amazing hen carve “it” over and over again. But you are sick of it. You yell at the hen, “Don’t carve it!”

This image, once secured in your brain, will bring to mind the 10th Commandment, which is: Thou shalt not covet, or “Don’t covet!”


The 1st Commandment

No picture. This one requires pure imagination on your part...

Imagine a hive of honeybees amidst a field of flowers. There are thousands and thousands of busy bees in the air and on the flowers. All the bees are doing what bees do... except one.

Out of all the thousands of bees there is one that has decided to be a bee farmer. This farmer bee is wearing a little straw hat and driving a little tractor.

So, out of all the bees, there is "one bee farming," which sounds a lot like the phrase "none before me," which should prompt you to remember that the 1st Commandment is: Thou shalt have no other gods before me.


In Conclusion

There was a time when I considered hiring an artist and creating a book for children on the subject of learning the 10 Commandments using memorable silly images. But like a lot of ideas I get, this one will not happen. If someone else is inspired by this idea, then go right ahead and make the book. If done properly, it could prove to be a popular learning tool.

I can also see this concept translated into skits within a family or church group. It would be a lot of fun, and surely memorable.

Beyond that, it would provide an opportunity for more serious discussion. After all, the pictures and the technique is silly, but, as I explained in Part 1 and Part 2 of this series, the 10 Commandments are something very serious.


View of the Supreme Court building in Washington. Moses, holding the 10 Commandments, is the central figure. Learn more at This Link.
 (click to see enlarged view)








Learning
The 10 Commandments
(Part 3)

Dateline: 8 April 2015

Jerry Lucas, back in the day.

I’ve discussed the importance of the 10 Commandments in Part 1 and Part 2 of this series. Now I’m going to share with you a fun way to remember the 10 Commandments, starting with the 9th. 

The memory technique I am using here started with a book my Aunt Jean gave me back when I was in 11th grade (1975). The book was titled, Remember The Word, and it was written by Jerry  Lucas, the famous basketball player. 

Remember the Word was a book about learning to memorize verses and passages of the Bible. I lost track of the book over the years, and I never did use the memory techniques in it to learn any Bible verses. But I did spend quite a bit of time learning and practicing a technique for memorizing numbers. 40 years later, I still use the technique when I need to commit a number to memory.

Without going into detail, I'll just say that the number-memorization technique assigned phonetic sounds and letters to each number from 0 to 9. Then, to remember a long number, you translated the number into a word picture, or several word pictures, as needed (Click Here to learn the technique).

As a simple example, I once wanted to memorize the last 4 digits of the phone number for my friends, Ken and Mary P. The number was 3169. I memorized that number back around 1980, and still remember it (even though I have rarely needed to use it) because I had such a good word picture “burned” into my brain for it. My word picture for that number is “mitt shop.” 

In my mind, when I want to remember that number, I get an image of going into Ken and Mary’s house. When I walk in the door, the room is piled high with mittens. Mittens are everywhere, and there are Ken and Mary with mittens on their hands waving at me. It is a ridiculous picture, but our minds remember ridiculous pictures.

In this short YouTube clip Jerry Lucas explains why the memory technique of using images works so well, and he shows an image he uses in his teaching materials for helping children remember the capital of the state of Arkansas (by  the way, if you have an interest in learning memory techniques, or in teaching them to your children,  there are some excellent YouTube videos on the subject).

The best word pictures to use for memorizing (numbers or anything else) are kind of silly and, better yet, they involve some action. Our minds tend to remember the absurd pretty easily. And coming up with absurd word pictures is an imaginative exercise that can be a lot of fun.

When it came to developing word pictures for the 10 Commandments I needed images that would bring to mind the Commandment number along with a phrase that would bring to mind the essence of the commandment. Some familiarity with the 10 Commandments is needed to begin with, and the word picture phrase serves as a prompt to bring your mind to the actual Commandment. 

All of this will make more sense as I walk you through the images I have put together—first in my mind, then in the following drawings—for remembering the 9th Commandment (click on the images to see larger views)…

We begin with the nine tree (below). Have you ever seen a nine tree? probably not. It is an absurd looking tree. Sort of like what you might find in a Dr. Suess book, eh? But it is certainly a memorable tree. When you want to recall the 9th Commandment, the nine tree should come to mind first...



In the crook of the nine tree is a bird’s nest (with bird)...



Into this picture of natural serenity and beauty enters a bear. The bear sees the nest in the crook of the nine tree...


The bear decides he wants that nest. So he climbs way up the nine tree to get it...


After he gets the nest , the bear slips and falls...



Yes, it’s a sad story, but it’s just a story. The important thing is to remember the bear, climbing the tree, and falling with the nest

Upon remembering this, you will recall the key phrase, Bear Falls With Nest.  And that phrase sounds so much like "Bear false witness" that it will prompt your brain to recall that the 9th Commandment is: Thou shalt not bear false witness.

What does it mean to not bear false witness? Click Here to read a good discussion of the subject.

In my next (and final) part in this series, I will share with you the word pictures I came up with to remember the other nine Commandments.

Click Here to go to Part 4 of this series.


Learning
The 10 Commandments
(Part 2)

Dateline: 6 April 2015
In the crook of the nine tree...
(click drawing  to see a larger view)

In Part 1 of this series I introduced the idea of learning the 10 Commandments. I explained that God’s law, as distilled into the 10 Commandments, gives us a standard of human perfection that is humanly unattainable, therefore making it abundantly clear that we are all sinners (that includes you too). 

Sin separates us from God because God is holy. But God solved the separation problem by coming to earth Himself in the person of Jesus Christ and allowing his lowly created beings to brutally kill him. In so doing, Jesus paid the penalty for the sin of all those who come to him, thus restoring them to proper relationship with God. Only a loving God could come up with a solution like that.

This matter of sin (sometimes referred to as the transgression of God’s law) is actually a popular topic of discussion in our society. Read the news on any day of the week and you’ll be reading about all kinds of people who have committed sins, or are accused of committing sins. Pick a sin: murder, theft, rape, extortion, sodomy, arson, bribery, pornography, adultery, child abuse. Yes, sin certainly is a major news story and topic of discussion.

We can also simply look at ourselves and find sin. If our sins are not of the sensational, news-making sort mentioned above, every one of us is surely guilty of the more subtle sins like pride, lust, envy, selfishness, lying, gossiping, and so on. 

The reason we see many sins mentioned in the news is that many sins are against the law. It so happens that the punishment of certain sins is one of the most legitimate functions of government in a civil society. The most obvious example being that of murder. If one person murders another, then the civil authorities have a responsibility to punish the sinner. 

This punishment is known as justice, and justice serves to not only stop the murderer from committing more murder, it also sends a message to other potential murderers that if they commit the same sin, they will meet with similar justice. It is justice (the civil punishment for certain sins) that, if carried out fairly and consistently, ensures a safe and stable society.

That said, I’d like to take a look at the phrase, “You can’t legislate morality!” 

It’s really an odd thing to say because morality is nothing more than an understanding (or definition) of right and wrong, and all legislation (laws) are based on someone’s understanding of right and wrong. Laws are, in fact, codifications of morality. So, it's just plain silly to say you can't legislate morality.

Knowing that, the question that every civil society needs to ask itself is, “What morality, or whose moral system, will we use for our system of law and justice?”

Historically speaking, the organized system of law and justice in America, beginning with the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, came in large part from William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England

Blackstone (1723-1780) was an English jurist who recognized God’s law, as revealed in scripture, as the only legitimate moral foundation for civil law. This short YouTube film introduces Blackstone’s beliefs about law and scripture.

This Web Page about Blackstone's Commentaries has the following quote:

In his 1941 book The Mysterious Science of the Law Daniel Boorstin wrote that no other book except the Bible played a greater role in the history of American institutions. The Founders of the country found their philosophy in John Locke and their passion in Thomas Paine, but they found the blueprint for a new nation in Blackstone.

There is an interesting story related to Blackstone’s Commentaries and the famous evangelist Charles Finney (1792-1875).  As a young man studying law, Finney was a skeptic of Christianity.  His reading of Blackstone’s Commentaries, with numerous Biblical references, led Finney to purchase a Bible. When Finney read the Bible, he became a Christian and, eventually, an evangelist. 

I’m on a rabbit trail here, but I’ll circle around to my main discourse after this… 

The story of Charles Finney reading the Bible and coming to Christ is pretty much what happened to Rosaria Butterfield (in more recent history). Rosaria was a tenured English professor at Syracuse University. She was a radical lesbian. Her academic interests centered around feminist theory and queer theory. 

As part of a research project on evangelical Christianity, Rosaria read the Bible. She wanted to understand why Christians thought the way they thought. More than just reading the Bible, she put hours and hours into actually studying it. Then, like Charles Finney, she became a convert to Christianity. Rosaria left the lesbian lifestyle and married a pastor. There is more to the story and you can hear it in This Interview.

It was the English people who, so long ago, came to the understanding that God’s law was a more dependable and fair moral authority than that of a monarch (I'm thinking here of the Magna Carta). The reason being, God’s law was transcendent; it was a moral authority that came from outside the sinful tendencies of mere men. 

As a mere man, a monarch was inclined to define law and morality in ways that served his own selfish best interests. Besides that, mere men are inclined to be arbitrary and capricious.

But God’s law is neither arbitrary nor capricious. It is a rock-solid, dependable moral authority that defines right and wrong. Such a law is the surest support for civil law, justice, and the stability of any civilization. 

You don’t need to be a Christian believer to understand the value of a immutable moral standard as the foundation of a national system of law and order. It’s just common sense. 

Now, as we all know, the transcendent moral authority of God’s law (the foundation of much of American jurisprudence) is in the process of being jettisoned. God is no longer feared or honored by the majority of Americans, and his moral authority is dismissed as a relic with no useful value.

The most glaring example of this in the news these days is the whole movement to redefine marriage. God clearly established marriage as a union between a man and a woman. When the civil institutions of a nation decide that God's law on this matter is no longer the moral authority for marriage, we leave the safety of God's law and enter into the bizarro world of marital anarchy; marriage will be redefined again and again to include all manner of perversions.

Anyone, like myself, who asserts that God’s law, as found in scripture, is a far more reliable standard than the varying moral whims of our cultural milieu, is characterized as an ignorant, intolerant hater who wants America to be a theocracy. (that’s not what I believe, by the way)

So this nation, once secure in it’s understandings of right and wrong, is now in a state of moral flux and confusion. We are a nation adrift. All our institutions are faltering. Even many churches are in a state of moral confusion. We are a civilization in decline. Tyranny is rising.

Perhaps we should reconsider the value of God’s unwavering standard of morality as the foundation for law and justice.

======


So I have not taught you the 9th Commandment, using the “nine tree” as I said I would in my previous essay. But I needed to get these thoughts out of my brain. I will show you how to remember (and never forget) the 9th Commandment in my next blog post. Really, I will.