Monday, August 19, 2013

George Kell



I don't know when it happened...I guess sometime over the last year--it has been a while since I thought about it. But this week when I thought about my all-time Tiger team Miguel Cabrera had replaced George Kell at 3B. It kind of broke my heart because I loved George Kell. I never saw him play, but he was the Tiger TV play-by-play man of my youth. I also had as one of my prized possessions a 1952 Topps George Kell baseball card. In case you're wondering here is how my All-Time Tiger team breaks down (in parentheses is the All-Time team that I actually saw play--mid 70s).

1B Hank Greenberg (Norm Cash)
2B Charlie Gehringer (Lou Whitaker)
SS Alan Trammell 
3B Miguel Cabrera
C Mickey Cochrane (Lance Parish...I-Rod and Freehan were right there)
OF Ty Cobb (Kirk Gibson)
OF Harry Heilman (Willie Horton)
OF Al Kaline
SP Hal Newhouser (Jack Morris)
SP Denny McLain (Max Scherzer) 
SP Justin Verlander
SP Mickey Lolich
RP John Hiller

They've had other greats who didn't play with the Tigers very long and players who had amazing seasons, but I took longevity into account (Eddie Mathews, Willie Hernandez, Mark Fidrych, etc...).

Saturday, July 6, 2013

DEPRESSION


If you are fighting depression you are not alone. Depression seems to have been the bane of many of life’s great leaders. In the Bible, Moses, Elijah, David, and Job had to deal with it. In the world, Sir Winston Churchill called depression his ‘black dog’, and Ernest Hemingway referred to it as ‘the artist’s reward’.

President Abraham Lincoln battled depression and suicide all his adult life. There were times when for his own safety he would not allow himself carry a knife. Lincoln often turned to the Bible to relieve his depression. Let the Scriptures help you just like they have helped so many of us.

This little prayer helps me as I meditate on each line:
Be still and know that I am God
Be still and know that I Am
Be still and know
Be still
Be
(Based on Psalm 46:10)

More Scripture passages:
Anyone who is among the living has hope (Ecclesiastes 9:4)

The eternal God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms (Deut 33:27)

Cast your cares on the Lord and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous fall (Psalm 55:22)

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and PEACE as you TRUST in him, so that you may overflow with HOPE by the POWER of the HOLY SPIRIT (Romans 15:13)

Dear friends, do not be surprised at the painful trial you are suffering…but rejoice that you participate in the sufferings of Christ (1 Peter 4:12-13)

Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you (1 Peter 5:7)

As Rev. Fred Prince always reminded his congregation "Remember you are loved!!!"

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Get over it!



We live in a world where nearly everything is available immediately: information, books, results, etc... I remember as a teen waiting patiently in the afternoon for the newspaper delivery man so that I could look at the box scores from the previous night's baseball game. Now I'm irritated when mlb.com doesn't have them updated after every inning! So it is no wonder that when I spoke with someone that was grieving this morning they lamented how they couldn't shake their grief--the event causing the grief happened less than a month ago!

We assume that because we can cook a hotdog in 30 seconds or have our questions answered by wiki in the time it takes us to type them that we should get over grief quickly. It doesn't happen that way. Grief is that one thing that we cannot rush. There is no button, no internet website, no pill that we can take that will expedite the grieving process. It takes time and often a long time. So please, for the love of God, never tell anyone "Get over it". Give them time, give them your unconditional presence, but don't try to fix them or rush their grieving process.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Spiritual lessons from BJJ



"If I tap, I start again in 3 seconds. If I don't, I start again in 3 months." 
~ Gracie Jiu-Jitsu Academy 

I am sincere believer that in our spiritual lives we sometimes need to tap out and admit we've been defeated so we can get back to our feet and start again. Sometimes we just miss the mark and fall short in our spiritual journey--too often we try and hide that fact. When we hide it, when we fail to admit that we are in a bad position, we are at great danger of putting ourselves in a worse position where we will incur severe damage and set our journey back a great deal.


The greatest example of this is King David. If he had simply admitted he was lusting after Bathsheba, he would have encountered a lot less grief. However, let us even say he had the affair--if he had admitted his failure then and not tried to cover it up he would still have encountered a lot less grief. In King David's case lusting put him on the slippery slope to murder all because he was too tough to tap out and admit defeat to his lustful desires.


We are a culture that likes to express toughness. I can do it, I can fight through this, I can make this right, etc... There is nothing wrong with tapping out, admitting defeat, getting on your feet and continuing the journey.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Humanity




Let me begin this post by saying what happened in Boston is a real tragedy and my heart goes out to all who are affected. This post is not meant to make light of that horrible event or dismiss it as frivolous, if you interpret it in that way I apologize in advance.

I was watching the news in the lobby of a waiting room yesterday and a woman said to me: "What is wrong with humanity, what is wrong with the United States...we're becoming barbaric like other nations."

I know she was grieving the Boston Marathon bombings in her own way, but right away I was struck by our short sightedness when it comes to thinking the United States was/is a beacon of morality. As the movie "42" reminds us it wasn't that long ago that we treated African Americans horribly--and a short time before that when we treated them like property to be beaten and sold. I'm also reminded of the genocide that we perpetrated on the Native Americans from our moral high horse.

I wanted to tell this woman, "no ma'am we've always lacked respect for humanity as a whole." Instead I shook my head with her and said "it is sad." 

How can we move forward in peace? How can we live the life we're called to where we all love one another?

Friday, February 15, 2013

Tailgating

I was ready to enter the office today and write a blog about how angry it makes me when people don't use their turn signals. I was going to write how it is just plain selfish as well as dangerous. I was in such a hurry to get home and write about this that I became more enraged when the car in front of me was doing at least 10 mph below the speed limit. To show my frustration I pulled up as close to their bumper as I could so that they couldn't miss me in their rear-view mirrors. Finally the car turned and I was able to proceed at a reasonable rate of speed. I got to my office and turned on my computer and scanned some blogs that I like to read. One of the blogs was about the selfishness of people who are in such a hurry that they feel the need to tailgate. Ouch! Now this wasn't the person I had tailgated; the person who wrote this lives in a different state, but the timing was spot on.

Sometimes I feel like I'm able to look around the 4x4 in my own eye so easily!

Friday, January 18, 2013

I want to live in a world . . .

I want to live in a world . . .
where people aren't judged
where there are no jobless or homeless people
where animals aren't mass produced for slaughter or scientific testing
where we don't feel the need to have weapons
where differences are celebrated
where there are no stereotypes
where the gift of creation is celebrated and not hoarded
where there is no disease

What I am I doing to help create that type of world?