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Introduction

To bring you up to date… an enlightening chronicle that briefly takes you through the birth of a dream, around the enduring course of difficulties, obstacles, and distractions, then the sprint to the elusive finish line, which is always further away than it seems... but can't be far off now!

I have tried to keep these postings in a chronological sequence so, for first time visitors, go to the bottom of "What I've been doing" where you'll find the first entry and the most recent entry will be at the top.

I have recently felt the need to add a disclaimer. The tone of this blog tends to follow after the mood and interests of the editor. While its original intent was to chronicle my boating escapades, of recent, my adventures have begun to embrace a religious flavor. For this reason, I'd like to clarify that, although the posts may appear biased, I advise you to reject any notion suggesting that I, in fact, may appear to be endorsing any predilection or point of view. Anymore, I believe what I believe, which is between myself and I, and I have learned that beliefs are personal and deserve being protected from public scrutiny. Please view anything posted within this site only as food for thought.


Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Myths


When I was a boy, my mother taught me that the treatment for a sore throat was to swab it with a Q-tip dipped in turpentine. This makes me laugh today because I know that turpentine is toxic… a poison! She could have done no worse to us had she used gasoline! But she was a firm believer. Her mother administered the same treatment and her mother’s mother probably did too. I remember going over to visit her and Charles a few years back when they lived around the corner from my present home and finding out that she was “under-the-weather” with a sore throat but had taken care of it with turpentine. In a modern world of easily accessible information and a horde of available “legitimate” and affectively safe remedies, her misconceptions could not be changed.  For me, the day I left home was the first day of never again tasting turpentine! My high school education was all it took to bust that myth.

To illustrate my point, let’s turn this story around. Let’s suppose that my mother taught me religiously to always use turpentine and although it did seem to be effective, she eventually learned, to her horror, the potential dangers of that remedy. How could she correct the wrong that she so diligently instilled in her children?


Here’s an interesting article. When you read it, consider the tactics of organized religion… in particular, the LDS Church.  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/03/AR2007090300933.html?hpid=moreheadlines

When I read it, I shook my head incredulously and envisioned my home teacher, high priest’s quorum and Sunday school teacher… all the church members and friends who mentally have called me apostate (because I can read their minds!) who refuse to participate with me in any conversation on the subject of church history. I realize now that I spent a lifetime swabbing my children’s throats and now that I have real facts and realize the mistake I made, try as I might, as the Washington Post's article points out, there seems to be no way to right my wrong. I'm told how devastating it is to them that I have given up turpentine but, in another way, it is devastating to me as well.