Taking Stock of Woodstock

How that concert forty years ago impacted society;
My Big Fat Greek Name

Taking Stock of WoodstockHow that concert forty years ago impacted society When the Beatles crossed that London road,Dear Abby, what did you supposewas happening in rural New Yorkthis week in ’69? Could you have known that music festwould make such news? Could you have guessedthat Woodstock would prove just as bigas landing on the moon? Dear Abby, it was bigger yet!As I look back and recollect,it seems those days of rock and rollwould bruise our culture’s soul. It celebrated booze and drugsand unclad couples locked in hugs.The lyrics and the atmosphererebuffed authority.  That weekend concert would portenda values shift that would not end.Since then, we are less civilized.Our stock is wood not gold. We are less cultured than beforeand (though more wealthy) we are poor.Free love has proved much costlierthan any could have guessed.

My Big Fat Greek Name
There’s more to it than meets the eye

“It must be Greek!” I hear it said
when I pronounce my name.
“It is indeed!” I say with pride.
“Like the Olympic flame!”

A fourteen letter curtain call
all lined up in a row.
Somebody bought too many vowels
from Vanna long ago.

But Wheel of Fortune jokes aside,
I love my Grecian name.
It calls to mind my loving clan
when life can leave me drained.

I say it slowly and it helps.
Awesome-ah-COPE-ah-less.
This awesome mantra helps me cope
with major stress (or less).

My neighbors are the Crowes and Bones,
the Beattys and the Browns.
In short I claim a treasured gift;
the longest name in town.

But did you know the following?
I used to be a Smith.
My Papou took an alias.
It’s true! That’s not a myth.

Haralambos chose Harry K.
to be his new first name.
And Smith instead of Asima…
Good grief. Had he no shame?

But gratefully that all got fixed.
In Nineteen-sixty-nine
a judge’s gavel gave us back
the name that now is mine.

* on August 13, 1969 the Edwin Smith Family of Wenatchee, Washington became the Edwin Asimakoupoulos Family. This week marks the 40th anniversary of a change of name that literally changed my life. And now you know “the rest of the story.”

 Check out http://wenatcheeworld.com/article/20090813/NEIGHBORS/708139948

A Book Club Extraordinaire

Celebrating the phenomenon of Facebook;
A Tribute to the One-Armed Organist

A Book Club Extraordinaire
Celebrating the phenomenon of Facebook

It’s a phenom known as Facebook
where lost friends are found
and parallel paths cross again.
It’s a treasure hunt unlike
I’ve ever been on
where I’m digging up names from back when.

It’s like I’m a detective.
I am sleuthing online
for a classmate I knew in high school.
And like magic they surface
on my PC screen.
It’s a treasure more costly than jewels.

It’s amazing, addictive.
It gives you a rush.
One click of the mouse and you see
what old chums are doing,
have planned or regret
or what, with the Lord’s help, they’ll be.

It’s a book club of members
who are writing the book
that keeps growing in length day by day.
And while not a bestseller
(much better, it’s free),
it has content for which gladly you’d pay.

It’s an online reunion
without leaving home.
You share pictures, advice, recipes.
There’s no need to be lonely
with Facebook around.
Just log on and have fun.
It’s a breeze.

A Tribute to the One-Armed Organist
Remembering Mark Thallander’s near-fatal accident six years later

You never will forget that day
life as you knew it passed away.
But in the wreckage of what died
a new life came to be.

As friends and families got the word
of what had happened August 3rd.
They prayed that God would let you live
and then that you would thrive.

Concerts of prayer, that’s what took place
as thousands stormed the throne of grace.
With fingers flying on the keys,
we pulled out all the stops

We asked the Lord that what was left
would give way to the upper cleft
so melodies with your right hand
could swell with praise to Him.

And what we asked the Father for
has come to pass. You know the score.
The minor key of tragedy
resolved in wondrous ways.

It’s all about God’s faithfulness
where sorrow and unhappiness
become the means to bring about
the music of His heart.

* Six years ago while vacationing in Southern California, I received an email from Peggie Bohahnon. This writing colleague in Springfield, MO alerted me to a tragic accident in New England (on August 3, 2003) involving a world-renown organist. Peggie asked me to join thousands who were praying that Mark would survive. I did. I also wrote a poem especially for Mark hoping to encourage him in his struggle. On going correspondence and a personal friendship began that week that continues to this day.

As it turned out, Mark did survive, but his left arm didn’t. It had to be amputated. His life as he’d known it was over. What could be worse to a concert organist than to be deprived of his left arm? To add to his grief, while Mark was hospitalized his father died. Mark was unable to attend the funeral service. He listened to it on a portable phone placed near his bed.

Subsequently, Mark has defied the odds and continued to make a career of concert performances and church appearances. Having been fitted with a prosthesis, he can use his left hand to chord. It’s an amazing story of courage, determination, faith and God’s faithfulness. Yes, faithfulness is the word for the day.

You can learn more about Mark’s amazing story by going to www.markthallander.com

Mr. Gates, Help Me Open Windows

Exposing the real crime in Cambridge (and elsewhere);
The Heat is On

Mr. Gates, Help Me Open Windows
Exposing the real crime in Cambridge (and elsewhere)

Yes, he tried to open windows,
but that proved a big mistake.
You’d think that not a problem
for a man whose name is Gates.

What happened back in Cambridge
near that town best known for tea
was an operating system
that could not be called PC.

It exposed the unveiled vista
we pretend does not exist
of a nation where black people
top the “can’t be trusted” list.

What if after your vacation
you returned home without keys
and you tried the doors and windows
while your neighbors called police?

Wouldn’t you be pretty angry
and the source of endless grief
if they branded you a burglar
and then cuffed you as a thief?

Would the same thing Gates encountered
have occurred to one less tan?
I would bet a different outcome
for a paler key-less man.

Sad to say the door marked EQUAL
still remains most often locked.
It is time we force it open.
The real crime is simply talk.

  • Henry Louis Gates, Jr. is the black Harvard professor who was arrested after entering his own home without a key when a neighbor called authorities assuming it was a break-in.
  • The above poem has been updated since it was originally published. In the original post I implied that the neighbor who called the police on Mr. Gates knew the “alleged intruder” was black. Subsequent to posting the poem I read a transcript of the 911 call that indicated the neighbor did not know the skin color of the person.

The Heat is On
Sounding off about Seattle’s Heat Wave

I don’t know ’bout global warming.
I just know I cannot sleep.
It’s an oven in my bedroom,
much too hot for counting sheep.

Though they call this season summer,
I think simmer’s more correct.
Since we have no air conditioning,
I’m a sleepless nervous wreck.

Yesterday we broke a record
1-0-3 humid degrees.
In Seattle that’s unheard of.
It is known for seventies.

But perhaps God sent this heat wave
to convert our pagan state.
When the temperature’s like Hades,
some might move t’ward Heaven’s gate.

Where Have All the Newsmen Gone?

A tribute to a trio of beloved broadcasters

Peter, Paul and Mary
are still hammering their song.
They’re pondering the blowing wind
and where have flowers gone.

But Peter, Paul and Walter
are now dead and gone from sight.
I speak of Mr. Jennings,
Mr. Harvey and Cronkite.

That former trio challenges
injustice through their songs.
The latter three remained content
reporting social wrongs.

Their voices were melodic,
most familiar and unique.
Their newscasts were a work of art.
We loved to hear them speak.

But now those voices have been stilled.
We grieve beside their graves.
Like Puff the Magic Dragon,
they have slipped into their caves.

Without those three, it seems to me
the news has lost its fizz.
The greats are gone just like old blooms.
That’s just the way it is.

And That’s the Way It Is!

Remembering Walter and the way it was

We called him Walter, never Walt.
And like a drugstore chocolate malt,
he helped define “the way it was”
when we were very young.

He anchored us on stormy days
when tragedy (like frightening waves)
would threaten to capsize our hope
that all would be okay.

He first informed us of the shot
that stole our dreams of Camelot.
And it was he who shared our joy
when man walked on the moon.

He was the voice within “the eye”*
I somehow thought would never die,
for even in retirement
he spoke from time to time.

But now he’s gone and I am sad.
Just eight months since I lost my dad,
I am reminded yet again
that heroes pass away.

That’s just the way it is, I guess.
In time, death claims the very best.
And while we miss the way it was,
we treasure memories.

* The logo for the CBS television network is an eye