1. Debbie sent Christy, Carol, and me several pictures today, helping us see what a joyous reunion Debbie, Adrienne, Patrick, and Molly have experienced and how happy our grandchildren seem to be to see one another and be in the company of the family as a whole.
I haven't experienced FOMO (Fear of Missing Out).
I've experienced KOMO (Knowledge of Missing Out)!
That hasn't been a bad thing -- not when I see what a happy occasion this reunion has been.
I'll add that some time ago, Patrick and Jack began working together through electronic communications to help Jack build a computer.
Now, with Patrick and Jack being in one another's company, they've finished this project and Debbie sent us pictures of them working together and connecting the computer to Adrienne's internet connection.
I look forward to Debbie's return to Kellogg, but, at the same time, I wish her time with the family all being together could last longer and that it were simpler to make happen more often.
2. As I've written several times on this blog, Portland free lance journalist Leah Sottile, back in July, posted on her Substack a list of books she admires in response to the New York Times' list of the top 100 books of the 21st century. Out of my admiration for Leah Sottile's podcasts and writing, I decided to read every one of the fourteen books she listed. I am almost finished with book number twelve, leaving me with two to go.
Today, I remembered that several days ago I'd received a notification email that Leah Sottile had posted a new article on her Substack. I subscribe to her Substack account and I checked out her latest piece entitled, "Some Very Good Writing".
In it, she reminded readers of her July book list and she put a footnote at the end of this reminder paragraph.
I read the footnote.
It referred to me!
Leah Sottile wrote: "It couldn't delight me more that one subscriber, Bill, has turned the book list into his personal reading list. Folks, be like Bill. Read more books."
I had commented a few months ago on one of Leah Sottile's Substack articles that I decided to read all of the books on her list. That's how she found out I undertook this project.
I am happy to have delighted Leah Sottile.
As I told her, reading her list of books has been unnerving, challenging, stimulating, and chilling.
Now I look forward to reading the articles she listed in her latest article, "Some Very Good Writing".
I also look forward to her next book coming out: it's an investigation of the New Age movement entitled Blazing Eye Sees All: Love Has Won, False Prophets, and the Fever Dream of the American New Age.
3. I drove to Gladstone and Eugene and back again in the first part of December. Upon arriving home, I seem to have become caught up in other things and then I started watching Poker Face and I fell out of my reading routine.
Today I returned.
I picked up where I left off about a month ago in the book, American Terrorist: Timothy McVeigh & the Oklahoma City Bombing.
Today's reading chilled me, not only because it detailed the logistics and the unimaginable carnage of the bombing itself, but it detailed the cold rationality Timothy McVeigh drew upon to carry out his mission.
It haunts me to read stories of people who possess the gift of superior intelligence and employ their intelligence in the pursuit of violence and destruction, fueled by obsession and a narrow and intense commitment to a particular ideology.
The killings at Ruby Ridge and at Waco and McVeigh's deep disillusionment with the U. S. military and his experience as a soldier in the Gulf War combined to fuel Timothy McVeigh's anti-government obsessions.
He wanted to pay the federal government back for the deaths and injuries its agencies had brought about and he had come to believe that doing so, by engineering a huge, unforgettable act of destruction, would trigger a widespread anti-government revolution. Timothy McVeigh either hoped or believed that once people understood why he blew up the Murrah Federal Building, that it would be the start of a movement to end, by whatever means, government tyranny and build up liberty.
The bombing did not have this widespread effect (although it did inspire a fraction of our population).
The book then chronicles McVeigh's arrests, his indictment, and I put the book down later tonight, still deep in Timothy McVeigh's trial.