Sometimes this simple quote is enough to keep me going. Especially considering the original source...
Spoken by wonderful Native American actor Chief Dan George's character Lone Watie in the classic Clint Eastwood western, The Outlaw Josey Wales, it has become one of those larger-than-life movie quotes taken from Hollywood but applied often to real life. George's role in the picture, while played mostly for deadpan comic effect, closely mirrors that of actual American Indians throughout our history.
And so, for him to continually utter the phrase in the face of his monumental struggle, it becomes easy to transfer it and its meaning to the more mundane challenges we face in our modern lives.
Endeavor to persevere. Strive to make the effort. Keep on keepin' on. Never give up. However you want to package the words, they remain a potent reminder.
Not of the solution. But of those first steps towards it...
Showing posts with label off topic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label off topic. Show all posts
Saturday, June 25, 2011
Friday, July 16, 2010
When I Say Hillshire...YOU SAY FARM!
So, you wanna know what's been stuck in my head the past few days? It ain't pretty...
Basically, it's been "I said a BEEF! HOT LINKS! I said a BEEF! HOT LINKS!":
So, why do these things happen? All I can do is give Madison Avenue all the credit in the world for still being able to manipulate me, especially at a point in my life when I feel I'm pretty much immune to that sort of thing.
I mean, I rarely eat meat at all, and your smoked variety is something that I don't even think about, even when grocery shopping. But here I am, singing that silly song all day (of course I use the term "singing" very loosely), and wouldn't you know it, I'm actually thinking I should take a look at this stuff the next time I'm by the deli case.
God bless America...GO MEAT!!!
Basically, it's been "I said a BEEF! HOT LINKS! I said a BEEF! HOT LINKS!":
So, why do these things happen? All I can do is give Madison Avenue all the credit in the world for still being able to manipulate me, especially at a point in my life when I feel I'm pretty much immune to that sort of thing.
I mean, I rarely eat meat at all, and your smoked variety is something that I don't even think about, even when grocery shopping. But here I am, singing that silly song all day (of course I use the term "singing" very loosely), and wouldn't you know it, I'm actually thinking I should take a look at this stuff the next time I'm by the deli case.
God bless America...GO MEAT!!!
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
New York Yankees Owner Steinbrenner Dead At 80...
Well, those of you who know me, and especially any of you that have followed my older blog on photographyreview.com , understand that I often wander far from photography and art-related topics in my musings. Sometimes very far...
So today we have the first off-topic post of my new blog. The passing of long-time New York Yankees baseball club owner George Steinbrenner at the age of 80. According to news reports, Steinbrenner, in poor health for several years now, died of a massive heart attack at approx. 6:30 this morning:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/bbo_obit_steinbrenner
As a lifelong Yankee fan, I'm sure I'm not alone in saying it has been a love-hate rollercoaster ride of emotions over the years with Steinbrenner as the owner of the team. For many sports fans, the ends justify the means, and in that sense I've been very happy with the great success of my Yanks since the mid-1970s. Plenty of great baseball, and American League Divison Championshps and pennants, and of course World Series Championships.
But I've also suffered greatly over the years (at least in the sense that you can suffer as a sports fan), being embarrassed many times at his public behavior and royally pissed many other times when he fired popular managers for what sometimes seemed like the slightest of reasons (Dick Howser being let go after winning 103 games in 1980 comes to mind).
Still, in the end, he not only transformed the Yankees into perennial winners, but forever changed the way baseball and every other type of professional sports franchise is operated and marketed. To me, the ultimate irony (and compliment to him) was that at some point, nearly every owner that criticized him was actually trying to emulate him, but simply couldn't do it as well, and the fans of other teams that publicly berated him, secretly wished their teams were more like the Yankees and their owners more like George...
Thankfully, George Steinbrenner mellowed as he got older and acquired championships. While his drive to succeed never waned, he took a much less public profile in later years, rarely "calling out" coaches and players the way he had done in the past.
Now, this may sound a bit morbid to some of you, but I can't help but smile thinking Steinbrenner could not have picked a better time to die: on the eve of tonight's MLB All-Star game. At a time when baseball wants the fans and media's complete focus and attention on all the teams, who should be dominating, not only the sports networks, but every news channel and outlet? His beloved (and hated) New York Yankees. He would not have wanted it any other way.
Rest in peace King George...
So today we have the first off-topic post of my new blog. The passing of long-time New York Yankees baseball club owner George Steinbrenner at the age of 80. According to news reports, Steinbrenner, in poor health for several years now, died of a massive heart attack at approx. 6:30 this morning:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/bbo_obit_steinbrenner
As a lifelong Yankee fan, I'm sure I'm not alone in saying it has been a love-hate rollercoaster ride of emotions over the years with Steinbrenner as the owner of the team. For many sports fans, the ends justify the means, and in that sense I've been very happy with the great success of my Yanks since the mid-1970s. Plenty of great baseball, and American League Divison Championshps and pennants, and of course World Series Championships.
But I've also suffered greatly over the years (at least in the sense that you can suffer as a sports fan), being embarrassed many times at his public behavior and royally pissed many other times when he fired popular managers for what sometimes seemed like the slightest of reasons (Dick Howser being let go after winning 103 games in 1980 comes to mind).
Still, in the end, he not only transformed the Yankees into perennial winners, but forever changed the way baseball and every other type of professional sports franchise is operated and marketed. To me, the ultimate irony (and compliment to him) was that at some point, nearly every owner that criticized him was actually trying to emulate him, but simply couldn't do it as well, and the fans of other teams that publicly berated him, secretly wished their teams were more like the Yankees and their owners more like George...
Thankfully, George Steinbrenner mellowed as he got older and acquired championships. While his drive to succeed never waned, he took a much less public profile in later years, rarely "calling out" coaches and players the way he had done in the past.
Now, this may sound a bit morbid to some of you, but I can't help but smile thinking Steinbrenner could not have picked a better time to die: on the eve of tonight's MLB All-Star game. At a time when baseball wants the fans and media's complete focus and attention on all the teams, who should be dominating, not only the sports networks, but every news channel and outlet? His beloved (and hated) New York Yankees. He would not have wanted it any other way.
Rest in peace King George...
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