Morning Coffee w/ Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 2/4/19

February 4, 2019
Good morning friends, many thanks for stopping by today.

The Electoral College and Chicago Transit Authority are featured in On This Date while 1989 is spotlighted in Top of the Charts. Philosophy 101 features and old saying about how everything has already happened.

Today is, more or less, the midpoint of winter, summer for our friends in the Southern Hemisphere.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In 1789 – The Electoral College unanimously elects George Washington president of the United States. While John Adams also received electoral votes and was elected vice president, Washington was the only candidate named on every elector’s ballot and is considered to have been unanimously elected. Washington would duplicate this feat four years later and he remains the only president unanimously elected by the Electoral College. He would take office on April 30, the first president under the new Constitution.

In 1977 – Two trains operated by the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) crash, killing eleven and injuring 180. The initial crash actually wasn’t that bad – one train rear-ended the other at a slow speed and passengers only reported a slight bump- but the operator of one of the trains, who turned out to be high, kept his train going, leading to its derailment and crashing down on the street below. The accident occurred near the intersections of Lake Street and Wabash Avenue and remains the deadliest accident in CTA history.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1989:
Hot 100 – When I’m With You…Sheriff (only week)
Soul Chart – Can You Stand the Rain…New Edition (1st of two weeks)
Country Chart – What I’d Say…Earl Thomas Conley (only week)
Album Chart – Don’t Be Cruel…Bobby Brown (3rd of six non-consecutive weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,636: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.974: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
645: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
Everything has happened. Everything will happen.
An old saying

We’ve heard today’s thought attributed to everyone from the Hindus to American Indians to the Chinese; it’s a common thread running through our human experience and in many respects it is true: we are not the exciting salt and summit of humanity that we may think we are; we are what our ancestors were: people trying to make a go of it, albeit with smartphones in our pockets now. Of course, we are continuously evolving and advance, but the inevitable march of progress doesn’t change and neither does the fact us that collectively us humans continue to tread much the same course those before us trod.

Individually, however, we are responsible for every new thing in this world. No one was born with the exact same combination and measure of talents, skills and ambition that we were. It’s nature’s gift to us and our gift to our fellow humans and we have both the opportunity and obligation to maximize the talents we were born with. Those that get on in this world do this every day. Not some days and not others, not some months or years and not others: they make the 24-hours they are issued every day – the only commodity we all have in equal measure – serve them.  They intuitively know the life they are meant to lead and they go and lead that life.

We intuitively know the life we were meant to lead, too. If we want to also get on in this life we must have the courage to go and live that life and the patience to go and live it every day.

We are the only new things in this world. It’s up to us to show this to ourselves and the world.

Many thanks for reading, and have a good day.
xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 2/3/19

February 3, 2019
Good morning friends, many thanks for stopping by today.

Today, On This Date has an aviation bent, the Top of the Charts investigates 1968 and Philosophy 101 has a quote from Saul Bellow to keep us thinking.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In 1959 – Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens J.P. Richardson – better known as the Big Bopper – and their less-famous pilot are killed in a plane crash in north-central Iowa. The flight was en route from a show in Clear Lake, Iowa to another show in Moorhead, Minnesota. Country music legend Waylon Jennings, a member of Holly’s band, lost a coin flip to Richardson for a seat on the flight. Fares for the flight were $36 per person, a bit more than $300 in today’s dollars.

In 1961 – The US Air Force begins Operation Looking Glass, a program of round-the-clock flights designed to provide airborne command of US nuclear forces in the event ground command centers are inoperable. The plane is headed by a commanding general and a staff of about 20, not including aircraft personnel. The operation ceased continuous airborne operations in 1990, but remains on 24-hour alert.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1968:
Hot 100 – Green Tambourine…The Lemon Pipers (only week)
Soul Chart – Chain of Fools…Aretha Franklin (3rd of four weeks)
Country Chart – Skip a Rope…Henson Cargill (1st of five weeks)
Album Chart – The Magical Mystery Tour…The Beatles (5th of eight weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,635: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.970: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
646: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
I almost never think of my calendar years. I’m forever hiking across the same plateau with no end in sight.
Saul Bellow
Ravelstein

It is very easy to think of our calendar years. Our need to reckon time is a fundamental part of human nature, so much so that we have names for each new day and these days are broken up into hours and minutes. Enough days and a week has passed and weeks make up a year and these years make up decades and centuries. Every year the anniversary of our birth awaits us, reminding us how much time we’ve spent on this planet and how much, or how little, we might have left. No one’s time on this planet is unlimited and unless there’s a death warrant with our name on it, we generally don’t know when or how it will end. Marking our days and years is a much a part of our human experience as eating.

It’s human nature to mark time, but how necessary is it? Those that get on this world generally do not pay too much attention to the passing of the years. They were meant to make their time serve them and not to merely stand around marking its passing and they work hard to get the most out of their time on this planet. They do this by cultivating and getting the most out of the talents they were born with and those who do this with dilligence and courage lead lives whose end, while a foregone conclusion, has no bearing on their present.

Our lives are, indeed, similar to a plateau whose end cannot be seen. Of course, the years pass and they will take their toll: hair will turn gray, our bodies will no longer the limber temples they were in earlier years. But if we are on our paths, if we are counting on our hearts to tell us where to go and our instincts to tell us how to get there – which they never fail to do – we may well find the years passing without reference from us.

Saul Bellow (1915-2005) was a Canadian and American writer. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1976. 

Many thanks for reading, and have a good day.
xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 2/1/19

February 1, 2019
Good morning friends. 

The long march of what our fellow humans have done continues in The Daily Almanac, including the start of the British Invasion, still one of the great dividing points in our cultural history. Oh, and Philosophy 101 talks about the joys of being by yourself.  

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In 1960 – Four black students from North Carolina A&T University stage a sit-in at an all-white lunch counter at Woolworth’s in Greensboro. While not the first sit-ins of the era, they did inspire further sit-ins locally and throughout the South. Two of the Greensboro Four are still alive, and the Woolworth’s where the sit-in took place is now the International Civil Rights Center and Museum.

2003 – The space shuttle Columbia disintegrates above Texas and Louisiana during re-entry after a piece of foam insulation breaks off and damages a wing. Seven astronauts died, though some worms one millimeter in length and housed in aluminum who were taken up did survive the breakup and crash landing.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1964:
Hot 100 – I Want to Hold Your Hand…The Beatles (1st of seven weeks; the Beatles first #1 song in America)
Soul Chart – No chart
Country Chart – Love’s Gonna Live Here…Buck Owens (16th consecutive and 17th of 17 non-consecutive weeks)
Album Chart – The Singing Nun…The Singing Nun (9th of ten weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,635: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.969: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
646: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
I’ve been alone a lot in my life, and I’ve never tired of it.
Robert B Parker
Playmates

There is no substitute for being content with ourselves. We do not have to be hermits, we do not have to shun others to the point of being anti-social, but we must be comfortable whenever circumstances give us time to ourselves, for however long that might be.

It isn’t easy. Us humans are social creatures and liking and being comfortable with oneself so that one enjoys being alone takes some cultivation. The best, only, way to do this is to be completely in touch with yourself, with who you are and what you are about. We must be living the life we were meant to live. When we’re not living the life we were meant to live, nature sees to it that we are antsy and out of sorts and not ourselves. When we are not ourselves being alone is difficult. It feels constricting and unnatural.

Time to ourselves should be treasured. If it’s not, we should ask ourselves why? It is probably because we are not completely at home with ourselves. We must ensure we have the wisdom to know the life we were meant to live, the courage to go and live that life and the patience to see it through to the very end. When we do these things, we will find time to ourselves to be completely natural and satisfying.  

Robert B Parker (1932-2010) was an American writer, mostly known for the Spenser series of mysteries.

Many thanks for reading, and have a good day.
xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/31/19

January 31, 2019
Good morning friends.
Today on the Almanac we have some hot US Constitutional amendment action, the Top of the Charts is from 1982 and Philosophy 101 talks about the impostors known as success and failure.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In  1865 – The United States House of Representatives passes the 13th Amendment to the United States Constitution. This followed the amendment’s passage by the Senate the previous April and sent the measure, which abolishes slavery in the United States, to the several states for ratification. The following day Illinois would become the first state to ratify the amendment and it became law after Georgia ratified it in December.

In 1945 – US Army Private Eddie Slovik is executed for desertion in France. The soldiers that shot Slovik weren’t Marksmen of the Year. Of the eleven bullets that hit Slovik (one soldier fired a blank), only four were close enough to the heart to do fatal damage, and the squad was actually preparing to load further rounds in their weapons. Slovik was one of 21,000 soldiers convicted of desertion during War II and one of 49 sentenced to death and the only one to have his sentenced carried out. It was the first execution by the Army for desertion since the Civil War

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1982:
Hot 100 – At This Moment…Billy Vera and the Beaters (2nd of two weeks)
Soul Chart – Candy…Cameo (1st of two weeks)
Country Chart – You Still Move Me…Dan Seal (only week)
Album Chart – Slippery When Wet…Bon Jovi (4th of eight non-consecutive weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,634: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.968: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
647: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
A man’s life is interesting primarily when he has failed — I well know. For it’s a sign that he tried to surpass himself.
Georges Clemenceau

Failure and success are interesting animals. They are, to a great extent, how we measure the worth of our lives or, more accurately, how we are conditioned to measure the worth of our lives. You set a goal and don’t make it you’ve failed. You reached that goal, your a success.

Us humans, every one of us, were meant to do things. Now, those things differ based on our talents and ambitions, but those that get on in this life try things; they set goals and try to reach them. Sometimes they reach those goals – life’s great prize. Sometimes they don’t – life’s great lesson. And dreams some they will chase until the day they die – life’s great challenge. Their lives transcend the usual measures of success and failure because success and failure are impostors, the construct of outside influences that exist only in relation to one another. Take away the relationship and neither exists.

We dismiss success and failure, too, when we are on our path, when we have the wisdom to know what we were meant to do with our lives and the courage to go and do it and the patience to see it through to the very end. When our time comes to look at our lives all we are left with are the talents we were issued at the birth and the work we put into maximizing those talents. When we’ve done this, we will be looking back on time well spent and a life well lived, the ultimate success.

Georges Clemenceau (1841-1929) was prime minister of France from 1906-09 and 1917-20.

Many thanks for reading, and have a good day.
xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/30/19

January 30, 2019
Good morning dear readers. Today in the Almanac, it’s tough at the top, as King Charles I and Andrew Jackson show in On This Date, Hall and Oates dominate Top of the Charts, while Philosophy 101 offers a discussion on the difference between genius and talent, with a quote from Schopenhauer providing the impetus.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In  1649 – Charles I, the king of England, is beheaded in London, punishment following his conviction for treason. Charles had declined to enter a plea or, for that matter, acknowledge that any earthly court had jurisdiction over him. Justice was swift back then: his trial had begun on the 20th and he was found guilty on the 26th. The English were so displeased with the monarchy they would remain a commonwealth until restoring the throne, to his son, Charles II, in 1660.

In 1835 – The first assassination attempt against a president of the United States occurs when one Richard Lawerence attempts to shoot Andrew Jackson. Jackson was leaving the US Capitol building at the time and Lawrence tried to shoot him twice in the back, but both pistols misfired. After the attempts, Lawerence was subdued by the crowd, including President Jackson, who beat him with his cane. Lawerence would later be found not guilty by reason of having lost his marbles, and spent the remaining 26 years of his life in asylums.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1982:
Hot 100 – I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do)…Daryl Hall and John Oates (only week)
Soul Chart – I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do)…Daryl Hall and John Oates (only week)
Country Chart –  I Can’t Go for That (No Can Do)…Daryl Hall and John Oates (only week)
Just kidding. The soul chart listing is legit, but we are just funnin’ you with the country chart listing. The real #1 country song is this one:
Country Chart – The Sweetest Thing (I’ve Ever Known)…Juice Newton…(only week)
Album Chart – 4…Foreigner (10th of ten non-consecutive weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,633: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.966: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
648: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
Talent hits a target no one else can hit; genius hits targets no one else can see.
Arthur Schopenhauer

One of the life’s greatest lessons is all of us can do something well, and it’s a lesson we were fortunate enough to be taught very early in our lives. We were all issued varying measures of assorted talents and ambitions at birth and what we get out of our lives depends on how much we maximize and utilize those talents. Often the difference between success and failure is the amount of work we were willing to put into something.

Now, our talent is not exclusive to us, lots of people can do lots of things in this world, but what we get out of that talent is exclusive to us. We must have the wisdom to know what we are about, the courage to live the life we were meant to live and the wisdom to see our paths through to the very end.

Only we can make our mark on this world: nobody else can do it for us because no one else sees the same targets we do. If we follow our genius, if we live the life we were meant to live, then the targets we were meant to hit will be plain for us to see.

Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) was a German philosopher. 

Many thanks for reading, and have a good day.

xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/29/19

January 29, 2019
Hello readers, many thanks for stopping by this morning.

Today in the Almanac we have The Raven and the Rubik’s Cube headlining On This DateTop of the Charts is from 1994 and Barry Manilow provides the ballast for Philosophy 101 with a quote about believing in yourself.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In  1845 – The Raven by Edgar Allen Poe is published in the New York Evening Mirror. The Raven is about a raven who visits a distraught lover and follows the gentleman’s fall into madness. It made Poe famous but did not bring much financial success and while The Raven’s place in history remains the topic of some discussion, it remains one of the planet’s most famous poems.

In 1980 – The infernal Rubik’s Cube makes its international debut in London. The standard 3×3 cube has, more or less, 43 quintillion goddamn possible combinations and remains one of the most popular, not to mention frustrating, toys in history. It has become so popular it even has its own international governing body for contests and the acknowledgment of records, the World Cube Association.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1994:
Hot 100 – All For Love  – Bryan Adams, Rod Stewart and Sting (2nd of three weeks)
Soul Chart – Cry For You…Jodeci (2nd of three weeks)
Country Chart – Live Until I Die…Clay Walker (only week)
Album Chart – Music Box…Mariah Carey (6th of eight non-consecutive weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,632: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.965: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
649: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
I believed in what I did so much, I couldn’t believe there were people who couldn’t hear it.
Barry Manilow

Barry Manilow is an interesting person to utter something like this. A critical and commercial success like few others, Manilow was also one of those artists it was popular for certain people to say they didn’t like. Not everyone heard Barry’s voice.

We must believe in what we are doing. There is no substitute for this because no one, no one, will believe in us like we do. Your mother and a good spouse will try, but no one has the vision for your life and how your time must be spent than you do. And this is true for whatever you may be doing in this life. A carpenter must put his heart and soul into every project. A writer must believe in every word they put down, that they are saying what they feel must be said every time they sit down to ply their trade.

When we believe in what we do because it is coming from the very depths of our being, the very core of what we are about, good things will follow. Not everyone on the planet may hear our voice, but that’s their loss. As long as we hear our voice, that we are on our path and living the life we were meant to live, that is all that matters.

Thank you for reading. We will see you again tomorrow.
xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/28/19

January 28, 2019
Good day, readers. I’m glad you’re here.

Today the English monarchy and the last flight of the Challenger are featured on On This Date, Top of the Charts highlights this date in 1978 and Virgil, an old Roman poet, has the quote that provides today’s Philosophy 101 lesson.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In  1547 – Edward VI becomes king of England, following the death of his father, Henry VIII. Edward was nine at the time and only reigned until his death at age 15. When it became clear he was going to die, Edward declared in his will the throne pass to a cousin, Lady Jane Grey, but she only lasted nine days before being overthrown and replaced by Mary I, the second child of Henry VIII to wear the crown. The third and final child would be Elizabeth I, who assumed the throne following the death of Mary’s husband, Philip.

In 1986 – The space shuttle Challenger lifts off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, on a routine mission to release a satellite, observe Halley’s Comet and have schoolteacher Christa McAuliffe conduct lessons from space. Challenger never left Earth’s orbit, however, exploding 73 seconds after take off, an investigation showing primary and secondary O-rings on a solid rocket booster failed. It is not known exactly how or when the crew died, though the impact of the crew cabin crashing into the ocean would have killed anyone who was still alive. It was the first American manned spaceflight not to make it to space and the second ever, following a 1975 Soviet mission where the two-man crew survived.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1978:
Hot 100 – Baby Come Back– Player (3rd of three weeks)
Soul Chart – Our Love…Natalie Cole (2nd of two weeks)
Country Chart – Out of My Head and Back in My Bed…Loretta Lynn (1st of two weeks)
Album Chart – Saturday Night Fever…Various artists (2nd of 24 weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,631: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.963: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
648: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
They can because they think they can.
Virgil

To an extent that may surprise or even astonish us, we tend to get the lives we expect. Those that expect a good life, those that know what they are about and maximize the talents they were born with at birth, generally get the lives they were expecting. Similarly, those with low expectations for their time on this planet usually get that, too.

Now, just because thinking you can doesn’t mean you will. There are other factors involved, not the least being what you want must be attainable and it must be something you have a knack for. For example. if we were to try to win an Olympic sprinting medal, we would not succeed. Certainly, this is attainable because Olympic sprinting medals are issued every four years, but no matter how much we want it or how much we think we can do it, we don’t do it because we are not cut out for high-speed foot travel. Plus, it is useful to remember there are billions of people on this planet all leading random lives and sometimes things are out of our control.

However, if you think you can do something you have a knack for, if you are reacting to something emanating from the very core of your being, and you put in the work required to make it happen and you have the patience to see it through to the very end, you may very well climb your mountain. And if you don’t, the very fact you were on your path doing what you were meant to do with your life ensures an equally satisfactory result will present itself.

Thank you for reading. We look forward to seeing you tomorrow.

xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/27/19

January 27, 2019
A good Sunday morning to you, many thanks for stopping by.

Today we have a rather poignant On This Date for you. Sometimes we try to funny up this segment a little bit, but that is not possible today. Elsewhere, Top of the Charts investigates 1973 and a quote from Roots provides the fodder for today’s edition of Philosophy 101.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:
In  1945 – The 322nd Rifle Division of the Soviet Red Army liberates the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland. It had been in operation for five years and was responsible for killing over one million Jews.

In 1967 – Three American astronauts, Gus Grissom, Ed White Roger Chaffee are killed when the command module they were testing catches fire at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. An investigation concluded the fire was caused by a spark in some faulty wiring, aided by the pure oxygen atmosphere in the spacecraft. Manned flights were suspended for almost two years, and the first manned Apollo mission, Apollo 7, was not launched until October 1968.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1973:
Hot 100 – Superstition– Stevie Wonder (only week)
Soul Chart – Why Can’t We Live Together…Timmy Thomas (1st of two weeks)
Country Chart – (Old Dogs, Children and) Watermelon Wine…Tom T Hall (only week)
Album Chart – No Secrets…Carly Simon (3rd of five weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,630: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.961: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
649: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
Would he spend the rest of his life here…watching hope slip away along with the years until there was nothing left to live for and time had finally run out?
Alex Haley
Roots: The Saga of an American Family

Roots, of course, is a story of Haley’s ancestors, one of whom was captured in The Gambia and shipped to America for duty as a slave, and today’s quote is about one of these ancestors, though we neglected to note which one. Roots remains one of the finest books we’ve ever read and we were dismayed to find out Haley plagiarized some of it.

If you are reading this you are not subject to being a slave, unless your master provides you with Internet access, but today’s quote is as relevant to us as it was to Haley’s ancestors because we must ask ourselves these questions every day: Are the years slipping away? Will time finally run out? And the only question that really matters: will we make our time on this planet serve us, or will we squander our time here?

We must always have something to live for. Slaves only had more forced labor to live for, but we have 24 hours every day – the only commodity each of us is issued in equal measure – to make something good happen for ourselves. Those that get on in this life are the ones who take advantage of those 24 hours. They make their time serve them, whether it’s a champion athlete you see on television or the mechanic who expertly fixes your car, know what they were meant to do with their lives, they have the courage to go and do it and they have the patience to do it every day. Not some days and not others, not some years and not others, but every day, from the time they make the commitment until the day they die.

We can be no different; The life we were meant to live is there for all of us, but we have to go and get it; it’s not going to fall in our laps. We must pursue our path with diligence and courage.

Thank you for reading. We look forward to seeing you tomorrow.

xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn – 1/26/19

January 26, 2019
Good morning dearest readers, I’m glad you stopped by today.

The almanac for today features the world’s largest diamond and a fibbing president, the Top of the Charts highlights 1952 and Philosophy 101 talks about overcoming ourselves.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:

In 1905 – The world’s largest diamond, known as the Cullinan diamond, named after the chairman of the South African mine where it was found, is discovered. It would later be cut into nine separate games, two of which are in the British crown jewels and the rest of which are owned by Queen Elizabeth.

In 1998 – President Bill Clinton goes on national television to announce he did not have sex with a White House intern named Monica Lewinsky. He was just kidding, of course, and in December 1998 Clinton was impeached by the United States House of Representatives, though in early 1999 he was acquited in a trial held by the United States Senate.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1952:
Best Sellers In Stores – Cry– Johnny Ray and The Four Lads (5th of eleven weeks)
Soul Chart – Weepin’ & Cryin’…Griffin Brothers Orchestra (3rd of three weeks)
Country Chart – Slow Poke…Pee Wee King (13th of 15 non-consecutive weeks)
Album Chart – An American in Paris…Soundtrack (3rd of 16 non-consecutive weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,629: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.959: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
650: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
…yet McGary loved the church, as a comradely gathering of people alike hungry for something richer than daily selfishness…
Sinclair Lewis
Elmer Gantry

From time to time in this feature we talk about overcoming human nature and, by extension, ourselves. It isn’t easy. The daily selfishness that Mr Lewis refers to often stems from our deepest instincts: self-preservation, the sometimes goatish urge to reproduce, the need to look after ourselves before we do anything else.

It’s not easy overcoming these instincts, but it is necessary because we cannot get on this life, we cannot maximize the talents we were issued at birth, we cannot live the life we were meant to live unless we do. It takes wisdom, courage and patience to overcome ourselves: the wisdom to know the life we were meant to live, the courage to go and live that life and the patience to see it through to the very end.

Sometimes those traits aren’t enough because selfishness presents itself every day. However, are our talents and ambitions preset themselves every day, too, and we are not going to get the most out of these if we spend our days succumbing to daily selfishness. We must have the fortitude to overcome ourselves.

xoxoxo
Kaitlyn

Morning Coffee w/Kaitlyn 1/25/19

January 25, 2019
Good morning dearest readers.

Henry VIII and The Guiding Light star in On This Date while Your Hit Parade spotlights 1986 and Philosophy 101 features Herbert Spencer talking about how our thoughts are our gift to our fellow beings. Well, I actually talk about that, but a quote from Spencer is the inspiration.

THE DAILY ALMANAC
On This Date:

In 1533 – English King Henry VIII marries his second wife Anne Boleyn. This was actually the second time the two had been married, the first was the previous November. Both were in secret because ol’ Henry was still married to his first wife Catherine of Aragon. Henry was no more pleased with Anne than he was with Cathrine and would have Anne beheaded in 1536.  Their only child Elizabeth would reign as queen of England from 1558-1603.

In 1937 – America’s longest-running soap opera, The Guiding Light, debuts on NBC Radio. The show moved to CBS Radio in 1947 and CBS Television in 1952 and left the air in 2009 after 18,262 episodes. On the air for 72 years, The Guiding Light remains the fifth-longest running show in worldwide broadcasting history.

Top of the Charts
#1 songs on this date in 1986:
Hot 100 – That’s What Friends Are For– Dionne and Friends (2nd of four weeks)
Soul Chart – That’s What Friends are For…Dionne and Friends (1st of three weeks)
Country Chart – Never Be You…Rosanne Cash (only week)
Album Chart – The Broadway Album…Barbra Streisand (1st of three weeks)
– Chart data courtesy of Billboard.

Numbers Racket
10,628: the continuous number of days the US has been at war.
21.957: the number of dollars, in trillions, of America’s national debt. – Source: usdebtclock.org
651: days until Election Day 2020.

Philosophy 101
His thoughts are as children born to him, which he may not carelessly let die.
Herbert Spencer

Our thoughts should be cherished because they are some of the few things we cna truly call our own. Others have thoughts, of course, but those are their lookout; our thoughts belong exclusively to us. Sometimes, out of insecurity, we may try to compare them to the thoughts of others, but while in step with human nature, it is not fair to us. Our thoughts stem from what we’ve been and lay the foundation for what we will become.

This is especially true for a writer because your characters become so real to you you can picture them sitting at your desk when you are writing about them. This is the way it should be, too, because there is no way you are going to make them real to a reader if they are not real to you.

But today’s quote is true even if you are not a writer. So don’t be afraid of your thoughts. They are your mind’s gift to you and your gift to the word. There is no reason to fear them. Nurture them and let them grow.

xoxoxo
Kaitlyn