One more thing to be thankful for… Lee making an extra 300 bucks on the penny slots.

November 20: Merry Christmas

I’ve said before that Brattleboro runs on a very well defined annual cycle, more obviously so than other, larger places I’ve lived. Sometimes I don’t notice all the changes immediately, like when I went online this spring and learned that other people nearby had seen hummingbirds a month before me.

The most pervasive annual cycle must surely be the retail cycle. And so it really wasn’t a big deal to see Costco fully prepped for Christmas when I stopped in on the way home from the airport. But then when I was hunting for a station in the NPR dead zone in Western Mass., I heard a full on Christmas station, and that really made it real. Christmas shopping season is upon us… maybe it’s already been on for weeks but I’m officially in the loop.

Flower bed

This cute display has been outside the Brattleboro Food Co-op at least all summer, but I didn’t actually get the joke till just the other day…

Tactically inconclusive, but strategically victorious, but not victorious enough

My hotel for the week overlooks this statue of Gen. George B. McClellan, but I had to go to Wikipedia to learn/remember exactly who he was.

In reading the first several paragraphs their account, it appeared as if he lost the battle of Antietam. However, since Gen. Lee was the first to withdraw from the battlefield, the deadliest day in American military history (at least up to that point) was considered a win for the Union Army. And so, at the very end of the article summary, we get to a beautiful summation: tactically inconclusive, but strategically victorious.

The Union victory at Antietam led directly to Lincoln issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, and influenced France and Britain to hold off recognizing the Confederacy.

Personally and professionally, McClellan fared poorly even in victory, and was widely believed to have let the Confederate Army off too easy, given his superior numbers at Antietam and in the aftermath of the battle. He was relieved of his command shortly after, and many armchair generals have suggested that if he done a better job that day the war might have ended much sooner.

Amaze your relatives with this powerful fashion

We wandered into the Cherished Goods thrift store this weekend to see if we could get a jump on the ugly sweater contest that is planned for our family Christmas in Houston. No joy on the sweaters, but we found this wonderful sign.

The Snaz at Iron Horse Music Hall

An incredible amount of groove, and almost as much attitude, way cool.

Veterans Day 2013

11/11, 11:00 AM

I snuck away from my desk this morning to go to the VFW for a Veterans Day commemoration. Although my own National Guard service was short, domestic, and un-dangerous, it still left a strong mark on who I am today. Veterans Day is one of the lesser holidays these days, but it’s real for me, not least because I work for the US Department of Veterans Affairs part of every day.

There are maybe 150 people here today, most of whom served. These old soldiers are notable for what they have ( a bewildering assortment of caps, jackets, pins, remnants of uniform) and in a few cases for what they don’t (arms, legs).

We stood and saluted as the arthritic color guard posted the colors, we said the Pledge of Allegiance, heard the Star-Spangled Banner, invoked, blessed and appreciated. We heard the big voice of the VFW Post Commander break with emotion as he read his speech. We applauded an awful long list of invited guests, heard the service anthems and then heard more speeches. And then the band absolutely rocked the Sousa medley.

There’s no good reason to go to war, but nor is there any way to avoid it, and so here we are. And military service, wartime or not, surely shapes us as individuals and as a people. All that “I’ve got your back” has to come from somewhere, and to a very large degree I think it comes from having your hair cut short and pondering how you would handle the order to come up out of the trench.

To all those who made it back to Brattleboro for today’s buffet luncheon, and to all those who didn’t, I salute you and offer my heartfelt thanks.

The guv’nor, again

At the Retreat fundraiser tonight, Gov. Peter Shumlin accepts the Anna Marsh Award for his commitment to a better stronger mental health system.

He’s still a funny and articulate guy, and I do want to believe everything he says.

What a good-looking group on the way to the Retreat Gala… Or if it were sponsored by Hallmark it would have been a Funla.

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