DAY SIX – CROSS COUNTRY SKIING

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CROSS COUNTRY SKIING

The previous post was partly about my dog Tasha.  She came to me shortly after I had returned from a six-week road trip through Western Canada, which passed the time while I was waiting for the results of the bar examination.  I was pretty sure I had passed, but I couldn’t start practicing law until I had been formally admitted to the bar.  The exam was held in July and the admission ceremony was in October.  I was set to start working as an associate at a small firm in Thornton, Colorado – Carroll, Bradley & Ciancio.  After I was admitted, I immediately began working on some very interesting cases, including the defense of a murder for hire criminal prosecution and a case to determine who owned the water system serving the City of Northglenn, Colorado.  Somewhat less interesting was my first divorce case.  I represented the husband while the wife was represented by another young attorney who had been admitted to the bar at the same time as me.  We were both sort of feeling our way through the process, but I didn’t find it very interesting.

At some point during the negotiations, the other attorney and I began talking about things we enjoyed outside the office and I mentioned cross country skiing, a sport I have enjoyed for many years.  He said that he had never tried it, but would like to learn and we arranged to meet the following weekend to go skiing.  Tasha was about 7 or 8 months old at the time and had never been skiing, so I brought her along.  When I met my skiing companion, I found that he was not alone, either.  He had brought a woman with him – who also had never been skiing and was expecting me to teach her.

Well, this lady was attractive, intelligent, personable and witty, and I was glad that she had joined us. Continue reading “DAY SIX – CROSS COUNTRY SKIING”

DAY FIVE – WHERE ARE MY DOGS?

March 14, 2013

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WHERE ARE MY DOGS?

There were, of course, other dogs.  For most of my school years we had two wonderful dogs named Lady and Smoky.  Lady was a Cocker Spaniel Mix and Smoky an AKC Weimaraner.   They had very good lives for dogs.  We lived in a rural area where they could run free almost all the time.  Whenever I would go hiking through the fields or ride our horse, Jeff, they would accompany me.  I didn’t really think of them as pets.  They were just these wonderful animals who were always around and always wanted to do things with me.  We had a good time and I assumed they would always be part of my life.Continue reading “DAY FIVE – WHERE ARE MY DOGS?”

DAY FOUR – WHERE WERE WE IN ’63?

March 13, 2013

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WHERE WERE WE IN ’63?

I was a student throughout the 1960s – first elementary school, then junior high, then high school and finally college.  I got my bachelor’s degree at the end of the 1969-70 school year.  In many ways, the ‘60s seem to have started for me when I started high school.  I seem to meet a number of people these days who grew up attending Catholic schools.  I never really wanted to do that, but my parents thought, for some reason, that I should try it.  Regis Jesuit High School was the closest Catholic high school to our house – though it was still more than 10 miles away – and it had an excellent academic reputation.  I took the entrance exam and was accepted and I attended Regis during the 1962-63 school year.  Besides being far away, the tuition was expensive and all of my childhood friends were still going to public schools.  I mentioned to my parents that although it was interesting to have spent my freshman year receiving a Jesuit education, I would rather go back to a public school and save them some money.  As luck would have it, a brand new high school was set to open for my sophomore year, and it was only a couple of miles from home.  I could walk there if necessary (which I did that several times), and my parents agreed that I should transfer.

Although I still think of it as a “new” school, Arvada West High School (Go, Wildcats!) is preparing to celebrate its 50th Anniversary.  The first school year for Arvada West began on September 3, 1963. Continue reading “DAY FOUR – WHERE WERE WE IN ’63?”

DAY THREE – REMEMBER TO EAT YOUR VEGETABLES

March 12, 2013

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REMEMBER TO EAT YOUR VEGETABLES

My father came from the Quad Cities area in Illinois and my mother from East Texas.  They were both Marines and met in Washington, D.C. right after World War II.  They married in September of 1946 and moved to California.  About a year later they moved back to Moline, Illinois, where I was born on March 12, 1948.  A few months later, we moved to Dallas, Texas.  My brother Lonny was born there on May 19, 1949.  After another year and a few months, we all moved to the Denver, Colorado area where my brother Jim was born on September 16, 1952.  At about that time we moved to Arvada, a suburb of Denver.  My parents lived there for the rest of their lives.

Right after I finished kindergarten, our family bought a small house on 5 acres a few miles Northwest of Arvada.  I remember it as 3 rooms and a path.  There was a kitchen, a living room with a coal stove to heat the whole house, a bedroom – and out back was the outhouse.  We also had a large chicken coop which had indoor plumbing, even though the house had none. Continue reading “DAY THREE – REMEMBER TO EAT YOUR VEGETABLES”

DAY TWO – WAITING FOR THE VET

March 11, 2013

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WAITING FOR THE VET

Yesterday I started talking about life and interactions with other people.  Another important consideration is one’s interactions with animals.  I have had dogs around me for almost all my life, cats for many years and, especially while my daughter Suzanne was young, we had gerbils, hamsters, fish, birds, guinea pigs, a rabbit and a chinchilla.  Like most of us, I long believed that veterinarians could be trusted with my pets’ health at least as much as physicians could be trusted with my own.  As time has passed, I have become a bit more leery of both categories of doctor and I have recently decided to find a new vet as the primary care provider for our dog, Darcy.  A few examples of past interactions with the veterinary profession – some positive and some negative – may show why I took that step. Continue reading “DAY TWO – WAITING FOR THE VET”

DAY ONE – BEGINNING

March 10, 2013

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BEGINNING

On March 12, 1948, the life expectancy for an American male was 64 years and 8 months.  Since I was born on that day, I will be celebrating my 65th birthday on March 12, 2013 – and I will be long past my expiration date.  If I was a carton of milk, I would have been thrown out long ago.  Fortunately, though, my wife Cathy has decided to keep me around for at least a little longer. 

Now that I am turning 65, which is a fairly significant birthday in many ways, I have decided to spend a little time writing about what has been a pretty normal, pretty satisfying life.  I intend to do this for the next 65 days – 65 years in 65 days seems to have a nice ring to it.

Why is 65 significant?Continue reading “DAY ONE – BEGINNING”

YEAR OF THE SNAKE – 2013

February 9, 2013

YEAR OF THE SNAKE – 2013

On the Chinese calendar, the Year of the Water Snake begins with the New Moon on February 10, 2013.  Therefore, it is time to make my annual forecasts for the coming year.  I do not claim to have any extraordinary psychic abilities or great expertise in Chinese astrology.  Why should these forecasts matter then, you may ask.

I am reminded of the story of a famous scientist who hung a good luck horseshoe over the door of his office.  One of his colleagues remarked, “You don’t really believe that superstition, do you?”  The scientist replied, “Of course not; but it works whether you believe in it or not.”  So, if the Chinese are correct in the belief that there are various cycles, such as 12 years and 60 years, some reasonable predictions for the coming year may be made by looking at what occurred in previous Snake years.

How well does this approach work?  Well, looking back to last year, 2012’s forecast for the Year of the Dragon correctly predicted that the world would not end (a subject which will be revisited below); that my daughter, Suzanne’s, wedding would be celebrated in July (it was a lovely ceremony); that Barack Obama would be re-elected president; that we would see violent political discord (like the Arab Spring); that unemployment would fall and the stock market would rise and Kate Middleton’s pregnancy.  The predicted advances in solar energy, energy storage and stem cell therapy may have occurred, but they were not big news.  It was predicted that the Middle East would become more stable, but that does not seem to have occurred; and there were no major volcanoes, as it was suggested there might be (but that is a good possibility for this year).

There are so-called experts in astrology who will say that Snake years are not necessarily bad years.  Among the good things that can be expected are advances in the arts, an important year for fashion, a positive year for music and theater.  It is also a good year for love and romance, but that can lead to some scandal(s) involving famous people.

While all of that is probably true, it is important to be vigilant during these years and prepared for anything that might happen.  Like the proverbial “snake in the grass,” these years may seem rather calm until there is a sudden and vicious strike. To illustrate this, let us look at some of the “strikes” made in other Snake years during the 20th and 21st Centuries:

1917:  German U-Boats began sinking increasing number of American ships, drawing the U. S. into World War I.

1929:  The stock market crashed in October, triggering the Great Depression.

1941:  The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into World War II.

1953:  The secret test of a hydrogen bomb by the Soviet Union, followed by President Eisenhower’s directive that the U. S. nuclear arsenal must be maintained and expanded, marking the beginning of the Cold War.

1965:  The first American combat troops were deployed in Vietnam.  This was not as sudden as many of the other listed events, but it did mark a major change in policy and in the way the American people viewed the situation in Vietnam.

1989:  The major “snake bites” occurred in other countries, with the killing of protestors in Tiananmen Square in Beijing and the first suicide bombing by terrorists in Israel. In the United States, we had to deal with the Exxon Valdez oil spill and the invasion of Panama to oust Manuel Noriega.

2001:  Terrorists hijacked planes and crashed them into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.  The resulting “War on Terror” and military excursions into Iraq and Afghanistan are still affecting us.

The Year of the Snake has also brought the end of hostilities, such as the treaty ending the Russo-Japanese War in 1905 and the official end of the Korean War in 1953.  I am hoping that this coming year will not bring sudden military strikes, but will be another year in which conflicts end, especially in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Nevertheless, it is important to be prepared for some major tragedy occurring without warning.  Since we do not know which snake will strike, it is very difficult to try to guess what that tragedy might be.

In 2012, we saw the agitation of the “Arab Spring” followed by civil wars in several countries.  These events are likely to increase during the coming year.  Past Snake years have seen the beginning of the Russian Revolution in 1917, the resumption of the Chinese Civil War in 1941 and the events in China and Panama in 1989.  Unfortunately, it looks like there will be more bloodshed over the next several months.

Major advances in science and technology have occurred during Snake Years.  Examples include:

1905:  An automobile was first driven at a speed of over 100 mile per hour and Einstein’s famous equation e = mc2.

1929:  First regularly scheduled TV broadcasts; first Technicolor movie; first manned rocket plane flight.

1941:  Plutonium isolated; first commercial TV licenses issued; first commercial FM radio station; first working, programmable, fully automatic computer.

1953:  Watson and Crick discovered structure of DNA; polio vaccine; first 3-D film.

1977:  First personal computers marketed; first flight of the Space Shuttle; first nodes of the ARPAnet were connected, which was the beginning of the internet; Apple Computer was formed.

2001:  Apple began marketing iPods and iTunes and the first draft of the human genome project was published.

Most of these developments were examples of applied science with commercial implications rather than pure research; and many involved Apple Computer.  We can probably expect more high tech gadgets in 2013, and probably some sort of major announcement from Apple.

With advances such as these, Snake years appear to be good for business and finance, but they are subject to sudden reversals stemming from the major events that seem to happen without much warning during these years.  The two most serious depressions in American history began in Snake years, following the Panic of 1893 and the events of October 1929.  There is an old saying on Wall Street that investors should “sell in May and go away.”  This could be a good year to follow that advice – although I think I may consider selling by April.  We will probably see the Dow Jones Industrial Average rise to 14,500 or above, but it could come crashing back down – probably temporarily – at any time.

Looking back to 2012, much was written about the end of one cycle in the ancient Mayan calendar and how that might signal the beginning of a new age of spirituality.  If that is so, we might expect to see at least the start of that trend during the coming year.  That may very well occur because past Snake years have been times of important advancements in the fields of religion and spirituality, including:

1917:  The Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to three children in Fatima, Portugal.  Parenthetically, I might add that Mary’s first appearance at Lourdes, France in 1858 occurred only two weeks after the end of a Snake year.

1929:  Vatican City became a sovereign, independent state.

1941:  While there were certain events that could be mentioned (such as Nazi Germany banning all Catholic publications), the main emphasis was on World War II and the belief that one side was morally and spiritually superior to the other.

1953:  Pope Pius XII, who had been the Pope through all of World War II, and had been subject to criticism for his failure to condemn the Nazis and the Holocaust, proclaimed that the following year would be a Marian Year to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary.

1965:  The Second Vatican Council (Vatican II) was completed, bringing about major changes in the Catholic liturgy and changes in the way the Catholic Church saw its place in the modern world.

1977:  The first woman was formally ordained as an Episcopal priest.

1989:  The Episcopal Church appointed it first female bishop.

Most of the changes in this list show an established religion making changes to adjust to life in a changing world.  Others involve the Virgin Mary.  It seems, then, that we should see one or more of the major religions moving toward modernization in the coming months.  Also, it should not be surprising for there to be reports of appearances of Mary during this year.

In order to keep this post from becoming too long, let me just list a few other events that may occur during this Year of the Water Snake without discussing how they relate to past Snake years:

–          Flooding and serious hurricanes and tornadoes are, unfortunately, likely to occur.

–          Health problems for one or both of the former Presidents Bush, one of whom may not survive the year.

–          Similar health problems for, and the possible passing of, a member of the British Royal Family.

–          Increased autonomy for the various regions of China, with major economic advances for Mongolia.

–          Volatility in precious metal prices (you might want to familiarize yourself with the events of 1893, which was also a Year of the Water Snake, and the effect of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act – which particularly affected Colorado – and its part in the Panic of 1893).

–          Another large earthquake in Japan and a large earthquake, and perhaps a volcanic eruption in Central America or the Caribbean.

–          Major technology companies such as Google and Facebook could be subject to cyber-terrorism.

–          Solar flares will be given more attention than in the past.

–          Watered down gun control legislation will be enacted, but it will not end the trend of mass shootings.

–          The U.S. unemployment rate should dip below 7%.

–          The world will definitely not end this year.  I am so confident of this that I promise to never make any more predictions if I am wrong this time.

In summary, this should seem a fairly calm year for much of the time, at least on the surface, with attention focused on arts and media.  However, a tragedy or catastrophe could strike at any time with little or no warning.  It is a time to be cautious and to avoid speculation and gambling.

As mentioned last year, it is a tradition in some parts of China to cook a whole fish the day before the New Year and eat most, but not all, of the fish on New Year’s Eve.  Part of the fish must be saved to eat the next day, symbolizing that if we are not overly exuberant, the resources for a good life are with us even as times change.  This would be a good year to practice that tradition – and if you are a vegetarian, it doesn’t need to be a fish, just something good that can be feasted upon with part saved.  I hope that your luck and your opportunities, as well as your resources this year are exactly what you want and need.

Gung hay fat choy (Happy New Year)!

 

LONNY PAUL WELTZER — 1949-2012

October 6, 2012

Unfortunately, my brother, Lonny Paul Weltzer, passed away earlier this week.  As you may know from what has been written here, he had suffered from a rare blood disease called myelofibrosis and had been fighting the complications of that condition for several years.  When he couldn’t fight it any longer, he passed over peacefully in his sleep just before Midnight on Tuesday.
 
Lonny and his wife Deb moved to Austin, Texas shortly after he retired in 2010.  His daughter Lisa also lives in Austin with her husband and two sons.  His younger daughter Laurel lives in Greeley, Colorado with her husband and son.
 
We will have a memorial gathering in the Arvada, Colorado area, where he grew up, in early November; but the plans for that are not yet finalized.  I can let you know about the gathering sometime soon.
 
In lieu of flowers, you may make a charitable contribution in Lonny’s memory, if you feel inclined to do so.  An organization that seems relevant is the MPN Research Foundation, 180 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 1870, Chicago, IL  60601.  Additional information is available at the Foundation’s website – either:
 
http://www.mpnresearchfoundation.org/quick-online-donate or http://www.mfchallenge.org/Donate-to-MF-Challenge.

 

July Update

July Update

August 2, 2012

My daughter’s was married on July 15th.  Paul traveled from Texas to Colorado to attend the ceremony (and to see his daughter’s family in Greeley).  He was very tired from having made the trip, but he did make it!

The first round of chemotherapy for the incipient acute myeloid leukemia seems to have had no effect.  Paul underwent another 5 days of chemo the week after the wedding.  The doctors won’t biopsy the bone marrow for another month, so we won’t know until then whether the second round was successful.  He will need to go through a third round of chemo in about a month, after which a decision may be made as to whether he will be able to have another stem cell transplant.

Our whole family remains optimistic, but the waiting periods can be frustrating.

June Update

June Update

7-1-12

I will briefly bring you up to date on my brother’s condition and progress.

The first round of chemotherapy – five days – has been completed, but it is not yet known how successful it has been. 

My daughter is getting married in two weeks and Paul is planning to come from Texas to Colorado for the wedding.  It is a good sign that he is able to travel.  I will have a better idea concerning his progress when I actually see him.

He is supposed to start the second five-day cycle of chemotherapy back in Houston the day after the wedding.  It is hoped that the acute myeloid leukemia will be found to be in remission (assuming that he actually had that condition) and the medical people can proceed to do the second transplant.

Once again, your prayers and good thoughts are appreciated.  Thank you.