Utah campaign against porn marches on with phone filter plan (apnews.com)
Some veteran Jackson Mississippi Samson guys' musings, recommended resources, and Samson Society news / updates (all written by 100% Grade A - Human Intelligence)
Weekly meetings available to you are as follows:
Tuesday at 6:30 PM, Truitt Baptist Church - Pearl. Call Matt Flint at (601) 260-8518 or email him at matthewflint.makes@gmail.com.
Wednesday at 6:00 PM, First Baptist Church Jackson - Summit Counseling Suite - 431 North State St. Jackson. Call Don Waller at 601-946-1290 or email him at don@wallerbros.com.
Monday at 6:30 PM , Vertical Church - 521 Gluckstadt Road Madison, MS 39110. Mr. Roane Hunter, facilitator, LifeWorks Counseling.
Wednesday at 7:00 PM, Crossgates Baptist Church. Brandon Reach out to Matthew Lehman at (601)-214-4077 for further info.
Sunday night at 6:00 PM, Grace Crossing Baptist Church - 598 Yandell Rd. Canton. Call Joe McCalman at 601-201-5608 or email him at cookandnoonie@gmail.com.
Friday, March 19, 2021
Brave Man Here - Recommended Reading
Why Tyler Hubbard Thinks a Healthy Sex Life Is "Crucial" To Parenting - E! Online
Life’s Footprints: Evanescent or Indelible?
Happy Friday, everyone! Today's post features something I wrote on my own personal blog back in 2014. I grabbed it and posted it here to share. I added an addendum at the end as a sort of 2021 update.
Footprints in the Sand |
“One’s options in this world are as vast as the horizon, which is technically a circle and thus infinitely broad. Yet we must choose each step we take with utmost caution, for the footprints we leave behind are as important as the path we will follow. They’re part of the same journey — our story.”
===================================
“I think that’s what we all want, in the end.
To know that we left footprints when we passed by, however briefly.
We want to be remembered.
So remember us.
Please.
Remember us.”
===================================
Your way was through the sea,
your path through the great waters;
yet your footprints were unseen.
~Psalm 77:19 (ESV)
==================================
Life is a journey, and the footprints that we leave behind are interesting things. Each footprint is different, and there are no two that are alike. Wherever we go, we leave footprints behind us. Some people leave big footprints, and some leave small footprints. There are others who leave wide footprints, and those who leave narrow ones. Sometimes the footprints we leave are evanescent, quickly fading, just as the footprints left in the sand are soon erased away by time and the force of the waves.
Some footprints are long-lasting. Those are the kind of footprints that people should be striving to achieve. The home we currently live in is an older one, but it is special because it’s the first home we’ve owned. The subdivision where our home resides was developed in the mid to late 1970’s, making our home nearly 40 years old. Besides having a wide and inviting front porch to relax on, the hominess of this house beckoned us to it when we first found it four years ago. In a way, our home is unique because we purchased it from the original owners who had it built many years ago. Although the house had sat empty for quite some time when we first looked at it, there was a sense of love and belonging that permeated the walls, and we could feel it when we first walked in the door. In fact, when we first looked at the home, I almost imagined that I could hear the voices of the family who lived, loved, and laughed in the home for more than 32 years before we bought it. It was a house that was well-loved and continues to be loved by us.
When the neighborhood was developed, sidewalks were planned and built up and down every street in the neighborhood for pedestrians to use. One can travel to any part of the neighborhood using these sidewalks. On the side of our home facing the driveway, we noticed that there were tiny little footprints of a long-gone child permanently embedded into the sidewalk. My wife and I thought that these footprints were just about the coolest thing we’d ever seen, and I often found myself wondering how these footprints had come to be in the sidewalk, and who had made them. Two of my neighbors directly across the street have been here since the neighborhood’s inception in the 1970’s. One day I happened to be outside when one of my neighbors was walking her dog, and I just so happened to think about asking her if she knew the story of the footprints. She indeed knew how the footprints came to be and proceeded to tell me the story of a little boy who had grown up in the neighborhood many years before. This little boy apparently lived in the house next to mine when they were pouring the sidewalk. She told me that before anyone could stop him, he pulled his shoes off and walked through the freshly poured cement, forever immortalizing the prints of his tiny feet. My guess is that they either didn’t catch the fruits of his labor before the cement dried, or they thought it was cute and left it as it was. I suppose his mother was not amused at all on that day many years ago to find out that her child had cement all over his feet. The footprints don’t go far. They actually start a short distance up from my house and then terminate almost directly in front of my driveway. But they’re still there nearly 40 years later and they tell the journey of a small boy who one day took a walk down the sidewalk.
Even though the mystery of the footprints has been solved, I have often wondered about that little boy. Where did he go when he moved, and whatever ended up happening to him? What did he grow up to become? Does he remember the footprints he once left in my sidewalk, and has he ever returned to see them? You see, whether he knew it or not, he was destined to leave permanent footprints on that fateful day when he decided to go for a stroll in the freshly poured cement of the sidewalk. These are footprints that can still clearly be seen nearly 40 years later, and they cause people to stop and ponder where they came from.
The evanescence of footprints left in the sand poses a stark contrast to the enduring footprints of those left in the stone. In our lives, we leave many footprints. Everywhere we go we leave footprints. These footprints tell the journey from whence we have come and to whither we go. They tell the story of what we have done and of what we have achieved. We also leave footprints in the lives of people. In the scope of eternity, our time here on earth amounts to the mere blink of an eye. We are so small and so immortal. Our time is short in the grand scheme of things. But like the footprints left by the child in the newly built sidewalk many years ago, the footprints we leave in the lives of people should be long-lasting. After you have left your footprints behind, you may never return to see them again. If you have left footprints that are indelible, they will no doubt be felt and seen by many for generations to come.
In conclusion, life is too short for us to be concerned with those things that are of transient nature. Whether it is the relationships that you form with others or the things that you choose to occupy your time with, let your mark be seen and felt. In my own life, I am grateful for those who have invested in me and left permanent footprints in my life. Some of them are no longer here, but their footprints continue to be seen and felt by me. May your footprints be forever and a day, and may they leave a lasting mark in the lives of all those you will meet.
[2020 Addendum] - We are still here, living in the same house. It is a small, modest house, but it is home and it's where we chose to stay and raise our son. Several of our friends have since bought their second or third house and I'll be honest - we have considered doing the same several times. But this is home, and we just don't feel motivated to move. It's a house that was filled with so much life when we bought it, and we have continued to pour so much life into it as well.
Sadly, we lost Mrs. Woods last year. She was a wonderful, sweet lady who loved everyone and looked out for all her neighbors. Very few original owners remain in the neighborhood, and no one else would know the history of those footprints. She knew everything, it seems. I'm extremely grateful I thought about asking her the history of the footprints one day several years ago.
Those footprints are now over 45 years old. You can still see them, and I love them more than ever. They are truly indelible footprints.
So many people have come and gone in my life over the past ten years. Many of them, I still think of fondly from time to time and their footprints bring a smile to my face. Some, those footprints will fade over time, the victim of being washed away by the waves of time. But others will remain imprinted on me for as long as I live. I must ask myself: "What kind of footprints am I leaving?"
~ S
Tuesday, March 16, 2021
Recommended Reading "The Joys and Difficulties of Making Friends in Adulthood"
At Large ~ (c) 1908-1909 by Arthur Christopher Benson |
Throughout much of my life, I was not very good at making or maintaining friendships. Because of my past experiences, I can sometimes come off as disinterested, cold, or aloof when meeting someone for the first time. But that couldn't be farther from the truth; I would dare say that those who have really taken the time to get to know me have seen the real me and seen beyond that facade I put up. My thirties were spent learning how to be a better friend to people, and how to let others be a friend to me. I will speak more on that in next week's Bridges series when I talk about The Connected Bridge ~ The Bridge to Friendship.
In our adult years, most of us are incredibly busy. We have neither the time nor the energy required to make and maintain these friendships. But what I have discovered in my own life is these connections are so incredibly necessary. They keep me going forward in life. I NEED People in my life! After years of walking alone, I have been blessed with some amazing friendships in my adult years, and staying connected keeps me healthy mentally.
Today, I want to share with you an excerpt from the chapter on "Friendship" from At Large by Arthur Christopher Benson. This is a wonderful volume of essays on life written around 1908-1909. I have the original book, but it's also available in the public domain through Project Gutenberg - CLICK HERE. So I'll leave you with this reading for today. You can click on the link below to read the .PDF version of the excerpt from "Friendship." The language is slightly antiquated, but I assure you, the message is just as relevant today in 2021 as it was back in 1908.
CLICK HERE TO READ "FRIENDSHIP"
~ S
Sunday, March 14, 2021
Bridges, Part Two - The Disconnected Bridge
Bridges, Part Two – The Disconnected Bridge
Author’s
note: I had fully intended to write and publish this blog entry a week after my
first entry in the series. Unfortunately, life got in the way and I have really
been struggling with some things lately. Perhaps I will be able to share those
struggles in greater detail in an upcoming blog. – Stephen
May 2005
It was a warm summery day
in early May 2005. The windows were rolled down in my old blue Dodge sedan, and
the faded blue headliner, barely held up by safety pins, flapped noisily as the
humid summer wind buffeted through the car. I was a man on a mission. As a
teenager growing up in the mid-1990s, I remembered reading (along with the rest
of my community) with absolute horror of the story of a young couple in their
early 20s. This couple had met an untimely demise while stargazing on a rickety
old bridge late one summery evening. This couple had become the victims of an
evil family who lived in the woods nearby. All these years later, I do not
remember the motive, but I do remember the story quite vividly. I remember
reading about how the couple had been abducted at gunpoint and taken from the
bridge to another location where they were murdered in a double homicide then buried in the backyard. It
was such a horrible tragedy that it shook every community within a 60-mile radius of the bridge and as a teenager, it truly opened my eyes for the first
time to the evil that humans were capable of. However, that warm summer day, my goal
was not to think about the grisly murders, nor was it to visit the site of a
crime so grisly that it should have appeared on the “48 Hours” television show.
No, my goal was simply to find the remnant of the beautiful old wrought-iron bridge that I had remembered seeing in the newspapers 11 years prior.
Back in those days, Google
maps was not even a blip on the radar; in fact, Google was not even a name in
the .com industry. These days, one only must type in a landmark, or a place of
interest and Google will lead them right to it. Back in those days, we had
“MapQuest” and a LaserJet printer that printed pages. So off I set, printed maps in hand, to find
the massive old iron structure. Even though MapQuest claimed that the bridge
was located less than an hour’s drive from where I lived, I must confess that I
made many wrong turns on that day and spent well over an hour just trying to
locate the bridge. Finally, I arrived at the bridge and received the shock of
my life.
You must understand, the
abduction and subsequent murders had taken place 11 years prior to the day that
I visited the bridge. The local community was devastated by the sequence of events
and had subsequently done everything possible to erase the bridge from their
collective memories. At the time that the murders took place, the bridge was
still very much open to the public and the country folk who lived in the
sparsely populated rule area used the bridge to cross from one side of the
river to the other as they traveled between their communities. Following the
homicides in the mid-1990s, the road was barricaded to the public, the bridge
was condemned, and all the wooden decking except what for remained in the very
center of the bridge had been removed.
As my noisy, ever-clattering
old Dodge sedan stopped at the barricaded road, I pulled over and ensured that
my car was well off the road in a grassy parking area. As I walked down the
barricaded road on foot, camera in hand, I was taken by the fact that I was so
incredibly isolated. There was literally nothing on that abandoned road aside
from the dense forest that bordered both sides of the road. I was truly alone. In
some ways, walking down that road alone was symbolic of the way that much of
my life had been up until that point. The deafening silence was broken only by
the crunch of my shoes as I walked across the disintegrating asphalt. The
occasional bird song emitting from the forest served to somewhat lighten up the
melancholy and slightly sinister atmosphere. I remember feeling extremely
nervous on that day, but I wanted to capture a photograph of the bridge. I was
determined not to leave until I had my photographs. Suddenly the abandoned roadway gave
way to a sheer drop off, and there it stood before me. It was a magnificent two-span wrought-iron bridge from the turn of the 20th century. It truly
looked like something out of a Gothic horror novel, as vines and kudzu had
taken over everything alongside the bridge and had started to take over the
structure itself. I got as close as I could and took quite a few photographs
that day using the zoom lens on my newly purchased SLR camera.
Disconnected Bridge |
With the decking removed, there was no way to walk to the middle of the bridge, as the approaches from either side were totally inaccessible. From what I understood from reading the reports in the newspaper and talking to local people, this had been done to not only prevent vehicular traffic from crossing the bridge but to also strongly discourage any pedestrians from ever walking out on the bridge. The superstructure of the bridge was intact. The amazing ornate ironwork was there. The decking on the middle span of the bridge directly over the river was there. But there was no way to cross the bridge. You were truly disconnected from one side of the river to the other. Unlike the bridge in my first blog post in this series where only my fear kept me from crossing, a lack of physical flooring would keep me from crossing this bridge. This was a much larger bridge. The bridge of my first blog post was a single span camelback through-truss iron bridge as opposed to the bridge in this blog post which was a magnificent two-span through truss bridge. Although humans may have built the bridge many years ago, their abandonment had caused nature to slowly begin the process of reclaiming the bridge for its very own. Indeed, it was not that hard even back in 2005 for one to imagine that nature would completely obliterate the bridge from view within a few years.
Have you ever felt
disconnected in a way that made absolutely no sense to you? I felt that way for
so many years. My life was disconnected for many years prior to my discovery of
Samson. I would dare say that it was even disconnected for my first few years of
Samson, as I was not walking the path as I should have been. I am realizing
that trauma is a real thing, and so is PTSD. Even if we have endured a lifetime
of being told that we are not to feel any emotion nor show any emotion, that
emotion is there – within us – swelling to the point where it will someday boil
over like an unwatched pot on the stove. Sometimes we don’t even recognize
traumatic things in life as being such, but they nonetheless are. Sometimes we
have spent so much of our lives being so disconnected, that we are left with no
way to truly understand how to begin to bridge that gap – to rebuild the decking
of that disconnected bridge.
I remember vividly having a conversation with another
Samson guy several years ago. During the course of that conversation, he point-blank told me that he believed I had missed a critical step in childhood while
growing up and until I went back and identified and made attempts to recover
that critical step, I would never be able to move forward with my life on this
side of heaven. A number of years ago, my wife and I were going down to Florida
to visit her family one summer. We had stopped to grab a bite to eat, and upon
getting back on the interstate, I took the wrong exit ramp. A few minutes into
the trip, I started telling my wife that “I believe we have passed these towns
before.” She said, “no, I think you’re going the right way.” Now, at that time,
I don’t believe that I owned a cell phone that had navigation capabilities as I
do these days. Since we had previously made the trip before, we had not felt
the need to use a GPS system. But the further that I went, the greater my
unease grew. Finally, I pulled over on the side of the highway and grabbed my
Garmin GPS out of the glovebox. I powered it on and programmed it with the
destination that we were headed to. Sure enough, the Garmin came up and told me
to take the next possible U-turn and start going the opposite direction on the
interstate. By that time, we had wasted about 40 minutes of our trip, and I
remember driving a little faster at that point to make up for the lost time. My
wife and I still laugh about that to this day.
Sadly, the critical step that I missed in my own life
while growing up cost me far more than a mere 40 minutes. No, that missed step
cost me about 25 or 30 years of my life. These past few years have been years
of intense self-examination and exploration with the help of my Silas and
trying to figure out exactly where I went wrong and where the disconnect in my
own life started. It was hard, but I finally over these past few months, wrapped up
that self-examination and had my aha moment. I spent much of the years between
2017 and late 2019 unpacking boxes that I had long packed away in the attic of
my brain. This was stuff that I did not want to see and stuff that had not seen the
light of day for near 30 years. I was left with all of these pieces that I had
unpacked; they were lying in front of me and I was in the process of trying to
figure out what I needed to do with them and how to reassemble those broken
pieces. Then 2020 hit. I know that 2020 was a rough year for every single
person alive. For me, it provided the perfect excuse to pack up those pieces
and not have to look at them anymore and isolate and withdraw from all in-person meetings. I cannot tell you how damaging that was to all of the hard
work I had accomplished over the past few years or what it did to me mentally.
Things recently came to a head towards the end of January and I knew that I had
to pull those storage boxes back down and begin the process of going through the pieces once
more. This time, I was more familiar with the pieces and could identify them
more clearly. That is why I was able to have my aha moment recently. I
discovered the missing piece of the puzzle from my past, and I knew exactly
what damage this missing piece had caused me.
Both my wife and my Silas claim that I spend way too
much time living in the past. And they are probably right. Each day, I must wake up
and remind myself to count my blessings and to remember that the past doesn’t
exist anymore; I live in the here and now, in this very moment. And then I am
reminded of how incredibly blessed I am. My Silas told me a few years back after a particularly rough venting session “Stephen, you know how much I love you and
I say this in love, but sometimes I wish I could just beat the snot out of you.”
Once I had recovered my initial shock, I asked him why in the world he would
want to do that. He said, “for one thing, you would be in so much pain in the
present that you would forget to remember the past!” When I later told my wife
what he had said, she told me “good, I have often wanted to do the same myself!”
I suppose that those two were on to something.
Connections are so important in life. They give us
cause to live, and they provide a bridge that allows us to move from one area
of life to another. Like a solid bridge, they support us as we go over the murky waters of life,
giving us a safe passage and allowing us to have a sense of peace. Nearly 30 years
later, after discovering Samson and beginning the self-examination process in
my own life, I discovered the missing pieces needed to repair the decking of my
own derelict bridge. My bridge is a work in progress. Some days are a lot
harder than others, and I feel like I am getting nowhere. But other days, I
feel like I am so much closer to the other side of that bridge; that, more
than anything, gives me hope to continue moving forward. My wife, my friends,
my son, my Silas, and my heavenly father are waiting for me on the other side of
that lonely bridge, cheering me on and awaiting that day when I can fully
bridge the disconnect in my own life. I would love for anyone who wishes to join me on my journey for a while.
One of the recent joys in my life has been to introduce my son to movies that I loved growing up. Last year, we found Benji, you know, the lovable mutt from the 70's and 80's. One night, we were watching a Benji movie from the 80's, and it was one that I don't remember seeing as a kid. The introduction began with a song that nearly moved me to tears, so I looked it up and found it. It goes like this:
So many yesterdays...
haunting my soul today...
Now time is standing still,
in the tears and the rain
I'll find another spring,
No doubt the birds will sing,
But will never shine, so very bright again...
I had so many yesterdays
that haunted me for many years. Maybe you can relate? In a way, I think that we
all can. For years, I thought I had missed my chance to shine so very bright.
Perhaps I will never shine in the same way I would have once in another lifetime. But there is
another spring, and we can find it on the other side of that bridge once it is rebuilt. Someone
recently told me that if I hadn't gone through all that I had, I would not be
where I am at today. I have to remember that. Everything I went through
prepared me for this moment in time to live in the here and the now and to be
there for my family in only the way that I can be.
Having taken all of the photographs that I wanted to
on that warm summery day in May, I once again climbed into my old trusty blue
steed and made a U-turn on the overgrown road that nature was slowly
reclaiming. As I slowly drove away, the warm wind hitting my face, I looked
into the rearview mirror and bid the bridge goodbye. I have never returned.
Unlike other bridges featured in this blog series, that was a place that I
never wanted to return to or experience again. Unlike my own bridge in life,
that one would never be repaired.
~ S
Saturday, March 13, 2021
Bridges - Moving ahead....
Good afternoon, everyone. Stephen here.
I realize that I have been missing in action for a while now. Some seasons of life are just busier than others and navigating the waters of being a husband, father, working full time, and finishing up the last semester of my second Master's Degree has taken a toll on me... in some ways not so good. I have been asked to step up this coming week and post more content, so I would like to invite you to come alongside me for this next stretch of the road during this next week while I share more content on this blog.
Be looking for this next entry tomorrow! Hey, if I say here that I'm going to share it, I actually have to follow through and publish it, right? I need some accountability here!
Bridges - Part One - The Lost Bridge
Thursday, March 11, 2021
Demystifying The Archetype
I was introduced to my archetype whilst in 6th grade. The year was 1985, and I was at a weeklong summer camp for 5th and 6th grade boys in south Alabama. This summer camp experience was hosted by our church, and surprisingly (to me today), I can only recall 5th and 6th grade boys from First Baptist Church Jackson attending. Therefore, there were no more than 30 to 40 of us there (if that many) during this week, and this made it a truly intimate experience.