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Wednesday, May 6, 2026

5/6/2026

 Wednesday, May 6, 2026

2001 During a trip to Syria, Pope John Paul II became the first pope to enter a mosque

2025 The Bundestag elects Friedrich Merz, leader of the Christian Democratic Union, as the 10th Chancellor of Germany in the second round of voting, with 325 votes out of the 316 votes necessary.

In bed at 9:15, up at 5:30; 0545 134/59/32 119 203.6; 38/50/35, sunny early, then cloudy.

Morning meds at 7:15 a.m.,with my banana bread, and a half dose of Bisoprolol at 6:20 a.m.  



Warm weather visitors: White-crowned and White-throated sparrows

I'm reading The Correspondent by Virginia Evans on Kindle.  When I mentioned this to Geri last night, she told me that she was reading The Correspondent on Kindle.  If she had known I was interested, we could have 'family shared' her copy.  I sheepishly failed to add that I had purchased the Audible add-on, which I have come to really enjoy, not as a sole or primary way of getting through Kindle books, but as a very welcome supplement.  I feel a little bad about wasting some money on the second copy of the novel, but when I think of the money we spent on cigarettes in our smoking days and I spent on Zinfandel and gewurztraminer in my drinking days, I get over it quickly.  It turns out that both Geri and I are big fans of epistolary novels, though we can't claim to have read many because there aren't that many to be read.  I became a fan from during my 'monster reading' phase of life when I read RLS's Dr. Jeckyll and Mr. Hyde, (1886),Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley's Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus, (1818), and notably, Bram Stoker's epistolary Dracula (1897).  It followed my heroic saga phase when I read Beowulf, Chanson de Roland, The Nibelungenlied, and The Iliad.  Geri became a fan from reading and seeing the film 84 Charing Cross Road, which I also saw but did not read.  I also read and enjoyed C. S. Lewis's The Screwtape Letters (1942), a series of letters from the senior devil Screwtape to his junior tempter Wormwood.  Just thinking about these past reading pleasures makes me want to read them again.  

Back to The Correspondent, I'm only about 10% into the novel so far but I'm enjoying it greatly.  It reminds me of a period in my life after the 13 years during which my father and I never spoke to each other or saw each other when we reconnected, and I wrote him a letter every single day and flew or drove down to Florida to visit him 4 times a year.  I suppose the daily letter-writing was a crazy thing to do, just as our not speaking to each other for 13 years was a crazy thing to do, but we were clearly crazy men, or I suppose more accurately, deeply-injured men for years.  Eventually of course I persuaded him to leave his lonely life in Floriday and come to live with us in Wisconsin and with Kitty and Jim in Arizona so we enjoyed a few years of daily togetherness until he died at age 86 in 2007.

Again, back to The Correspondent,  I just finished a letter that  Sybil Van Antwerp wrote to Joan Didion on November 14, 2012, about the death of Sybil's son Gilbert 39  yearss before at age 8 and that includes this:

There is an articulation of life one hears again and again.  People will say, 'oh, this is only a season.' You know what I am referring to, don't you?  I mean how if someone is in difficulty they'll say 'it's only a season.'  Or if someone is having a new baby and in the sleepless nights, an older woman will comfort with this idea that the expanse of time is a season -- a winter, I suppose? (rather, a hurricane season!) -- and the season will change eventually to something sunnier.  I take issue with this.  There are, by definition, four seasons that repeat in measured pattern year after year.  As there is no such rhythm in the human life, I have to think that when it comes to seasons we all get one round.  We are born and grow through childhood in spring.  We live those glorious, lively, intreting years of our twenties, thirties, forties in summer.  We settle into ourselves in autumn, that cool but not yet cold time, rich and aromatic.  And in winter we age (brutally) and die.  One turn of the seasons per person, unless it's cut short, like it was for Gill . . .  I suppose, on this schedule, we'd say your John had made it to Fall.  My mother died in her summer.

But I think of life rather like a long road we walk in one direction.  By and large a lonesome walk out in the wilderness of hills and wind.  Mountains. Snow. And soetimes there is someone to come along and walk with you for a stretch, and sometimes (this is what I'm getting to) sometimes you see in the distance some lights and it heartens you, the lone house or maybe a village and you come into the warmth of that stopover and go inside.  Maybe you have a warm supper and stay a night or maybe you stay there a few years.  I had one of those stopovers when the children were young, just before Gilbert died, and Daan and I were happy, even though I didn't know it was happiness at the time because it felt like busyness and exhaustion and financial stress and self-doubt. . . . [M[y point is I tire of people speaking of season as if you can count on three months of winter turning out three months of summer on repeat.  It's not so.  The stretches on the high, windblown road are far commoner than the stopovers in comfort, . . . .

I was struck by her metaphors comparing our lives from birth to death to the four meteorological seasons and a long walk in one direction with only occasional comforting stopovers.  At age 73, she sees herself in the winter of her life when "we age (brutally) and die."  We learned in an earlier letter that she is losing her eyesight and that, just as the novel began, she had a temporary "black out" that caused her to crash and total her Cadillac.  This view of herself explains in large part her prickly, not-very-pleasant view of life.  She's not a terribly likable person, to put it mildly.  She seems to have a pretty bleak view of life and especailly of old age, seeing no benefits to it offsetting its many detriments.  Is 'bitter' the right word for her, or is that too harsh?  I should find out as I read more.

I was particularly struck by her statement that she had one of those comforting "stopovers" on her one-way road of life when her children  were young and "when Daan and I were happy" because I have long thought that the period when my Sarah and Andy were still little children was the happiest time of my life, though it was a time of consdierable unhappiness for Anne, who yearned to get out of the house and return to the workplace.  I can't think of any time that came closer though I suppose second place would clearly go to the period when I was so deeply enthralled in my First True Love, until she dumped me when I returned from a couple of months of active duty in the Navy.


 

 

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

5/5/2026

 Tuesday, May 5, 2026

1916 US Marines invaded the Dominican Republic and stayed until 1924

1965 First large-scale US Army ground units arrived in South Vietnam

2022 WHO study of excess deaths worldwide said 15 million more people had died than normal, far above the official COVID-19 death toll of 6 million 

2025 The Vatican announced that it would convert and donate a Popemobile into a mobile health clinic for wounded children in Gaza, Palestine, in accordance with one of Pope Francis' final wishes.

In bed at 8:30, onto the LZB in the middle of the night, up at 4:22; 0435 128/75/85. 120 204.8; 43/35/55/42, mostly cloudy day ahead.

Morning meds at 6 a.m., with half dose of Bisoprolol at 5 a.m.  At 5:05 a.m., my AppleWatch jiggled and gave me a "low heart rate" warning, registering a heart rate of 34.  What does this mean in light of what Dr. Singh has told me about "false readings because of the ventricular tachycardi???

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.  I finished it this morning, wondering why I had devoted as much time as I did to it.  In the last chapter of the noevel, Joyce uses Stephen Dedalus to articulate Joyce's theory of Beauty, based on Aristotle and Thomas Aquinas:  Pulchra sunt quae visa placent, or that is beautfiul the apprehension of which pleases.  That said, a reader has to wonder why Joyce wrote the way he did, the incoherent, circular, stream of consciousness, head-scratching, hard to follow way that he did.  He didn't do it when he wrote Dubliners, but he started with in Portrait, went full-bore in Ulysses, and became completely incomprehensible in Finnegan's Wake.  Did he really think he was making something beaufiful?  I guess he did.  Maybe he thought only a handful of people were able to truly appreciate "real" breauty, meaning he himself and a few literary dilettantes, perhaps the types that got into Deconstruction and a lot of the post-Modernism stuff impossible for most of us to grasp.  The Ezra Pound types.  In any case, this poor child from St. Leo parish on the south side of Chicago gets lost pretty easily in a verbal thicket of non-sequiturs of the type Joyce loves.  I'm the same way with most contemporary poetry that is incomprehensible.  The poets must think their work is beautfiul because it is to them, but for readers other than them, it's meaningless.  What's the point?   Consider this "poem" by Gertrude Stein.  It's a small excerpt from Tender Buttons, published in 1914, 2 years before the publication of A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man:

A CARAFE, THAT IS A BLIND GLASS.

A kind in glass and a cousin, a spectacle and nothing strange a single hurt color and an arrangement in a system to pointing. All this and not ordinary, not unordered in not resembling. The difference is spreading.

GLAZED GLITTER.

Nickel, what is nickel, it is originally rid of a cover.

The change in that is that red weakens an hour. The change has come. There is no search. But there is, there is that hope and that interpretation and sometime, surely any is unwelcome, sometime there is breath and there will be a sinecure and charming very charming is that clean and cleansing. Certainly glittering is handsome and convincing.

There is no gratitude in mercy and in medicine. There can be breakages in Japanese. That is no programme. That is no color chosen. It was chosen yesterday, that showed spitting and perhaps washing and polishing. It certainly showed no obligation and perhaps if borrowing is not natural there is some use in giving.

Does this have any meaning, to a reader or even to Stein? 

When is a "ceasefire" not a ceasefire?  The Americans and Iranians are shooting at each other in the Persian Gulf/Strait of Hormuz.   SecDef/SecWar Pete Hegseth and the President say that these acts don't exceed 'the threshold of hostilities' necessary to invalidate the ceasefire, or something like that.   He also says that the 'battle for Hormuz' is "separate and distinct" from the war with Iran.

“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.” “The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.” “The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master—that's all.”

 “But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought. . . . Political language – annd with variations this is true of all political parties, from Conservatives to Anarchists – is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, and to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind. . . . “A man may take to drink because he feels himself to be a failure, and then fail all the more completely because he drinks. It is rather the same thing that is happening to the English language. It becomes ugly and inaccurate because our thoughts are foolish, but the slovenliness of our language makes it easier for us to have foolish thoughts. . . . In our age there is no such thing as ‘keeping out of politics’. All issues are political issues, and politics itself is a mass of lies, evasions, folly, hatred, and schizophrenia. ― George Orwell, Politics and the English Language

Callou callay!  A gorgeous Baltimore oriole on the suet feeder this afternoon.  Time to put out some oranges.  We've also had white-throated and white-capped sparrows feeding on the ground under the feeders, the the occasional bluebird as well.  I've seen some surprisingly aggressive behavior,by a mouning dove lately, even towards another dove.  It seems like I ought to be able to think up some line of poetry about that, but I draw a blank.  I'm reminded of Joan Clark's experience among some Quakers, whom she characterized as very passive-aggressive.😧

 

Monday, May 4, 2026

5/4/2026

 Monday, May 4, 2026

D+179/105

1535 Five Carthusian monks were hanged, drawn, and quartered at Tyburn, London, for refusing to acknowledge Henry VIII as head of the Church of England

1977 US Catholic bishops rescinded automatic excommunications for divorced and remarried Catholics (receiving communion but still outlawed it if the previous marriages were not annulled by Church tribunals)

1990 Latvia's parliament voted 138-0 (1 abstention) for Independence

2001 The Milwaukee Art Museum addition, the first Santiago Calatrava-designed structure in the United States, opened to the public

2021 Mexico's President Andrés Manuel López Obrador made a historic apology to the Mayan people for abuses against them in the five centuries since the Spanish conquest 

2023 WHO declared COVID-19 over as a global health emergency, but it remainsed a significant threat, with seven million known deaths and a real total likely 20 million

In bed at 9, awake at 4, moved to LZB, up at 6; 0430 112/63/53 120 206.0; 65/42/72/46, sunny with elevated concern for wildfire conditions..  

Morning meds at 8 a.m.,  and half dose of Bisoprolol at  6:40 a.m.  

We watched the documenary on the100th anniversary of The New Yorker last night.  It included a comment by art, theater, and cultural critic Hilton Als: Throughout the city there is beauty, if you pay attention and are really looking, to which I thought, how true, and for every city, every hamlet, every rural area.  It reminded me of our back yard, of all the trees all over the place, of the spring flowers now in bloom and the summer and fall flowers to come, of the elegant, interesting homes throughout the area.  Als is correct that we have to pay attention and really look about us, and throughout much of our lives, we are too busy with the daily affairs of life to do that.  The same is true of our vision of other people; there is hidden beauty in them too, but we rarely get to see it.

I took a ride up to Random Lake this afternoon, via I-43, Hy.57, Jay Road, Ozaukee Couty 3, Hilltop Road (a favorite view of Wisconsin countryside), Camp Awana Road, Hy. 144 back to Hy. 57 to back home.  The weather was sunny and uncommonly warm, in the low 70s, but it'll be 20° cooler tomorrow and the rest of the week.  I listened to chapter 5 of Portrait while driving through the countryside.

Oh, how I am carried back to my youth by Portrait of the Artist!  From Chapter 4:

Every morning he hallowed himself anew in the presence of some holy image or mystery. His day began with an heroic offering of its every moment of thought or action for the intentions of the sovereign pontiff and with an early mass. . . His daily life was laid out in devotional areas. By means of ejaculations and prayers he stored up ungrudgingly for the souls in purgatory centuries of days and quarantines and years; yet the spiritual triumph which he felt in achieving with ease so many fabulous ages of canonical penances did not wholly reward his zeal of prayer, since he could never know how much temporal punishment he had remitted by way of suffrage for the agonising souls . . . On each of the seven days of the week he further prayed that one of the seven gifts of the Holy Ghost might descend upon his soul and drive out of it day by day the seven deadly sins which had defiled it in the past; and he prayed for each gift on its appointed day, confident that it would descend upon him, though it seemed strange to him at times that wisdom and understanding and knowledge were so distinct in their nature that each should be prayed for apart from the others. Yet he believed that at some future stage of his spiritual progress this difficulty would be removed when his sinful soul had been raised up from its weakness and enlightened by the Third Person of the Most Blessed Trinity. He believed this all the more, and with trepidation, because of the divine gloom and silence wherein dwelt the unseen Paraclete, Whose symbols were a dove and a mighty wind, to sin against Whom was a sin beyond forgiveness, the eternal mysterious secret Being to Whom, as God, the priests offered up mass once a year, robed in the scarlet of the tongues of fire.

Those endless Catholic religion classes taught by the Sisters of Providence and the Irish Christian Brothers!  Those so-called Theology classes taught by the Jesuits, all based on St. Thomas Aquinas!  That off-putting terminology (Paraclete Parakeet), all that Latin (Tantum Ergo makes your hair grow!) All those lists (7 gifts of the Holy Ghosst, 7 deadly sins, sanctifying grace vs. actual grace, . .), the mysteries of Faith,   Nobody could beat this kind of stuff into your heads and consciousness like the Irish religious and they carried their dedication and tenacity to America, and to my parish on the south side of Chicago in the 1040s and 1950s.  And no one could write about it more tellingly than James Joyce.  I hardly knew whether to laugh or cry as I read and listened to the descriiptions above in Chapter 4.

I tend to be hard in my judgments about Catholic education, harder than I should be.  The 40s and 50s were not the 2020s.  I grew up at the end of the Pre-Vatican II Church, the Church of Pius XII, not the Church of John XXIII.  I was born at the end of the Great Depression, just before Pearl Harbor and World War II.  The Sisters of Providence who taught me dealt with classes of 40 to 50 studends, boys on one side of the room, girls on the other.  They had rather little formal education themselves and little preparation for teaching those huge classes other than what they themselves experienced in their own Catholic education.   It was a hard life and many didn't do very well.   I remember especially my teacher in 5th or 6th grade who couldn't deal with the stress(es) and had to be replaced early in the Fall semester.  There are many good memoirs in print about life in the convent, some of which I've read, like Karen Armstrong's Through the Narrow Gate: My Climb Out of  Darkness, and Removing the Habit of God: Sister Christine's Story by Susan Bassler Pickford.   They are powerful, touching stories of girls and young women struggling with their relationship with God.  When I joined St. Francis of Assisi parish in the 1990s and became active in parish and Church affairs, I found that the most admirable members of the parish (in addition to my friend Troy Major and Roland Wright) were a few religious sisters.  I regret losing my relationships with them when I left the parish after falling out with the provincial leadership of the Capuchins during the child sex abuse scandals.

On the othjer hand, in the 5th and concluding chapter, Joyce relates Stephen Dedalus's and his friends' arguments in college about Thomistic philosophy, Irish identity, the definition of Beauty, Art, and suchlike, much of it in Latin.  I have a hard time reading and/or listening to Joyce, and this chapter is particularly difficult for me.  Much of the dialogue is just words that float over my head.  I'll finish the book, probably tonight or tomorrow morning, but I'm not enjoying it except for the parts where he exposes the wretchedness of the Irish Catholic Church.

  


Sunday, May 3, 2026

5/3/2026

 Sunday, May 3, 2026

1921 Northern Ireland was created under the UK Government of Ireland Act partitioning off six north-eastern counties with a Protestant majority

1926 US Marines landed in Nicaragua (9 months after leaving), stayed until 1933

1960 The Anne Frank House opened in Amsterdam, the Netherlands

2007 Peter Charles Clausen was born at West Allis Memorial Hospital to his mother Anh Hoang Clausen and his father, Andrew Charles Clausen

In bed at 9ish, up at 5:30; 0545 155/78/54 119 204.0; 46/32/63/43, windy, overcast. 

Morning meds at 10 a.m., and Bisoprolol at 6:45 a.m.    

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.  My back started acting up so I went back to back this morning and listened to, rather than read, where I am in Portrait, Chapter 3.  I had forgotten what a superb job Joyce did in providing to the reading world an example of the Irish Catholic Church's teaching on Heaven and Hell, sin and its eternal consequences, and mostly, God's just punishment of his children who die not in a state of sanctifying grace, i.e., with at least one mortal sin on their soul.  Growing up in that Church was living and being formed in a Reign of Terror.  I relate to and react to Joyce's writing about it so intensely because I grew up in that Church.  The American Catholic Church that I grew up in was an Irish Catholic Church.  Most of the hierarchs were Irishmen, and perhaps they still are.  Our archbishop in Chicago was Samuel Stritch, as Irish as Paddy's pig, as we used to say.  Our parish pastor at St. Leo the Great parish was the Rt. Rev. Patrick J. Malloy, another Irishman.  My teachers at Leo High School were the Irish Christian Brothers, mostly Irishmen.  And, of course, my own blessed mother, Mary Healy Clausen, was the daughter of Dennis Healy and Catherine O'Shea Healy, both Irish immigrants.  Here's just some of what I wrote of growing up in the Irish Catholic Church in the chapter of my memoir I titled "Born in the Bosom of the Church":

There is a story about Jesus in the gospels of Mark and Luke that receives too little attention from the professional Church, the priests and nuns and eminences with satin beanies and palatial residences.  Mark tells it like this:

People were bringing little children [or toddlers] to him in order that he might touch them; and the disciples spoke sternly to them.  But when Jesus saw this, he was indignant and said to them, “Let the little children come to me; do not stop them; for it is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs.  Surely whoever does not receive the kingdom of God as a little child will never enter it.”  And he took them up in his arms, laid his hands on them, and blessed them.

Luke has the disciples even more authoritarian and off-putting than Mark: “when the disciples saw them, they sternly ordered them not to do it . . .”

It’s a great tale of Jesus’ warmth and physical affection – “he took them up in his arms . . .”   The aspect of the story that I am focusing on here, however, is that it is the disciples of Jesus, the ‘true believers,’ the ‘in crowd’ that stood between the children and Jesus.  It was the people closest to him who built a wall around him, attempting to fence Jesus in and fence the innocents out.  I reveal my hostility toward clericalism in admitting that I can’t help thinking of those disciples as the ecclesial ancestors of the Church’s clerical caste, the professional God-guys, or at least the pharisaical ones, of whom I have known a good many.

With our home life on the Good Ship Clausen so precarious and sometimes stormy, my mother’s stabilizing keel notwithstanding, the major influence on Kitty and me other than our family was the Catholic Church.  This influence was exercised mainly through parochial schooling at St. Leo’s Grammar School for both of us and Leo High School for me and Visitation High School for Kitty.  The grammar school was run by the Sisters of Providence headquartered outside Notre Dame, Indiana.  Leo was run by the Irish Christian Brothers and “Vis” by the Sinsinawa Dominicans with their motherhouse south of Platteville, Wisconsin.  

. . .

    The most popular priest was a young fellow named Father Burke.  He was friendly and open without any hint of being manipulative or predatory.  I remember only two things about him.  One, that I liked him.  Two, that he was delegated to come into our 7th and 8th classes before summer vacation to give us the temple-of-the-Holy-Ghost-avoidance-of-occasions-of-sin talks.  In large part because the American Catholic Church was so thoroughly an Irish Catholic entity, the avoidance of ‘the solitary vice,’ of ‘self-abuse,’ of anything having to do with s-e-x was about as important as defeating Godless Communism and keeping the “undesirables” out of our neighborhoods.  Father Burke told us boys (the girls of course were in another classroom waiting to get their temple-of-the-Holy-Ghost-never-BE-an-occasion-of-sin-for-a-boy talk) that staying in a bathtub or shower any longer than was necessary to remove the dirt from our bodies was inviting damnation.  Better a soiled body than a sullied soul.  

    Growing up Irish American Catholic in the 1940s and 1950s in Chicago was a schizophrenic    experience.  While we received occasional infusions of “God so loved the world . . .” the main teaching of the Church, which is to say the professional God-guys, was fear of eternal damnation.  The Church touted the Little Flower and St. Francis of Assisi preaching to the birds when it needed a little romanticism and sentimentalism, but its regular indoctrination came right from the same Calvinistic hellhole that Jonathan Edwards drew from when he wrote his “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” sermon.  The wrath of God burns against them, their damnation does not slumber, the pit is prepared, the fire is made ready, the furnace is now hot, ready to receive them; the flames do now rage and glow. There was precious little difference between 16th and 17th century Puritan moral theology and the Irish Catholic moral theology of the mid-20th century.  Damn near every sin more grievous than disobeying your mother was a mortal sin and if you died with one mortal sin on your soul, the eternal fires of Hell awaited you.  Do you know how long eternity is, boys and girls?  Imagine holding a lighted match under your finger for one second.  For ten seconds.  For ten minutes!  Ten hours!! TEN THOUSAND MILLION GAZILLION YEARS!!!!!   And that’s not one one trillionth of one one trillionth of ETERNITY!    And, to make growing up more interesting, any boy or girl could get into this kind of trouble as soon as they reach “the age of reason” which the God-guys decided was 7 years old.  This teaching was enough to keep a pubescent boy awake at night praying for no wet dreams, especially before he fell asleep.

    At least if one did slip into a sin of the flesh meriting burning in Hell for all eternity, the sin could be forgiven by coming alongside Father Devereaux and being grappled.  One sin and only one sin was unforgivable: hating the Holy Ghost.  I believe I learned this in the 5th or 6th grade from one of the Sisters of Providence who had it on the highest authority:

"Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be forgiven unto men. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come."-- (Matt. 12:31-32)

As soon as I learned of this unforgivable sin and that I must never say “I hate the Holy Ghost”, I was constantly pursued by the Evil One tempting me to say “I hate the Holy Ghost.”  I was a 10 or 11 year old neurotic haunted by the soft siren call “Go on, say it.  Say you hate the Holy Ghost.  Go on, say it.”  I still remember the terrible day I was dispatched by my teacher, Sister Mary Chalkdust, to take the wastebasket downstairs and empty it.  All the way down the back steps at St. Leo Grammar School I struggled against my obsessive wrestling against thinking the words “I hate the Holy Ghost.”  No.  Don’t say it.  It’s unforgivable!  No use.  I thought the words in a complete sentence: “I hate the Holy Ghost.”  I was done for and I hadn’t even kissed a girl yet. 

. . . 

    I can now half-laugh at the absurdities that were beaten into my head and my heart as a child under the spiritual authority of Pope Pius XII, Cardinal Stritch, Monsignor Malloy, and the Sisters of Providence, but of course it wasn’t one bit humorous as I lived through it.  Along with the horrors of living each day in this world with my father’s abysmal unhappiness and alcoholism, I had the Church doing all in its power to convince me that there was no hope for me (or my family) even in the next world.  I cannot think of all that hellfire and damnation brainwashing that we went though other than as, at best, the sick visions of some deeply neurotic people and, at worst, as willful child abuse by  those who knew they were speaking untruths.   The deeply neurotics included many of the priests and nuns as is evidenced in Karen Armstrong’s wonderful biography about her life in a convent Through the Narrow Gate, Andrew Greeley’s Uncertain Trumpet, and by other writings about life within the clerical and religious castes.  The child abusers included many others, popes, cardinals, bishops, priests, nuns and brothers, who were willing to toe the party line of the official Church for career reasons and/or for social control reasons knowing that what they said was pure bullshit.    

. . .

    Whose purpose was served by having children believe that the ground they walked on was a moral minefield and that at any moment they could stumble into eternal perdition?  When the disciples saw the people bringing little children to him, they sternly ordered them not to do it.  What was accomplished other than the creating of more neurotics whose lives were driven by fear rather than love?  Those who benefited from the Moral Reign of Terror, of course, were those in the clerical or priestly caste.  Those of us in mortal fear of eternal damnation had one practical way out, and that was to repair to the confessional to be shriven by a priest.  Absolution was the ticket to Heaven and the priestly caste had monopoly power over the tickets.  The popes and the bishops, for their part, owned the railroad.

The disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?”  He called a child, whom he put among them, and said, “Unless you change and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  Whoever becomes humble like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.  Whoever welcomes one such child in my name welcomes me.”

“If any of you put a stumbling block before one of these little ones who believe in me, it would be better for you if a great millstone were fastened around your neck and you were drowned in the depth of the sea.  Woe to the world because of stumbling blocks!”  Matt. 18:1-7

Woe indeed.  Stumbling blocks indeed.  What anguish we suffered if we believed, and believe I did.  What threats we endured if we couldn’t believe, a sin against Faith.  Repression, suppression, oppression were the hallmarks of the Irish Catholic Church and the American Church was an Irish Church.  Wonderment about matters religious that might deviate from the Teachings of the Church?  Sinful.  Normal maturing through emerging sexuality in childhood and adolescence?  Sinful.   Failing to toe the line with all the laws of the Church, like “making your Easter duty?”  Sinful.

    As I look back on those days, what strikes me more than the spiritual and emotional pain the Church put us through is what the Church didn’t do.  It didn’t help us.  It didn’t help us grow up.  Not emotionally, not spiritually, not religiously.  It was in great measure negative and life-denying.  Having grown up in that cold Irish spiritual environment, William Blake’s church poems immediately appealed to me, poems like Garden of Love.

I went to the Garden of Love, 

And saw what I never had seen; 

A Chapel was built in the midst, 

Where I used to play on the green. 

And the gates of this Chapel were shut 

And "Thou shalt not," writ over the door; 

So I turned to the Garden of Love 

That so many sweet flowers bore. 

And I saw it was filled with graves, 

And tombstones where flowers should be; 

And priests in black gowns were walking their rounds, 

And binding with briars my joys and desires. 

and The Little Vagabond

Dear Mother, dear Mother, the Church is cold, 

But the Ale-house is healthy & pleasant & warm; 

Besides I can tell where I am used well, 

Such usage in Heaven will never do well. 


But if at the Church they would give us some Ale, 

And a pleasant fire our souls to regale, 

We'd sing and we'd pray all the live-long day, 

Nor ever once wish from the Church to stray. 


Then the Parson might preach, & drink, & sing, 

And we'd be as happy as birds in the spring; 

And modest Dame Lurch, who is always at Church, 

Would not have bandy children, nor fasting, nor birch. 


And God, like a father rejoicing to see 

His children as pleasant and happy as he, 

Would have no more quarrel with the Devil or the Barrel, 

But kiss him, & give him both drink and apparel. 

In the Irish American Church of my youth, however, there was no “God like a father rejoicing to see His children as pleasant and happy as he.”  It was a Church of little joy, little delight, little peace, little awe, but no lack of dogmas, doctrines, rituals and rules, sins and sufferings.

If the Church was cruel to its children ‘born in the bosom of the Church,’ it was no less cruel to adults, especially mothers. . . 

. . . 

    I have scratched the surface of some of the besetting sins of the Church I knew as a child and a youth: clericalism, legalism, authoritarianism, sexism coupled with a morbid sexual obsessiveness,  racism,  secrecy and superstition.  It was an institution marked by pride and arrogance and an addiction to power and control.  St. Paul admonished the Colossian Christian community “as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, meekness, and patience.”  These virtues were for the sheep, Pius X’s ‘docile flock,’ not for the shepherds.  The besetting sins of the Church existed long before the mid-20th century and well beyond the archdiocese of Chicago.  Some of them pre-dated but became fixed by the first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea in 325 and they were still around at and after the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.  

    It was my experiences with the official Church, the Church as power structure and Establishment that started me on the road to philosophical anarchism, a personal philosophical rejection of the notion of Authority.  Power and gospel values do not coexist comfortably.  That is the essential contradiction within the official Church, an inherent contradiction at the very heart of the Church.  My later experiences with the United States government during the Vietnam War and with all sorts of governmental and other power structures confirmed a deep-seated rejection of anyone’s or any entity’s claim to Authority, at least outside of a parent/small child relationship.  It was Pius X’s power play in asserting papal infallibility in the First Vatican Council that led Lord Acton, one of a handful of British peers who was Roman Catholic and an opponent of the Pope’s power grab, to pen the famous ‘Acton’s axiom’:

If there is any presumption, it is . . . against holders of power, increasing as the power increases . . . Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.  Great men are almost always bad men, even when they exercise influence and not authority: still more when you superadd the tendency or the certainty of corruption by authority.  There is no worse heresy than that the office sanctifies the holder of it.

To which I say “Amen.”

A page from my holographic watercolor sketchbook Live in the Time of Covid, living with the pandemic under Trump

I could have put sections of Joyce's Chapter 3 in today's journal, but the journal is a collection of reflection of thoughts I have thought and and of writings I have written about my life, not Joyce's.  One of the great things about keeping a journal is that there are no rules.  Personal journals are personal, just a form of diary.  I wish I started journaling long before I was in my 80s and coming apart.  I did journal on some of our trips to Europe and I've often picked them up and reread them to recall things I had long forgotten.  But I suppose it's only on vacations and in retirement that we have the time and motivation to be scribbling in notebooks and writing thoughts on laptops.

The Heart Surgery.  Geri and I had a long, serious, detailed, and good conversation this mornning about my upcoming heart surgery (and the recommended bladder surgery) and why the decision to have the surgery or to cancel it is not an easy one.

 

 

  

 

 

 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

5/2/2026

 Saturday, May 2, 2026

1929 Billie Holiday (14) and her mother were arrested for prostitution following a raid on a brothel in Harlem, New York City

1938 Thornton Wilder won the  Pulitzer Prize  "Our Town

1949 Arthur Miller won the Pulitzer Prize for "Death of a Salesman"

1978  Sharon Celek Kevil was born

2025 A Gaza-bound activist humanitarian aid ship catches fire and issues an SOS after what its organizers alleged was an Israeli drone attack off the coast of Malta in international waters.

2025 Donald Trump signs an executive order calling for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to stop directly funding NPR and PBS, and for government agencies to stop indirectly funding them.

In bed at 7with bad back pain again, right side, up at 6.  0625 145/78/51 117 205.4; 35/51/32, mostly sunny.   

Morning meds at 7:30 a.m., and half dose of Bisoprolol at 6:43 a.m.

My day started with a text from Sarah:  "The boys would like to say 'good morning!'



Anne Clausen:
Good morning, Max and Freddy! What big boys you are now. Very handsome as well. 
Now for something REALLY handsome: that bread. To die for! (I wish Maria were here to see it. She always lived your baking adventures!)
Chuck, I wish you well with your catheter ablation. I hope it is successful and that there are no problems. I also hope your overnight stay is warm and comfy. Take care. 
“Liked” not “lived” in the sentence about Maria. 


Charles Clausen:
Thanks, Anne.  I very much appreciate your good wishes.  It’ll be my third hospital stay this year, plus two day surgeries and a few ER visits.  As they say, not for wimps.  I hope you are doing well.

Unintended consequences.  This morning's New York Times includes a feature story on Japanese bathhouses, or sento, Not Even Japanese Bathhouses Are Immune From Shocks of Iran War, by River Akira Davis and Kiuko Notoya.  It relates that public bathhouses, an already diminishing institution in Japan in our era of private bathtubs and showers in private homes, are in danger of going out of business because of the high cost of oil due to Netanyahu's and Trump's war on Iran.  Reading the article and seeing its photos brings back memories of my too-short stays in Japan  and then on Okinawa in 1965 and 1966.  Most of my time in Japan was spent in the town of Iwakuni, about 25 miles south of Hiroshima, where there is a Marine Corps Air Station, a former Japanese Imperial Air Force base.  The orders overseas that I received at MCAS Yuma, AZ, designated the Marine Air Control Squadron at Iwakuni as my destination, but by the time I arrived there, the unit had already been deployed to the huge air base outside Danang, South Vietnam.  There was a tiny rear echelon still at Iwakuni under the charge of my buddy from Yuma, Warrant Officer Ron Kendall, and Ron appointed me the investigating officer for an accidental death of an enlisted man in our unit.  His head had been crushed as he tried to repair his car.  That investigation, and the scarcity of air transport equipment, kept me in Iwakuni and away from Vietnam for about 3 weeks.  I returned a few months later to deal with the dress uniforms and other stuff I had shipped from the States for my 13 month tour of duty, unaccompanied by family.  That visit was supposed to be for only 2 or 3 days, but ended up taking a week because of "space unavailable" for the return trip to RVN.  Still later, probably in 1966, I was sent on temporary duty for a week to the huge American naval bases at Yokosuka,  35 miles south of Yokohama.  Yokosuka was and is the largest US naval installation in the world, and I was sent there to attend "Crypto school," i.e, to learn all I could about crytography in a week.  It was part of my duties as the Top Secret Control Officer for Marine Wing Headquarters Squadron 1 in Danang.  I wish I could say I learned much about Japanese life and culture during my 4 or 5 weeks in Japan, but alas, I didn't.  I Yokosuka I spent all of my time working inside the moutain innards where the Crypto School was located, or resting in the BOQ, and in Iwakuni, when we weren't working or sleeping, we were usually in the Officers' Club on base or in the officers' bar in town, and the shadow of Vietnam hung over everything and everywhere.  I did, however, get to more than one bathhouse and more than one massage parlor, usually as part of recovering from hangovers from the night before.  So I learned that the Japanese are pretty fastidious about cleanliness and that they think the American practice of getting into a tub to clean up is ass-backwards.  They clean up by washing and showering before they get into a tub.  The tub is for soaking and socializing.  I was reminded of this, and so much more, by the article in this morning's Times.  I was reminded, too, to telling my Dad, once, that I enjoyed my time in Japan and the little time I got to spend with Japanese people, and his reaction.  After Iwo Jima, and all his experiences in the Marine during World War II, he had no use for Japan or its people.  Wars do that to people, though in the case of Vietnam, there was often an unavoidable ambivalence because, after all, we were there to help the Vietnamese, right?  Kind of like George III was helping the colonists, some of whom were rebelling against him because  "when push comes to shove, I will kill your friends and family to remind you of my love."  But I deviate from the point: Japan's bathhouses are in danger of finally disappearing because of Bibi Netanyahu's and Donald Trump's war against Iran.  Such a small world we live in where such unintended consequences occur.  Or will they disappear because only the very old still use them, people my age and will they ultimately disappear with those very people, who still enjoyed soaking in a tub of 104° water while schmoozing with the neighbors rather than peering into a smartphone or a computer screeen?

Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.  I've started rereading this early book of James Joyce.  I'm not sure why, but I think it's to re-exerience his description of growing up Irish Catholic, as I did.  I'm just about through with the first chapter and I'm getting my fill of it, at least in the parts where he describes school masters inflicting corporal punishment on school boys , sometimes for misbehavior but also for failing to accurately conjugate Latin verbs or to decline Latin nouns, pronouns, adjectives, or adverbs.  Oh, those good old days of Brother Hennessey telling us to "face the birdies" as he whacked us on the ass with his drumstick, or Brother O'Keefe smacking us across our hands with  his thick ruler-thing, or Brother Charles Borromeo Irwin hitting the back of our heads  for any reason whatsoever.  Or poor young Brother Comack who almost broke his hand punching the blackboard in anger because he some poor bastard wasn't able to answer his question in class.  And no surprise when I read many years later that Charles Borromeo Irwin was credibly accused of sexually exploiting some some guy.  Our teachers were denominated the ICBs or Irish Christian Brothers, but we knew them as the International Child Beaters and James Joyce reminds me of those days.
    Lazy idle little loafer! cried the prefect of studies.  Broke my glasses!  An old schoolboy trick!  Our with your hand this moment!

    Stephen closed his eyes and held out in the air his trembling hand with the palm upwards.  He felt the prefect of studies touch it for a moment at the fingers to straighten it and then the swish of the sleeve of the soutane as the pandybat was lifted to strike.  A hot burning stinging tingling blow like the loud crack of a broken stick made his trembling hand crumple together like a leaf in the fire: and at the sound and the pain scalding tears were driven into his eye.


 

Friday, May 1, 2026

5/1/2026

Friday, May 1, 2026

1943 Food rationing began in the United States during World War II

1961 Fidel Castro announced there would be no more elections in Cuba

2003 In what became known as the "Mission Accomplished" speech, U.S. President George W. Bush declared that "major combat operations in Iraq have ended" on board the USS Abraham Lincoln off the coast of California

2011 Pope John Paul II was beatified by his successor, Pope Benedict XVI

2020 Armed protesters against stay-at-home-orders gathered at the State Capitol in Lansing, Michigan, as Governor Gretchen Whitmer reinstated the State of Emergency

2025 District Court Judge ruled that US Trump cannot use the Alien Enemies Act to deport Venezuelan migrants, deeming the previous use of this power as having been improperly invoked. 

In bed at 9:30, up at 4:30; 125/61/E, 3 mnutes later 139/74/30 129 204.8; 3643/36, cloudy all day. 

Morning meds at 7 a.m., and half-dose of Bisoprolol at 5:30 a.m.

I woke up with a bad back.  I hoped that a hot shower might alleviate the pain, but no luck, so I put a 5% Lidocaine patch on it.  It kept me from attending the memorial service for our next-door neighbor, John McGregor, at Fox Point Lutheran Church with Geri, but thankfully, it was lifestreamed from the church.  This was the same church in which I attended the funeral for Brad Carr in 1996.  Brad died of cancer at age 50.  I had first met him when Anne and I lived in Juneau Village, during my first two years of law school.  I met him at a party in the apartment of Ron Warren, a law school classmate of mine for one years.  Ron was a physical therapist at Mount Sinai Hospital and worked full time during law school, which probably contributed mightily to his flunking out after our first year.  In any event, Brad Carr was a guest at the party and we met.  I can't remember our next meeting, or when we became friends of a sort, but we did.  I think Brad was teaching and an assistant basketball coach at a Milwaukee high school when I first met him, but he was a born politician and he soon became an aide to Milwaukee's long-term mayor Henry Maier, and the part-time, weekend sportscaster for WISN-TV, Channel 12.  Eventually he became a part-time law student, and eventually a lawyer doing a lot of municipal business which, alas, got him in some bribery trouble which cost him his law license in 1991.  Less than 5 years later, he died at age 50.  I suppose it's hyperbolic, but I think of him as a bit like Icarus, one with tremendous potential but who flew too close to the sun.  He was young, Black, handsome, intelligent, articulate, good-looking, a great tv screen presence, politically well-connected, a lawyer, but too hungry.  My good neighbor John McGregor wasn't the opposite of Brad, but very different.  He was born into the Stratton family, of Briggs and Stratton.  The family changed its name to McGregor from Schlesinger during one of the world wars, because of widespread anti-German animus.  He grew up wealthy, attending Milwaukee Country Day School, and Stanford University, but only after he recovered from polio that left him with some deformity and pain for the rest of his life.  He devoted his life to his family, and to his work in real estate development, and local charities, including Children's Hospital and the Schlitz Audubon Center.  He was a kind, gentle, and generous guy and a truly great neighbor.  He inspired (and shamed) me with his disciplined daily walks and recumbent bike rides.  We were born within weeks of each other in 1941 and, although we were never close personal or social friends (alas), my life was diminished by his death from leukemia.

I watched the entire memorial service on livestream from Fox Point Lutheran Church on Santa Monica Boulevard.  I enjoyed the eulogies given by a friend and by his son, Skip, and everything they said about John rang true.  I didn't get much out of the religious parts of the service, except for the duo who sang Panis Angelicus, which has been one of my favorite hymns for decades, probably since I was a kid.  The singers, ka baritone and a soprano, were both superb.

Panis angelicus
Fit panis hominum
Dat panis coelicus
Figuris terminum
O res mirabilis
Manducat dominum
Pauper, pauper
Servus et humilis

May the Bread of Angels
Become bread for mankind;
The Bread of Heaven puts
All foreshadowings to an end;
Oh, thing miraculous!
The body of the Lord will nourish
the poor, the poor,
the servile, and the humble.

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

4/30/2026

 Thursday, April 30, 2026

1975 Saigon fell & became Ho Chi Minh City

1977 Human rights group Mothers of the Plaza de Mayo began protesting at the forced disappearances of thousands, under the Argentine dictatorship of Jorge Rafael Videla

2015 Bernie Sanders announced he would seek the Democratic nomination for President

2021 45 were killed and 150 injured in a crush of people at the Israeli Lag B'Omer festival at Mount Meron

2025 The United States and Ukraine signed the Ukraine–United States Mineral Resources Agreement to share profits from the future sales of Ukraine's mineral and energy reserves

In bed by 10, up at 6:15; 0625 138/73/47 110 205.4; 38/45/35, sunny

Morning meds at 9 a.m.; Bisoprolol half-dose at 7 a.m.

Apocalypse Now Redux.  There are many times when I wish I were smarter, more on the ball, less obtuse, a person with greater insight and understanding of what's going on.  Those times include when I don't get jokes on SNL, or on late night monologues, or when I read a poem that is comepletely indecipherable to me, or see a movie that I don't understand.  I sort of have that feeling about Apocalypse Now.  I think I get the big picture, i.e., that it's an indictment of American popular culture, and of our national hubris about our role in the world and what great things can be wrought with our immense military and economic weight.  It's no secret of course that the movie is a clever adaptation of Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness from the jungles of the then-Belgian Congo to the jungles of Indochina, and from European economic exploitation to American military exploitation, from the hypocrisy of Western European civilization to the hypocrisy of American 'exceptionalism,' etc.  I especially enjoyed Col. Kurtz pointing out the hypocrisy of our military and poltitical leaders forbidding our airmen from writing "Fuck" on the fuselage of our aircreaft that drop napalm and white phosphorous bombs on human beings: "We train young men to drop fire on people, but their commanders won't allow them to write "fuck" on their airplanes because it's obscene!"  When I was in Vietnam, seven days a week for 33 weeks or so, I and my team kept track of thousands, I suppose tens of thousands, of our aircraft leaving and (mostly) returning from missions during which  they dropped fire, and high explosives, and poisons on tens of thousands of human beings,  human beings we were taught in our churches and many schools were "children of God," and "our brothers and sisters," and "our fellow men," and we did it with as much emotion and moral compunction or qualm as if we were keeping track of a factory's inventory of nuts, bolts, or sheet metal.  We flew into Vietnam with our rifles, heavy artillery, bullets, bombs, and herbicides and as if we had a perfect right to do so.  In the 'land of the free and home of the brave,' our government plucked young men off our streets, out of their workplaces, and out of their schools to train them to become killers of strange men and women and children thousands of miles away, men who posed a threat to our young men only because our government put them 'in harm's way.'  Anyone who knows me at all knows how I feel about our government and what it did in and to Vietnam, what it did to the young men it sent to Vietnam, and to their families.  Thus, it's obvious that in the main I am glad that John Milius wrote Apocalypse Now and that Francis Coppola turned it into the movie that showed at least some of what the war was like.  That said, however, I wonder whether they went overboard in their depiction.  I write 'I wonder' because I don't have a strong judgment about it.  To be sure, they depicted a hell on earth, and for those victimized by it, war can surely be a hell on earth.  And the most vivid image of Hell is fire, but the semi-ubiquity of fire in the movie seemed really gratuitious.  And what are we to make of the ritual slaughter of Col. Kurtz, much like the simultaneous ritual slaughter of a water buffalo by the montangards?  And what of the idea that the government has professional assassins in the special services?  Capt. Willard already had six assassinations notched on his .45 when he received the mission to assassinate Col. Kurtz.  And what of the assignmen to one man, armed only with a .45 pistol, to travel into Cambodia to kill Kurtz, who was surrounded by an army of loyal montangards?  I know these comments are incoherent, that they don't make much sense, and one doesn't follow from another, but it seemed to me on second viewing that the film doesn't quite hang together, that it sort of falls apart once Willard arrives at Kurtz's camp. It's probably me being not smart enough or educated enough to get it as a work of genius, but I don't understand the title, Apocalypse Now.  Wikipedia says "apocalypse" has come to mean a catastrophe "but the Greek word apokálypsis, from which it is derived, means a revelation."  I don't get what, in the plot of the movie, was the catastrophe, or what was the revelation.  Was it Kurtz's insight about the wisdom of the NVA/VC fores who chopped off the arms of the children who had been vaccinated against polio by his American special forces?    That 'wisdom' seems to be that moral restraint is a liability in war, that the end justifies the means, and that in order to win, one must embrace or at least accept horror as a means and to use it without hesitation.  Is this the point of the movie?  Or is it a rejection of that?  How about the means the Americans used?  Assassination.  Ritual slaughter.  How about Willard's murdering the girl with the puppy in the sampan?

This was an act of murder by the hero of this film, as was his butchering by machete of Colonel Kurtz.  What are we to think of these acts?  What are we to think of the other 6 assassinatins that Captain Willard commtted before Kurtz?  What are we to think of the general, the colonel, and the CIA agent who ordered it?  Who were the heroes in this film?  Were there any?  Maybe "Chief"?