Monday, June 30, 2008

Napalm and Forgiveness

I had seen the picture before. A Google search of "Vietnam War" popped it up. I looked at it briefly and looked away. It's hard to look at. The terror and the pain on the child's face is unbearable. I couldn't bring myself to think about what had happened to the little girl. I just quickly clicked on to the next picture. I don't even remember why I did the search or what the next picture was, but I remembered the picture. I stored it away in my mind under "what humans do to other humans".

Today on my way home the segment on NPR "This I Believe" came on. The announcer said that she was the subject of one of the most memorable pictures of the Vietnam war. Kim Phuc was the little girl in the picture and she was still alive, now 45 years old (only 6 years older than me) and living in Canada. I cried. She had lived after that horrific day.

She read her essay for the show. She read about the day when she saw the planes drop the napalm bombs on her village and her clothes were burned off her. She read about the years after, her recovery, and her hatred "as high as a mountain". But 10 years after that day of horror, she read about accepting Jesus Christ as her savior. She read how she learned forgiveness through her religion.

"Napalm is very powerful but faith, forgiveness and love are much more powerful." she read.

I know now what happened to the girl in the picture. She is very much alive. Despite the continuing difficulties and pain, she continues to do more than survive. She lives. And I cry.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Eli Mattson's Got Talent

This guy is good. Check out his myspace page.

http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendID=261228170

He was on America's got talent. I'm not proficient at adding videos, but I will try. If it doesn't work, look him up on youtube.

Goodbye George


I don't like watching the news and I don't watch a lot of the celebrity news shows, so I was very surprised and then sad when I saw that George Carlin had died.

The first routine I remember was "Stuff". I laughed my head off. It was all so true. I listening it to it right now. I have it on my i-pod. I know my co-workers think I'm crazy when they walk by my office and I'm smiling or giggling.

I remember a routine he did about golf courses and writing a complaint letter. I now call them "George Carlin Letters". I going to have to find that routine .

That was George. He took real situation and broke them down to funny. But he was also a very wise man. The quote to the left caught my eye one day. He could really say things simply with a very complex meaning.

His talent wasn't just comedy, it was making you laugh and think at the same time.

I'll miss you George.