Reasoned Audacity

~Daily commentary on public policy and culture ~
Ranger Handbook

"Achieve maximum effect
by exhibiting
Reasoned Audacity."

Finalist Link

To Subscribe

Enter email address:

Must Read

Jack's blog!

Ipso Facto Comic

Speaking

Charmaine Speaking

Need a speaker? Click here to bring Charmaine to your event.

Recent events:

MOPS, Truro Church, Fairfax, Virginia

September 8th

Washington & Lee University, Washington D.C. Program, "Women and Politics"

May 13th.

Trinity Fellows, Charlottesville, VA, "Gay Marriage"

May 26th.

Cedarville College, April 14th.

Extra

Sex Trafficking PPT

Blue Star Banner

For Josh, Michael and Will.

Be safe.

MarchTogether

We Surf For You

Main

May 06, 2006

For Jack, Scenes from a Life, Another Year. . .

From the archives, from last Cinco de Mayo. . .I still do.

* * *
1990.gif
May 5, 1990

To have and to hold, from this day forward,

Those two didn't know what they were getting into did they?

for better, for worse,

May 5, 1990: The day dawned dark and dreary. . . but, then -- midway through the service, the sun broke through, a single ray of light piercing the chapel windows, illuminating the altar. . .

for richer, for poorer,

No, we had no way of even imagining the hurdles and challenges that lay ahead.

in sickness or in health,

But then, no way of even dreaming of the joys either.

4corners.jpg
The Penta-Posse
Four Corners Monument, April, 2005

to love and to cherish

May 5, 2005: another dark and dreary day. . . just take-out dinner on folding chairs at the ball-park, . . .but there, still, rays of light, piercing our hearts, illuminating the future. . .

















hylight.jpg john light.jpg
gylight.jpg sylight.jpg
james light.jpg

'till death do us part.

I do.

* * *

Update: April, 2006

The Penta-Posse

the_gang.jpg


May 01, 2006

White House Correspondents Dinner: Fairchild v. Trainor

buckley_chris_white_house_corr_dinner_yoest.JPG

With Elaine Donnelly, Christopher Buckley and Jack

Jack has a hilarious post up entitled "Walking the Red Carpet in 7 Easy Steps." I love the part where he points out the two tennis poles growing out of his and Chris Buckley's heads in the pic above. . .

FairchildMorgan.jpg
Morgan Fairchild

My favorite story from the event comes from one of the pre-dinner parties. At one point I was standing next to a beautiful woman who turned, put out her hand and said, "Hi, I'm Morgan Fairchild." Very friendly. I think I'm going to have to forgive her for being a Democrat.

We started to chat when I felt Jack pulling my elbow. "Come on. Quick," he whispered.

I wondered what could possibly be pulling us away from chatting with. . .Morgan Fairchild. But ever the dutiful wife, I hurried away with him. . .

trainor.jpg
Lt. Gen. Bernard Trainor

"Hurry," Jack says, a star-struck sound in his voice: "We've got to meet Bernie Trainor."

Kid. You. Not.

April 03, 2006

Savage Places Second in the Cal Ripken Tournament

Cross post from Jack Yoest with Savage.

baseball_tourney_2_april_06_trophy.JPG

Savage Spirit, Maryland
Championship First Runner-Up
Cal Ripken, Opening Day Tournament
2006, 11u, years old and under

Vince Lombardi once said, "The Green Bay Packers never lost a football game. They just ran out of time."

Coach Scott Grebenstein must be saying the same thing. Running out of time and innings in the final championship game Sunday afternoon with the Maryland Cardinals. Score: Savage behind Cardinals, 11 to 12, to place second.

He led the Savage Spirit baseball team this weekend on a series of wins and a "slaughter rule" upset over the Maryland Mud Hens.

It started Friday nite. Your Business Blogger packed up Charmaine and the Penta-Posse into the monster SUV for two nites in Aberdeen, Maryland. Home of the Cal Ripken Stadium complex. Opening Day Tournaments.

We saw old friends from Charlottesville baseball allstar days. Charmaine teared up. Not me. Although it was windy andblowingdustgetsinyoureyesandwateruptogetdustout.

(Hint: moving 11 times in 15 years of marriage is too many good-bys. Too many hellos.)

Anyway. The team played well. The Dude played well.

baseball_tourney_april_06_yoest_windup.JPG


The Dude pitching

baseball_tourney_april_yoest_winding.JPG



Wind up


baseball_tourney_april_06_yoest_pitch_deliver.png


Delivery: 3 up, 3 down

baseball_tourney_april_06_yoest_hits.JPG


The Dude can hit
The Dude got his first over the fence home run on Sunday.

Congratulations Savage Spirit on a great season's opener!

###

Was this helpful? Do comment.
Consider a free eMail subscription for this site.

Thank you (foot)notes:

ripken_logo.jpeg


Cal Ripken Baseball

December 29, 2005

I'm honored to be included. . .

. . . on Concerned Women for America's end-of-year Evangelical Women of the Year 2005 list. Jack has the story. (Of course!)

December 21, 2005

Cooking From Scratch

And speaking of my grandmother. . . among the many remarkable things I could tell you about her: she has a blog. Check out this post about cooking from scratch in the 1930's.

December 10, 2005

New Job with Family Research Council

I had big news in my life this week . . . I took a new job as Vice President of External Relations at the Family Research Council.

My portfolio now includes all of their web and new media activities and the radio productions. I'll also still be involved with policy issues -- iIn particular I'm working on a book about women and work. A subject near to my heart, of course.

Well, actually, my work is a passion, but my heart belongs to my kids, the Penta-Posse. And so I am most grateful that I get to tackle this exciting new project, but still maintain a flexible, home-based schedule.

Stay tuned, 'cause I've got some fun projects cooking that I'll let you know about in the days ahead.

November 17, 2005

My Birthday

black wreath.jpg

A song for the Penta-Posse. . .

(Thanks for the wreath.)

November 05, 2005

In Memoriam: Joseph Carr

We heard yesterday that my husband's uncle, Joe Carr, had died. He was 88 and had recently been hospitalized for heart problems, so it was not unexpected. And he died in his sleep at home, so that is a blessing.

Uncle Joe's wife, Helen, died in 1986, but her ring was still on his finger when he died. When we saw my mother-in-law this afternoon, one of the first things she said to us was: "Joe is happy now, he is with Helen."

Cross-posted at Yoest.org.

October 05, 2005

Celebration!

fireworks.jpg

We crossed 100,000 at 8:11:29 tonight with a reader in Fairfax, Virginia. If that's you, shoot me an email at charmaine-at-yoest-dot-org and I'll send you your "I Think, Therefore I Blog" t-shirt!

Hey, thanks for reading Reasoned Audacity!

# # #

Cross posted at Jack Yoest.

Closing in on Visitor 100,000!

We're at 99,973 -- we'll hit 100,000 some time this evening. Come on back and see if it's you!

Remember: the 100,000th visitor gets an "I Think, Therefore I Blog" t-shirt.

Thanks for reading Reasoned Audacity!

October 04, 2005

Cyber-Celebration Coming Later this Week!

Reasoned Audacity is quickly approaching a major milestone: the 100,000th visitor!

Right now the sitemeter is reading 99,555. Less than 500 visitors more . . . we need a cyber-celebration!

I really want to thank all of you who stop by here regularly, even those of you who disagree (yes, you, Eric!)

thinkbloginversion_1.jpg

So here's the plan -- when we hit 100,000, I'll let you know the city and state of that visitor, and if you want to claim the distinction of being that person, I'll send you one of the in-demand "I Think Therefore I Blog" t-shirts!

Thanks for reading!

September 11, 2005

New Blog on the Block

My husband got tired of bugging me to write "the WalMart post." Finally, when I said: "you know, you really ought to start a business blog and write it yourself. . ."

He did.

And now I love the WalMart post, and wish I had written it! I've always wondered about the left-wing vendetta against WalMart, and Jack explores why the Left hates the mega-store so much.

marylandrieu.jpg

Mary Landrieu

Although my favorite post of his from this week is one on Tears and Leadership. I know as a woman I am supposed to think that tears are okay -- that Pat Whats-her-name got a bum deal for crying in public -- but I think Jack makes a very strong case for No Tears among leaders.

He cites Mary Landrieu's teary tour of New Orleans as a case in point. And, honestly, can you imagine Margaret Thatcher crying in a situation like that? When we finally do have a female president, it will be a woman who successfully navigates these treacherous shoals of handling personal emotions publically.

kanye west.jpg

Kanye West
New Pepsi Spokesman

And lastly, for those of you who followed the Indra Nooyi story here at Reasoned Audacity, Jack examines the wisdom, or not, of Pepsi's marketing decision to hire Kanye West as their new spokesperson. . .

September 10, 2005

Love Dressed Up as Life

Woke up yesterday facing a drive to Philadelphia to check on Jack's uncle who is in the hospital . . .

Checking email before leaving -- (punctuated by: "Your shoes are in the closet. . . get them on and get in the truck!)

And found a message from one Cotillion member to another about the "chaos and mayhem" of being a mother. . . ("C'mon, let's get going, gang. Get in the truck!")

But her conclusion really hit me:

Right now it just LOOKS like choas and mayhem, but it's just love dressed up as life.

Thanks to Rightwing Sparkle for a thought that stayed with me through a long, weary day full overflowing of love and life.

August 25, 2005

Putting the Ipod to Good Use


boo_ipod.jpg


boo_ipod_closeup.jpg

June 25, 2005

The Elephant Woman: She's a Large Mammal!

Shazam! I woke up this morning to discover I had become a Large Mammal.

elephant-woman.gif

(From Population: 3
A Comedy Theatre Troupe)

Just call me the Elephant Woman!

Some of you may remember the excitement around here when I moved up to become a Marauding Marsupial. Others of you are saying: Mammals, Marsupials. . .What?? Has she lost her mind?

N.Z. Bear, over at The Truth Laid Bear, ranks blogs by the number of links other bloggers have given them. The TTLB Ecosystem starts out at Insignificant Microbe and travels up the food chain to Higher Beings.

So this is a really fun milestone here at Reasoned Audacity and . . .

I Thank You!

However you made your way here to this site, I'm grateful for your time. I'm doubly grateful for those of you who have made my day with your kind comments and emails -- and those links.

Do keep coming back!

I want to say a special thank you to the Ladies of The Cotillion! A quick check of Technorati confirms my happy suspicion that you gals put me over the top.

###

Updated July 14: Kevin Drum at The Washingon Monthly has an interesting reading list,

...the women I read are considerably more liberal and considerably more anti-Bush than the guys.

June 20, 2005

In Pursuit of Princes: Happy Father's Day

Monday morning . . . bumping this Father's Day post from Friday to the top of the page. I've also added more links below . . . Hope you had a good weekend, and Happy Father's Day! More later.

* * *

john_jack_shoulders.jpg

My prince and his boy

I have a Father's Day piece up today over at the Independent Women's Forum site. Here's how it begins:

In Pursuit of Princes
I wonder how long it will be before Father’s Day is relegated to the remainder bin of history.

Ironically, when the end of fatherhood is written, the title will be: In Pursuit of Pleasure. Gay and defiant, confident in its indictment of the patriarchy, the culture dances unheedingly away with the playboy replacement. The arbiters of cool nod approvingly; the guardians of the gifted grant their blessing.

When midnight strikes, she wakes up alone. A baby cries. Full consciousness reveals no prince. No slipper. Only shards of glass mark her broken dreams.

Sadly, this is no apocalyptic vision of some dystopic future. It is today’s reality for many women and their children. Father’s Day may still have some kick to it: this weekend, cards will be bought; burgers will be charred on the barbecue. Meanwhile, our culture is dancing with the drummer...and relentlessly undermining the very heart of fatherhood. . . .

iwf.gif
Read the rest over at Independent Women's Forum!

And Happy Father's Day.

To the thoughtful Princes at Mudville Gazette writing on Open Post.

Thank you to James Joyner controlling traffic, if not culture Outside the Beltway with quality contributors on Beltway Traffic Jam.

See alternative thoughts and lifestyles at Shakespeare's Sister on Friday BlogRolling.

Update: Read more from the vast right wing on My Vast Right Wing Conspiracy and good writing at Weekend Open Trackbacks

Thank you for a wiz-bang good blog at Wizbang with Carnival of the Trackbacks XVI

Salute to Dad lifting up his son on 365 and a Wakeup, see Happy Father's Day

Little BlackFive scores on Happy Father's Day

Pro-Life Blogs has a link to remind us about fathers and their aborted children at Father’s Day 2005 - 48 Million Killed

IMAO has (a funny) (or maybe not) (or is it?) Happy Father's Day (somebody let me know).

June 18, 2005

Welcome Townhall.com Readers

townhall_logo.GIF

Thank you for clicking through to the Independent Women's Forum and to Reasoned Audacity. It is an honor to have you visit.

June 17, 2005

Family Governance 101: Children of the World, Unite!

We were all headed out in the Black Rocket. I was reviewing with the Penta-Posse what they could expect from the day.

Some of the details were not received with enthusiasm.

election_nite_2004_posse.jpg

Anarchists. Clearly.
Election Night 2004

The Dreamer decided she had some better ideas, and offered them. In a tone of voice which was, shall we say, ill-advised.

"And what," said I, "makes you think [the part she didn't want to do] is up for discussion?"

"I was just trying to offer a compromise," she replied. (Still with the 'tude.)

"Well," I responded, "This isn't a democracy." (Okay, so that was a little snarky. . .)

Jack decided to clarify: "No, this is a benign dictatorship."

Then, from the far back, the Dude (lovin' the fact that his sister was in trouble) chimes in:

"No, this is ANARCHY!"

June 09, 2005

Thank Heaven for Little Girls: Congrats to George and Jeffrey

gibby_lava.JPG

Thank heaven for little girls for little girls get bigger every day! Thank heaven for little girls they grow up in the most delightful way! Those little eyes so helpless and appealing one day will flash and send you crashin' thru the ceilin'. . .
* * *

george_awentworth.jpg

George Stephanopoulos
and Ali Wentworth

Credit: Andrea Renault/Globe

Shortly after she became engaged to George Stephanopoulos, Alexandra, "Ali" Wentworth and I were riding the elevator up to tape Politically Incorrect. George was, at the time, one of Washington's most eligible bachelors, so the engagement was a Big Deal here in the Nation's Capital. Just to make conversation, I asked Ali if it was weird for her personal happiness to be such a big media event.

She looked at me quizzically, shrugged, and replied: "Well, it would have been the same if I'd married a rock star."

Oh. Right.

Well huzzah for high expectations. She was actually quite pleasant, so I'm glad to see that my cynically low expectations for their union appear ill-founded. The Big News now is the arrival of a new Stephanopoulos: their second daugher, Harper.

You can read all about it at the Celebrity Baby Blog, which is a hoot. But they missed the news of another important recent baby girl arrival, blog baby: Caitlyn King!

caitlyn_king.jpg

Caitlyn King

But she's a celebrity here: look at that cute face. Caitlyn is the daughter of Jeffrey King at Three Fingers. Daddy and daughter and mom are doing fine.

The years go by too fast . . . we're thanking heaven for our first baby girl, who turned twelve this week. Before you know it, you turn around, and they look like this. . .Happy Birthday, baby, I love you.

hannah_tree.jpg

My sweet Dreamer
Photo credit: Helena Yoest

So Congratulations George and Jeffrey! And welcome Harper and Caitlyn.

While I am all teary over my baby girl's birthday, my husband, Jack is gearing up for battle with the boys. He insists I send along to you new fathers his battle-plan -- W. Bruce Cameron's 8 Rules for Dating my Teenage Daughter, a must-read for every dad with a daughter. He thinks you might want to keep it handy. . .

W. Bruce Cameron's Rules
Rule One: If you pull into my driveway and honk you'd better be delivering a package, because you're sure as heck not picking anything up.

Rule Two: You do not touch my daughter in front of me. You may glance at her, so long as you do not peer at anything below her neck. If you cannot keep your eyes or hands off of my daughter's body, I will remove them.

Thank you to Mudville Gazette for Open Post

(** And if this trackback belongs to you:» http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/2576807, please contact me: I owe you a link! **)

Update: Thanks to Wizbang with Carnival of the Trackbacks XV for helping to celebrate.

Update: Big Congratulations for another girl-baby blogger! June 6th, 2005 “BORN” Lillianne Grace Ransom. Newport Beach, CA. 8 pounds, three ounces. Posted by Greg Ransom at PrestoPundit, alerted byMusing Minds at Congratulations to the Ransoms

The world is a better place.

28 June 2005, Up Date on another baby girl alerted by Marla Swoffer.

Continue reading "Thank Heaven for Little Girls: Congrats to George and Jeffrey" »

June 03, 2005

Arlington National Cemetery, John Wesley Yoest, USN, BMCS

Every time we've made the left turn onto Eisenhower Drive, and passed through the imposing brick gates of Arlington National Cemetery, I've been overwhelmed with emotion. Family members of those buried at Arlington National Cemetery are given a special pass and may drive onto the Hallowed Grounds to visit the grave of their loved one. It's an enormous honor which makes me feel humbled.

posse_at_arlington.jpg

The Penta-Posse
at Arlington National Cemetery

My husband's father served thirty years in the United States Navy, and died the year I married into the family, so I didn't know him well. And the fact is, after a lifetime of nine-month Mediterranean tours, wars, and rumors of war, there is a lot my husband doesn't know as well.

However, over the 15 years that we've been married, I have gotten to know my mother-in-law well. She doesn't talk either about the sacrifices she made, but there is one story that she has told me several times.

Once, when my father-in-law was out on tour, and she was home with three small children, the car broke down and, of course, she had to take care of it. My husband marched up and said, "Don't worry, Mom, I'll fix it." He was about five years old at the time.

My mother-in-law laughs. . . the little man, takin' care of things. But it makes me cry.

We owe a lot to our military families.

When we visited Arlington this past week, we passed at least three funeral ceremonies on the way to Section 64. I lost track of the fresh graves and the still-standing tents, either just vacated by other grieving families, or awaiting the afternoon's fresh, raw sorrow.

As we pulled up on Bradley Avenue, an Air Force honor guard was marching precisely back to their bus after a ceremony for an airman who had been a POW in Korea. While we searched for my father-in-law's headstone, an empty horse-drawn caisson lumbered past, and settled briefly in the shade nearby, awaiting their next assignment. . .

mom_dad_uniform.jpg

We found my father-in-law's headstone: The front has the Christian Cross with the old Chief's Curriculum Vita. Chief Yoest cut high school to catch World War II. He retired with rows of ribbons and a "v" device, and pinned butterbars on his boy. He now has a grandson, The Dude, who bears his name and wants to be a Navy pilot.

The reverse of the stone is blank, awaiting the inscripton for Chief Yoest's high school sweetheart, his wife, Jack's mom, "Babcia" (Polish for Grandmother), who is still with us. In the end, they will be buried together, an honor she earned.

As we turned to go, the Diva took her jingle-bell necklace from around her neck, and left it on the headstone. A fitting tribute for a warrior.

jingle_bell.jpg

Sailors, rest your oars.

We drove back down Bradley Avenue -- past a fresh grave covered by a tarp. In front of us, sparkling in the bright sunlight of a gorgeous day, stretched row after row of white marble markers, orderly, peaceful, some weathered, others new and crisply chiseled . . .

I turned to the Penta-Posse. "I want you to look," I said. "I want you to understand, that each one of these headstones represents someone who gave their life so that you could be free."

They were quiet and solemn. The weight of it is beyond measure.

The Dreamer said, "Don't cry, Mom."

We made the right turn onto Eisenhower. We drove slowly toward the exit, passing the drive to the Tomb of the Unknowns to our left, until we came to a crosswalk thronged with tourists. The guard on duty motioned to the crowd to stop, and we drove through, passing through the gates, back to a busy day, leaving behind -- the curious crowds, the chattering school children. . . and the silent stones.

Other Memorial Day Links:
Blackfive with "Opening the Gates of Heaven."
Intel Dump

Marine Corps Moms

LaShawn Barber's Corner

See Traffic Jam

May 18, 2005

Becoming "We": Why I Changed My Name

I have a very distinct memory of hearing a speaker, prior to my marriage, offering advice to married couples and suggesting that they introduce themselves as "we." As in: "Hi, we are the Yoests. Nice to meet you."

Over at the Volokh Conspiracy, Eugene asks married women why they changed their names, if they did.

I changed my name so that together the two of us could become "we." Now, we two have become seven, and the idea of "we" is even more important. Nay, essential.

CharlesRuth_40s^2.jpg

Charles and Ruth Shaw
My Grandparents

Actually, I can't express it any better than does one of my favorite poems, written by my Grandmother . . .about being "we."


We

I was I and he was he
A ceremony made us 'we.'
When in the sight of God and men
We pledged our troth and kissed our kin
And set our sails ... breathlessly
On the matrimony sea.


My handsome prince
... he held my hand.
My every wish
... was his command


Until one day
... I said, 'I think we
Should see my friends
... more frequently.'


He said, so loud ... it shook the house
That he was man ... and not a mouse
And furthermore ... he said we should
See his friends more ... he said we would.
He said, we would ... most certainly
I said, we won’t ... we both said 'we'.

Strange, when we do ... or don’t agree
One thing is clear ... we both say 'we'
Now that’s the secret ... for love to grow
Through Summer’s sun ... and Winter’s snow
Through diaper rash ... and teething ills
From P. T. A. ... to college bills.


Through three-point circuit ... and inner-city
And Pastor Parish Relations Committee
Through Conference moving time ... again
When you’re not one ... of the bishop’s men.
Through covered dishes ... well, thick and thin
Love like this ... will never end
For when we do ... or don’t agree
We still find joy ... in being 'we'.

Sarah Ruth Baird Shaw and Charles Shaw were married nearly 50 years before his death in 1986, and had seven children together. Baby Boo was her 15th great-grandchild. (My truly amazing grandmother has a website, and more poetry here.)

May 10, 2005

Howard Kurtz quotes Reasoned Audacity

Howard Kurtz quotes our review of the new blog, the Huffington Post today in Media Notes Extra.

media_notes_howard_kurtz.jpg

Howard begins: "A rather mixed reception in the blogosphere:" Then quotes, American Mind, Jack Shafer at Slate, Nikke Finke at LA Weekly, Boi from Troy, and Reasoned Audacity, following:

"[Huffington's] blog is a strange disconnect for me: in person, Arianna is strikingly beautiful, quite engaging, and her accent, so distracting on television, is charming. By contrast, the blog, named after her, is strangely none of those things."

I thought one of yesterday's most interesting comments on Arianna's venture came from Jim Geraghty:

Attention, Arianna: We already know what celebrities think. They're telling us all the time. . . this has "Tina Brown's Talk magazine" or "John F. Kennedy Jr.'s George magazine" written all over it.

Today Arianna has one recognizable conservative female, Danielle Crittenden along with Joe Scarborough. Then for "balance," Tina Brown, and a whole gaggle of male liberals: Rob Reiner, Bill Maher, Andy Stern, Gary Hart, Jerry Brown, Larry David, Walter Cronkite, Jon Corzine, Ed Markey. . .

Actually, come to think of it, that looks like a fair fight.

May 08, 2005

Marauding Marsupial Mom . . . on the Move!

marsupial.jpg
A Marauding Marsupial Mom?

As the mother of five children, for Mother's Day, let me offer a cautionary tale. The context -- this week marked a major milestone in my life: I became a "Marauding Marsupial." Which makes me, I figure, a Marauding Marsupial Mom! M-cubed!

How blogging has changed my goals in life -- not only am I excited about being a marsupial, now I want to be a "Large Mammal." Large not being an adjective I have heretefore wanted anywhere near me. . . Previously, I had been an "Adorable Rodent," so you understand my excitement -- even as an adorable one, I do much prefer marsupial to rodent. (If you're new to blogs, rodents and marsupials are categories in the rockin' TTLB Ecosystem thanks to N.Z. Bear.)

So, I was checking my progress in the Ecosystem one day this week, when the Dude walked in.

"Hey, guess what?" I said. "I've moved up! I'm a Marauding Marsupial now!"

"Cool," said he. "What's Instapundit?"

(Instapundit??!! The kid is 10 years old. How does he know about Evil Glenn?)

"Well, frankly, he's pretty much at the top. A Higher Being, I think."

"So how long will it take you to be as high as him?" he asks with sweet earnestness.

I snort. "The chances of that are basically nonexistant," I said.

"Mom!" the Dude exclaimed, "you can't say that! You wouldn't let me get away with that. You can do anything you want to do!"

Oh. Right.

The moral to this story: Be careful what you teach your kids -- it will come back at you sooner than you think.

So, okay, people. The mission is now clear: tell a friend about Reasoned Audacity. . . and visit often. A ten-year-old's faith in the Mom Who Can Do All Things is riding on it.

No pressure though.

I'm a Marauding Marsupial Mom on a Mission, and on the Move. . . Watch your back, Glenn Reynolds!

May 06, 2005

Aging? Who Me?

In his ongoing attempt to get me to: a) take my vitamins, and b) give up my Diet Coke addiction, the Chairman has sent me an article on aging (aarrrgggh) from Scientific American.

Apparently, he thinks my brain is functional here at the end of the week. Because the article includes words like "catalase" (very important) "hydrogen peroxide," (bad, very bad) "free radicals" (even worse) "mitochondria" (I'm thinking, I'm thinking) "organelles" (connected to the mitochondria?). Insert random verbs. Your choice.

dorian gray.jpg
Dorian Gray: For Perpetual Youth,
What Would You Do?

But hey, I'm on the job, to figure out what all this means! So, I dug out the original article, "Extension of Murine Lifespan by Overexpression of Catalase Targeted to Mitochondria":

To determine the role of reactive oxygen species in mammalian longevity, we generated transgenic mice that overexpress human catalase localized to the peroxisome (PCAT), nucleus (NCAT), or mitochondrion (MCAT). . . Cardiac pathology and cataract development were delayed, oxidative damage was reduced, H2O2 production and H2O2-induced aconitase inactivation were attenuated, and the development of mitochondrial deletions was reduced. . .

Okay, okay. Basically, it says: take your vitamins. (Better approach than Dorian Gray. . .)

But I'm not giving up my Diet Coke.

May 05, 2005

For Jack, Scenes from a Life, Together

1990.gif
May 5, 1990

To have and to hold, from this day forward,

Those two didn't know what they were getting into did they?

for better, for worse,

May 5, 1990: The day dawned dark and dreary. . . but, then -- midway through the service, the sun broke through, a single ray of light piercing the chapel windows, illuminating the altar. . .

for richer, for poorer,

No, we had no way of even imagining the hurdles and challenges that lay ahead.

in sickness or in health,

But then, no way of even dreaming of the joys either.

4corners.jpg
The Penta-Posse
Four Corners Monument, April, 2005

to love and to cherish

May 5, 2005: another dark and dreary day. . . just take-out dinner on folding chairs at the ball-park, . . .but there, still, rays of light, piercing our hearts, illuminating the future. . .

















hylight.jpg john light.jpg
gylight.jpg sylight.jpg
james light.jpg

'till death do us part.

I do.

National Day of Prayer

national day of prayer.bmp

A prayer for our soldiers. . . and most especially, for the families today who grieve. . . our debt of gratitude is unbounded.

O Trinity of love and power!

Our brethren shield in danger's hour;

From rock and tempest, fire and foe,

Protect them wheresoe'er they go;

Thus evermore shall rise to Thee

Glad hymns of praise from land and sea.

Eternal Father, Strong to Save, "The Navy Hymn," Fourth Stanza

April 30, 2005

It's Just What Moms Do . . .

If you are coming over from LaShawn's Corner, welcome!

With the writing I've been doing on women in combat, I've been thinking a lot about the differences between men and women, moms and dads. A lot of people want to argue that there isn't much difference.

But my friend and mentor, Steve Rhoads, wrote a book this last year Taking Sex Differences Seriously which lays out all the evidence that, in fact, moms and dads, while equally important, are not interchangeable. (You can find a direct link to get this important book on the left sidebar!) For example, moms are better able to hear their baby's cry than dads are. Strange, but true.

This week was the Dude's tenth birthday, so we had the cousins over last night. The Penta-Posse plus Two were camped out in the family room, including the Dancer, who hasn't been feeling very well this week. The physical space separating us included stairs and a door. . .

In the middle of the night, I woke up, for no obvious reason, so started trying to go back to sleep. But I couldn't. Something felt wrong. I listened carefully. I heard nothing. Or was there something faint?

I decided to check on the kids since I was awake, and as I opened the door to head down the hall toward the family room, I heard the Dancer crying as if her heart would break. She was curled up in a ball on the couch, the blanket on the floor, her body cold, her head hot.

Why didn't you come to me, baby? I asked.

It was dark. . . I was scared. . .

I got her some medicine, took her to our room, and got her settled in snugly. She burrowed in and went to sleep immediately. With the commotion, Jack woke up. What's going on?

Over the years, with five kids, we've had our fair share of multiple kids throwing up, so he's been a part of plenty of night-time traumas.

But, usually, mom is the one who hears the first cry. It's just what moms do.

April 23, 2005

Farewell to a Friend: Diane Knippers

This afternoon, on a grey and rainy day, several hundred people gathered at Truro Episcopal Church in Fairfax, Virginia to say farewell to our friend, Diane Knippers. Her husband, Ed, is an artist, and one of his remarkable paintings graced the cover of the bulletins handed out at the sanctuary entry. This one was of Jesus, hanging on the cross; underneath, it read, "By his wounds we are healed." Isaiah 53:56
Dianeprotesting.jpg
Faith McDonnell and Diane,
protesting Chinese President Jiang Zemin

As we sat waiting the beginning of the service, the storm clouds were clearly building outside the windows. How appropriate I thought. A grey day. A sad day.

Even so, the bulletin was entitled, "Celebration of a Life," and indeed it was. It was such a day of sorrow -- losing someone like Diane so young; she was only 53 -- but the service was so beautiful, and God was so very present, that it was, in a way, Diane's last gift to those of us privileged to have known her and to have been there today.

Continue reading "Farewell to a Friend: Diane Knippers" »

April 18, 2005

In Memoriam: Diane Knippers

The Dude was singing to himself in the back seat: "There's a hole in the world tonight. . . "

He didn't know it, but it's true. With the loss of Diane Knippers, after a brave battle with cancer, at 2:00 this afternoon, there is a hole in the world tonight.
Diane Small.jpg
Diane Knippers

There will be a lot said and written about Diane in the coming days -- as President of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, she was recently named as one of the nation's top 25 most influential evangelical leaders by Time magazine.

But I just knew Diane as my friend.

She so deserved that honor from Time. And I'm sure she was pleased about it. But that kind of recognition was not what Diane was about.

When I first moved to Washington D.C., straight out of college, Diane took me out to lunch. She was a busy woman, everyone in Washington is, but I do remember that she asked a lot of questions and let the lunch go long. It was the kind of lunch that you leave feeling a little chagrined that you talked too much . . . because she listened, and she cared.

That's who Diane was. She wasn't about landing in Time magazine. "The true measure of a man is how he treats someone who can do him absolutely no good." (Samuel Johnson) That was me -- no gain for Diane. I was young, and needed a friend, and she was one. Even in a town where they say there is no such thing as a friend.

In a city marked by ambition and compromise, Diane modeled conviction, dediction to purpose and a purity of faith.

Truly, there's a hole in the world tonight. . .

April 16, 2005

Marine Corps Marathon

We made it into the Marine Corps Marathon! Jack, me and my dad will be wearing Reasoned Audacity t-shirts and running (well, if you can call it that) 26.2 miles in October. . . Jack and I ran the Richmond Marathon a few years ago, and also the Country Music Marathon (very fun) in Nashville.

I have always wanted to do our "hometown" run here in DC with the Marines, but haven't been able to get in in the past. The first time I tried, I sat for hours hitting the refresh button for the online registration, but the server had crashed. But this year, we made it!

marathon.gif

Charmaine

About Charmaine

Writing

My writing over the years, and longer pieces: click here for more Reasoned Audacity.

Thatcher

"You turn if you want to. The lady's not for turning."
~ Margaret Thatcher, 1980

Blog Blurbs

The Penta-Posse

The Penta-Posse

The Occasional Adventures of the Penta-Posse: Diva, Dreamer, Dude, Dancer, and Darlin' Boo . . .


Prev | List | Random | Next
JoinPowered by RingSurf!

Israel

Comments

Email:

comments at charmaineyoest dot com
Messages sent to this email are assumed to be public and publishable.

Amazon Honor SystemClick Here to PayLearn More

Blogroll

The Cotillion

The Cotillion

Site Meter

Powered By

MovableType

Site maintained by

Disclaimer

This is Charmaine Yoest's personal website. The views expressed here are solely her own.

Copyright, All Rights Reserved

Charmaine Yoest, 2006