Third day of armistice movement. Supply Train of the 1st Bn, 59th Infantry, Moyeuvre La Grande, Lorraine
French troops entering Brussels for King Albert's review.
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
And what, pray tell, was that advice:Michelle Obama got this advice after confiding to her mother that she hated being a lawyer
“You know, my mother didn’t comment on the choices that we made,” Obama said. “She was live-and-let-live. So one day she’s driving me from the airport after I was doing document production in Washington, D.C., and I was like, ‘I can’t do this for the rest of my life. I can’t sit in a room and look at documents.’ I won’t get into what that is, but it’s deadly. Deadly. Document production. So I shared with her in the car: I’m just not happy. I don’t feel my passion. And my mother—my uninvolved, live-and-let-live mother—said, ‘Make the money, worry about being happy later.’ “Let's look at that again.
Make the money, worry about being happy later.Michelle Obama was born in 1964, one year later than me. Her mother, Wikipedia reports, was born in 1937. So at the time this advice was given, her mother was at least 50, maybe older (we aren't really informed when this advice was given, only that it was give prior to Mrs. Obama meeting her husband. . . we know that Michele Obama graduated from Harvard Law School (of course) in 1988 (she's a Princeton undergrad by the way) and met her future husband in 1989 (their first date was to see "Do The Right Thing"). So, this conversation must have occurred in 1988 or 1989.
Again, this is a commonly used term for this generation. I can't say much about them other than that both of my parents would have fit into it. According to Strauss and Howe that would mean:
- Silent Generation (1925–1942) (Artist)
Artists grow up overprotected by adults preoccupied with the Crisis, come of age as the socialized and conformist young adults of a post-Crisis world, break out as process-oriented midlife leaders during an Awakening, and age into thoughtful post-Awakening elders.
Well, what I noted there, I'd note again. I don't think there's a colossal difference between the World War Two generation and those born in the late 1920s and the 1930s. Indeed, my guess is that the overarching nature of the twin global crises of World War Two and the Great Depression had a big generational leveling effect. To add to that, my mother, who was slightly older than my father, was actually old enough to have joined the Canadian armed forces, which she inquired about doing, if she had wanted to (she realized right off that her genteel upbringing made her singularly unsuitable for service life, and so she didn't pursue it). My father was too young to serve in World War Two, but that generation that came close to fighting in it always looked to it and their late teen experiences such that it was a looming event in their life. . . in some ways even a larger event than the one that many of them did serve in (including my father), the Korean War.
I definitely don't see that in my parents generation. Indeed, I really think that there was very little difference between the World War Two generation and them, other than they were born at an age where they were either serving very late in the war, or in the next one. In other words, if the artist category describes people born in the late 1920s, anyhow, this doesn't seem right to me at all. And indeed, perhaps the generational years assigned to this cohort are flat out wrong. It wouldn't strike me, for example, that kids born in the Jazz Age year of 1925, who would have been eligible for military service in 1943, would share that much in common with people born in 1945.
- Neil A. Waring's - Confessions of a Writer of Westerns: Great First Lines: The snow is coming down as I write this, looks like four or five inches so far. The First Line – So much has been written about getting a...And some great first lines there!
‘Great War’ brought Catholics, bishops into mainstream of US society
No, you can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantYou can't always get what you wantBut if you try sometime you findYou get what you need
The Rolling Stones, You Can't Always Get What You Want
“You are never too old to set another goal, or to dream a new dream . . ."
C. S. Lewis did not say.
That's right, that statement, frequently attributed to C. S. Lewis, is something he didn't say.
And that might be because you can indeed be too old to achieve a goal or dream. And at some point, while you may dream it, it's a species of regret.
Not that we don't all have regrets, and indeed we should have regrets. Edith Piaf did say "I don't regret anything", or rather sang it. . .in French. . . but that's not a very sound way of viewing things, quite frankly. "I don't regret anything" might as well mean "I haven't learned anything", unless we don't regret our errors as we learned from them. Even then, a person ought to rationally regret our trespasses, as the Lord's Prayer counsels that we do.
Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? Declare, if thou hast understanding.
Gird up now thy loins like a man; for I will demand of thee, and answer thou me.
Giant Impact Crater Found In Unusual PlaceEh?
Hundred-year-old Thanksgiving Menus