
Keepin' It Real with Cam Marston
105 episodes — Page 2 of 3
Paraty
On today's Keepin It Real, Cam reports back about his most memorable event on his recent trip to Brazil. He traveled a long way to come back with this... ------ Cachaca is a Brazilian alcohol that was first made by the slaves the Portuguese brought to Brazil. It's sugar cane based. Very sweet. And like gumbo, red beans and rice, jazz music, and the Mississippi delta blues among other things, it was what the poor people created due to a lack of resources and that the wealthy people eventually wanted. Crazy how that works so predictably. It's like clockwork. Anyway, my wife and I were enjoying our first cocktail made of cachaca by the pool last week in a small coastal community north of Sao Paulo called Paraty. However, we struggled to enjoy the drink. And I'm certain you can relate to what happened. It's become a meme - There was someone in an environment too small for their voice, talking too loudly. It was loud people having private conversations on the phone in small spaces. Loud Zoom calls in coffee shops. You've witnessed this. In our case it was a British couple lying in lounge chairs by the pool on speakerphone with their daughter talking about finding her an apartment in London. The father, to be heard, raised his voice to nearly a yell so the phone would hear him from three feet away. Well, my wife and I heard him, neighbors living next to the hotel heard him, the birds in the trees on the coast heard him, the shop owner across town, people in the next city over and the Uruguayans 1000 miles to the south also heard him. We didn't want to, but we learned a lot about this family and their dysfunctional and helpless daughter. Our relaxing drink tasted like cachaca, lime, and disgust. Around the pool were two other couples. We met and stood talking in the pool. They were really nice. One couple had been traveling since January 1st. They were recently retired and described retirement as having three distinct phases – Go Time, Slow Time, and then, No Time. Go Time is travel. Slow Time too old to travel and now you sit around the house. No Time is travel back and forth to your final doctor appointments. They retired early to have a longer Go Time and were doing it up right. They were telling us about how they planned their extensive trips then, and I promise I'm not making this up, the British man got into the pool and began swimming laps right through middle of us three couples and another guy who had joined us. We stood there in water up to our waists in disbelief. He kicked right through us, splashing us, no more than a foot or two away as he came by. I'd never seen anything like it. Was it aggressive? Or was it just plain clueless? Anyway, the three different couples plus the one guy decided not to move. And he kept swimming. We'd pause our chat as he swam through. It's sad that after traveling about 18 hours to get to a place way off my radar and another 18 hours to get back home, the only story I have from my trip is about a British man in our pool. Which makes me want to drink lots of cachaca. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Procrastinating Like a Champion
Today on Keepin' It Real, Cam looses focus and finds his mind wandering about an upcoming trip instead of focusing on what need to be done. ----- My day today will be spent studying Brazilian demographics. And I know what you're thinking: How did I get so lucky? I mean, come on, most of us have to work but you get to spend your day studying Brazilian demographics. How is that fair? Friday, my wife and I leave for a week in Brazil. I've been invited to speak at a conference next week in Sao Paulo. These types of invitations are rare for me. While at a conference in November, a young man approached me and said, "Can you do that same speech in February in Brazil?" "Sure," I said. "No problem. Easy." Well, it's not easy. Which leads me to today, carefully studying and incorporating the Brazilian data to replace my US data that I used in November. Much of the data is very similar. Young women are outperforming young men in education. Women are having first babies older and having babies into older age. People are getting married at older ages. Household sizes are falling. Life-spans are increasing, meaning Brazilians will be in retirement longer. There are worrying trends in whether the Brazilian federal system will be able to support retirees long-term, much like there are new rumblings here about whether our social security system will be able to fund payments in the future. All familiar stuff. Up until recently, I would have said their political climate was very volatile with their in and out of favor populist president Jair Bolsonaro but, his ascendance and the turmoil it created looks very similar to what we're seeing here. Even his presidential portrait is of him in some combination of a scowl and a frown, much like Trump's presidential portrait that was released a few weeks ago. My comments will be translated into Portuguese as I speak, meaning I need to go slow so the translators can keep up. I find it difficult to pace myself like this. My words will need to be carefully chosen. When normally I can explain something well-enough with a paragraph, I need to now do it in a sentence. Writing these commentaries each week have helped me as a speaker – writing has taught me to be more precise in speaking. And as much as I'm excited to work with my Brazilian client, my wife and I are leaving for Brazil early to enjoy a short trip to a seaside community that will include a drive to a bunch of waterfalls and a tour of the coastline by water. Beaches, waterfalls, plus a trip a distillery that makes something like rum but is not rum. And, truth be told, I've spent more time looking into the waterfalls, the coastline, and rum but not rum than I have looking into Brazilian demographics. Focused preparation has been a problem. I'm even looking repeatedly at the weather forecasts for the seaside community – all poor uses of time considering the prep work that is still needed. I'm a champion at finding things to do that are not urgent and finding ways to justify doing them. Like this commentary. And, with that truth-bomb announced, I will now put this away and get back to Brazilian demographics. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to keep it real.
Unconditional Positive Regard
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam reacts to a text from a friend about the hopelessness she feels today as a result of the new presidential administration. There are two sides to this, Cam says. And the healing must begin within. But it won't be easy. ----- There are those of you listening right now filled with anxiety and rage. You can't believe our nation is full of people who care so little for truth, honesty, and compassion. You can't believe that you know people, lots of people, who are willing to abandon truth, honesty, and compassion to win. This is not how you were taught to live as a child. These are not the lessons of Aesop's fables. There is nothing in the New Testament that says this is Ok. However, there are others of you out there equally mystified. "How can you not want this?" you're asking. How can you not see that our future, both each of us individually and as a nation, will be better? We're returning to dominance. We're getting rid of the cheaters and the thieves who have slipped in and are stealing opportunity from you and me. We're making them pay. We're righting wrongs. This is what this nation is about. This is who we are. We've strayed and we're now, finally, returning to who we should be. How can you not see this? No argument from either of you will win. No data will convince either of you of anything. No clever wording. No quoting the constitution. No biblical chapter or verse. Deadlocked. Both sides deadlocked. Anxiety and rage. Both sides. Dr Carl Rogers was an American Psychologist who, in 1982, was listed as the most influential psychotherapist in history. Of his many accomplishments, there is one practice of his that I'm using – well, that I'm trying to use – in my interactions with others. It's called Unconditional Positive Regard. It's a framework for listening and helping even with those whose opinions are diametrically opposite our own. It's a learned discipline and it's not easy. Unconditional Positive Regard assumes that this person in front of each of us has worth, this person in front of us can grow, they can change, they're eager to learn, they're curious, they are a person of value. Unconditional Positive Regard. You can see how this powerful outlook can benefit a therapist in their interactions with patients. You can see how someone hoping to pull the best out of another person, who still has hope for the other person, could and perhaps SHOULD engage them with a mindset of unconditional positive regard. It's hard, though. It's very hard. Especially when what some of you have seen of others brings this quote to mind: "When you worship power, compassion and mercy will look like sins." To many of you that's what it looks like out there today. It's obvious to say, but compassion is not a sin. Mercy is not a sin. None of us should ever hold back on either. And perhaps for all of you listening right now filled with anxiety and rage, holding each other in unconditional positive regard might be step one in healing…ourselves. I'm Cam Marston, just trying to keep it real.

Snow Day
Tuesday, Cam watched as a 130 year old weather record was shattered. He took it all in, savoring it as best as he could. ----- It's strange looking out there right now. Maybe even eerie. I keep looking again to make sure my eyes aren't fooling me. The top of the neighbor's magnolia tree is getting small touches of early sunlight and those big, deep green leaves are holding snow. It's beautiful. And I can't stop turning to look again and again. How could this week's commentary be about anything but the weather? So often the meteorologists in my part of the world hype of the incoming storm that turns out to be a big nothing-burger. I panic and put the family in the duck-and-cover position in the bathtub and nothing ends up happening. "Abundance of caution" they always say. This storm they got right. In fact, one of the TV weathermen kept saying the storm "outperformed" – that it did more than they predicted which is opposite of what usually happens. Mobile, Alabama officially received seven and a half inches of snow yesterday. What in many parts of the world would equate to a "so, what?" moment was a record-breaking snowfall, breaking a 130-year-old record. Yesterday I tended to the fire and kept turning to look outside. I had two client Zoom calls and both interrupted to ask if that was rain outside the window behind me. "No," I said, "It's snow. And we here in Mobile, Alabama hardly know how to behave." And we don't. The roads were largely empty. It reminded me of the teeth of the pandemic when we all stayed home for days. My wife and I finally went outside late in the afternoon and walked down the middle of the busy street not far from our house. Our dog stepped outside and immediately turned around and dove back under the couch – she would have none of the snow. And the birdfeeder seemed extra active as little birds who live comfortably in our warm sub-tropical climate had to keep eating more and more to fuel themselves and stay warm. I learned that being snowed-in lends itself to grazing all day long. Just a little snack here and there and then here again and maybe a little bit more of this and just one more bite of that. I had to make myself stop. And the temptation to open a thick, bold bottle of red wine was overwhelming. Had I made eye contact with a bottle of red-wine I would have caved, but I maintained my Dry January discipline and had a couple of NA beers, instead. I've read recently about savoring. Savoring is wanting to know something. To experience it. There is no time pressure to savoring. No pressure for more. No greed. Savoring is an attitude of spirit. It's a life of spirit. And it's the opposite of craving, which is an attitude of greed, control and sensation. Yesterday's snowfall and this morning's sunrise is an experience I'll savor. I'll likely never see anything like this again here on the upper lip of the Gulf Coast. I'll stay sitting here in my coffee chair and taking it in, as the magnolia tree is mottled with brilliant white and deep green and is now ablaze in the sun. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Retro Learning
On this week's Keepin' it Real, Cam Marston's new effort has been a year in the making and it's finally ready. It's learning delivered the way it used to be and he's very excited for it. ----- Here's a story for you: An old man lowered his clay jug every day at the well. He did it by hand with the jug attached to a rope. He was very careful to not let the jug bump the edge of the well which was made of stone or else the jug may break. A young man saw all this and proposed a wheel built over the center of the well with a rope that would lower the jug straight down every time. It would be easier and faster. All he had to do was crank the wheel up and down. The old man listened to the young man's idea and said, "No, thank you. Without the work of lowering and raising the jug, I'm not sure the water would taste as good." Over one year ago I begin surveying clients and colleagues and having lunches and Zoom meetings with them to discuss a new two and half day workshop I was developing on communication skills. Their reply was unanimous: these skills a desperately needed in our workplace. I asked a lot of questions, have written, rewritten and rewritten the course over and over again and the program launched this past Wednesday. Could the program be delivered remotely? Yes. Could it be pre-recorded and done online at the leisure of the participant? Yes, I think so. Could it be shorted to one day? Or maybe half a day? After all, people are busy. Probably. But none of that's going to happen. There is a saying in the addict recovery world: What do you do when the very thing that is destroying you is what gets you through the day. For the addict it is drugs. For many of us today, though, it's urgency. It's more and more. It's busyness. Its Fear of Missing Out. It's the dopamine hit of the flashing or buzzing phone. And I'm as guilty of it as the next guy. So in an effort to make a difference with the people who began with me Wednesday, I've created a program that slows the pace of learning. It's not cramming. It's learning. It's savoring new knowledge. It's dialogue, discussion, eye-contact, and thoughtful progression through learning and relearning skills that, per my colleagues, are desperately needed in their workplace. No PowerPoint. No Audio or Video. Instead it will be flip charts, instruction, dialogue, and practice. Even pencils and not pens. It's the hard, slow, deliberate work that creates results and will lead to a more fulfilling and successful workplace for my participants. It's in a sense, retro learning the way it used to be done back in the day before all these tools we've created made things, what, quicker, better, easier? Maybe all of those but what I've created will be – memorable and transformational. To many of my participants, what's old will be new again. It's been a year in the making. And we could get to end of the program much quicker than two-and-a-half days but, like the old man lowering the jug by hand every day, the water simply wouldn't taste as good. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Truth
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam has found infinite inspiration for commentaries for years and years to come. ----- I sat quietly this morning and was ready to admit it's time to quit Keepin' It Real. I've lost my creativity. My energy around writing insightful and truthful things about the world around me was gone. Seven – maybe eight! – years is a pretty good run. Maybe close to 350 or more original pieces – I should be proud of my work and unashamed to put these commentaries to bed. But then… Scrolling through today's headlines, I spotted a lifeline. Something that will allow me countless weeks of effortless content. It was hard to believe it was true, but… there it was. Mark Zuckerberg was turning off the fact checking on his social media platforms. No longer would Facebook and Instagram work to fact-check people's posts. They'd let the community of users do it, instead. The article went on to say it was his way of genuflecting to the Cheeto Jesus – our upcoming, return of the king, Commander in Chief. Trump dislikes facts and accuracy so Zuckerberg, to curry favor with him, was ending any reliance on it in his giant megaphone of social media. Wow. If the age of Enlightenment wasn't already dead, it is dead dead dead now. I've always been a fan of the expression "never let the truth get in the way of a good story" and I embrace a good, exaggerated story whether it be my own or someone else. However, today the expression is "never let the truth get in the way of anything." And what a giant hall pass this offers me in these commentaries. Why tell the truth when our highest elected official avoids it, and his minions support it. So, with that, I'm redoing my biography. You may know me as a commentator for Alabama Public radio who lives in Mobile married with four teenaged children. That was who I was during the days when truth mattered. Now I'm a world-famous commentator who offers sage wisdom and insight and has been feted by the Nobel Prize committees and has turned down Pulitzer Prizes because they weren't prestigious enough. Sounds good. My four children are the best kids in any environment they ever enter – academics, athletics, needlepoint – you name it they're the best out of everyone. My previous work was as an astronaut, but it bored me, a lion tamer but the smell of the lions got to me, and, of course out of tribute to George Costanza, I am both an architect and a marine biologist. I've built a woodshed once and tossed a fish back into the Gulf, which in this era of non-truth, is sufficient enough to give myself those titles, regardless of what anyone says because those people are jealous liars who are out to get me. My resume and my CV will change by this afternoon and will include the words Adonis, Guggenheim, and National Book Award. I'll call the bank and tell them the balance I see online isn't correct, my truth says it is much higher, and they better change it or I'll sue because the bank has a personal vendetta against me. And my truth says that it's not the Gulf of Mexico nor the Gulf of America. It's the Gulf of Cam. It, in fact, has always been. Tell me it's not true. I dare you. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just tyring to Keep it Real.
Liminal
On Keepin It Real this week, Cam Marston makes some observations on this odd stretch of the calendar between Christmas and New Years. ----- This is a strange time of year every year. Kinda a liminal space between two big holidays. My instinct says I need to be working but the buzz of my email – a reflection of how busy my work world is – is so quiet. It's hard to get anyone to make decisions right now. Beginning around December 18th, we enter the "let's circle back on this next year" stretch of the calendar. We go from opening small talk with "So, are you ready for Christmas?" to ending it with "Let's circle back next year." I'm as guilty of it as the next guy. My father turns eighty-eight today. He's turned his pickle-ball crowd onto these commentaries. So, to those of you playing pickleball today at the Via Health Center on Dauphin Street in Mobile, wish my father a Happy Birthday. He will probably try to waive you off, but I know he'll be flattered to hear from you. One of the most remarkable things in my world today is the activity of my eight-eight-year-old father. He plays pickleball at least four days a week. He's made a whole new friend group there. Last year they convinced him to get a bike, and when they don't play pickleball, they'll often gather downtown and ride together for a few hours, staying away from the hills, and stopping some place for lunch or a beer. Many of them are twenty years younger than my father. They like him. They call to check in on him. They invite him to join them when they schedule things. It's wonderful for him and it's wonderful for my brothers and me to know that since my mother's passing a few years ago, my father has found an outlet. I saw recently that one of the primary ways to determine how long you'll live is your measure of activity. Said another way, you don't get old and stop moving, you get old when you stop moving. Dad's still moving. He can still split firewood with an axe, still keep up with the youngsters on his bike, and still play pickleball several times a week. My daughter calls him to play when she's home from college and they make a morning of it together at the Via Health Center. Right around the corner on the calendar is Twelfth Night, known more commonly as the Feast of the Epiphany. The traditional date is January 6th and it's the official start of Mardi Gras down here on the coast. King Cakes begin appearing in bakeries, beads start showing up. Notable and respectable people forgive each other and are forgiven for acting like fools with the culmination being Mardi Gras day which, this year, is March 4th, and, as luck has it, is also my birthday. In years past when my birthday coincides with Mardi Gras Day, I've created quite a spectacle of myself. Those days are over though I will enjoy Mardi Gras day a little more this year because it's my birthday and I will enjoy my birthday a little bit more because it's Mardi Gras.. Enjoy this odd liminal time on the calendar. Soon enough the grind will start again, and these commentaries will return – hopefully – to meaningful and thoughtful content. I'm Cam Marston just Trying to Keep it Real.
Russians
On Keepin' it Real this week, Cam takes us back to 1988 when he and his team lined up to upset the world order in an all out international rowing competition. It was one for the record books. ----- It was the spring of 1989 in Augusta, Georgia. I was a member of the Tulane University Rowing team and we were there to train for Spring Break. Crew teams from across the south and many of the elite crew teams from the northeast came to Augusta and this perfect stretch of the Savannah River to train during the week and race at the end of the week. A call went out that the organizers were throwing together an unscheduled race at the end of race day. It was open to the first crews who could respond and would feature a race that none of us ever would ever forget. Tulane scrambled to field a crew. I made it lineup, and sat in seat number six, a port-side rower. As our boat was backing down into the starting position I looked to my right. It was the Russian national team. They were in the US to train. We'd seem them practicing – their boat moved effortlessly and screamed down the river. Their powerful strokes appeared to make gaping holes in the water. We'd had sights of them on land and they were all about six feet four and 220 pounds. Cold, solid, hard looking. The Cold War was still on, and since birth, we'd been taught that these people were our enemy. To our left, in a boat on our starboard side, sat the British national team. They, too, were in Augusta to take advantage of the training. Beating the Brits would have been fine, but it was the Russians we wanted. The other five boats in the race were the elite Ivy crews. And there sat Tulane about to disrupt the rowing establishment and make the name for ourselves that we felt we deserved. The starter worked to align the boats, backing some down, pushing some forward until all eight bows were aligned. It was quiet as these commands rang out. Sixty-four rowers sat with backs perfectly straight, leaning slightly forward, oar blades completely submerged, hands tight on the handle, looking forward, steely-eyed, waiting for the start, breathing. The starter finally had alignment and it happened fast. We heard, "Rowers sit ready. Ready! Row!" and we dug in for the first stroke. We were tied with the Russians for maybe one one-hundredth of a second. By the time we had completed ten strokes they were half a boat length ahead. In another ten strokes we could no longer see them. All we saw was their fading puddles where their oars had torn holes in the water. Within twenty seconds our hopes for upending the world rowing order had vanished. It happened fast. And we weren't really upset at the outcome. Heck, we had just raced the Russians. How many of our rowing peers could claim anything like that? We were a club team, after all, not even varsity. But we did it. We tried. We tossed our hat in the ring and tried to give those commies a good whippin.' So here's to you and me throwing our hat into the ring for something for which we know we are completely outgunned in the new year. And doing it anyway. We got shellacked but, heck, I've been telling this story for thirty-six years. It was well worth it. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Top Hat
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston has just returned from a few days in Fort Lauderdale. It's a different world down there, Cam says. One that he might have envied at one point in his life. ------ My wife and I returned from Ft Lauderdale Saturday. We were there for a corporate event where I was giving a speech. My client generously offered an extra couple of nights in the host hotel and our room was on the 26thfloor overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. I watched the sun rise each morning as I sipped coffee and read. It began as a faint glow on the horizon to a disk coming out of the water. It was nice. My wife and I haven't had a chance to do things like that recently. Now that the kids are older, we're trying to take advantage of them. As we left to go on our trip, we told our kids to please not let us find the house in ashes when we returned. We felt that was reasonable. And it was in pretty good shape when we got home Saturday. South Florida is quite different from South Alabama or, I suspect, most of Alabama. And I guess saying that is simply acknowledging the obvious. I counted five or six different Ferraris which I rarely see around here. I think they're beautiful. There were lots of Bentleys. There was lots of jewelry on everyone. Lots of senior citizens on the boardwalk late in the afternoon walking together, riding bikes, sitting and visiting. Lot of accents. Lots of people speaking Spanish, and what I think was Russian. Guitar players up and down the boardwalk, busking and playing music they hoped would catch the senior's attention. My hope for my wife and my trip was to create not a bucket list for the two of us, but a reverse bucket list. Not a list the things we wanted or wanted to do. I wanted us to create list of the things we could do away with. What we could do to simplify. I've said it many times to my wife and kids – we could probably get rid of half of the things we've accumulated over the nearly twenty years in this house and never miss them. If you've lived in the same place for a while, you can probably relate. How and why did we get this stuff in the first place. And why do I have such a hard time getting rid of it. I look at all those things those people in South Florida had, especially the beautiful cars, the jewelry, the magnificent beachfront homes and thought "Wow. That's beautiful. I'm glad I don't want it." And that's a 180 degree shift and about face from the way I once was – I wanted the stuff, the houses and the cars. Today what excites me is getting rid of the stuff I have. And m y wife is kinda there, too. It's a part of our journey together of what we want for ourselves from here on out. And what we want will change. Likely many times. Ironically, though, as I say this my wife and kids have asked for my Christmas list – more things I want which includes, partly to my shame, a top hat. Do I need a top hat? No. Do I want a top hat? Yes. In a few years will I wonder why I have it and why I struggle to give it away? Absolutely. I think maybe I've identified the problem. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Regrets
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam hopes you have no regrets from Thanksgiving. And if you do, that you learn from them. ----- Well, how'd it go yesterday? Any family flare ups? Any thoughts you wish you'd kept to yourself? Thanksgiving gatherings are famous for finding people's boiling points and the election having been just a few weeks ago, some are still gloating and others still licking their wounds. Any regrets from yesterday? I heard Dan Pink speak last week at a conference in San Francisco. He's a New York Times best-selling author and his most recent book is called The Power of Regret. I was invited to go backstage to meet him and he told me how he gathered data for the book. He personally read over 60,000 people's regrets. He solicited them from across the world and people enthusiastically responded. It was almost a catharsis for many respondents, he said. Like people wanted to get their regrets off their chest. He had to cut off submissions he had so many. Regrets tend to come in four categories, he said in his keynote speech. They're either Foundation Regrets – where you're sorry you didn't do something long ago that would have changed your today – started saving money, read more, gone after the degree, or had a bad feeling about who you were marrying but decided to overlook it. Then there's Boldness Regret – when you played it safe instead of taking a chance or times when you look back and wish you had spoken up about something. There's Moral Regrets – You did the wrong thing and it haunts you, something that was very much out of your character. He told the story of a woman who, when she was nine, remembers bullying a girl on the school bus and that behavior has eaten her up ever since. And finally, there are Connection Regrets – when you should have reached out and, instead, let a relationship wither. Whenever you ask yourself "should I call? Should I visit? Should I send a note" the answer, Pink says, is always yes. Pink also showed a slide that shows that regrets increase over time – the more time goes by, the more the regrets of our past haunt us. And our regrets of today sting worse when we make a poor decision right now. "I should have known I was going to regret this," we say, kicking ourselves. That, Pink says, is our own wisdom, earned over years, trying to exert itself, but we ignore it. So, any regrets from yesterday? Anyone important to you storm off in a huff? Or maybe, did you? Apologies always matter. They make you feel better when you apologize and genuinely accepting apologies is part of God's magic for relationships. My regrets? Well, I certainly regret the second helping at yesterday's Thanksgiving meal. I regret the third helping worse. More seriously, I regret losing my temper a few times as a young father. Regardless of whether any of my kids remember it, I can't forget it. I did the wrong thing and it haunts me. Since my stroke about eighteen months ago, though, I keep regrets in mind. I want to learn from the ones I have and prevent any more. Something to think about as I fix a turkey sandwich for lunch today. I'm Cam Marston, just trying to Keep it Real.
'Tis The Season
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston wants you to know he's NOT A CYNIC. But there are things this time of year that just kinda get to him... ----- 'Tis the season for pensive and sappy messages. I'm so sorry but it's true. They're appearing in TV commercials, in client and vendor emails. Letters received in the mail about the joys of the season and now's the time to be grateful and all that. I hate being a cynic, but it all appears to be virtue signaling to me. The people I know sending these messages are savage businesspeople and it's like times running out and they're throwing a Hail Mary pass to make Santa's good list. Maybe these people really are kind and generous and are thankful for their bountiful blessings, and the season is a gift meant for a deeper understanding of the commonalities of mankind and that the cockles of their heart swell with the love of the joy of the togetherness of their fellow man and the brotherhood of the love of the oneness of all of us…and all that. I can't help but roll my eyes. I seriously doubt many of these people have heart cockles. I question whether some of them even have hearts. But man, this time of year, people eat this stuff up. My father and I watched a lady on the local news early Sunday morning deliver such a message. Her message was about enjoying the season by simplifying it to the essentials. It's a similar message that we all hear over this time of year. I was unmoved. My dad, though, was over the moon about it. He thought it was great. He repeated the message aloud several times, full of energy. Dad, I wanted to say, you hear this same message over and over again every year. There's nothing new here. Instead, I kept quiet. The message made him feel good and I guess that matters for something. 'Tis season for extras, though. Whoever you are, you can justify something a little bit extra this time of year. "It only comes around once a year, so why not just a little more?" we say. A little more to eat. An extra slice of pie or two. Maybe a whole extra pie. Fill the wine glass a little fuller than normal. Each time. An extra gift for someone and maybe an extra one for you, too. Leave the office a little early. And then a little earlier. And then earlier. Every day of the year only comes around once a year, but these are…different. These days are a part of the Christmas season which, per the displays at Lowes, begins mid-October, making the Christmas season nearly a quarter of the year. Some, like my wife and kids, have no problems with this. What does it matter, they say, if we like the decorations and they make us happy? My position is that the shorter it is, the more intense and special it is. If your default mode is that it's nearly always Christmas, what's so special about it? At least that's what I say to myself, sitting all alone, while what remains of the cockles of my heart burn to cinders. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Cats
On the way home from Oxford Saturday, Cam and his family stopped at a service station which led to him thinking about what NOT to put on his Christmas list. ----- For years I had my children convinced I was allergic to cats. I told them the reason we couldn't have a cat as a pet was that my head would explode in a fiery ball. They wanted a cat. They asked regularly and finally accepted that I was allergic. I'm not allergic to cats. I'm not sure how they found out, but the cat-pet requests are back. Frankly, I want nothing more to do with anything that requires fuel or any sort of sustenance from me to operate, be that cars, boats, cats, birds whatever. My wife and I have four kids, too many cars, one dog, and share responsibility for a boat. And I'm weary of giving birth to, parenting, raising, collecting or owning creatures or things that need me. Buckatuna, Mississippi is a nice stopping point between Oxford, Mississippi and Mobile. We stopped there coming home this past Sunday. We had five people in the car, and it was time for a fluid adjustment in some way for all of us. The ladies in the car needed a bathroom, and I needed something cold to drink to keep me awake for the final stretch of road and the boys just needed to walk around. There at the door of the service station sat a cat. We noticed another and then another. My wife and kids went toward them using their kitten voices. There were a lot of them. Another car stopped and the driver got out, watching my wife and kids. "I want all of them," my wife said. She is now the pro-pet cat camp. "All you gotta do is catch one," the driver said, "But, be careful what you wish for. My daughter," he told us, "came home with one and said 'I rescued a cat!' Well, I said, that's your cat. You have to figure out how to feed it. Then she came home two months later with another. Two months after that, we suddenly had nine cats and my daughter was struggling to feed them all. Then one day I came home and there was a dead snake on my porch with its head gone. I found out that cats help clean up vermin in the yard. Rats, mice, and even snakes. They bite snake's heads of and bring the body home as a gift. So now," he said, "I'm feeding those cats." "So," he said again, "be careful what you wish for." The holidays are on the horizon. Kids making lists for themselves. You, perhaps, making lists for your kids. I've begun the tradition of making lists, making copies, and leaving them in places around the house where I know they will be found. Toilet seats. Front seats of cars. I've even put them in cereal boxes. No one can claim they don't know what to get me. Cats are not on the list. Neither are dogs or anything alive or inanimate needing food or fuel. As a child we had a pet rabbit that ate through the power cord of the deep freeze. It wasn't until all the food was spoiled that we realized it. Anyway, just like cats and that rabbit now's the time of year to be careful what you wish for. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just Keepin' It Real.
Owls
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam tells us about some early morning attacks that are happening in his part of town. You'd be surprised at who is doing the attacking. ----- On the top of the Tangles Hair Salon on Bit and Spur Road in Mobile sits a hat and a headlamp with its light on. The headlamp is the type that an early morning jogger wears before the sun comes up. How it got up there is a heck of a story. Dennison Crocker jogs before daylight nearly every morning. His headlamp lights the way. One dark morning near Bit and Spur Road, a giant thunk, thud, and whoosh caught Dennison off guard, and his hat and the light were gone. Something had hit him in the back of the head. His light was flying away and stopped on the roof of Tangles. The culprit: an owl. Likely a barred owl. They're the ones known to attack. But that was just the beginning. Weeks later he was jogging not far from the same spot when the owl hit him again. He was in the middle of the road and, bang. Dennison started swatting wildly in the air. Just then a car stopped and asked if he were ok – Dennison was, after all, wildly swinging his arms around in the air in the middle of the road before daylight early one weekday morning. He told the driver about the owl. The driver looked concerned for Dennison's mental well-being and slowly drove away and, just then, the owl hit him again. The driver reversed back, seeing Dennison wildly swinging his arms again and offered to get him outta there. Dennison dove in and went straight home. The owl has become quite a star around here. My new best friend, ChatGPT, says the owl is either protecting its nest or it thinks Dennison is poaching on its hunting ground. It's probably the latter since it's a bit early yet for owls to be nesting. So Dennison, per the owl, looks like a food supply threat. And, well, maybe he kinda does. Dennison's a big solid guy and I'm guessing he'd need a lot of squirrels to fill up, leaving fewer for his owl friend. The owl is rightly concerned Dennison taking more than his share. I learned about all this at my regular Thursday beer drinking session with my homies and it was Jay Stubbs who told Dennison's story only because Jay told us HE has been attacked, too. Jay is an early morning walker and not far from Tangles where Dennison's hat sits, Jay got hit by what he says felt like a broom over the back of his head. His hat flew off and all he saw was wings. Jay, too, looks like a food supply threat. Jay could pack in some squirrels. Oddly, I'm on team owl. I don't want anyone to get hurt, I don't wany eyes gouged out, but I like it that in our terribly predictable world, we have to worry about an owl attacking. It makes me chuckle. Getting attacked by an owI is something you could never have predicted sitting on your couch New Year's Day, making guesses about your upcoming year. It's a wonderfully refreshing story of life's randomness and unpredictability. What's the moral? It's simply this – it's against the normal order of nature for people to exercise before daylight. Even the owls know this. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Can I Transfer?
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam recalls a time when he was very much out of his element and was slightly afraid for his life. ----- About midway through the fourth quarter of Alabama's loss to Vanderbilt, my son, who is a student at the University, sent me a text. It read, "Can I transfer?" I laughed. As a Tulane student we were fond of saying that on Saturdays in the fall, the New Orleans Superdome hosted a cocktail party for students to mix and mingle in the stands. Occasionally we would look up and notice that a football game was going on in front of us, but we never let it distract us. Then one weekend I visited friends in Tuscaloosa. Saturday morning, I asked about plans for the night. "It depends," was the answer. "On what?" I asked. "Whether we win or lose tonight." "You mean the football game?" "Of course!" they said. "Well," I suggested, "let's assume we're going to lose and make some fun plans anyway. That's the way we do it at Tulane. And if we win, it's a wonderful surprise." There was quiet look of incomprehension. Of disbelief. "I recognize your words," their faces showed, "but I don't understand what you're saying." I realized that I stood in a dangerous culture unfamiliar to me, and I'd best button my lip unless I said something that might bring me harm. Like standing with uncivilized tribe in the Amazon jungle where you don't know the rules and a foolish move may cost you your life. My son's text brought that memory back. Monday, I spoke with a friend who was in Nashville during the Vanderbilt game. He watched from a balcony on Broadway as the goal posts made their way down the street. The students were very well heeled. Lifting the goals posts over the cars and apologizing if their impromptu parade was inconveniencing drivers. Very kind. Very nice. Bear Bryant's advice on what to do when you're in the endzone – act like you've been there before – was lost on them. By-standers watched in delight and awe, like spotting Halley's comet, returning after making its long loop around the sun. It was a lifetime event. He said even the police were in on it, blocking traffic and making way. I have a friend who's quit smoking except for the second half of Alabama games. He watches through the window, one cigarette after the other. Another who only watches alone in his small home office where he can't be disturbed, and no one can be offended by his cursing. I have some who make everyone stand up and change places when something goes wrong on the field. As if new seats in the room will bring better luck. Saturday I'll be watching the Alabama Tennessee game with my father, my two brothers, my son and some nephews at a work weekend at my father's camp in Clark County. I am a Tide fan, after all. But there will be no strange hocus pocus from us. Just my lucky Bama hat, my favorite Bama shirt, and my lucky Bama sock – just one sock. I tried wearing them both again during the Vanderbilt game. It's my fault they lost. I'm sorry. I took the bad one off and burned it. Roll Tide, ya'll.
FBI
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston tells us about a bomb maker he met who sends the bombs he makes to his friends. Oddly enough, you and I should be happy he's doing it. ----- There's a man on the outskirts of Mobile who spends a good part of his days making bombs. He uses items he finds around town and buys from retail stores. He then sends his bombs to his buddies to see if they can disarm them. It's a game and, believe me, it's a game you and I should be grateful they're playing. I'm participating in a seven-week course called the FBI Citizens Academy. For two hours each week about twenty of use hear how the FBI works, and we meet their agents. Last night we met the bomb guy. He stays sharp by creating bombs that he may encounter made by the bad guys. He tries to get in their heads by making bombs out the same materials they would. The bombs out there, he says, are getting more sophisticated as the items available to the public are getting more sophisticated. He mentioned light sensitive triggers, much like the light sensors on my flood lights that toggle their nighttime settings. The closest parallel I've come up with is that the FBI is like a hospital emergency room. People go to the emergency room because something bad has happened. Similarly, the FBI doesn't act because something good is happening, they react to bad threats, bad news and bad events. And, I learned last night, just like emergency rooms have busy seasons like Halloween and New Year's Eve, the FBI gets busier around Christmas. A Christian holiday where people gather to celebrate their Christian faith is a dinner bell for some bad guys. Underground news begins percolating and rumors of attacks ramp up around the holidays. The FBI responds to all of it. Every one. And the bomb guy stands by, ready to diffuse the device, explode it safely, or worst-case scenario, examine the scene for evidence and ask witnesses many seemingly irrelevant questions including what color was the smoke – all of it helps to solve the puzzle and find the maker. You and I live mostly unaware of complexity of the work of the bad guys. We live mostly unaware of the constant activity of the FBI. It's white-collar crime. Violent crime. Sextortion. Terrorism. And much more. Add to that the sometimes brutal criticism from the public who knows nothing about their work yet feels superior enough to criticize, including our former – and perhaps future – commander in chief. Keeping the team motivated must be difficult. They're focused day and night on evil, malice, and destruction often without the support of the loudest voices in our communities and nation. But my takeaway is these are tough men and women who are compelled to serve. To simply serve. They're givers in a land of takers. Every one of them. Six weeks ago, our class began with this: The bad guys want to be bad. The good guys want to be good. The bad guys work very hard every day to be bad. The good guys work very hard every day to be good. And the bad guys only need to be bad once. Before the class began, I was fond of the FBI. Six weeks later, I'm deeply grateful. I'm Cam Marston, just trying to Keep it Real.
Infantilized
On this week's Keeping It Real, Cam Marston reacts to a book review about society and how we're raising kids. It's not the kids fault, Cam says, it's definitely the parents. ----- The Economist magazine reviewed a book called Infantilised: How Our Culture Killed Adulthood. The author, Keith Hayward, argues that western society is keeping kids less mature than previous generations. He tells of a young lady who insisted on spelling the word hamster with a P. When corrected repeatedly, she called her mom and put her on speakerphone to tell her boss not to be so mean. That's laughable, but I've heard similar things. I work with employers to help them manage, motivate, and recruit employees. I hear stories like this, though the ones usually shared with me are the extremes. Is it true we are keeping kids less mature? I think maybe we are. Life stages are transition periods leading to a new phase of life. These transitions can happen quickly, like becoming a parent, or they can be a more drawn-out process, like moving into retirement. On the other side of the life stage – once it's complete-, the person is usually changed. Their view of the world and their values have evolved through the life-stage. I track several life stages using Census data. It clearly shows that today's younger generations are going through the same life stages as previous generations but at much older ages. Average ages for first marriages have increased nearly year over year since 1970. Young adults living with parents has increased sharply since 2007. Average age of mother at first birth continues to climb. One explanation, per the book's reviewer, is that youth today continue their schooling longer. Therefore, they are dependent on parents, resist getting married and resist having children until older. Maybe. It does make sense. But my research shows that since the Renaissance, in times of affluence, parents work to keep their children younger longer. Parents facilitate, as one writer calls it, Peter-Pandemonium. And I can tell you where you can go witness first-hand it if you wish – high school sports. I've seen parents demand more playing time for their children on the field or the court regardless of performance data. Parents lose it over a slight they feel their child received, regardless of team rules. Demanding the child not get what they've earned, but what the parents feel the child wants. The lengths they'll go through, the bridges they'll burn, the scene they'll make is shocking. Oddly, the child seems to care the least, but the parents – wow. There's a story told by author Michael Lewis that sums this up. It's about his high school baseball coach who was tough on kids. The alums, now adults, wanted to buy a plaque to honor this coach who, the alums agreed, shaped them into the men they are today through discipline and tough love. At the time the alums were raising money for the plaque, this very same coach was being attacked by current parents as being too mean and too hard. The current parents demanded his resignation. The same coach. The same coaching. Diametric opposite opinions of the effects of his methods. To oversimplify it, Infantilised argues that kids today are soft. Maybe. But I promise you, they're not nearly as soft as the parents. Just ask a high school coach. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Lucy At The Vet
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam's family dog heard what he said to the vet. And she has something to say about it. ----- When I walked through the back door our dog, Lucy, looked at me as if to say "you and I have some unfinished business." Lucy had been feeling bad. She was lethargic and had thrown up in four or five places in the house. On the rugs, of course. I got to my hands and knees to try to clean them up. It was nasty. She definitely wasn't herself and my wife, who Lucy seems to regard as The Kind One, took her to the vet. My wife texted that afternoon saying, "Please go pick up Lucy before the vet closes today." Nothing more. At the vet I told the lady that I'm here to pick up Lucy and I'm in a hurry to get downtown for a meeting tonight. In my experience veterinarians, as a rule, seldom operate with any sense of urgency. They're in the warm, fluffy, cuddly business which does not lend itself to hurrying. To her credit she jumped into action and said, "that will be $800." "I'm sorry," I said. "Say that again." "Eight-hundred dollars." My expression must have concerned her. "I'll print the receipt," she said, "so you can see what was done." The receipt was written in medical code. None of it made any sense to me. As if these Latin looking medical terms and abbreviations explained anything. What I did comprehend, though, was the long column of dollar figures running down the right side of the page. Then I said what makes vet offices hate people like me. "You know I can get a new dog that's not broken for this amount." A moment of silence then, "Yes. I know." She didn't roll her eyes but she may as well have. "For this amount I need to speak to my wife to make sure she's aware of this and then speak to the vet to get an explanation of what was wrong and what we need to do. My wife is busy now and I don't have time for the explanation today, I need to get downtown. Can you keep Lucy for the night and let my wife come get her and talk to the vet tomorrow." "Yes," she said, dropping her eyes. She never looked at me again. I could tell she loathed me. Shouldn't I want to bring my dog home to comfort her? How could I leave her in a crate at the vet? Eight hundred dollars vs the comfort of having Lucy home? And the opportunity to care for her? I'm a cruel and heartless human being. I'm the bane of mankind. And that's exactly what Lucy was thinking when I came home the next afternoon. She was still lethargic but there was anger in her eyes. "I heard your voice when you came to get me yesterday," her look told me. "I thought I was coming home. You left me. The Kind One came and got me like I knew she would. I've been thinking about you. Remember those vomit spots you cleaned up the other day. They were nothing. I was just warming up." And she was. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Questions
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston says he has a question for you. And he's curious if you have a question for him. ----- A story that lives in legend in my family is the day my mother interrupted a story about a boastful largemouth bass fisherman and my mother, in full innocence, asked "Who had the large mouth? The fish or the fisherman?" She had never heard of a largemouth bass. But, considering the context of the story, it was a legitimate question. The group fell silent and stared. Someone then explained to her about the species of fish. While the story gets repeated because of the question, my memory of the story is her reaction after getting the explanation. She began laughing at herself. At how silly her question must have sounded. At how perfectly naïve she was. I love the memory. Laughing at herself, fully confident in herself and her innocence. No need to be embarrassed. Self-composed, self-confident, and self-aware. I have inherited the questioning part of my mother. I ask a lot of questions. And I can't exactly explain why I want to know these things other than just to know them. Do the answers make my life better? I don't know. It certainly makes me happier to learn these things. Do I make my environment better by asking so many questions? I don't know. Do I make the people who I ask questions of better? Yes, until a certain point. I was asked to go to the back of the line at a tour of the Biltmore House in Asheville when the tour guide said we were in room number two of the twenty plus we were scheduled to see that day and were already an hour behind schedule. My questions were to blame. Today I'm participating in an academy hosted by the FBI and one of my fellow participants said we need to stop asking questions so the agent can get on with their slides. The comments weren't targeted at me exactly, but I was asking a lot of questions. I find incurious people boring. I've learned it's the single characteristic that makes me interested or not interested in a person is are they curious about things. Plenty of people are not. Plenty of them. What they see and what they get and what they observe and what they hear is fine. No questions asked. They find me annoying that I want to know more. However, at the same time I can't imagine going through life not wanting to know. And, unfortunately, the more I feel I know, the more questions I ask. Further, I've never been reprimanded for asking a bad question. For too many questions, yes. For a bad question, no. People seem to like being asked. I recently finished a great biography of Leonardo da Vinci. He was famous amongst his contemporaries for his insatiable curiously and many of his questions lead to breakthroughs in his artwork and his inventions. One note he made to himself was to learn about the tongue of woodpeckers. Such a seemingly random thought. But a question to which he wanted answer. I think I would have liked him. I'd love to have sat with him. And asked some questions. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Waxed
On Keeping It Real this week, Cam reacts to Tuesday's presidential debate and shares something he's learned about himself in the recent years. ----- Trump got waxed Tuesday night. Wow, did he get waxed. I watched the debate not knowing what to expect but man, to me, he got crushed. Trump later proclaimed it his best debate performance ever. He was outgunned. In hindsight, he never stood a chance. The pundits downplayed his shellacking. They emphasized some of the points he made but largely overlooked how badly he performed. Fox News was doing cartwheels to find something to like about it. Now, per the stereotype of public radio listeners most of you should be pleased with the debate's outcome. I was. I'm not much a fan of the current leader of the Democratic party but I have a very strong negative reaction to the Republican party's leader. And his presence in the national spotlight over these many years has taught me something about myself that is increasingly becoming more and more clear. A friend says he separates Trump's actions from his bombast and the lies and the crazy insane ramblings. My friend makes decisions based on the actions of the person, not their words. He doesn't allow himself to be distracted by the insane ramblings. That is how, my friends said, to evaluate Trump. Ignore his words, observe his actions. I have a big problem with that. Your words are a part of your actions. In fact, your words are how you engage reality. Psychologist Dr Albert Ellis is considered one of the most preeminent psychologists to ever live, and his findings are that how we think and talk about situations influence our perceptions of reality and the emotions that follow. Words create our world. Our reality. You can't separate them from behavior. They're the seeds of our emotions, the seeds of our behavior. Ignoring what someone says is just stupid. Even in the book of Matthew, Jesus says, "For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of." I knew a public speaker who had a brash, condescending, and overly simplistic view of selling. He offended people in his seminars as a part of his schtick. I was invited to his home as a part of a larger group and one of the friends pulled me aside and said, "He's not really a jerk, he just acts that way." No, he's a jerk. If he acts like a jerk, he's a jerk. If he's regularly mean and cruel to people, then he's mean and cruel. There are no asterisks or exceptions to this. In my world, in my reality, and in the study of solid psychologists, that's not the way it works. I can't support someone who talks about people and things and events like Trump does and think that the way he talks and the words he uses don't matter. Observe his actions, ignore his words? I'm incapable of separating the two. It's not in my blood to do so, it's not in my bones and, frankly, it's not how reality works. His words define his reality and just like my words define mine and yours do yours. And his words, to me cannot be ignored. None of ours can. None of us. And in both words and actions, Trump got waxed Tuesday night. He got waxed. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Gettin' Lucky
Cam's back from his one month sabbatical and creating commentaries again. This one he simply calls Gettin' Lucky. ----- Dr Suchan Shenoy is one of the regulars at Restaurant Five in Tuscaloosa on Saturday mornings. I join the regulars when I'm in town visiting my son who is a sophomore at the University. Dr Shenoy is an OBGYN at the DCH Hospital there. He and I sat together and we made some small talk. I don't know any of the regulars well, but I enjoy their company when I'm in town. Dr Shenoy could relate to my situation. I was a new guy sitting amongst a group of old friends in their familiar place, not knowing exactly what to say or do. I don't have any background with them and the conversation can run pretty slow and thin. Dr Shenoy mentioned that when he's at a party or an event and the content runs thin, he brings up some things he sees around the hospital. Odd baby names. Things new parents have done. Stuff like that. Lots of people can enjoy those stories. Lots of people find them interesting. He mentioned that the maternity ward at the hospital had an unexpected surge of newborns in late July and early August. It was strange, he said, since it wasn't a national trend or he would have heard about it. It appeared very local. DCH Hospital's normal rate was one or two babies a week and suddenly the numbers had doubled for a few weeks. Almost out of the blue, there were babies everywhere. Very local. Very isolated. We talked about how the hospital had managed the surge well. They were all hands-on deck for a little while. The surge in babies was, frankly, good for business and they knew it wouldn't last but, for a few weeks, everyone was in motion caring for the babies, the mothers, and dealing with the families. It was odd he said, and he couldn't figure out what had caused it. Not content to let it go, Dr Shenoy reverted to an old equation he had learned in medical school that helped Drs back in the day estimate due dates. It's called the Naegele Rule Calculator and it's not much used anymore since the today's computers are much easier to use and more accurate. However, using the Naegele Rule you can reverse the math and estimate a conception date. And the math zeroed in on November 25th. Late November last year. Thanksgiving? Not likely. They would have noticed a surge in previous years if it were Thanksgiving and it wouldn't have been isolated to the area. Then it occurred to him. In the late afternoon of Saturday, November 25th last year, with 43 seconds left in the game, Alabama's Jalen Milroe threw a bomb to the back left corner of the end-zone where it was caught by Isaiah Bond leading to Alabama's extraordinary come from behind win. The surge in babies Dr Shenoy was seeing were conceived that night. As Alabama fans taunted Auburn with "who's your daddy" well, it became clear to Dr Shenoy that lots of daddies were made that night. Apparently, lots of people, including the Crimson Tide football team, got lucky. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Really?
On this week's Keepin' it Real, Cam Marston wonders if we prefer entertainment to anything of substance. And frets over the consequences. ----- I hope everyone had a nice July Fourth holiday. On July 4th, 1776, the Declaration of Independence was officially adopted and signed. It has proven to be one of the most influential documents in world history, generating demands for independence and self-rule across the world. Eleven years later, in 1787, the US Constitution was created and was then ratified about a year later. The energy and enthusiasm and aspirations of these two documents propelled a new nation forward. They're full of hope and ambition and the authors of the documents counted on the honor and integrity of this new nation's leaders to fulfill what those documents stood for. The leaders, the documents, and the mood of our country at the time was hope fueled by the divine. Let's contrast that to what we witnessed two Thursday nights ago in the Biden Trump debate. Let's consider for a moment what's happened to us. From uplifting prose to child-like name calling. From sage and cogent observations about human nature to incoherent ramblings. From relying on the honor and integrity of leaders to spewing gobs of lies. From working through honest and principled disagreements to an unwillingness to even shake hands. No one I know likes the candidate they'll eventually vote for. No one I know thinks their candidate, regardless of their party, is capable or qualified. Everyone I know is voting for their guy to prevent the other guy from destroying the nation. What have we done to deserve this? It's a serious question. What the hell have we done to deserve this? I've heard many people say, "Is this the best we have to pick from?" but after the debate last week, that question became "This is the best we have to pick from!". And, I'll say it again, everyone I know, regardless of who they will eventually vote for, is saying that about their candidate. No one likes their options. At dinner last Saturday night, a friend mused that he thinks our nation today likes entertainment more than anything that remotely feels like substance. When it comes to politics, we don't want anyone to tell us the truth. We want to be entertained. So, we keep electing politicians that tell us what we want to hear, that entertain us. Perhaps the debate last week will initiate a turning point. Perhaps now we'll begin talking about substantive topics. When was the last time a politician even offered an opinion on our nation's debt or deficit? When was the last time a politician addressed our nation's addiction to entitlement spending? A trusted economist I interviewed on my radio show last week predicted that around the year 2030, our nation will fall into an economic depression that overshadows the Great Depression of the 1930s and it will largely driven by deficit spending, national debt, and runaway entitlement spending issues we've known about but refuse to acknowledge. And if he's right, and as these dark clouds gather, we sit and watch two of the nearly least capable people our nation has ever put forward feebly argue over why they should represent us as president. It's gut-wrenching. And it's not entertaining. Not at all. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to keep it real.

The Roost is Full
The roost is full at Cam's house. And on this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam shares that it may never be this way ever again. ----- My wife and I had thought our summer would be quiet and a bit boring. Two of our four children would be living away and the other two would be at home but either working during the day, away at camp for a few weeks, or playing sports. Plans changed, though, and they're all back home for the summer. Our house is packed. The roost is full. Our four kids are between the ages of twenty-one and seventeen and they're all living at home until the fall when my two college aged children return to campus. In the meantime, we're all together. Just like old times except, today, they're all in the bodies of adults. Our Costco run Saturday morning was $700. We could easily return tomorrow for another run. The food goes fast. The refrigerator goes from full to empty in just days. And even after packing the fridge, we heard the all-too frequent complaint – "there's nothing to eat around here." My wife calmed herself and took my children on a food tour standing in front of the refrigerator with the door open, pointing out the $700 worth of food we had just put in there. Pointing at items and explaining how simple it was to prepare and eat the food. The trash cans are always loaded, too. Before the house was full, we'd take the trash to the outside cans a couple of times per week at most. Now it can be twice a day. The recycling is always overflowing, too, and needs to be taken outside every few days. We are running the dishwasher every night – it fills up every day whereas when previously it was run maybe once per week. The washer and dryer are in constant motion. And I spent ten hours cooking a nine-pound Boston Butt Saturday. Nine pounds of meat would usually last my house a week or so. It was nearly gone by the time dinner was over Saturday night. Oddly, though, I see my children much less than I thought. Mainly because by the time I'm up and have left for the office, they're still in bed. And when I get home later in the afternoon, they're gone to work or with their friends. We hear them at night, though. They each come in and knock on our bedroom door to let us know they're home. It's nice to have the roost full again. I wondered if it would ever happen. It's easily conceivable that my college aged children could never have returned home ever again though my friends with older children say that is not likely to happen; like it or not, your kids are coming back, they say. But the thought of my kids not living at home anymore, I don't know, kinda unsettles me. Makes me feel sad. Is that chapter of my life really over? I'm told I'll miss the shoes all over the floor and the dishes in the sink someday. Maybe I will. Maybe I won't. However, the Costco runs – I'll definitely not miss those. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Am I My Brother's Dog's Keeper?
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam is having a harder and harder time walking his dog due to his neighbor's dog that won't go away. ----- "Am I my brother's keeper?" Cain asked this of God after his brother Abel went missing and God asked Cain, "Hey. Where's Abel?" Cain claimed he didn't know. Cain had killed Abel, by the way, and was trying to hide it. How about this question – "Am I my brother's dog's keeper?" I remember growing up in a neighborhood where everyone let their dogs run. There were few fenced in yards. No such things as invisible dog fences and fancy dog collars. The dog I got for Christmas as a teenager, a black lab we named Holly, mostly stayed in the yard, on the front porch, or by the back door. She had a small piece of left over carpet that she could sit and sleep on when she was allowed inside. It stayed next to the back door and Holly was not allowed to go anywhere else in the house. Outside she roamed a bit when she got older. She was one of many. There was Gumpy and Gidget and Daisy and Elizabeth and more all on our street. Holly was known by the neighbors and, well, tolerated, just like their dogs were by us and tolerated. Holly never caused problems – at least that's the way I remember her. The rules have changed. Today we fence dogs in. Or we put them behind invisible dog fences with collars that give dogs a series of warning beeps when they approach their boundaries. We don't let them outside unsupervised. We only walk them on leashes, and we pick up their droppings with special poop bags and carry their poop in our pockets before we throw it away, which shocks me. We humans have created artificial intelligence, we regularly go to and from outer space, we have created the pyramids of Giza, a flawless sculpture of David, and radars that can see underground from outer space but we regularly carry dog poop in our pockets. We're not as advanced as we think. But I digress. So, back to the question, am I my brother's dog's keeper? My neighbor's dog wanders the neighborhood. The owner says the same thing – Oh. I'm sorry. She got out again. And again. And again. And again. The windowsills in the front of my house are destroyed. My dog goes nuts when she sees the other dog in our yard. And when the other dog comes up to our window our dog barks violently and claws at the window which has destroyed our sills. Their dog gets into our curbside recycling, spreading it all over the yard. Their dog follows us when we go on walks and we have to abandon our walks for fear of their dog getting into traffic. The dog, of course, is just being a dog. It's doing what dogs do. We've returned the dog to the owner many times but, I don't know, the owner doesn't seem to care about the hassles the dog causes. So, am I my brother's dog's keeper? And if yes, for how much longer? And can I put the dog's owners in a poop bag and throw them away? I'm Cam Marston just trying to Keep It Real.
Bored
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam is board so he's thinking about paddling across the Pacific. Or planting a few ferns. ----- I'm bored. And that's a problem. Somethings been nagging at me for a few weeks and I now know what it is – I'm bored. There's little adventure in my world right now. Very little discovery. And when boredom sets in get panicky and a bit rash. Too often, I over compensate. This morning I spent way too much time on the Molokai to Oahu web page. It's a 32 mile stand up paddleboard race from the Hawaiian island of Molokai to the island of Oahu and it takes most paddleboard participants about seven hours to complete. The participants in the videos were all much much younger than me and loaded with muscles. I saw no participants that were middle aged plus men with beer bellies. Some participants spoke of the unbelievable color of the water in the center of the Ka'iwi channel which is crossed between Molokai and Oahu. I'm guessing that's because the water in the channel is 2300 feet deep. I think I want to do it. It's a sure way to cure my boredom. The problem is that I don't own a standup paddleboard and the few times I tried one I spent more time climbing back on than I did stand up paddling. I also have thalassophobia which is a deep fear of deep bodies of water. Whenever I'm in the ocean where I can't see the bottom, I envision a giant toothy creature surging from the depths with its mouth open, headed my way. Man loses his edge when swimming in the ocean – it becomes an equal playing field between man and beast. However, training to paddle from one Hawaiian island to another would certainly resolve my boredom however crazy it sounds. A more realistic and, frankly, a sad alternative to my boredom is yardwork. I hate it that I even mention that. What else says overweight, middle aged, thinning brown haired white guy than deciding working in the yard is a cure for boredom. My wife, my son, and I planted forty autumn ferns a few weekends ago in areas where no grass has grown for the past fifteen years. I didn't much like planting them. My mood is generally sour when working in the yard, but I've slowly walked by and admired our planted ferns a dozen times or more sense then. I don't like doing yard work. I like having done yard work. Another forty ferns would solve my boredom problem but that's so dang sad. So, I'm bored. And the ideas I've come up with for solving my boredom problem are either fanciful or pitiful. When I told my wife that I had figured out the cause of my melancholy and that it was boredom, she gave me an uneasy look. I've been here before and I usually do something stupid in times like this. And she's right. And I'm sure I will. Will it be to paddleboard across the ocean? Or gobs of ferns? Good lord. What's wrong with me? I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Flourish
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam says we know we're all busy, very busy, but are we doing what it takes to flourish? ----- What does it take for a human to flourish? Such a simple question to understand but to answer, not so easy. Listening to a podcast last weekend, this question arose between the host and his guest. The guest pointed out that, in his opinion, everything being promoted as valuable in our Western society today is detrimental to human flourishing. What is being promoted, he said, actually leads to loneliness. And he might be right. So, what is being promoted out there? One immediately must turn to technology and, specifically, social media. Our consumption of social media is largely done alone. We may share things we like, but we consume 99% of our social media alone. The accumulation and broadcasting of wealth is certainly being promoted. On social media. In the types of cars next to us on the road right now. Through our posts about the clothes, the toys, the trips we take. It all serves to boost and promote our ego and egos, unchecked, always elevate and separate. Always. Egos say, "I'm better, I'm different." I'm above you. I'm away from you. More loneliness. I could go on. So, if we want to flourish, what exactly should we want? If we want our children to flourish, what should we want for them? Unfortunately, most of us don't know. We're conditioned to say friends, health, meaningful and purposeful activities each day. It all sounds good. So look at you. Look at me. What are we doing to achieve this? What of our behaviors illustrate that we're flourishing? For the vast majority of us, there's not a lot to point to. And we have the ability to heavily influence our kids. We want our kids to flourish so, we give them cell phones. We solve their problems. We let them stay home from school. Kids today spend less time interacting with each other. Increases in anxiety and loneliness. We want them to flourish but we don't equip them or teach them how. And adults aren't much different. We're busy, though. So very busy. Flourishing? No. Busy. Yes. Very busy. A small business colleague asked a simple but heretical question last night: "What's wrong with not wanting more? What's wrong with not wanting private equity to swoop in and buy me out because I like what I do, and I don't want to stop? What's wrong with not wanting a boat, a plane, a second house or whatever? What's wrong with liking where I am? And why do I feel wrong for asking this?" There's nothing wrong with it. But it's counter to our culture of more and more and busier and busier. Everything needed for each of us to flourish is within our reach. Education. Art. Friends. Hobbies. Community. Do you and I have what it takes to leave the mess we've created so that we can flourish? I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Breach
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston had a client breach a contract and he's trying to use lessons from Marcus Aurelius to keep himself from absolutely losing it. ----- I'm reading Marcus Aurelius' book called Meditations written in about the year 175. They're notes to himself about the thoughts he's having and how he's working to keep his head on straight. He's writing to work things out. No audience in mind, just for him. Throughout his writings several themes arise. First, he's aware of the presence of death. The topic of dying is never far. Second, he has to keep reminding himself that he can't control the behaviors of those around him, only himself. He controls his outlook on things and his attitude. He writes this over and over again. And third, his desire to do good. Always wanting to do good. For himself, for Rome, for the gods, for his troops. He's consumed by doing good. Struggling to temper his reactions whenever bad things come his way. He's focused on controlling his behavior. It's been a good read. Aurelius had a number of people conspire against him while he was away on campaign. His plan was to return to Rome and forgive them. He died in route. It's a very kind action in an era I often associate with ruthless and barbaric behavior. I've recently had a client break a contract. Their behavior appeared willful and intentional but in hindsight, I'm hoping it wasn't. It is a very large multi-national company. Every person I've met there seemed honest and genuine and sincere until this one thing has happened. A few weeks ago, I wanted to go to my small business colleagues and yell at the top of my lungs "Be careful. They're not who they say they are. Don't let the charm fool you. Be very, very careful." Now, not so much. My anger has diminished. I need to remedy the contract. I need to correct what's happened. But goodness knows mounting a legal dispute would drain my small business. I'd go broke trying. Them? Hardly a blip on their radar. So, how to proceed? What would my man, Marcus Aurelius, do? I think he'd remind himself that he can't control the behavior of other people and his desire to do good and be kind should outweigh any anger, hostility and disappointment he feels. He needs to find the remedy without letting anger take hold. He may forgive them but he'd, rightly, never forget that it happened. And for me, right now, for what appeared like pre-meditated theft, forgiveness is a tall order. It's amazing how unchanged our thoughts and emotions are in 2000 years. How the disciplines and thoughts and writings that a Roman emperor used to keep himself from losing it applies to me right now. I'd like to think that we're kinder and more civil and sophisticated today. However, it's simply not true. The virtues that Aurelius championed are as hard to bring forth in me today as they were to him 2000 years ago. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Staring At the Clock
On this week's Keepin' It Real, what was Cam doing today at 4:59am? Well, he wasn't getting out of bed. That we know for sure. ----- Most mornings I'm staring at the clock about 4:30 am waiting to get up. I won't allow myself to get out of bed before 5am. Getting your day started at 5am means you're aggressive. You're eager to get going. Getting out of bed before 5am means you have a problem. They're slight gradations. Minutes matter and 4:59am is a good bit different from 5am. I stare at the clock until it turns 5 when I feel like it's ok to jump up and get the coffee started. Most of my friends are much the same. I sat at my kitchen table last Saturday night with two friends as we waited for the beef ribs to get to 203 degrees, which, according to one of my kitchen guests, is the magic temperature for beef ribs. Each of us talking about how early we get up and what we do in those early morning hours. It's worth noting that none of us do anything much interesting at all at this time of day. We make busy. We putter around. Each thinking that our behavior at that hour must be fascinating to others and we can't wait to tell them about it. It's not. As different as we think we are, we're all remarkably the same at that time of day. Years back I saw that when I accomplished something at that time of day it set a precedent for getting stuff done throughout the day. If I could check something off my list first thing in the morning – even something small - then I was likely to accomplish more during the day. This is to avoid staring into my phone as my first action of the day which leads to a poor beginning to the day. So at night, I cue up my early morning project. It's simple stuff – I fold laundry, empty the dishwasher, take trash to the street, change a lightbulb. Something small done with one eye on the coffee maker. Because when the coffee maker beeps that the coffee is ready, the projects stop, the coffee goes into my cup, and it's go-time for the day. But, in that short amount of time the coffee is brewing, I've made progress on having a good day. It's unfair that the first fifteen minutes of each day has such great influence over the following sixteen hours. I'm more like a child protecting its pacifier than any sort of adult doing adult things. But I've learned, so goes my morning, so goes my day. A more mentally disciplined person would never allow that to happen – they can set a positive trajectory by shaping their thoughts anytime of the day. I, however, am vulnerable to those first fifteen minutes. It's shocking and, frankly it disappoints me about myself. Amazing how beholden we are to our routines, isn't it? Amazing how we count on them like we do. I can choose to get out of my routine and enjoy it. But knock me out of my routine unwillingly and I struggle to keep my day from deteriorating. So I protect it. And any parent knows what I know about myself – you don't mess with the pacifier. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Don't Get Sick
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam has seen much more of the healthcare world these days than he would like. His advice: Stay well. ----- I've been given an up a close look at our health care system over the past several months. It's been, well, disappointing. And this comes after hearing a remarkable speaker discuss the importance of customer service on company culture. I made a reference several months ago to the pain I've had. It's finally been diagnosed as polymyalgia rhumatica, or PMR. It showed up around February first and has been a part of every day since. It's a sickness that can't be confirmed through tests. Once they rule out everything else, it's one of the ones that's left. I've dealt with some pain in my life. Cluster headaches. A blood clot in my lung. However, nothing day in and day out has been like this PMR pain. On a scale from one to ten it's regularly an 8 in the morning dipping to a four or five in the afternoon and back to an 8 the next morning. I need help getting my shirt on and off. I can barely brush my teeth. Right now, I'm on a steroid that masks the pain and I pray that the pain ends before the prescription runs out. Now, the heath care system. I've seen five different doctors to try to diagnose this. I'm guessing I've spent less than an hour total with all of them. Averaging, maybe, ten minutes each. They burst through the door, they ask a handful of questions, they order tests. It's quick. I've spent lots of time with nurses and assistants and in waiting rooms. But the doctors are hard to come by. One hospital wouldn't let me speak to a doctor who I heard might can help. "Unless you're a patient," they said, "you can't speak to him." "Well, I might become a patient if he thinks he can help. I've seen others of his specialty, but I hear he knows more. "Sorry," they said. So, I wrote him a letter to get him to call me. I got a voice mail from the office supervisor – "you can't talk to him. Please call me back," she said. And I tried, got an exhaustive phone tree, zero'd out and asked, "Can I leave a message for the supervisor?" "Sorry," they said. "Her phone isn't hooked up to the system." Over and over. Round and round. There were some phone trees that never allowed me to speak with anyone. If I weren't in pain already my experience with today's health care system was getting me there. Another – "before I can treat you further, I have to do some tests," the doctor said. "Make an appointment on the way out." "We don't make appointments," the front desk said. Annoyed. Staring at her phone. "Someone will call you." A day later, "Our next available appointment is in July." "So, I have to live in level 8 pain from early April to July?" "Sorry. That's all I got. You want the appointment or not?" The culture of healthcare today is painful. Don't get sick, folks. Don't get sick. If your sickness doesn't kill you, finding the treatment just might. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to keep it real.

He's Not Roscoe
Each spring Cam sits in his morning reading chair and see's a friend just outside the window. But Cam won't give him a name. He absolutely won't. ----- My lizard friend is back again. He shows up on the air conditioner every spring just outside the window. He stays there quite a while each morning, arriving about half an hour after sunrise. I sit each morning in my reading chair and keep an eye out for him. And suddenly, he's there. I grew up calling these things chameleons. Wikipedia, however, just told me he is a green anole and he is often mistakenly called a chameleon, likely started by pet shop owners who were selling them as something much more exotic than they are. Wikipedia also says his species is "secure", meaning they are abundant. My lizard friend is a male. He keeps pushing out his dewlap, his little red throat thingy that they show during mating season, hoping, I suppose to attract some babe lizard due to his remarkably colorful and large dewlap. He sits alone on the air conditioner flexing his dewlap in the hopes that some chick lizard will spot him and be taken with his masculinity and crawl on over for a big moment of lizard passion. At least that's what I assume he's doing. In this regard, my lizard friend isn't too much different than many of the guys I see at the gym. As a child we'd catch them and scare the girls. My braver friends would catch two and when the lizard tried to bite them, they'd let the lizard bite their earlobe and let it hang. The kids would walk inside with lizards hanging from each ear, find their mothers and say, "Mom. Look at me." The mothers would see two lizards hanging from their son's ears and freak out. "Get those lizards off your ears and get them out of my house!" We loved it. Scaring mothers with bugs and lizards was a big fun part of my childhood. There's a part of me that wants to name him, and the name Roscoe keeps coming to mind. However, once you give a name an animal it becomes much closer to being a pet. A friend owns a beef cattle farm and he's talked to me about how he avoids naming any of his cattle. One may have a big mark on him that makes my friend want to call that cow Spot or Freckles or something, but he resists the urge. My friend knows that one day that cow will be in the cooler for sale, and having to say goodbye Spot or Freckles is, well… He knows not to name them. Same is true for the lizard outside who might be Roscoe. He has lots of predators looking for him. Birds. Snakes. Larger lizards. I won't name him because I may be watching him display one morning at the same time a blue jay or mockingbird sees him and suddenly Roscoe's gone. So I won't name him, the anonymous lizard who might otherwise be Roscoe. He's trying so hard out there. Every morning, he and I say hello through the window and he gets to work while I read. He's a good lizard, Roscoe is, but I won't name him. I won't. I'm Cam Marston. Just trying to Keep It Real.
Talking in the Locker Room
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam Marston takes a moment to observe the fingerprint of time. And wishes he hadn't. ----- Talking to a naked man is awkward. It's just…awkward. There are men that have come my gym at the same time every day for decades. And their work in the gym may have kept them alive but it has not kept them from aging. There is nothing firm on them. There's nothing taut. Age plus gravity has left a sagging fingerprint. And talking to a naked man, especially one with some age on him, is, well, awkward. They're standing there, towel over their shoulder, not around their waist. Is eye contact the right thing? Is no eye contact the right thing? I struggle with what to do. My gym has a hot tub. It feels good to get in there and, as I say, boil my bones for about ten minutes. I wear shorts. It's a moment of truth whenever a naked man approaches the hot tub and asks, "Mind if I join you?" I never say what I want to. There's plenty of room in there for the both of us, but sharing a hot tub with a naked man is, well, awkward. How far do I stay away? My instinct is to push myself up against the furthest edge of the tub. However, too much aversion may be rude. So somewhere between the next county over and right next to him seems to be about right. Always looking up. Always looking out. Always looking away. No behavior or no eye contact to suggest that you're happy he's joined you. I watched out of the corner of my eye as an old man walked across the crowded locker room, towel over his shoulder, toward the water cooler. The room parted like the Red Sea. Everyone scooting out of the way. Him talking the whole way about golf or politics or traffic, whatever. No one was listening after he starting moving. Everyone clearing out. Making a path. Don't get too close. And, good lord, don't touch him. Fully dressed I'd happily shake his hand or even hug him. In the locker room with only a towel over his shoulder, no contact at all. Another tried talking to a younger man who was getting dressed. The older man, towel over his shoulder, couldn't get the younger man's full attention. It was clear that the younger man did not want a conversation with a naked old man, so older man began walking towards him. The younger man moved to avoid him and kept moving, like a slow moving chase. Once the older man got within a certain distance, the younger man moved again. Like the repulsion of two magnets. And it was funny as long as he didn't want to talk to me. The male body, especially after a certain age, is nothing people should want to look at. It's nothing people should have to see. It becomes oddly misshapen and strangely bulbous. There are exceptions, of course, and they're on the covers of magazines. But most of us – yes, me too – avoid full length mirrors until we're dressed. We already can feel the fingerprint of time. There's absolutely no reason to have to look at it. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Persevere
On this week's KIR, Cam Marston wonders if he could do the same thing for fifteen years and know, just know in his bones, that it would pay off. ----- I've just watched the documentary on Steve Martin called "Steve! A Documentary in Two Pieces." I've always liked Steve Martin. What caught my attention the most is that he did his standup act for fifteen years. The vast majority of that time, his audiences were very small. In one video clip, he's counting the number of people in the room during his act – there were fifteen people there. He got what he thought were big breaks that bombed, in one case opening for Anne Margaret in Las Vegas and after he finished his act all his belongings had been put in a box outside his dressing room. However, the last stand-up comedy act he did was at the Nassau Coliseum outside New York City where he sold it out three nights in a row – 45,000 people each night. After the third night, he walked off the stage, never to do that act ever again. He was at the top of his game. It took him fifteen years to get there. And then he was done. Question: Who of us have the will, the fortitude, to persevere for fifteen years – fifteen years - with the hope – actually, the confidence – that what we're doing will ultimately pan out. When giving up or changing course is a very real option but we chose not to do it because our vision of what could be is so strong. I'm not sure I do. How many of us can see the need for a change, or see a change coming, and get out in front of it, remain confident amongst the failure and rejection, and never waver. A number of times during the documentary Martin says that he did his act because he had few other options. The little money it brought in was all he had. Those interviewed, though, said he was waiting for society to catch up to his humor. Steve Martin changed standup and comedy and humor. He could see the change coming, but the vast majority of society wasn't aware that a change was happening. Martin saw it coming, ever so slowly, so he kept going. It's one thing to ID forthcoming changes in technology and how to get ahead of those changes to profit from new products – think Steve Jobs and the iPod – but what Steve Martin did was predict a change in the ethos of the United States following Vietnam. He had a hunch people would be different. And he kept at it. And, in time he was proven right. What's the moral of this story? Someone like that is out there amongst us right here and right now. Doing something we think is foolish, or that doesn't seem funny, or saying something that doesn't sound smart or goes against the grain of society. We ridicule them or cast them aside or, more likely, just ignore them. But they keep coming back. Perhaps, we should take a look. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
April's Fool
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston hypothesizes on what a parenting podcast from him and his wife would sound like. ----- My wife and I sat together at the beach last week laughing as we retold stories and reminded ourselves of the humor of parenting. Especially as Gen X parents. We decided to compose a social media post together. The date was April first, and that date matters. The post read the following: We are frequently asked how we've raised four perfect children. Here's our response: We are excited to announce our new Parenting Podcast called Gen X Parenting Tools. Go check it out. We listed some episode titles: Episode One: Building a Foundation: Hose water and neglect Episode Two: Who needs effective discipline? The effective use of ridicule and humiliation Episode Three: At the Heart of it All is Cynicism. Lots of people, too many in fact, thought we were serious. Across the top of the post, it read Launching April First. We thought that would be a dead giveaway. Several asked where they could find the podcast. One cheered enthusiastically, agreeing that we did have four perfect kids, and was excited to hear the show. Lots wrote in reply, "I can't wait" or "I'll listen." My guess is that we were too subtle. I had hoped people would add new episode titles like Episode Four: Serves You Right – Whatever Just Happened You Had it Coming. Or Episode Five: Maybe it Will Scar, Maybe it Won't – Either Way Stop Crying. One person understood quickly that it was a hoax and she wrote: As soon as I saw the line about your four perfect kids, I knew it was a joke. Well, we're glad you got the joke but, ouch! If my wife and I had a podcast on parenting the title would be "Here's how to fail only about half the time, try not to get your kids to hate you, and hope you get lucky at parenting." Today, I worry that our practice of making the kids run a lap around the house if they burped at the table at mealtime may have been too extreme. Are they somewhere now sharing their traumatized memories of running outside barefoot in the dark in their pajamas on cold nights? Screaming the whole way around the house "It was an accident. It was an accident." Our podcast would be full of situations where my wife and I didn't know what to do and still don't. "Should we have allowed him to go to that concert?" "I don't know. I'm not sure we did the right thing. I hope we didn't mess him up. I guess time will tell." "Should we have made her change her clothes into something different before that event?" "I don't know. I'm not sure we did the right thing. I hope we didn't mess her up. I guess time will tell." My conclusion is that in parenting, just like in April Fools posts, there needs to be some self-deprecating humor, less subtlety, and a good bit of praying we didn't mess it up and that it will all work out in the end. However, that hose water thing – that may come back to haunt us. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Workplace Veterans
On this week's Keepin It Real, Cam Marston has some observations about the NCAA tournament. The old guys are winning, and he likes that. ----- Someone in my family is not pleased right now. As I write this Wednesday, I don't know who. Last night the North Carolina Tar Heels basketball team took on the Alabama Crimson Tide in the NCAA tournament. My wife is a Carolina grad. I was unaware people could like basketball that much until I met her. My son is a Freshman at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa. He was an avid sports fan moments after his birth. One of them lost last night and is not pleased. They'll be picking at each other today until the loser says "Ok. That's enough." My wife has commented all year about how this year's basketball season is different. There were many more seniors playing than ever before. North Carolina's standout forward, Armando Bacot, is twenty-four years old. It's not only my wife that's noticed it. Yesterday, while I was walking on the treadmill, my buddy Jimbo mentions how all the successful teams are all older. Then this morning, the daily newsletter I enjoy so much called Morning Brew mentions the same thing, going on to state that nearly 300 tournament players are in the fourth, fifth, or sixth years playing basketball. Covid rules allowed them to extend their eligibility and NIL money is keeping them playing in the college ranks whereas in the past they may have bolted for the big money of professional basketball. This is in great contrast to the years of when the top basketball teams were loaded with "one and done" players. The top players would play one year in college then go on to bigger money. The teams loaded with one and done players this year have not fared as well. The University of Kentucky's basketball roster has eight freshmen on it. Kentucky has been a perennial basketball powerhouse and a perennial one and done program, and they likely watched last night's games at home on their couch just like I did after they lost in the first round. Experience is proving to matter this year. Many of the teams that may have never have ever had a chance to make the NCAA tournament were present this year, fueled by upper-classmen. Many of them have already lost, but they were there. And many for the first time. And on some teams, fans are able to watch their players mature. Some players are staying on the same team throughout their college career. While it is true the transfer portals have spoiled much of this, there are places where the seniors have been at the same school the whole time. They're rare, but they're out there. And their fans adore them. They'll cheer any player wearing their alma mater's jersey, but they'll adore the ones who have worn it four years or more. So why does this make me feel kinda good? That the old kids are proving to be the winners? That the veterans are the difference makers? I suppose because it shows that wisdom and time and experience matter. And, as I get older, that keeps getting more and more important to me. And even though these veteran players are more than thirty years younger than me, I feel a kinship with them. I'm Cam Marston and, old as I am, I'm just trying to keep it real.
Need A Message
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam is searching for a message and if he hears one, he WILL obey. ----- I think there is someone or something out there trying to send me a message. A few things have happened lately that seem, well, like there is a message coming or attached but I don't know what it is. First, storms rolled through a few months ago knocking out the power. Fortunately our house has a generator attached and it kept a few rooms running for a little while. My friends began texting about their power being out. I proudly texted a photo of my comfortable and well-lit kitchen that showed our generator working fine and then, boom, a lightning strike destroyed the generator. Soon after I was telling someone I think the whole idea of "long covid" is bogus. There's no such thing as "long covid" I said confidently. It's a made-up sickness that people are using to stay out of work. Then I was hit with pains like I've never had before. They won't go away. They're in my shoulders and hips and are intense in the night and early morning. It's been two months of constant pain. After determining it wasn't arthritis and drawing 1000 gallons of blood, the Doctor told me I have post-viral myofascial syndrome. Otherwise known as long-covid. The pain might last for as long as six months, she said, Get used to it. Then there are the clients who have contacted me asking for proposals. I ask thoughtful questions so I can better customize for them. They confirm they're eager to get started soon. The call ends wonderfully. And I, foolishly, start counting my chickens. Then things get quiet. I follow up and they assure me they're looking at it and we'll get started soon and over and over and round and round. Ultimately, no decisions. I'd much rather a client say No, Thank you than never reply or never make a decision. Uncertainty, in this case, is worse than bad news. So, like I said, I feel like someone or something is trying to get a message through to me. But what? Tell me. I need the sky to crack and open and a booming voice to come from it or a burning bush in the back yard telling me what to do. Or the phone to ring or the email to buzz or something. What's the message? After dealing with the pain from post-viral myofascial syndrome – I'm struggling to call it long covid - for two months, I'll do anything to help with the pain. The most recent advice is that I fast for at least a day and three days would be better. During lengthy fasting, the body begins cleaning itself and eliminating anything unneeded, like a pesky virus causing pain in my hips and shoulders. I'm writing this closing in on 48 hours of fasting. I'm a bit loopy. But if another 24 hours of fasting will help with the pain, I'll do it. However, can't be sure what my mental state will be 24 hours from now. I may be just loopy enough that…I finally hear a voice. And real or imaginary, I'll do whatever it says. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Tell Them Both I Said Hello
There's a grocery store Cam goes to when he's in a hurry. It's NOT the one closest to his house. That one is full of memories. Full of roots. ----- I saw him see me. He turned and headed my way. "Cam," he said. "How's you mother?" "Well," I said. "She passed away two years ago." I saw you at her funeral, I wanted to say. I remember talking to you. "Oh. Yes. That's right. I'm sorry. Well then, how's your father?" "Dad's wonderful. He plays pickleball five, sometimes six days a week. Sometimes twice a day. He's eighty-seven but I don't think he knows it. He's great." "Well, that's wonderful. Please tell them both I said hello." "I, I sure will. Thanks." The grocery store closest to my house is the one I got to least often. The trip takes too long. At any moment of the day there is someone in there that wants to chat. Wants a short visit. In the middle of the day, when I go in to buy something quick for lunch, someone like this is likely there. Usually friends of my parents. They're in no hurry. The grocery store I go to when I'm in a hurry is actually a bit further away. It's quicker. Conversations like this, with this older gentleman, while a bit comical and maybe a bit sad, mean something. "I know you," he was saying. "I know your people. You and me, we're connected. We fished when you were a young boy. Your dad and I hunted turkeys together." As a young man, I wanted no part of this. I didn't want to be reminded of myself as a boy. I wanted anonymity. I wanted a blank slate and to make my own way as a man. So, I left my hometown for two decades. Today, the opposite is now true. It's become important to me. It's a 180 degree about face. I like it, though a bit comical and a bit sad at times, I like it. It's roots. There's something about old connections, about roots. About generations of pasts that intertwine. I once dismissed this as unimportant. I felt that these were silly things cherished by simple, small-minded people. I was a young man then. I was bullet proof and I knew it all. I've had a 180 degree about face. They're important now more than ever as I look around at who I'll grow old with, how we're connected, and how my connections may show up in my kid's worlds in some unknowable way in the future. And I see one of my friend's adult children in the grocery story. I knew him when he was a boy. I tossed him balls, maybe, or cooked him pancakes in his pajamas at my house on a Saturday morning. And I go to him and I say, "Hey. Tell me. How's your father. I miss him. Please tell him I said Hello." I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.

Parent's Weekend
On today's Keepin' It Real, Cam shares something he saw last weekend that made him feel a little bit better about things. ----- I'm in Starbucks. It's Saturday. It's Noon. I'm in Tuscaloosa at the corner of Bryant Drive and 8th Avenue. Sororities across the street disgorging young ladies for their morning cups of honey-dew latté with extra chai, extra vanilla essence and a dash of bumble bee eyelashes or something like that. Yoga pants as far as the eye can see. One girl wearing a T-shirt reading Don't Date Frat Boys. Parents here for fraternity and sorority parent's weekend. Dads wearing dad jeans and comfy shoes. Moms perfectly coifed wearing fancy sneakers. My son's fraternity threw a party here in Tuscaloosa last night. The party planners likely said, "Get a band old people will like." The music was, indeed, for old people. Older than any of the parents there. As soon as I heard the first song, the count began – how many songs before Mustang Sally. It was seven. There's not a band that plays under a tent on a lawn at a quote-unquote "old person party" that doesn't play Mustang Sally within the first ten songs. They don't exist. It's as if everyone, including the band, just wants to get it out of the way. The same with Brick House and "let me hear you scream!" The lead singer came on in the second set. Her energy moved a lot of old people to the dance floor. It became an old person's careful shuffle, protecting aching knees, hips, and backs. Lots of moms and dads who never had dance moves or who had lost their dance moves decades ago packed the dance floor, shaking arrhythmically like dancing on a shaking fault line. Brightly colored wigs appeared. Confetti cannons. Parents shuffling together, ignoring their aches and pains. Advil will take care of tomorrow. I left for the bathroom and returned to find my wife in the front row. She waved me up. I pretended not to see, standing with my son who was rightly proud that his fraternity was entertaining so many people, so many old people, so well. It was a great time. Look at who I now am, my son seemed to be saying, standing next to me. Look at these new friends. This new environment. These new people who know me and like me and search me out in the crowd to say hello. I shook dozens of hands. Tried to remember names. Tried to remember parent's names. I'm a guest in his world. A new world that he's forged for himself. Full of new people from far off places who were unknown to him just a short seven months ago. They now laugh together like old friends do. They share funny looks and make references to inside jokes. As a parent you wonder how your children will turn out. What will influence who they are and who they'll become. You try to raise them right, the way you think is best, but parenting is just a portion of it. There are so many factors. And you wonder. And you worry. And then you see your child thriving in a good environment full of good people. An environment that he's created for himself. And you smile a bit. And you worry a little less. I'm Cam Marston, just trying to keep it real.
Forgiveness
On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam shares a story he's kept quiet for fourteen years. It's time to get it off his chest. ----- I've just boarded my flight. I'm headed home. Sitting here, a memory has resurfaced. Many years ago, deplaning in Chicago, I took a call from a young man. He'd studied my work and asked me to mentor him. He wanted to travel and give speeches. He wanted me to refer him when I was too busy, and he'd pay me a commission. He loved my topic and said he could represent me well. I was deeply flattered. He charmed me. A few months later, we sat at my dining room table for most of a day. I taught him my content. I shared my tips, my tricks, my tools of the trade. I had clients ready for him. I was busy. I needed help. He was eager to start. I was proud to help this ambitious young man launch. My wife and I dropped him at the airport for his flight back home. He disappeared into the airport, and I asked my wife, "What did you think?" She paused. "I think he probably beats his wife," she said. "No. You got him all wrong," I said. "Besides, he's not married." "He's the kind that would," she said. "Be careful." Something alarmed her. Two years later, at the window of my Greenbrier hotel room, his business manager called. Their partnership had just ended over a money dispute. I learned that as he was sitting at my dining room table, he'd take breaks and call in disbelief that I was giving him all my content. He was sending lists of my customers, and the next day he began calling them saying "I can give you Cam Marston's presentation much cheaper. I have all his materials." He took many clients, never told me, never shared the commissions. It had been a part of his plan since my phone rang that day in Chicago. The business manager now wanted a pound of flesh after being cheated by him, too. Today, he's well known in the industry. He's busy. I'm told he delivers a good presentation. And he should since it's my content. If this story ended in justice, I'd tell you his absence of ethics caught up to him. But I don't know that. I don't know what's happened to him. For years I've avoided hearing his name, and even today his name tastes like bile in my mouth. I need to forgive him. It would release me from this anger I've held for so long. So, with great difficulty, here, now, today, I forgive you. You will probably never hear this, but I forgive you. I still ache to pound your face. If we ever meet again, you should be afraid. You made me feel used and stupid and embarrassed and cheated and you cost me some of my livelihood. You conned me out of my trust. I won't ever forget it but, as of right now, I forgive you. This commentary is not inspirational. This is not pretty. Forgiveness won't help him but…I sure hope it helps me. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to keep it real.
Squeezed
Cam's phone has been ringing. It's a lot of his small business friends and they're experiencing similar things. They're feeling pressure. They're feeling squeezed. ----- When an orange is squeezed, orange juice comes out. We know this. We know that sun and good soil and water and maybe some fertilizer help that orange develop that juice. We know the ingredients, we somewhat control the ingredients, and we know the goodness that comes from a squeezed orange. What happens, though, when you and I are squeezed? What happens when life puts pressure on you and me? What ingredients are we drawing on when we're squeezed? And what results? I read this question in Rick Ruben's new book about creativity. He pulled it from an old school motivational speaker named Wayne Dyer. The metaphor's been around the block a few times. But, it still resonates. In the past two weeks, I've had four small business friends share that things aren't going well for them right now. A fifth one chimed in this morning with the same report. Regardless of what the economists say – some say it's great out there, others say it's dire – for my five small business friends and me, we're feeling squeezed. Pressure. One friend desperately needs orders. And when these times happen, he must remember to do the thing that's gotten him out of these pressures several times before. He has a beautiful piece of property, and he has to remember to sit comfortably and look out over the expanse – over the pasture and at the trees and the pond. That view provides inspiration and creativity. He has to remember to do it. Otherwise fear and worry will have him buzzing around thinking that busyness is the solution. Another needs walk-in traffic to his store. And for him, busy hands set his mind to creatively solving his problems. He takes on big projects knowing that somewhere along the line something will trigger a solution to his problem. Busyness presents him a solution. But the question comes back to what are the ingredients we're putting into ourselves so that when we're squeezed something positive comes out? Life's going to squeeze you. For the vast majority of us, it has already, I'm sure. How are you preparing for the inevitable squeeze? Have I prepared appropriately for this squeeze? What are the ingredients I'm putting in? And what's the pressure doing to them? Time will tell. Assuming the squeeze ends at some point, I can then look back and evaluate. Right now, my effort includes a work ethic having me make lots of phone calls to interact with old colleagues and working to meet new ones. I'm forcing curiosity by asking them "what's new?", "what's going on?", "where's your pain?" I'm working hard to keep a positive attitude about letting go of what's always worked in favor of trying something new. I'm asking, "What do people want from me?" not stating "Here's what people should want from me." These success ingredients I've used before but I'm having to create new variations. I'm working to embrace the struggle. To embrace the squeeze. Because, so often, this is where the good stuff happens. And I'm counting on it again. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.

Lent
Mardi Gras ended Tuesday for Cam. Immediately following Mardi Gras is the beginning of Lent and Cam struggles with what sacrifices he should make. ----- Lent. I struggle with Lent every year. How much suffering is enough to prepare my soul for the Easter arrival of the Lord? Is there enough? Who knows. There's always someone suffering more; someone taking it to the next level. As a child it was ice cream. I gave up ice cream every year and dutifully reported it to my religion teacher as the assignment instructed. I love ice cream, vanilla especially. In fact, I've created an association called the Vanilla Ice Cream Eaters of America Social Aide and Pleasure Club. It's known by its acronym: VICEA. Our motto is "It comes from Udder Space" and our logo shows a scoop of vanilla with Saturn rings around it and a Holstein cow walking across it. We've had a Facebook page since 2008 edited by Holt Stein. It has fifteen members. However, I don't eat vanilla like I used to. It's gotten expensive. That plus my waist size. Giving up ice cream is, well, too easy. I love the stuff but giving it up wouldn't equate to enough suffering. A friend from long ago gave up everything containing wheat for lent. Everything. That's a lot of stuff. She had to pay close attention to everything she ate. Anything with flour. All beer. Bunches of stuff. She was the same person who kept a bowl of peanut M&Ms at her front door and allowed herself one M&M per day. No more. I eat peanut M&Ms by the double fist full. If they're in front of me, I eat them. I can't stop. She had a degree of self-control that is unrelatable. Another friend gave up alcohol a few years ago. However, he had devised a chart of "skip days" where he could drink. He explained all this over a beer during Lent, by the way. His skip days were quite frequent, and it appeared to the rest of us like they related to the days that he wanted a drink. I was not impressed with his Lenten suffering. Mainly because there wasn't any. The good book says we're created in the image of the Lord. So, imagine hearing prayers saying "I'm planning to remember a big event in your life in about forty days. To prepare properly, I'm implementing things to temporarily remove joy from my life." I'd say, "Wait. Pardon me? Say that again. Is that what I'm supposed to want from you?" One year I tried to drink more water for lent. The health effects of more water and all that but it's not the same. The gest of lent is giving up something you enjoy. And I'm not sure what to think about it. All the hard-fast black and white rules that I learned as a child have faded into grey. I wish they hadn't. I knew the rules, I followed the rules, and I counted on the rules to take care of me. It was easier following and never questioning. Now, I question. A lot. And, believe it or not, it's made me a better follower. However, I still don't know what to do about lent. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Dry January
On this week's Keepin' it Real, Cam Marston has thoughts about this upcoming weekend. Mardi Gras is on us down here in Mobile, and that leads to some tough decisions. ----- Dry January ended last week. Dry January followed soaking wet, sodden to the bone December. I've never done Dry January before and after sodden December, I needed to give it a try. Aside from one small drink to celebrate my daughter's twenty-first birthday, I drank no alcohol for thirty-one days. I'm not sure I've done that since I was a teen. The net result? I lost nine pounds. I slept very well every night for a solid month. I was eager to get out of bed each morning. All in all, Dry January was a hit. And I was surprised and thrilled with how easy it was to do. I'm now struggling to decide if I ever want to go back? I'm pretty sure the answer is No. And, my friends, that's huge. Some of my favorite people are the guys I gather with every Thursday evening after work. We've done it weekly for ten years at the same table. We talk and we chat. We rib each other like guys are prone to do. And we have a beer or two. In early January, I avoided those Thursday gatherings, afraid that seeing a cold beer would tempt me too much and I'd cave. And I might have. However, by late January I had developed confidence in my Dry January and I was joining my group and ordering a NA beer. What I learned in Dry January is that I'm not nearly as funny as I thought I was back in December. And maybe even for a decade before that. For years I've laughed at my jokes until tears poured from my eyes. And my friends were hilarious, too. Well, in Dry January, nobody was funny. Especially me. A different friend hasn't had a drink in over ten years. I now feel embarrassed about the times I've been with him with a few beers in me and I realized he wasn't laughing at what everyone else thought was hysterical. In Dry January, it became clear why. And I'm not sure what's gonna happen. This new me is fond of this new me. But I liked the old me, too. And as of today, we're entering the teeth of the Mardi Gras celebration here in Mobile. Mardi Gras about silliness and revelry and I enjoy both of them and a drink always helps with both of them. It's a quandary. I know that creating a grand drinking strategy for Mardi Gras is foolish. Temptation is everywhere and I know myself well enough to know that I manage temptation poorly. However, my uncle told me that he stopped smoking by telling himself that when he wanted a cigarette, if he still wanted one in ten minutes, he'd smoke one and not feel bad about it. Gradually he stopped wanting them at all. I'm going to adopt his strategy and call it "the ten-minute delay plan for an uncertain semi-reformed drinker." If I want a drink, I'll wait ten minutes. After ten minutes, If I still want one, I'll get one. And won't feel bad about it. And if you spot me laughing hard with my friends, you'll know what happened. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
God Stop
What do you call it when your certain plans are suddenly upended? They're changed with no warning? You call it a God-stop. On this week's Keepin' It Real, Cam shares his experiences with them. ----- A friend told me a story about how he had applied for a job a long way from home. His potential new employer had said they were going to make a very attractive offer. My friend and his wife began discussing selling their home and moving their kids to a new school. It was certain to happen and then…it didn't. The job offer never came. His calls to the new employer to get an answer or a simple explanation went unanswered. "I've been in business a long time," he said, "and no one had ever disrespected me like that before." He had already left his former employer and was now jobless. He was crushed and wondered what he was going to do. Over lunch my friend told me the business he was now a part of was about to sell and some of the sale would come his way. The new role had been a perfect fit for him. His talents soared there, his skills were cherished, and his team had come to not only rely on him, but to really like him. It was the best job he'd ever had, he told me. "What about the other job? The one they never called you back?" I asked. "It was a God stop," he said. "That's the only explanation I have." A God stop. Where a part of the Master's plan is to firmly close the door on what we thought was certain. A divine interruption. No explanation can be offered other than the supernatural. How many God stops have each of us had? Lots, I suspect. And in hindsight, they're always for the best. Yet that's the very problem with God stops. It's only in hindsight that we recognize them. In the moment, they're agonizing. They feel like abandonment. They feed our uncertainties and escalate our fears. In the moment, they're awful. And we don't recognize them as God stops. They look and sound and feel like failure. My focus in such instances is too often on what didn't happen. The narrative I had created in my mind of what I wanted, of what I thought was certain, was beautiful. It was leading me to the land of milk and honey. I struggle to focus on what might now happen because I was so embedded in narrative I had created. Perhaps this new destination will be even greater. If we lived in the now, as countless sages have told us we should for millennia, God stops would never cause a problem. If we could manage our imagination, God stops wouldn't feel like disappointment. Instead we – or at least I - live in the future with a runaway imagination and I often struggle whenever my plans meet a God stop. I focus on the door that's just closed instead of stepping back to find a new door that's standing wide open. The goal, I guess, is to recognize the moment for what it is. It's not failure. It's not a loss. It's a God stop. And somewhere nearby a wide open door is waiting for me. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Twenty-One
Cam spent Monday evening at a big party for a small group of twenty-one year olds. To say the least, times have changed. Here's what he saw. ----- A moment after midnight on March 4th, 1990, I stood on a barstool and declared loudly to the packed bar that I had just turned twenty one years old. I was in Boulder, Colorado. A moment later the bouncer had me by the shirt and said, "That means you used a fake ID to get in", which was true. I was nearly carried, my feet barely touching the ground, to the door and tossed into the street. Oddly enough, the same story happened to my wife, long before we met. It was a stroke after midnight on July 13th, 1991, and she was on Franklin Street in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Her declaration was not made atop a bar stool. She was greeted by cheers from her friends and was bought a round of drinks. In both instances, our parents were not there. And, in both instances no evidence exists that any of it ever happened. Monday night in Oxford, Mississippi, I was with my favorite oldest daughter in a bar called The Summit. All her crowd was there plus more. She and her friends who had turned twenty-one over the Christmas break banded together to celebrate. My wife and I were invited. We were, in fact, encouraged to come. Decorators created an Instagram-able background including a balloon-arch and streamers. There was a platter of cupcakes in the shape of 21. Picture books were created for each of the birthday girls. The girls wore bawdy signs around their necks for the night. After a couple hours, my wife and I sensed the tide turning, the energy increasing, and a bar full twenty-one-year-olds were about to begin doing what bars full of twenty-one-year old's do. My wife and I paid our part of the tab, hugged our daughter, posed for countless photos with her, and got the hell out of there. This is a low estimate, but approximately 55 million billion photos were taken in the two hours of the party. This is not the way I would have wanted it, I kept thinking to myself. But the truth is, I didn't have a pocket full of magic back in 1990. While it was her celebration, the cell phone and its camera, this magical device, drove the show. I read somewhere that today mankind takes more photos in one day than we did from the invention of the camara roughly two hundred years ago to today. The picture books she was given were made quickly compared to what it would have taken back in 1990 – imagine developing 35mm film, duplicates, photo booths. The sign she wore was full of images, printed as a whole, and laminated. It certainly took some effort, but simple compared to what it would have taken back in the day. As much as I wanted to flinch, she and her whole party were a reflection of what technology has created. A natural consequence. Said another way, while I'd like to think differently, had the technology been available, I would have probably wanted the same. But I am indeed happy my parents weren't there. And I am indeed very happy no evidence remains. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Resident Cynic
My real name is Charles. But Chuck and Chas live inside me. Chuck was trying to get out this week. Chas had to try to keep in under control. ----- An icicle hangs from the roof of my house. I'm looking at it but still can't quite believe it. Icicles are very rare here. Usually reserved for the freezer door that was left open overnight. A winter storm blew through and Mobile, Alabama is doing what it usually does when it gets below average cold – we're freaking out. School is cancelled, quote, "out of an abundance of caution" for the kids. There's no rebuttal to that phrase. It can't be argued. Right now, my kids are picking up their friends to go to lunch. School was cancelled to keep the kids off the hazardous roads. The roads are fine, and my kids are loving it. There's no abundance of caution in them. There's about to be an abundance of Chick Fil A. I learned yesterday my generator that died at 3am in last week's storm is unrepairable. It's dead. The technician, a very nice guy, felt guilty telling me the replacement part I bought won't work due to the alternator being destroyed by what was probably a lightning strike. Replacing the alternator would cost as much as a new generator. So, it's dead. Here, he said, is his bill for the replacement part and for his time replacing it even though the generator is unfixable. That stung. We are but nineteen days into 2024 and Nick Saban has retired, the election year chaos has started, we've had a horrible storm that knocked out the power then its lightning killed my generator, it's now too cold to go outside, there's an icicle on my roof, and my kids should be in school but instead are at Chik Fil A with their friends. If I could rhyme all this with beer and mud and tire it would be a country music smash. A cynic lives inside of me. He's powerful. I call him Chuck. When he gets out, he becomes uncontrollable. He runs amok. It's been a life-long challenge to keep Chuck at bay. And it's times like this that he's banging at the door to tell the world what he thinks. What he sees. What the real truth is. And what's wrong with everybody. Chuck is a know it all. And I don't like him, but Chuck does live here. And it's on days like today that he rages to get out. Chuck's foil, lives here, too. His name is Chas. Chas finds what's right and what's good and what is working. Chas sees the bright side. His cup is half-full. It took years for Chas to show up. And Chas has to be groomed and fed and nurtured every single day or he'll vanish. Chuck needs nothing to thrive. He feeds on everything. Nurturing Chas requires discipline. He's delicate but vital and I need him now. Chuck says it's one skinny icicle, why are my kids out of school? Chas says the surprise on my kid's face from no school today was wonderful to watch. I'm Cam Marston and on behalf of Chuck, Chas, and myself, we're just trying to Keep it Real.
Kids These Days
Storms blew through Monday night. It was tough weather. I survived. My daughter? It was the aftermath of the storm that nearly broke her... ----- My favorite oldest daughter is upset. "I just can't deal with this. It's just too much," she keeps saying. She's leaving for a bit. She needs to get out of the house. "I'm going to Starbucks," she says. "I'll be back later." My wife and I say nothing. You see, the power is out. The big storms that cruised through Monday night left us in the dark. It's now Tuesday afternoon and the power company estimates another thirty hours or so before power returns. And the home generator, which kept a few rooms working, died about 3am Monday morning. My daughter needs her wireless, her internet. Apparently, the LTE signal she's getting is not quick enough for her. And she has no place to charge her phone. So, Starbucks. We have water here. We have food. It's cool outside but not cold. We have plenty of clothes and blankets. We won't freeze. We have places to go to bathe. But she needs her internet. She waited patiently for it to load but the LTE took too long. She needs to Snap and to Insta more quickly. This adversity, well, for the moment, is just too much. Somehow, she slept through the storms. The rain lashed the house. The wind howled. The power flickered on and off through the night, causing countless electronics to beep each time. My wife and I could hear horns and sirens as tornado warnings sounded. There were sounds of firetrucks and ambulances throughout the night. My daughter awoke the next morning and asked what was going on. My wife and I were zombies – we had been up all night ready to react to any roof leaks, trees on the house, windows broken, or windows blown open. How she slept through it I don't know. My wife and I were boiling a pot of water for coffee on the gas stove still dressed from last night when my daughter walked in in her pajamas. I suppose there was something that, as a child, I felt I couldn't live without. Something that I needed so badly that not having it was "just too much" like my daughter and her speedy internet. What was that thing? Was it my love for my stereo? I loved my stereo. My car? Some sort of clothing? I don't know. What did my parents think when I couldn't get that thing and it crippled me? I'm sure they worried about me. Worried about my future. Worried about their future if people like me may someday be in charge. The same worries that I have. That we have. The first comment that I'm aware of about one generation looking at the next and worrying about the future comes from Socrates 3400 years ago. 3400 years ago. So, for centuries, centuries, generations have looked at the generations coming behind them and shaken their head. And yet we seemed to have made it. We always survive. Things generally get better. 3400 years of precedent suggests it will again. So, I'll button my lip, and I'll drink my coffee. It's the best I can do. Otherwise, it's just too much. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
God On Our Side
On New Years Eve, I watched a conversation in my kitchen that was exactly as I hoped it would be. ----- A friend called this past fall. He said, "The Holy Spirit told me to call you and tell you the Holy Spirit wants you and me to make a podcast together. Will you help me?" My goodness. What do you say to that but "Sure. I'll help you." The podcast is about his spiritual journey. He brings his friends on from time to time to tell their stories. My job is to keep us focused on the topic, keep us at around twenty minutes per episode, and toss out a contrary opinion that will help the host clarify his position or story. The podcast is called Jeff's Last Cast. If you're the spiritual type and enjoy podcasts, let me know what you think. It's triggered some soul-searching in me. One thing I've observed from these podcasts is that everyone believes that God supports their decisions and behaviors, whatever they are. And I think this is universal. We all believe that what we're doing is inspired by God, blessed by God, encouraged by God, or approved by God. We all believe God approves of what we're doing. For example, the vigilantes that stormed into Israel in early October were doing it because it was God's will. We've labeled them terrorists, but they believe they were God's mercenaries. They screamed prayers as they killed. And Israel's punishing response is certainly God's will. The loss of life, the remarkable destruction, the hundreds and hundreds of bombs are justifiable for the harm caused by Hamas. God approves. Both sides are acting with God's blessing. There are similar beliefs since the rise of Donald Trump. Some say he's God's gift to humanity and our nation. God chose him for us. Trump has, in fact, said this himself. He's deeply flawed, people say, but aren't we all and who are we to judge? He's the one God wants. Those that oppose Trump are convinced that God wants to prevent Trump from having any influence over our nation ever again. Trump is the nearest thing to the anti-Christ our world has ever seen, and God commands us to fight him. Their protests, their online videos, their lawsuits are all weapons in God's arsenal to prevent Trump's rise to power . Both sided equally convinced that God is pushing them forward. The same arguments exist about Biden. Many say God wants him out. Many say God wants him in. They both site Bible passages and signs from above to justify their stances and their actions. They fight each other. They scream at each other. They grow red in the face. Both exactly the same. Both convinced they're backed by God. Honestly, I don't know what to think. But on New Years' Eve I watched and listed as two great friends quietly, calmly, and respectfully debated politics. They listened to each other. They didn't interrupt. They considered the other's point of view. They asked thoughtful questions. In the end they acknowledged that they could see the other's point of view but respectfully said they couldn't adopt it for themselves. They smiled. And the conversation moved on. Exactly, I think, the way he would have wanted. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Solstice
Yesterday was the winter solstice. Brings back memories... ----- Yesterday was the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year. Said another way, there is more darkness on December 21st than any other day. It's also the day I got engaged many years ago. The story I like to tell is that my wife, who was then a collegiate volleyball coach, was watching VHS videos of players she was hoping to recruit. I asked her to stop the video and pay attention to me for a moment or two. She reluctantly did with a "this better be good" expression. I asked her to marry me. She considered the proposition. She looked me up and down a few times. She remained quiet for a terribly uncomfortable amount of time and finally said "Ok" and then hit play on the VCR and returned to her work. She'll deny much of this story, by the way. It's usually the darkest day of the year that I begin my annual Christmas panic purchases. I fear that I've underperformed with the gift giving; that my gifts won't amount to enough. I blow through my preset budgets and start tossing stuff under the Christmas tree in a panic. My kids never mind this. My wife says you've done too much, you've gone too far. She's never returned any of the gifts I get her, by the way. She says "You've gone overboard" as she takes her bounty with her to the back of the house. And I get the same complaints from kids every year. "Dad," they say, "you're too hard to buy for." They're right. Like most fathers I tend to get myself what I want. Every year I struggle to get my father something and this year he flat our said "I don't want anything. Nothing. Really. Nothing. I'm trying to get rid of all the stuff I have." However, I'll get him something. It'll may be a new phone charger. The one he has is quite dated. It's powered by a gerbil on a wheel and takes all night to charge his phone. However, I struggle with the question "Is a phone charger the right gift to give your father?" Seems very impersonable. My grandmother used to give the gifts she received back. She'd say, "I've enjoyed it for many months. Thank you very much. Now I'm giving it back to you." We started buying her gifts with that in mind – what will I want in the spring that I can give her for Christmas? Incidentally, my wife and I married on the summer solstice. We got engaged on the winter solstice and married on the summer solstice. We realized this years later. So my wedding day was absolutely the longest day of the year. That cannot be denied. It's all in how you say it. As 2023 winds to a close, I wish you a happy holiday season and a Merry Christmas. Try to slow down. Find a warm fire and stare into it for a while. Fires make good company. There is stress all over during the holidays, but for a short time, try to sluff it off and sit quietly. I'll do the same. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Leena's China
A family tree of photographs is at the top of the stairs at my father's house. ----- A picture hangs at the top of the stairs at my parent's house. It's of my mother's grandmother, my great grandmother. I think it's Grandma Leena. My father and I were trying to figure out who it was. My mother had told me about the picture and about Grandma Leena for years. I never listened. There are a bunch of other pictures. At the top, near the ceiling, are pictures of my mother and father's family and they form a family tree, coming together, picture by picture, generation by generation, to a picture of my father and mother with my brothers and me. It's nice. It's my roots. My mother's family was from the upper peninsula of Michigan. The cities of Ontonagon and Rockland come to mind. Her grandfather's corner drug store. Another's cattle farm. Mom wanted me to know about all these people. "You'll want to know, someday," she said. Mom told us that the happiest times of her life were her summer visits to her grandparents when she was girl. She wanted us to know this. She wanted us to carry her summer memories on . Afraid that with her death they'd be gone. And they are. She died a while back. In a box in my father's attic is Grandma Leena's wedding China. It's carefully wrapped in brown paper. Each piece brittle and delicate. Mom loved it. My father and I looked at the box. "It's all hand painted," he said. My mother's handwriting across the top. Some of the China visible inside. "You want it?" my father asked? "No. I don't think so," I said. "But don't throw it away. Maybe I will someday." That China just sits in the box. I don't know the last time the box was opened. A decade, maybe. If I were to take it, I'd put the China in my attic where it may sit for decades more. Prior to my mother's death, she shared a lot of stories with us. And when she could no longer talk, she asked us to tell her stories of our memories of her. Our favorite days. Our funny adventures. She wanted to know she wouldn't be forgotten. What is it in us that makes us want to be remembered so badly? And why do we hold on to things cherished by our loved ones that mean so little to us? I don't know. We were around the Thanksgiving table at my parent's cabin in the woods a few weeks back. Lots of food. Lots of smiles. It's a special place. My mother came to mind. But I wasn't remembering her. I was feeling her. She was there with me. In me. I don't know. It sounds so strange to say. It wasn't a memory. It was better than a memory. Again, I can't explain it. But I suspect it was it was the same way my mother felt when, every now and then, she opened the box, removed the paper, and held a piece of Grandma Leena's China. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to keep it real.
The Master is Dead
This may be a bit over the top but it's what it looks like to me: ----- The apprentice to master model in the workplace may be dead. It was declining prior to the pandemic but now, after the struggles from the pandemic are largely behind us, the apprentice to master model is gone. And it's a shame. Our society today, our workplace, our government, all of it comes from this model. It served us well. We've left it behind. Out to pasture. It's not a good thing. Begun in the trades ages ago, its basic tenants are that a person enters a trade or a workplace with little to no knowledge. They apprentice themselves to someone who can teach them – a master. The apprentice slowly learns, begins mastery of their craft, to become the master themselves. They then train the next generation and so on. Stone masons, mechanics, glass blowers, plumbers, electricians, lawyers, and accountants. All of them and many more. What brought apprentice to master to an end? A few things, the first of which is technology. Technology began its creep into the workplace two generations ago. The Baby Boomers were running the show. Boomers were first skeptical of stuff, and took it on reluctantly. In time, the power of technology became apparent and most Boomers didn't know how to use it. Who did? The Gen X'ers. The Boomers said "Hey Gen X. We need your tech skills. Please come work here, use this stuff, and teach me how to use this stuff." Thus, Gen X entered the workplace as the master. The young were teaching the old. As technology continued its creep, more and more Gen X'ers were needed to teach the Boomers. The technology changed and the Millennials then entered teaching the Gen X'ers. Again, the young teaching the old. The workplace desperately needed the young master. After the pandemic hit it changed again. No one could find workers. Workplaces were doing cartwheels to get employees with no proven experience, no discernable talents. Employers further sent apprentice to master into oblivion by giving the youngest workplace entrants perks and benefits and hybrid workplaces and flex schedules that previously only the masters could dare ask for. Tenure no longer mattered. And if the new employees didn't like the way they were treated, if they felt unappreciated, registered too many microaggressions, off they went to quickly find a new job. A California MD told me in her workplace the newest workers are weaponizing wellness. "I don't want to do that," they're saying, about whatever it is. "It will make me unwell." I was with a client in Dallas Wednesday. They're struggling. They make high pressure valves and pumps and such. They're struggling to find people to work. Making the items, installing the items, building things, and fixing things. To learn this stuff, employees have to apprentice to a master. No Google search, YouTube video, or ChatGPT will do it. There was a lot of white hair in the room of 850 people wondering how to keep their businesses going. I've studied workplace trends for twenty years. I didn't have much good news for them. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep it Real.
Sock Shoe Sock Shoe
Time to begin considering New Years Resolutions... ----- It's December first which means it's time for me to begin planning my New Year's Resolutions. I take these seriously and begin planning them a month out. Any fool can resolve to change things New Year's Day when they're hungover, their belly is flopping around, and they're full of regret. Drink less and get in shape is a New Years Resolution standard, like turkey for Thanksgiving. At my gym, I refer to the first fifteen days of the New Year as tourist season. People show up motivated and driven by the hopes of meaningful change. They're seldom stick around. Old habits take over. Their muscles start to hurt. And they justify not returning – it's too expensive, it takes too much time, it hurts too much, I wasn't as bad off as I had thought. All the things. Tourist season in the gym. It never lasts long. I have a standard secondary New Year's resolution I've recommitted to for many years. It's from the late New Orleans musician Alan Toussaint and it's this: Everything I do gonna be funky from now on. It's one of his songs. The first line is: Just be myself and do my thing. It's my reminder that fitting in is overrated. I know folks who try to fit in and find each of them, to a person, unremarkable. I resolve to not be that guy. I gonna try to be funky again this year. My primary New Year's resolutions a behavior deeply held. And old habit. If I can change a habit, I know I can tackle most things. A few years ago, I resolved to change how I wave when I'm in the car. We wave in my neck of the woods here in Mobile, Alabama. To walkers. To runners. To friends in cars. To strangers. We're quite friendly. And for years my wave was to raise my thumb, my index finger, my middle finger off the steering wheel and shake my hand back and forth three times. You've seen this wave. That along with a smile and I did it without thinking. But I resolved to change it. Not because something new would be better, but to prove I could change. And I did. I turned to the garage door wave. Four fingers around the steering unroll to a wave and roll back down – garage door style. It's a hard change. It took a while. But I did it. I've always been a sock sock, shoe shoe guy. Beginning January second - the first is a holiday, after all - beginning January second I resolve to become a sock shoe sock shoe guy. I've been a sock sock shoe shoe guy since I was a toddler, so this will be a big one. Sock shoe sock shoe is a bit inefficient, but I welcome some inefficiency to prove to myself I'm capable of change. Sock shoe sock shoe. It will be my focus in 2024. I did a practice run when I got dressed this morning and it went OK. This one's going to take some time. I felt like I was dressing another man. I'm Cam Marston and I'm just trying to Keep It Real.
Christmas Comes Early in Oxford
I took the Friday after Thanksgiving off but found an excellent stand-in. This commentary comes from one of my daughter's college writing assignments. ----- Christmas Comes Early in Oxford There are two types of people in this world, ones who celebrate Christmas months in advance and those who celebrate after Thanksgiving. I can honestly say that I put people in these categories. It is an essential question I ask when getting to know someone along with, "What is your name?" and "How old are you?" People are passionate about their category. Those who celebrate early say that their favorite holiday is Christmas and that it is superior to all other holidays, which is true. People that don't celebrate early say that they hate keeping up with the tree and that It's messy, which is also true. I visited Ole Miss as a high school senior. I got to Oxford in late October and toured the campus. It was beautiful. Throughout the tour, the guides talked about this place called "the square." I knew nothing about Ole Miss or Oxford but figured out that the square must be the heart of the town. My mom and I later found the square. We stepped up to it and I was shocked. THEY ALREADY HAVE CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS UP? Again, it was October. My family has never been the type to start celebrating Christmas early but, Oxford, MS was starting to celebrate even before Halloween. I was floored! How can people be celebrating Christmas without celebrating Halloween or Thanksgiving? The decorations are adorable, but it was way too early for this. Walking through the square I saw that not only were the Christmas decorations up around the square, but all of the boutiques were selling exclusively Christmas decorations and clothing. They even had their fall decorations on the sale rack. How can people be so obsessed with Christmas that they start celebrating two months early? I felt like I was standing in the middle of Whoville. My father thinks the tree should be put up on December 20th. My mother thinks Christmas decorations should start November 1st. It is a battle. It happens every year. My parents recruit my siblings and me to their sides. My mom usually pulls my sister and me because it means we can start our Christmas lists early. My dad tells my brothers that if we get a tree now then they'll have to put it up and keep it alive. We've had the same Christmas eve and Christmas day traditions since I was around four years old. They're full of memories. And I think this is why the city of Oxford, MS and people in general celebrate Christmas so early, they want to have the feelings that they have on Christmas morning for longer than just one day. People buy Christmas gifts over months because they get a rush when thinking how the present will look wrapped and under the tree. They want that rush all of the time. People want to be happier, and if putting Christmas decorations up sixty days before the actual event does that for them, I can let it slide. I'm guest commentator Reiney Marston and, on behalf of my father and me, we're just trying to Keep It Real.