Thursday, September 20, 2012

Two miracles


If you've kept up with my blog(s) for any length of time, you have no doubt read me saying that I'm a miracle from God due to the fact that I was born with Hydrocephalus and have survived to be 48-years old. Well, after yesterday, I feel that He has touched my life with a miracle - actually two of them - yet again. I say that because, about six weeks ago, I started having trouble with atrial fibrillation where the top two chambers of my heart don't really beat efficiently, they basically just quivered. The result was I stayed weak, tired, and had to seriously curtail my activities -- even my writing which I dearly enjoy. What made it even worse was the fact that, even though my cardiologist had put me on medication, I was still having episodes and still finding my self having to go to the ER at Emory Midtown Hospital. Based on this, he said he wanted to do a heart cath, and that was done yesterday. Therein lies the first miracle: NO BLOCKAGES WERE FOUND! As soon as I found out that I needed a heart cath, I put a message up on Facebook asking my family and friends to be in prayer and their prayers were answered! He did find one thing . . . I have a enlarged aorta which he thinks was the result of my having hypertension since I was a teenager. Even that, however, wasn't causing a problem, but he said we would continue to monitor it.

The second miracle took place while I was waiting to be taken down for the cath. My dad and my step mom had come up to be with us during the procedure and my step mom and I had the opportunity to have a long, heart-to-heart talk . . . something we hadn't done since I was little. My biggest question was "can I call you mom". We both teared up and she said she had been waiting for the day I would ask her that because, even though she's my "step", I've always felt for her like she was my mom. So, what had been a day that filled me with fear and dread, ending up being one of the best days I've had in a long time! Thank you Jesus!

-- Walter

The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much.

 -- James 5:16 (KJV)

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Some people . . .

. . .


. . .are just so incredibly mean-spirited when it comes to persons with disabilities. For example, last night I was surfing around on YouTube when I came across this video of "Praise Him, Praise Him" by Fanny J. Crosby. For those who might not be familiar with Ms. Crosby, here is a link to her profile on Wikipedia: Fanny Crosby; she became blind during an infancy so, as many sightless people do, she wore dark glasses. Well, as I was enjoying the video, I was also reading the comments and came across one that said "they shouldn't post videos by people who don't have eyes". How could people be so dumb and mean-spirited? Granted you have to look due to the quality of the old sepia print, but you can make out the frames of her glasses.

I thought it ironic that I came across that comment now as September is Hydrocephalus Awareness Month -- another condition where it's sufferer's are made fun of because of our larger-than-normal heads. I use the term "our" because I am an adult survivor of Hydrocephalus. Most of my life - including the adults years - has been marked by people who made fun of my appearance or made ugly, rude comments. I remember as a junior in high school, I had a freshmen who wanted me to headbutt him just to see if it would cause my head to "bust open" (apparently he compared my head to a ripe water melon). I urge you, if you want to learn more about hydro, just ask me and I'll be glad to explain it. Also, you can check on Facebook as there are a number of Hydrocephalus Support groups on there. Just get educated . . . learn the facts!

Me as a child


Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Friends tweet before dying in Md. train derailment  | ajc.com

Friends tweet before dying in Md. train derailment  | ajc.com

Headlines like those above are why pictures like this scare me to death:


Yes, the railroad track makes for a scenic backdrop, but if a train comes along - particularly on a curved track like in the picture - it's not going to be able to stop in time. I did a little research - just to make sure improvements  in technology hadn't decrease the time it takes for a locomotive running at full track speed to stop - and it's going to take that train one (1) mile to stop once brakes are fully applied. But, being hit by a train isn't the only hazard posed by being on the tracks. According to the article above, the two girls in Maryland where apparently knocked from the trestle by the impact of the accident, fell to the street below, and were then buried by coal falling from the hopper cars. Personally, I don't care to fall from that height and then have - approximately - 150 TONS land on top of me!

Don't get me wrong, I like the old-style trestles too, but I would never put myself at risk by sitting on one. Despite their large appearance, they are actually very narrow along the rail bed -- usually just wide enough for the train to clear.

-- Walter

Saturday, July 28, 2012

I completely agree with Chic-Fil-A

Henson Company breaks off relationship with Chick-Fil-A over gay marriage stance

The Jim Henson Company has announced via it’s Facebook page that it no longer wishes to partner with Chick-Fil-A because Henson’s company supports gay marriage.
The Huffington Post:
“… on Friday, the Jim Henson Company posted the following statement to their Facebook page:”
“The Jim Henson Company has celebrated and embraced diversity and inclusiveness for over fifty years and we have notified Chick-Fil-A that we do not wish to partner with them on any future endeavors. Lisa Henson, our CEO is personally a strong supporter of gay marriage and has directed us to donate the payment we received from Chick-Fil-A to GLAAD. (http://www.glaad.org/)”
“With this, The Jim Henson Company joins the ranks of Boston Mayor Thomas Menino, who has vowed to block Chick-fil-A from opening a restaurant in the city, office star Ed Helms who tweeted that the chain had “lost a loyal fan,” and the countless individuals who have taken to social media to voice disapproval, including those planning a National Same Sex Kiss Day on August 3, in condemning the Chick-Fil-A’s CEO’s opposition to same sex marriage. “
A fan site reports that Chick-Fil-A kids meals were featuring a Jim Henson Creature Shop make-your-own puppet toy from mid July to Aug. 18th.

How do you feel about  Chick-Fil-A’s stance on gay marriage? Does it influence your decision to buy your food there either way? If you are offended, it is hard to give it up? (That is some yummy chicken.) Do you think the owners should stop talking about their views?

(I know this is a polarizing issue but please try to stay polite and discuss it like adults. No name calling please.)


****

Let me say up front, that I too am "guility as charged" because I support the Biblical definition of marriage. Throughout the Bible it states that marriage shall be between an man and a woman, not a man and a man . . . as a matter of fact, the latter is considered an abomination to God! Why then is there all of this furor when a Christian business owner states publicly that he supports it? Mr. Cathy didn't say that Chick-Fil-A wouldn't serve gay customers, only that it doesn't support them joining in a marital union.

All of the furor isn't going to change how God looks at homosexuality, so why do folks think think boycotting such a fine business is going to change the Cathy family's resolve to operate it based on Biblical principles. My wife and I have always enjoyed eating at the Chick-Fil-A after we get off work - as our finances allowed us to eat out - and we're going to do it again August 1st  to show our support on "Chick-Fil-A Appreciation Day"

Until next time . . .

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

This article has me seeing red!


Junior high students place garbage in 9/11 memorial

My wife and I had been running errands this afternoon and I read the above article when I sat down to catch my breath after we got home. According to the blog, written by George Mathis of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, a group of junior high school students were on a summer field trip to the 9/11 memorial when they "tossed garbage" into the reflecting pool. That in its self was bad enough, but some of the respondents to the blog attempted to say that President Obama was responsible for the children's actions.  It seems like those who don't like the president will go to any extreme to place blame upon him, but these comments bordered on the ridiculous. I think my favorite comment - and one that was very appropriate - was made by a U.S. Marine returning from two (2) tours in Afghanistan, he suggested that they be sent for a two-week "vacation" at Paris Island. OORAH!

Until next time . . .

Monday, April 30, 2012

GBI Director has the right idea!

Georgia Bureau of Investigation director Vernon Keenan isn’t known for being soft on crime, but he is working to keep one class of “criminals” out of jail.

 

Keenan (pictured at left), like sheriffs statewide, contends law enforcement turns jails into asylums at huge human and financial costs. Now, a study in which the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) is partnering with the Georgia chapter of the National Alliance of Mentally ill (NAMI), shows how to keep people with schizophrenia, bipolar and other mental diseases out of jail, Keenan said.

“The project is designed to prevent the acutely mentally ill from routinely being incarcerated,” he said. “It is a humane program, but one that also has significant taxpayer savings. The participants have been arrested dozens of times and been in and out of jail, usually for minor crimes.”

NAMI got a $2 million grant from the nonprofit Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation and another $2.3 million from other donors recruited 100 mental patients from Georgia Regional Hospital in Savannah and assigned each patient to caseworkers who monitored medications and lifestyle. The two-year program ends next year.

The GBI flagged all the names in the law enforcement database so when an officer checks the database for any warrants, a message instructs the officer to call the caseworker before taking the patient to jail, usually for crimes such as criminal trespass, shoplifting, disturbing the peace or minor assaults, Keenan said.

The caseworker also gets an email about the arrest and contacts the officer at the scene. If the officer decides there is no public safety reason to take the person to jail, the offender will be handed over to the caseworker who will decide the most appropriate next move.

The project has had a few bumps, she said, especially when officers didn’t check the Georgia Crime Information Center. “Our patient No. 17 was totally psychotic several months ago and he went into a convenience store and started drinking a Coca-Cola and walked out of the store,” said Nora Haynes, who is overseeing the project. “That Coca-Cola ended up costing the taxpayers $1,160 because instead of checking the GCIC system, the officer just took him to the jail. It took us 21 days to get him out.”

Currently the project is only funded in 34 sparsely populated counties in southeast Georgia, but sheriffs across the state are paying close attention to its results. Last year, an investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported state jails house mentally ill inmates for months — even years — for minor crimes because they’re incompetent for trial.

“We’re doing absolutely the wrong thing by incarcerating people with mental illness,” said Oconee County Sheriff Scott Berry, president of the Georgia Sheriffs’ Association. “There has to be some community-based-response system that is set up not just in a few counties in Georgia but all of Georgia.

“It is not right to shackle a mentally ill person and throw them in the back of a patrol car. It is not humane.”

The costs also get extreme for both local tax dollars, which fund the jails, and state tax dollars, which fund psychiatric hospitals. Last year, metro Atlanta jails reported the mentally ill accounted for at least 20 percent to 30 percent of the inmates. Fulton County spent about $4 million on jailed mentally ill. Cobb County spent more than $1 million a year and DeKalb County officials said they spent $2.2 million in 2010.

State costs are even more dramatic. The 35 patients who have been in the study for at least six months have cost state taxpayers $2.5 million because of repeated stays — 458 in all — at Georgia Regional Hospital, 83 of the visits coming within six months before enrolling in the project, according to NAMI numbers.

Since joining the project, the 35 patients have only had 26 stays — with three patients being responsible for half that number.

Fulton County Commission Chairman John Eaves said the project sounded worth emulating. Local law enforcement has to move past jailing the mentally ill people, he said.

“There has to be a more effective and efficient means of dealing with this population,” he said. “If they are not a threat to society and their actions result from their mental illness, there should be a way of hooking them up with mental-health services.”

Haynes said legislators were impressed with the early results — at least enough to award $500,000 in state funding. Former first lady Rosalynn Carter, a longtime advocate for the mentally ill, also endorsed the program. Mental health advocates are putting strong hopes on Gov. Nathan Deal, who voiced support for drug courts and mental health courts as mechanisms to reduce the prison population.

Marietta police Chief Dan Flynn questioned whether the state would ever fund enough mental health treatment alternatives to make the program viable statewide. Critics contend the Legislature doesn’t fund mental health programs in part because local law enforcement dollars end up directed at providing some level of treatment in the jails.

“Common sense tells you that these people aren’t going to do any better in a jail locked up with criminals,” he said. “My only skepticism is what is the end game here? Are we going to have new places to send them for treatment?”
****

As someone who works with those with mental disorders, I can only say why didn't someone do this sooner?

-- Walter

Monday, April 16, 2012

What's happened to ethics and honesty?



Celestine Sibley
I've been writing now for just shy of thirty (30) years so I was influenced by what I considered some of the best editors / authors / writers to come out of the south. Names like Reg Murphy, Lewis Grizzard, and Celestine Sibley (pictured at left). I've always done my best to follow their example and be as down-to-earth and honest in my writing as is humanly possible. For that reason, this story from today's New York Times was disconcerting to me:


Simply put, what has happened to ethics and honesty among some writers? Please don't get me wrong, I don't mean to be holier-than-thou, because I've made errors in my writing too . . . but never an intentional misstatement of facts and never a factual error severe enough to warrant a full-blown retraction of what I wrote. I had what, at least one editor considered, a "bad habit" of double-checking and occasionally triple-checking my facts.  On more than one occasion, he and I locked horns because he changed my wording. (For some reason, I could never get him to grasp the concept that there's a legal difference between an incendiary fire and an arson fire and that they were terms that couldn't be used interchangeably. Of course this was also the man who thought nothing of going under yellow "Fire Line" tape to capture a picture he wanted.) Unfortunately it was actions such as his that lead to retractions like are discussed in the article above. I can only hope my unofficial mentors aren't spinning in their graves at what our beloved profession has become.

Until next time . . . 

Sunday, March 25, 2012

The hoodie caused it?



For those who might not know him, the man pictured at left is television host Geraldo Rivera. Over the years he has hosted talk shows and what, very, very loosely, might be called "news shows". Apparently aging (he's 68) hasn't helped him because he has again stuck his foot in his mouth saying that "his (Trayvon Martin's) hoodie jacket killed him". I had been kind of following this case over the last few days  -- especially after several protests have been held here in Atlanta as a result of the killing.

The more that I read, the more I'm sure that Trayvon Martin was the innocent victim of a man who fancied himself as "the savior of his neighborhood" and attempted to prove that by following a young man - actually a child since he was only 17 - and then shooting him at point-blank range even though the only thing Trayvon was "armed" with was a bag of Skittles and a glass of ice tea. Consider these facts that have just come to light since Friday: 1) initial news reports has stated the perpetrator was the captain of his Neighborhood Watch. Turns out he wasn't . . .he had named himself "captain"; and 2) He had been in contact with 911 on his cell phone and been told "Do not chase this person". Because of that "savior" mentality I mentioned, he disregarded what constituted a lawful order and did chase the young man, knocking him to the ground, and shooting him at point-blank range.

I can only hope that Geraldo - and others - who think "his hoodie killed him", will take note of the quote from Pastor Raphael Warnock of Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta who stated "As the church of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the church of non-violent struggle on behalf of justice, we thought it important for us to say that a hoodie is not weapon." Amen!

Until next time . . . 


Geraldo's comments

Monday, February 13, 2012

It's almost time for a haircut again

Blog author Walter Little, Jr. at the St. Baldrick's event.
It's hard to believe it's been almost a year since I was introduced to a wonderful organization called the St. Baldrick's Foundation (website). For those of you who might not be familiar with them, they are one of the leaders in the field of childhood cancer research. Their primary means of funding this research is by recruiting volunteers - such as myself - who don't have cancer to have their head shaved. This serves two key purposes: 1) it shows support for the kids who have lost their hair to cancer; and 2) It raises $$$. Last year, for example, we raised $23,000 -- more than four times the original goal our team had set!


For the second consecutive year, I will be part of the Barrow County Emergency Services team headed by Firefighter Rob Nowakowski. This year we're going to gather at Dakota's Grill and Bar in Auburn, Georgia (Direction below) on Saturday, May 17, 2012. Join us as we raise money for the kids and have a little fun, food, and fellowship all at the same time!

Hope to see you on the 17th!




Sunday, February 5, 2012

If you insist on saying something stupid . . .

Kelly: Glut of war wagons?

Sunday, February 14, 2010    Last updated: Monday February 15, 2010, 6:38 AM
By MIKE KELLY
RECORD COLUMNIST
|
One evening last week police rushed to a Carlstadt warehouse where five gunmen were reportedly taking hostages and stealing $50,000 in perfume.
Members of the Passaic County Sheriff's Department SWAT team taking part in a drill with their armored response vehicle recently.
JOE EPSTEIN/SPECIAL TO THE RECORD
Members of the Passaic County Sheriff's Department SWAT team taking part in a drill with their armored response vehicle recently. The usual phalanx of light-flashing patrol cruisers sped to the scene. But also showing up was a sleek armored truck from the Bergen County Police Department that seemed more suited to the bullet-riddled roads of Iraq and Afghanistan.
Welcome to the newest and perhaps most controversial piece of local crime-fighting equipment — a military-like war wagon that can stop a .50-caliber bullet and keep fighting through a radiation haze from a terrorist's dirty nuclear bomb. Do cops really need this? In the suburbs?
Critics call these trucks a waste. And with a price tag of $300,000 to $400,000, they make a good argument. But police say local tax payers aren't footing the bill — most trucks are bought with federal Homeland Security anti-terror funds. And what's more, cops say they have to be prepared for a local version of the Columbine and Virginia Tech school killings — or worse.
So far, police are getting their way. Eleven police agencies across New Jersey have purchased armored trucks in recent years. The state police have three. Along with the truck operated by the Bergen County Police SWAT team, the Passaic, Morris and Hudson county sheriff's departments each have their own armored vehicles. The good news is that not one of these trucks has had to stop a bullet. But that good news also raises a troubling question: Are police preparing for gunfights or other emergencies that almost never happen?
****
. . .How about do us all a favor and don't say it?  I had woke up early the other morning so I decided to get up and look at the news headlines on the Web. Wouldn't you know, one of the first things I can across was this Op/Ed piece - at least that's how I would categorize it - and my first thought was "this guy is an idiot". I can only wonder if, maybe as a young reporter, he covered a barricaded person incident or a hostage situation? If he did, he would surely realize that his argument is flawed and that these specialized units justify their costs (which I think is somewhat lower than the figures he quoted) after just one operation.

Until next time . . .


Cleveland, OH Police SWAT unit