Tuesday, July 2, 2019

S.U.V.


By Alex Hammond - 2003

My brand new SUV. When most people think about SUV's they probably imagine a big shiny new 


Expedition or 4Runner. But when I think of SUV, I think of my not so shiny sport utility van. That is my father's silly attempt at a positive connotation for the minivan. I later grew to loath that term. That's right, I drove a minivan as my first car my junior year of high school. This is a story of the emotional damage of my first car and how I managed to overcome it and actually become a better person. My junior year is the kind of year that would drive any kid into developing a great relationship with their counselor and I don't mean schedule changes.

Imagine a suburban school where the student parking lot looks more like Bill Gates's private collection compared to the teacher parking lot. These kids drive cars that can make any working adult jealous and to tell you the truth, I haven't seen too many teachers hanging around the student parking lot. Now imagine a 1993 green Dodge Caravan Sport. To be honest I really would like to know what “sport” they had in mind when Dodge named that car because it doesn't look sporty to me and I don't play badminton. It had a stylish crack in the window complementing the futuristic box approach that was only a mere shell to the luxuries within. The words“ no a/c” is worth thousands of degrees I mean, words. This particular van was also complemented with the sweet sound of squeaky brakes that could be heard for a two-mile radius. Please try not to drool on my essay I worked hard on it.

But I have to say it; this car is a masterpiece of degradation. It is a true spawn of evil, cursing each occupier with relentless shame and headaches. To shed some light on the situation, it originally came with tinted windows. Tinted windows would have been a blessing, but remember this car is a curse. The tint was peeling and eventually stripped prior to my ownership. Oh yeah, you’re going to love this one; it had an alarm! I can swear that I could take this “SUV” or opportunity cost, as some junkyards would call it, to the most criminally infested area in the world, and I could just leave it there overnight. On top of that, I could leave the keys in the ignition with all the doors wide open with the title taped onto the window next to a note that says “please steal me” and that curse would still be there in the morning, waiting to infect me or it's next victim with its' venomous reputation killing disease. 

Which brings me to my most embarrassing moment. Of course, the alarm has to fail at the worst time possible, keeping in the spirit of the curse. Now I have to open the car in the middle of the school parking lot and manually disarm the alarm, which goes off as soon as I open the door. Which is exactly what I least wanted, to attract attention to myself. So of course, everyone looks and sees me trying to turn off my alarm as I'm ducking trying not to be seen breaking into my own car. Much worse, that car out of all the cars in the parking lot, I had to be breaking into that atrocity. At this point the kid who rides his sisters’ bike to school has more dignity than I do. Oh yeah, and you know how the common myth of high school is that riding the bus is the most undesirable way of getting to school. Oh, how I envied those lucky kids on the bus at that moment.

Driving that monstrosity to school can only compare to one of those low points in one's life where there is nowhere to go but up. Which leads me to part of the story where I succeed and overcome this evil force clinging to my back, holding me down and cramping my style. The only way out is to get rid of it and that I did. I can recall many a time where I left the doors unlocked praying for some angel of peace and resolution (car thief) to steal my car, but no such luck. But during the summer after my junior year I took the initiative and sold my car for $660 more than what I had originally calculated its' total worth. This came out to be a total of $-10 dollars, thus ending the evil curse and relieving the young prince of the dreaded humiliation off of his shoulders. But only getting that eye sore out of my sight is not the way to success. Coming to terms and really being grateful for what I have is the real achievement. Being in that humble position is something that will always constantly remind me to be grateful and not to worry so much about image, which is sort of all you have in high school as sad as it sounds. That is how I overcame my junior year of high school. I learned some important lifelong character lessons; thus, improving my overall quality of life and taking one more significant stride towards self-actualization.

"Everything that happens, happens for a reason” someone once said. Through all the embarrassment and all the indignity the whole experience was worthwhile. One could even go, as far as to say, it was a blessing in disguise. Whatever you call it, it must have something to do with heredity, because my fathers' first car was a station wagon. Now as fate would have it; I am only continuing the family tradition. So someday I can only hope to tell my son when he gets his first car, about the important lesson I learned while driving my very first car, an SUV.

Monday, May 27, 2019

Once a Marine; Always a Marine




Robert Russell Hammond, my “Uncle Bobby” was the son of  a U.S. Army Calvary “Buffalo Soldier.” Uncle Bobby entered the U.S. Marine Corps as one of nearly 20,0000 African-Americans who broke the color barrier during World War II. His boot camp was at MonfortPoint Camp, Jacksonville, North Carolina.  By May 1943 Bobby found himself in action in the Pacific until the war’s end when he returned to civilian life.  However, in 1948 Bobby was called back to active duty for the United Nations peacekeeping action known as the Korean War.  

After Korea he continued his military career  by engaging in three combat tours in Vietnam.  Bobby retired from active duty in August of 1975 as a Master Gunnery Sergeant in the Marine Corps. In June 2012, Master Gunnery Sergeant/Sergeant Major Robert R. Hammond received the Congressional Gold Medal.  Uncle Bobby passed away on May 26, 2016 and was buried with full military honors (including a 21 gun salute) at Cheltenham Veterans Cemetery in Cheltenham, Maryland. 

Semper Fidelis - Always Faithful. The U.S. Marine Corps’ motto sums up the life of Robert Russell Hammond, my “Uncle Bobby” and all Marines who make the commitment on  a daily basis to protect our country by land, sea and air.



Once a Marine, Always a Marine. Uncle Bobby in Vietnam 2nd from left



Saturday, April 27, 2019

Up in the mountains














We use to meet from time to time up in the mountains. Let us return up high to where the air is so clear that we can send a clear transmission. Vader would agree (click).  

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Lex Talionis

The Code of Hamurabi the kings law from around 1754 BC predates the Hebrew Bible with it's Lex Talionis "An eye for an eye," doctrine. My interpretation of this principle of law is to insist on adequate monetary compensation for the victims of tort cases that I may represent in my work. 

Tuesday, March 12, 2019

Laugh and cry


Related imageLast night I dreamed I was on  a high tower looking down on people going about their lives below me. Then someone who appeared to be a man climbed up and joined me and asked me, "why are you here?"  I said to him,  "I want to see as many people as possible live out their lives."  "When you go back down," he said, "what will you do for them?" Right then I awoke from my dream and lay awake thinking that I should write down my  thoughts, but I had no writing materials. Instead I grabbed my phone and sent myself an e-mail with some of my thoughts and recollections from my dream. The next morning as I read my e-mail I realized that what I wrote was more like a prayer. A prayer that went something like; "Help me Lord to treat every person I encounter as someone to laugh with or to cry with." "Let me express to each person I find in my path, that they’re funny and that I enjoy laughing with them. But if they are going through something sad, let me walk with them for part of their journey and pray with them to be alright."  

I know that it sounds overly simple and very impractical because some of the people that we meet are either going to be hostile towards us or afraid of us, if not both. Yet, something tells me that this won't be too much of a problem. That's because most of the people we meet on a day to day basis are people just like us who are living out their lives. They are the people I saw from high up on that tower I dreamed of.




Tuesday, January 22, 2019

Let my record show


Let my record show, that ever since I made Jesus Lord my life has changed.
I was sick now I’m well
I was blind now I see
I was deaf now I hear


I was lame now I run
I was a slave now I'm free
I was dead now I’m alive
I’m not so proud anymore
I still have selfish wants, but now I let go and let God. 

I’m still a sinner, but now I have His power to throw off sin more quickly.  
I had a guilty conscience but now my conscious is clear.
What I received one day was grace and absolution along with healing and this was nothing short of a miracle. 
There is nothing special about me. I did not earn or deserve this grace but the beautiful thing is is that you can have this miracle too by stepping towards God. He will meet you more than halfway there. 
More:
Read Matthew 11:1-6 and enjoy Anointed I Adore You an uplifting music video.

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

The Great Migration




Europeans migrated to North America (The New World) 400 years ago in great numbers, they often came violently and were unstoppable.  Now the descendants of native Americans come in ever increasing numbers from Mexico and from Central and South America and no wall, no political rhetoric or anyone’s going to stop the great migration. Call it Montezuma’s REAL revenge if you will.  I believe that our pre-historic human migrations, the European migration and today’s world wide migrations of peoples are all natural occurrences in nature. Migrations have always existed just like the ocean tides have always existed because of the gravitational attractions of the sun and the moon on the oceans of the Earth. 

Maybe our efforts as a species would be better spent not fighting these migrations, but in finding new places for people to migrate to. Aside from the Earth's land mass there are also even larger areas right on the surface of our oceans and also under them that people can inhabit. But the ultimate dream would be to travel outwards to new worlds among the stars. I sure hope that we won't find a wall blocking us from where we need to go. But if we do encounter one I'm sure that we’ll find a way past it; it’s in our human nature to overcome obstacles.