4.29.2025

Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 466

 



Here are a few excerpts from a book I recently read, "Covenant of Water," by Abraham Verghese.


The chaos and hurt in God’s world are unfathomable mysteries, yet the Bible shows her that there is order beneath. As her father would say, “Faith is to know the pattern is there, even though none is visible.”



The Zamorin of Calicut was quite unimpressed by da Gama, and by his monarch who sent sea corals and brass as tributes, when the zamorin’s presents were rubies, emeralds, and silk. He found it laughable that da Gama’s stated ambition was to bring Christ’s love to the heathens. Did the idiot not know that fourteen hundred years before his arrival in India, even before Saint Peter got to Rome, another of the twelve disciples—Saint Thomas—had landed just down the coast on an Arab trading dhow?



“You did famously. It’s the same operation as you did in Scotland, just that the pathology is magnified.” 

That word captures Digby’s first impression of India. It’s a term he’ll use often when a familiar disease takes on grotesque proportions in the tropics: “magnified.”



A few weeks after they bury him, as life at Parambil struggles to find its new normal, she hears the sounds of digging and scratching in the courtyard just as she’s about to fall asleep. It stops. The next night, she hears it once more. She goes out to sit on the verandah, facing the sound. “Listen,” she says, “you must forgive me. I chastise myself for not coming to you after putting the children to bed. I fell asleep. I’m sorry we argued at dinner. I overreacted. Yes, I too wish it had been different. But it was just one night out of so many that were perfect, was it not? I hoped for many more perfect nights but each was a blessing. And listen: I forgive you. After a lifetime of goodness together, you were more than entitled to a tantrum. So be at peace!” 

She listens. She knows he has heard her. Because, as was always his way, he expresses his love for her the only way he knows how: through his silence.



Even before his brain digests these sights, his body—skin, nerve endings, lungs, heart—recognizes the geography of his birth. He never understood how much it mattered. Every bit of this lush landscape is his; its every atom contains him. On this blessed strip of coast where Malayalam is spoken, the flesh and bones of his ancestors have leached into the soil, made their way into the trees, into the iridescent plumage of the parrots on swaying branches, and dispersed themselves into the breeze. He knows the names of the forty-two rivers running down from the mountains, one thousand two hundred miles of waterways, feeding the rich soil in between, and he is one with every atom of it.



They are perfectly matched, he thinks, both of them weathered by grief and time. And what is time but cumulative loss?



The next morning, before he opens his eyes, he thinks, Let this be a bad dream. Let me see my mother moving about, and my father holding the baby. But his father’s skin is as cold as stone. He has forgotten to breathe. His features are distorted from the blisters, and a puzzled expression is frozen on his face. His sister’s mouth moves like a fish out of water, her chest heaving sporadically, and as he watches, it comes to a stop. Lenin has never seen a dead body, but he knows he’s looking at two. His mother still breathes. Something breaks inside him. He flings the empty water vessel against the wall. He shakes his mother violently. “How can I manage if there’s no one to care for me?” He falls on her, weeping. “I’m your baby. Please, Amma, don’t leave me.” Her eyes are rolled back, unseeing. She’s beyond hearing. 

It is hot outside, but he shivers with hunger and fear. Follow the straight path—that was the last thing his father said. He will do that. He will walk in a straight line till he gets food or drops dead. Nothing will stop him. If he comes to water . . . well then, he’ll drown.



The Condition now has a medical name and an anatomic location, which explain its strange symptoms: deafness, an aversion to water, and drowning. They’ve found the enemy, but the victory feels hollow. So what if they have a name for it? What use is that unless science and surgery can advance to where a child with this disorder can live a normal life without the risk of drowning, or hearing loss, or worse symptoms as they get older?



“Do you know, I only coined the name ‘Mar Thoma Medical Mission Hospital’? It flows like honey off the tongue, does it not? But before the foundation was poured, people shortened it to ‘Yem-Yem-Yem Hospital.’” Mariamma thinks it understandable: “M” on the Malayali tongue can come out as “Yem.” And Malayalis love acronyms. “Then they began calling it ‘Triple Yem Hospital’! Can you imagine? So vulgar, Triple Yem! Like some ointment for piles!” She doesn’t admit to him that Triple Yem has caught on—she’s as guilty as all the others.

4.28.2025

Grade A Meet

 

Nobody seems to have love for meetings. Meetings are seen as soul-crushing wastes of time, a dreaded distraction from the real work. Which is puzzling to me, because I think meetings should be the most important, impactful, and enjoyable part of work. What I realize is that people don’t hate meetings; they hate bad meetings. And if all their meetings are bad meetings, then of course they’re going to hate meetings. 

Which is unfortunate, because it’s not hard to have good meetings. But it is hard to have good work without meetings. 

Good meetings, I think, boil down to a short list of important norms that need to be consistently hewed to: 

1. Start and end on time. 

2. Be clear about who is to attend and why. 

3. Make an agenda, share it in advance, and make sure people are ready for the meeting before the meeting. 

4. Have someone run it, keeping an eye on time, participation, and the fundamental purpose of the meeting. 

5. Establish what decisions need to be made and actions taken, and then do it. 

6. Be clear about what we’re supposed to do now that we’ve met. 

Without meetings, we are basically doing our own thing. Oh sure, you might argue that there are many ways to communicate outside of a meeting, and you’d be right. A meeting doesn’t replace those communications. But, those communications do not replace the meeting, because it’s impossible to move a complex task forward without a lot of synchronous together time. 

I suppose bringing snacks and having someone running the meeting who is funny goes a long way, too.


4.24.2025

Artificial Sweetener

 

 


 

AI tools (I use Grok 3) have proven to be a revelation for this old dog at work, as I am able to pose query after query and get instantaneous answers that, while not perfect, are good enough to give me some bearings on a topic that I’m in need of orientation on. It’s no substitute for knowing and connecting with human experts, but obviously it’s far cheaper, faster, and more accessible. 

On the personal front, I like how I can pose fairly complex questions (some rhetorical, some personal) and get pretty darn good answers, and even better that the answers can get further refined as I provide new criteria or hone my preferences. So for example, “plan a 4-city 14-day trip to Vietnam where cost and convenience are primary and I want to stay in only non-chain hotels” or “what’s the best city for young professionals when factoring in housing affordability, living car-free, and access to amenities.” 

Again, it’s the comprehensiveness and quality of the responses, but also the fact that I can access this information literally within seconds and for no cost. I've often thought my dream job was being a talk show host, interviewing smart and famous people, and I realize that what I adore about such a role is not gawking at the people themselves as it is probing issues I want to learn more about. Which is basically what you can do to your heart's content when engaging with an AI tool.

Now, there remains no substitute for talking to people who are superior at the nuances needed to respond to such questions. But what a nice perk to have a resource that is always available and costs nothing in money or time. And, perhaps more approachable, at least when exploring a topic for the first time, on more sensitive matters like finances or health. No need to feel you are bothering them or intruding on something inappropriate - just ask away and ask away some more!

Strangely to me, the computers seem to be less good at quantitative matters. I asked it multiple times to give me the equivalent two cities in the US to Shanghai and Beijing in terms of how far it takes to get from one city to the other, and it came up with wildly different and largely incorrect examples. Maybe future versions will master what I would’ve thought was a pretty slam dunk type of query. 

Conversely, I have found them to be amazingly intricate when it comes to things that play into their core strength as large language models. For example, I was absolutely wowed by an immediate and detailed response to my query that they give me a plot synopsis of a modern-day "Divine Comedy," complete with who the play would skewer versus extol, and even which actors would play which characters. (Can you imagine Mahershala Ali as the main character, with Toni Colette as his companion Virgil?)

What has been your experience with AI tools? What do you use them for and how you found them?

 

 


4.23.2025

Watch List

 



About three years since my last such post, here is a list of everything I've watched with grades and commentary, and this time with the dates I started and finished them. You'll note that now that I've untethered watching from exercise, I've broadened away from just action to include drama and comedy. Many more titles to get to, as always send me your recoms!


24 S1-8 (192 x 42 min) 

1/2/22-5/21/22

Really fun concept + Kiefer Sutherland is the best = my heart was pounding the whole time.


Money Heist S1-5 48 x 50 min

5/21/22-7/9/22

This show makes me want to travel to Madrid to learn Spanish with a Spanish accent.


Blind Spot S1-5 100 x 42 min

7/9/22-9/25/22


Last Dance S1 10 x 50 min

9/25/22-10/9/22


Seinfeld S1-9 180 x 22 min

10/9/22-12/29/22

I was shocked to realize I'd previously only seen maybe 10 to 15 percent of these episodes before.


Mad Men S1-7 92 x 47 min

12/29/22-5/5/23


Better Call Saul S5-6 23 x 45 min

5/5/23-6/4/23


Friday Night Lights S1-5 76 x 43 min

6/4/23-8/27/23

Such a special show, whose characters will live in my heart for a very long time.


Black Mirror S6 5 x 50 min

8/27/23-9/4/23


Black Summer S1-2 16 x 40 min

9/4/23-9/16/23


The Walking Dead S10-11 46 x 45 min

9/16/23-11/12/23

Loved this show at first, but by these seasons I kind of wanted to be put out of my misery like so many zombies.


Jane the Virgin S1-5 100 x 42 min

11/12/23-2/18/24

Oh my heart, what a special show that I could not help but laugh and cry along with.


This is Us S1-6 106 x 42 min

2/18/24-5/27/24

Another tear-jerker, this one hits so so close to home for me.


Blacklist S7-10 

5/27/24-11/16/24


House of Cards  S1-6 73 x 50 min

6/2/24-8/22/24


Money Heist Korea S1-2 12 x 60 min

11/16/24-12/7/24


Fleabag S1-2 12 x 25 min

12/7/24-12/21/24

4.22.2025

Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 465

 


Here are a couple of excerpts from a book I recently read, "Collected Stories of Willa Cather."

She had come to believe, indeed, almost arrogantly in her own malleability and endurance; she had done so much with herself that she had come to think that there was nothing which she could not do; like swimmers, overbold, who reckon upon their strength and their power to hoard it, forgetting the ever changing moods of their adversary, the sea.



When questioned by the Principal as to why he was there, Paul stated, politely enough, that he wanted to come back to school. This was a lie, but Paul was quite accustomed to lying; found it, indeed, indispensable for overcoming friction. His teachers were asked to state their respective charges against him, which they did with such a rancour and aggrievedness as evinced that this was not a usual case. Disorder and impertinence were among the offences named, yet each of his instructors felt that it was scarcely possible to put into words the real cause of the trouble, which lay in a sort of hysterically defiant manner of the boy’s; in the contempt which they all knew he felt for them, and which he seemingly made not the least effort to conceal.











4.16.2025

Keep the Main Thing the Main Thing

 



As a businessperson, civic leader, dad, and person of faith, it's important to me that I know what the main thing is and that I keep the main thing the main thing. Life is complicated and full of nuances, so unnecessarily generalizing things is not helpful. But the only way to navigate all the details is to focus on what's most important.

This may seem blindingly obvious, but too often we are truly blinded by something besides the main thing, which takes us off course, sometimes to negative or even disastrous effect. It may seem simple but it is not easy to maintain a laser focus, distracted as we are by our egos, our tribal allegiances, or our need for basic essentials like affirmation and comfort.

Contemporary politics is a good example of this. When we lament that things have become so divisive in our country, I think what we mean is that we really want to make progress, and yet we keep getting caught in litmus tests and retribution and winning. When was the last time that you conceded that you were wrong on an issue, or that at the very least you didn't have all the information and therefore needed to withhold judgment and keep an open mind?

Whether we are scientists, urban planners, or everyday citizens, uncertainty and differences of opinion are good things to sit in and work through, towards a greater good, whether it is intellectual breakthrough, equitable cities, or a more just society. Instead, we despise the possibility that an issue is more complex than "I am right and the other side is wrong," and we get ourselves worked up based on that negative feeling, so much that we have lost the plot.

Keeping the main thing the main thing, in the real world that is messy and difficult, requires a willingness to keep an open mind when others have made up their mind, and a willingness to give room to crazy ideas from crazy people when others would have you repudiate them. To me, the things that I consider the main thing are important enough to me that I am willing to forego comfort, popularity, and self-righteousness to pursue them. I urge others to do the same.

4.14.2025

Legacy is Overrated

 


My stepping down as president of the consulting firm where I’ve worked for the past 19 years was a process over two years in the making. I am immensely proud, happy, and relieved that we were able to work together among our leadership team to develop an overall succession plan that governs how transitions will work in the future and that puts the first steps of the first transitions into motion. 

It just so happened that the specific timing of me stepping down and others stepping up coincided with the national discourse we were having around President Biden’s competency to run for reelection and his eventual stepping aside for Vice President Harris to take on the role of Democratic Party presidential candidate. Succession is difficult, messy, and fraught, and I watched that play out for the highest office in the land as well as my own professional status, not to mention countless other non-profit, for-profit, and government entities of which I am familiar. 

I will briefly say, about my own decision and action in stepping down from being president, that for me it’s the kind of role I enjoy and think I’m good at, but it’s also the kind of role I know I cannot hold for forever. And the temporal aspect of that responsibility is both a matter of personal preservation and work-life balance, it’s also to participate in the healthy and nature transition of older leaders giving way for younger leaders to ascend. Which, again, I’m immensely grateful we were able to figure this out. 

Which leads me to today’s topic, which is legacy, a word that gets thrown around a lot and quite frankly I’m starting to feel is overused if not outright abused. Leadership is a sacred responsibility, and I value highly the importance of good leadership in the for-profit, non-profit, and government sectors, whether holding my leaders to a high standard or holding myself to that same high standard when it’s my turn to lead. So please don’t misconstrue my comments as devaluing the position at all. It is an important and hard and worthy role to play. 

Which is why I feel that when people start talking about “legacy,” they are substituting what is good for the greater good, what is good for the organization, and even what is good for themselves for a shallower calculus around ego and insecurity. “Legacy” as a value to pursue is healthy when it means that it matters to us how people will remember our leadership, so we are sure that we execute our role with integrity and courage. It’s healthy when it matters to us that our work is important and yet unfinished, and so we want to do what we can so that it continues beyond our ability to directly contribute, rather than things falling apart once we stop being able to show up. And I have no doubt that most people, most of the time, have these nobler things in mind when they invoke “legacy” in their thinking around how to fulfill their leadership role and what it looks like to move on. 

But I also have no doubt that many people, much of the time, invoke “legacy” in ways that are less admirable. Some leaders stay around too long, beyond their ability to serve at a high level and in a way that blocks younger leaders’ opportunities to step up, because to them “legacy” means continuing to be admired for the work we do and worrying about whether we will cease to be admired once we stop working. Others do eventually move on but do not set up their predecessors for success, because them failing and their organizations failing makes them feel better that what they will be remembered for is uniquely being able to find success when others that came after could not. Still others take on vanity projects because they are trying to cement their legacy with something that they want to be remembered by, even if those projects are not in the long-term interest of the organization that other people will be running long after they’ve departed.

 It is natural for leaders to have egos. It is natural for leaders to be compelled by their egos. But I would argue that part of what makes a leader is sublimating that ego in a way that it is satisfied by stepping aside, making sure others succeed, and otherwise doing everything possible so that the cause is advanced even and especially if that in turn subordinates how they will be remembered for their contribution towards it. If that seems like an impossibly high standard for good leadership, then I will say guilty as charged, because whether in the for-profit, non-profit, or government sector, it’s what I believe to be necessary for good leadership.

4.09.2025

Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 464

 



Here are a few excerpts from a book I recently read, "The Twelve Tribes of Hattie," by Ayana Mathis.


Philadelphia and Jubilee! August said when Hattie told him what she wanted to name their twins. “You cain’t give them babies no crazy names like that!” Hattie’s mother, if she were still alive, would have agreed with August. She would have said Hattie had chosen vulgar names; “low and showy,” she would have called them. But she was gone, and Hattie wanted to give her babies names that weren’t already chiseled on a headstone in the family plots in Georgia, so she gave them names of promise and of hope, reaching forward names, not looking back ones.



How her babies burned! How they wanted to live! Hattie had thought, when given over to such thoughts, that her children’s souls were thimbles of fog; wispy and ungraspable. She was just a girl—only seventeen years longer on the earth than her children. Hattie understood them as extensions of herself and loved them because they were hers and because they were defenseless and because they needed her. But she looked at her babies now and saw that the life inside them was muscled and mighty and would not be driven from them. “Fight,” Hattie urged. “Like this,” she said and blew the air in and out of her own lungs, in solidarity with them, to show them it was possible. “Like this,” she said again.



Six had preached four times before at Mount Pleasant Baptist church near his house in Philadelphia. The Word had come over him like a fit; it hijacked him utterly. The first time was nearly two years before, during the evening service one Sunday. Just before the call to prayer, Six heard a low flat whistle, like the sound of air blowing through a hollow bone. He felt something—spirit? demon?—coming toward him. When it reached Six, it entered him, not like the dove of the Holy Spirit that the Bible talked about, but like a thunderclap that wakes the neighborhood in the middle of the night. The force of it bent him double. He squeezed his throat with his hand, but that did nothing to stop the Word rising in him. He was so afraid he thought he might vomit. The Word collected in his mouth like a pile of pebbles and pushed itself out through his lips. 

Afterward, the parishioners told him he’d preached like God’s anointed for nearly thirty minutes. Six remembered very little of what he’d said or done. There remained only a lingering euphoria that faded quickly and whose departure left him depleted and confused. At home in his hiding place under the stairs, Six squeezed his eyes shut and tried to summon God, or whatever had come to him, but it was like trying to remember a dream—the longer he thought about it, the further it receded. The preacher had said it was grace. But what was grace if it came on him like a seizure and then left him as frail and hurting as he had been before its visit? There wasn’t anyone to ask about it: Hattie said it was just the same as when the church ladies caught the spirit and spoke in tongues, which only showed they were excitable. August said there were some odd things you just couldn’t explain in this world, and Six’s fits were one of them.

Six wasn’t sure religion was any more than a lot of people caught up in a collective delirium that disappeared the minute they stepped out of the church doors and onto the street. And who could blame them? Who would not want to be carried away by something bright and exalted? But Six wasn’t like the other church people. His experience of God was a violent surge he couldn’t control. He came to believe that, like everything else in his life, his preaching had something to do with his poor health. He could not see that perhaps there was a blessing in it, that some help was being extended to him. In the middle of the night while his family slept and Six was insomniac with body aches and bouts of itching, he knew his Jesus spells were another indicator that he was a freak, not merely of body but of spirit. His soul was susceptible to God’s whimsy, just as his body was susceptible to any opportunistic thing that might hurt it. If he’d known how to pray, Six would have asked God to take his gift away.



Hattie’s first babies. They fell ill on January 12 and were dead ten days later. Penicillin. That was all that was needed to save her children. They would be fifty-six now, grayed or graying, thick at the waist and laugh lined around the mouth. Maybe they’d have grandchildren. The lives they would have had are unoccupied; that is to say, the people they would have loved, the houses they might have owned, jobs they would have had, were all left untenanted. Not a day went by that Hattie did not feel their absence in the world, the empty space where her children’s lives should have been.



The organ thrum stopped, the congregation’s hum as well. The sanctuary was silent. Hattie pulled her granddaughter down the center aisle. She couldn’t allow it. She had lost Six to the altar. She sent him off to Alabama with nothing but a Bible, and he had become a womanizer and an imposter. By the time she understood the depth of his unhappiness, it had been too late to save him. Her twins were dead. She had given Ella back to Georgia. It was too late for Cassie, whom Hattie had also sent away. And it was too late for Hattie, who was a fraud in Christ and had shown Sala the ways of fraudulence. She couldn’t bear that the child was already so broken she was driven to the mercy seat. There was time for Sala. Hattie didn’t know how to save her granddaughter. She felt as overwhelmed and unprepared as she had when she was a young mother at seventeen. Here we are sixty years out of Georgia, she thought, a new generation has been born, and there’s still the same wounding and the same pain. I can’t allow it. She shook her head. I can’t allow it. 

They arrived at the pew, where August was waiting. “I don’t know why you done that, Hattie,” he whispered. Of course he didn’t. August’s faith was simple and absolute. He had aged into a sickly old man who prayed and loved the Lord. And if he understood more than he let on, if he was wiser than he acted, he kept it to himself. It’s easier to play the fool, Hattie thought, and August always did what was easy. She felt a spark of her old anger. But they were past all of that—it hadn’t served her when she was young and wouldn’t serve her now. Hattie looked around at the disapproving faces of the congregation. Their indignation would pass—everything passed sooner or later—and if it didn’t, she would give up the church too, this dear comfort of her old age. She was not too old to weather another sacrifice. 

Hattie put her arm around Sala and pulled her close; she patted her granddaughter’s back roughly, unaccustomed as she was to tenderness.

4.07.2025

Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 463

 




Here is an excerpt from a book I recently read, "Dante: A Life," by RWB Lewis:


The separation of powers between executive power and judicial power had not yet been invented. One of those judges, messer Paolo da Gubbio, was appointed to deal with barratry, which in its original medieval usage meant the illicit trade in Church or state appointments, and was the term generically used to indicate corruption, extortion and embezzlement of public funds. Barratry was a nightmare in Italian political life in the Middle Ages, and Dante denounces it furiously in Inferno, where he reserves a bolgia for barrators and obliges them to swim in boiling tar. In January 1302, however, he was the one on trial. Following the orders of his superiors, messer Paolo prepared a series of trials against the priors who had been in office since the end of 1299, and in one of these preliminary investigations he targeted five people, all in absentia. The first, Gherardino Diodati, was accused of having accepted 72 gold florins for freeing a magnate who had been detained for serious crimes, and was convicted separately. The others were messer Palmieri Altoviti, ‘Dante Alaghieri’, Lippo di Becca and Orlanduccio Orlandi.

4.02.2025

Life Principles

 


Here is a really great list of “principles” by Nabeel Qureshi, a visiting scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University. As I now have two adult children living under my roof, I think often of what they and others in their generation need in order to go out into the world and be happy and successful. Qureshi’s list is a good one for me to add some commentary on. So here are a few reactions from selected items:

 

21.        You are probably too risk-averse. Write out the worst things that can happen, realize they’re not that bad, then take the leap. 

Our children have been through so much life stress that they are reflexively risk-averse. Which is understandable, but the extreme version of this is a small existence, where you never put yourself out there, which means you never grow or learn or soar. See also #2, # 14, #40, #46, #52, and #62. For Qureshi to have so many variations on the same theme agrees with my belief in the importance of accepting your risk aversion but learning how to take the leap anyway. 

 

11.        Always be high integrity, even when it costs you. The shortcuts aren’t worth it. 

Truth is (and I would argue always has been) somewhat fluid, trumped by trust when it comes to developing your reputation and getting things done. Of course, the best way to engender trust is to tell the truth. To me, that’s what it means to have integrity, is to do what you say and never compromise on that. Life is full of opportunities to fudge this, and there is no more important lesson in the midst of that than to stay the course.

 

28.        At some point in your life, work on a startup, or at least a thing driven by a small group. Small group energy is amazing. 

For many, this lifestyle is not sustainable. But I think the point still holds, to take a chance at some point in your life where you and a small group of like-minded people are singularly focused on something. So much good comes from that. Do not miss a chance to do something like this at some point in your life.

  

49.        Figure out what gives you new ideas, and make sure you incorporate that into your routine. For me this is talking to people, tweeting, writing in my notebook, long conversations with friends (especially late night or while walking). For other people this is showering, baths, long walks, runs, etc. Make sure you “harvest” these ideas too, i.e. write them down somewhere so they don’t get lost. 

What makes us human is that we are creative. Indeed, with the unending progress of AI, ideas are what are valuable. So knowing yourself well enough to know how you come by ideas, and having intention to put yourself in those places, is paramount.

 

 59.        There’s a lot of alpha in being willing to do “menial” work (take notes, send out agendas, order pizza, manually inspect raw data, whatever). Beware over-delegation and being too far from the details. 

Our kids are not only digital natives but social media natives, so they only know an existence in which their entire lives and that of those around them is carefully curated. Which means everything is perfect and effortless and meaningful. Ah, but most of life is not those things. Indeed, in order to do perfect and effortless and meaningful, you have to do a lot of grind. That grind is necessary, and it is not just a necessary evil that you would forgo if you could, but there is something about the journey of so many steps that builds you up in a way that sheer talent or dumb luck cannot.

 


4.01.2025

Fooling, But With Feeling

 


Yesterday's entry was my annual April Fool's Day post. But it also doubled as an experiment in the use of AI to generate blog content. Specifically, I asked Grok to suggest what I should write. I published what it came up with, word for word, after a few follow-up prompts ("make it more serious," "make it more believable," "ok now more light-hearted").

Not very believable but still kind of fun. Although now I'm feeling convicted. Screens are overtaking our family. Maybe Grok wasn't fooling and I should make the fake post real?

Too Short for a Blog Post, Too Long for a Tweet 522

  Here are a few excerpts from a book I recently read, "Moby Dick," by Herman Melville. Again, I always go to sea as a sailor, bec...