Not only was there dance, but there was dinner!
The Forty-Five
Wednesday, January 07, 2026
2025 Cambodia And Vietnam: Cambodian Traditional Dance (II)
Tuesday, January 06, 2026
2025 Cambodia And Vietnam: Cambodian Traditional Dance (I)
One of the nice things that I like about the tour company that we use is that they find the opportunity to show off local culture and customs. This is especially noteworthy in a place like Cambodia, where the Khmer Rouge made a point of trying to eradicate traditional arts and customs. In this particular instance, we were able to hear traditional Cambodian music and see traditional Cambodian dance.
Khmer (Cambodian) dance has a long history, dating back back over 1,000 years to the age of Angkor Wat. Some of the dances were folk dances, some were done for the court.
First was a musical presentation. From left to right, the samphor (drum), roneat (xylophone), and tro (fiddle):
Monday, January 05, 2026
2025 Reading List
Somewhat inspired by FOTB (Friends Of This Blog) Leigh and Bob, I thought it would be amusing to list the books that I read in 2025. If nothing else, it may help to illuminate the madness that is my mind.
Books are listed in order read throughout the year:
1) Rome's Enemies: The Desert Frontier - David Nicolle
2) Ultra Running for Normal People - Sid Garza-Hillman
3) Praying the Word - Enzo Bianchi
4) A Brief History of Vietnam - Bill Hayton
5) The Unfettered Mind - Takuan Soho
6) A Beginner's Guide to Japanese Haiku - William Scott Wilson
7) The Forlorn Hope - David Drake
8) Why We Sleep - Matthew Walker
9) Get Your Life Back - John Eldredge
10) Samurai Wisdom - Thomas Cleary
11) The Peloponnesian War - Donald Kagan
12) Eaters of the Dead - Michael Crichton
13) Poitiers A.D. 732 - David Nicholle
14) Mistras - Myrtali Acheimastou-Potamianou
15) Iai: The Art of Drawing the Sword - Darrell Max Craig
16) The Varangian Guard: 988-1453 - Raffaele D'Amato
17) Ultralearning- Scott Young
18) Rome's Enemies: Germanics and Dacians - Peter Wilcox
19) Granada 1492 - David Nicolle
20) Letters #1 - Basil the Great
21) Tusculum Disputations Cicero
22) Epitome of Roman History - Florus
23) The End of the World is just The Beginning - Peter Zeihan
24) The End of E-mail - Cal Newport
25) Deep Work - Cal Newport
26) Rome's Enemies: Spanish Armies - David Nicolle
27) Living in Wonder - Rod Dreher
28) Nukazuke - Nami Yamada
29) Byzantine Imperial Guardsman 925-1025 - Raffaele D'Amato
30) The Age of Charlemagne - David Nicolle
31) Byzantine Cavalryman c. 900-1204- Timothy Dawson
32) Constantinople 1453 - David Nicolle
33) The Full Moon Coffee Shop - Mai Mochizuki
34) Soldiers of the Dragon - C J Peers
35) Anglo Saxon Kings and Warlords A.D. 400-1070 - Raffaele D'Amato
36) Armies of the Muslim Conquest - David Nicolle
37) Byzantine Naval Forces 1261-1461 - Raffaele D'Amato
38) Campaldino 1289 - Kelly Devries
39) Sparta's Third Attic War - Paul Rahe
40) Armies of the Caliphate 862-1098 - David Nicolle
41) The Sultan of Byzantium - Selรงuk Alcun
42) Wurmbrand: Tortured for Christ - Voice of the Martyrs
43) Hogen Monogatari - William R. Wilson
44) Troy c. 1700-1250 B.C. - Nic Fields
45) Manzikert 1071 - David Nicolle
46) The Intellectual Life - A.G. Sertillanges
47) Constantinople A.D. 717-18 - Si Sheppard
48) How to become CEO - Jeffrey Fox
49) The Varangian Guard: 988-1453 - Raffaele D'Amato (Repeat)
50) Knave of Dreams - Andre Norton
51) Uller Uprising - H. Beam Piper
52) Falkenberg's Legion - Jerry Pournelle
53) Teutoberger Wald A.D. 9 - Michael McNally
54) Heavenly Participation - Hans Boersma
55) The Hundred Rules of War - Tsukahara Bokuden
56) The Trivium - Sister Mirriam Joseph
57) Sassanian Elite Cavalry A.D. 224-642 - Kaveh Farrokh
58) Little Gold Book of YES! Attitude - Jeffrey Gitomer
59) Strategy - B.H. Liddell Hart
60) A Beginner's Guide to Prayer - Michael Keiser
61) The Rule of Saint Benedict
62) A Pilgrim's Guide to 46 Temples - Shiro Usui
63) The Way of Simplicity - Esther de Waal
64) The World Beyond Your Head - Matthew B. Crawford
65) Little Bighorn 1876 - Peter Panzeri
66) Conan - Robert E. Howard
67) Conan of Cimmeria - Robert E. Howard
68) Conan the Freebooter - Robert E. Howard
69) Conan the Wanderer - Robert E. Howard
70) Conan the Adventurer - Robert E. Howard
71) Edge of Eternity - Randy Alcorn
72) The Sword of No Sword - John Stevens
73) Cultivating Ch'i- Kaibara Ekiken
74) The Shallows - Nicholas Carr
75) If You Love The Lord - Keith Green
76) Superbloom - Nicholas Carr
77) Vikings: Lord of the Seas
78) The Onin War - H. Paul Varley
79) Conan the Buccaneer - Robert E. Howard
80) Conan the Warrior - Robert E. Howard
81) Conan the Usurper - Robert E. Howard
82) Rachel's Folly - Patrice Lewis
83) Conan the Conqueror - Robert E. Howard
84) Conan the Avenger - Robert E. Howard
85) Conan of Aquilonia - Robert E. Howard
86) Conan of the Isles - Robert E. Howard
87) Shopcraft as Soulcraft - Matthew B. Crawford
88) The Call - Os Guinness
89) Orthodoxy - G.K. Chesterton
90) Epictetus Vol. I
91) The Last Days of Socrates - Plato
92) Early Samurai 200-1500 A.D. - Anthony J. Bryant
93) Letters to Freya - Helmuth von Moltke
94) The Coaching Habit - Michael Bungay Stanier
95) Praying Hyde - Basil Miller
96) Hitler's Cross - Erwin Lutzer
97) Tecumseh: A Life - John Sugden
98) Prayers and Community: The Benedictine Tradition - Columba Stewart
99) Dietrich Bonhoeffer - Michael Van Dyke
100) The Rubiyat - Omar Khayyam
101) Knights Templar 1120 - 1312 - Helen Nicholson
102) Thermopylae 480 B.C. - Nic Fields
103) Catalunian Fields 451 - Simon McDowell
104) The Mongols - Steven R. Turnbull
105) Attila and the Huns - David Nicolle
106) St. Thomas Aquinas/St. Francis of Assisi - G.K. Chesterton
107) Epictetus Vol. II
108) The Forlorn Hope - David Drake (Repeat)
109) Dark Piper - Andre Norton
110) The Wizard and The Warlord - Elizabeth Boyer
111) The Sword and The Satchel - Elizabeth Boyer
112) Waiting for God - Simone Weil
113) The Punic Wars 264-146 B.C. - Roger Bagnall
114) The Advice Trap - Michael Bungay Stanier
115) Harpax Legomena Vol. 1 Spring 2025
116) Bruce Lee: The Art of Expressing The Human Body - John Lee
117) Tractes/Consolation of Philosophy- Boethius
118) Juran on Leadership for Quality - J.M. Juran
119) The Power of Habit - Charles Duhigg
120) Hagakure - Yamamoto Tsunetomo
121) The Harper's Handbook - Laurie Riley
122) Ecclesiastical History of The English People I - Bede
123) The Gallic War - Caesar
124) Christ In the Carols- Christopher and Melodie Lane
125) The Bible
Sunday, January 04, 2026
A Year Of Kindness (I): Prologue
To be completely frank, after completing A Year Of Humility, I was not sure that I was going to do another such series. Not that it was not valuable (I need it more than most) but from a couple of other items, the biggest one simply being that I do not know that I got every post on Humility right.
That might seem like a small thing - after all, this is a very small corner of the InterWeb - but there is enough bad teaching out there that one would not like to contribute further to it. Added to that was the fact that - honestly - not every week of writing on Humility was straightforward. Some weeks the posts almost wrote themselves. On others, I struggled with coming up on a new aspect of humility (a problem of me, not issue itself: entire works have been written on humility).
And so I had almost talked myself out of a new series - until I read Samuel Hancock's comment on the last day of the series: "So, which virtue will you tackle for exposition next? Perhaps not for an entire year, but I would appreciate your thoughts on those that remain and are of importance in your own life."
Without missing a beat, the word that came into my mind was "Kindness".
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Arguably, this is simple an extension of realizing (especially over the past year, it seems) that I have found an increasing split between what people believe and how people act. The split was probably always there and I missed it, but suddenly it seemed to become very real to me.
Looking at it from the perspective of the Christian, we are by default arguing for a belief and a relationship that (to the unbelieving or agnostic eye) is almost completely based on 1) What we say based on Scripture; and 2) What we do (Yes, there are mystical interventions of God. That said, it is not something we can or should necessarily count on for basic presentation to the world). Whenever there is a dissonance between the two, others question - rightly - if we really have anything different to offer from every other belief and The World, where these sorts of things are common enough. Or in some cases, other beliefs and The World do a better job than we do of merging the two.
When I think of many Christians that I either read or follow, the first word that does not leap into my head is kindness. Which is a shame, really. Christians too often like to point to Jesus' confrontation of with bold actions (Which he did, although to be completely accurate most of those confrontations were against the established religious order, not against sinners).
It is seldom they refer to His kindness, or to that of His Father.
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Kindness remains the legacy of my mother.
My mother was a kind person, perhaps the kindest person I have known. This manifested itself in how she was in our family (small and bigger), how she manifested her relationship with me, how she practiced that in the world as a schoolteacher, and how - even in the end - she manifested it during her final years with Alzheimer's.
Other patients could be argumentative or even violent. Not my mother, who even when she did not recognize who we were, acted as though she did, a habit (I believe) maintained from years of teaching. At one point she told me "I always wave back to children who wave at me, even if I don't remember them. They remember me, and for me not to wave back would make them sad."
The world could benefit from more of my mother's ways.
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I have no idea where or how this goes, to be honest. But I am confident that since this idea was the sort of instinctive response, the "gut feeling" that one has before one can even think about it, that there is a reason for it.
If - for no other reason - my firm belief that kindness is maybe the virtue we are in need of most now.
Saturday, January 03, 2026
A Day At The Beach
I have not been back to this beach since I moved in March of 2024, which is a shame. I have not lived so close in 35 years.
Friday, January 02, 2026
The Forty-Five 2026: A Primer
Greetings and welcome to 2026!
As has become a practice (since 2021, apparently), one of the first posts in the New Year is intended as a guide to places and characters that inhabit this particular corner of the world. Due to concerns about my location being located by aliens (I wish; really it for the anonymity) everyone and most places here go by another name (for which even I have to keep a "process aide" to keep things together).
I am your redoubtable host, Toirdhealbheach Beucail ("Toridhealbheach" is a version of my name in Old Irish Gaelic; "Beucail" means "booming or roaring", as in the sound of a cannon. If you ever met me in person, you would find I have only two volumes: silent and "ON"). I have been taking up space on this corner of the InterWeb for this, my twentiyfirst year (as of July this year).
A very brief history: I grew up in a small town, the same town my parents and my mother's parents had grown up in. I went away to college for two degrees that have nothing to do with what I ended up actually doing, then came back home and lived in and around that area (referred to here uncreatively as "Old Home") until 15 years ago, when due to a layoff we had to move (to the also uncreatively named) "New Home". Last year in 2024 after a series of two layoffs in 2024 (Hammerfalls 2.0 and 3.0), I have now ended up in equally uncreatively named "New Home 2.0", which is back closer to where I grew up.
I have a variety of interests. I am a practitioner of Iaijutsu, a Japanese sword martial art. I make cheese and other dairy foods. I train with weights. I write, both blogs and some kind of longer form. I hike, mostly in the Sierra Nevadas but have also been down into the Grand Canyon. I study languages, both current as well as the dead ones. I read voraciously - primarily history and theology, but also philosophy, agricultural books and "old style" (say pre-1985) science fiction and fantasy. I find myself doing far more travel than I originally anticipated. In years past I have gardened, although the relocation has reduced this to more of a container gardening situation for the moment.
Dramatis Personae:
- The Ravishing Mrs. TB: To whom I have been married for over 30 years now and who actually makes sure the trains run on time and things get done.
- Nighean Gheal: Number one daughter, a college graduate with a degree in International Business now living in the Cheongju province of South Korea, teaching English (at least through July of this year).
- Nighaen Bhan: Number Two daughter, also a college graduate with a degree in Communications and pursuing a Master's level program in Speech Disorders (a.k.a., Speech Therapist).
- Nighean Dhonn: Number Three daughter, currently studying Anthropology and Archaeology.
- The Fiancรฉ: The fiancรฉ of Nighean Bhan. At some point I will have to come with a more original name. As he is coming on a hike with us this year, something may present itself.
- The Director: One of my two best friends from High School and still currently one of my best friends. Lives in Old Home, one of the most intelligent people I know. Currently working on his Ph.D. On an unusual note, he is practicing Quaker.
- Uisdean Ruadh: The other of my two best friends from High School and still currently one of my best friends. Also lives in Old Home, currently living in The Cabin at The Ranch. Deeply Catholic, loves traditional Catholicism, planes, and history.
- The Berserker: My weight training coach. I have trained with him for 9+ years now. I live in fear of his weekly training regimes, although they have been very successful.
- The Shield Maiden: A friend I met throw Highland Games many years ago. She lives much farther away than she used to (Picture the border of Canada and then move down. Slightly.). We chat via the InterWeb every day. She is a reservoir of wisdom and the much needed lectures I will get from no-one else.
-La Contessa: My very good and old friend (post high school, so not quite as long as The Director and Uisdean Ruadh, but almost as long). We regularly have dinners once a month when I am in Old Home.
-The Outdoorsman: My brother-in-law and hiking partner in crime. What started as lark of an idea (hiking the Grand Canyon) has turned into 3-4 smaller training hikes and a single big hike a year.
- The Cowboy/The Young Cowboy: A father and son team, they have kept cattle at The Ranch for almost 20 years now. They are regularly present there and help to keep an eye on the place when I am not present.
- The Brit: My niece's husband who has also become a hiking partner in crime.
- Rainbow: One of the earliest people involved with this blog, she lives in the larger vicinity of Old Home. She and I speak more or less weekly about life, mostly disguised as a two person writer self-help group.
- The Dog Whisperer: Another refugee from Hammerfall 3.0 who is at the other end of the country. Loves dogs (and animals of all kinds).
Important Places:
- Old Home: Where I grew up and lived up to 15 years ago. Originally a combination of the small town I actually grew up in as well as the larger areas there which we lived in before moving to New Home, I use it more now to indicate my hometown.
- New Home: Where up to March of 2024, we lived. An urban area located in a state not where I grew up. We still have a house there, but it has been replaced by....
- New Home 2.0: Another urban area, in this case much closer to the state I grew up in. This is where The Ravishing Mrs. TB and I now live (currently in an apartment).
- The Ranch: The Ranch is the property my parents own and lived on in <insert yet another undisclosed location here>. It is approximately 90 acres of land in the mountains which has been our extended family for over 60 years. As of last year, we made the decision to sell the property.
Like most budding bloggers, when I started this blog I had great visions of this being a mighty bulwark of discussion and thought that would be a beacon of light (and, coincidentally, would let me write full time). It only took about 10 years to realize that neither of these things were going to happen. Either because of obstinance or foolishness (I am guilty of both) I persevered.
What I did find - and what I still believe in - is that blogging represents the Social Internet (not a phrase that I came up with, but one I love): the ability of people to read, think, and discuss things on the InterWeb (as opposed to Social Media, which I detest). What has become critically important to me is creating a sort of InterWeb agora, a place where we can discuss subjects - some deep, some completely shallow - in a way that hopefully encourages thought and helps to build connections in a society which values neither thought nor connections except of the most shallow kind (otherwise known as Social Media). Another unlooked-for at the time benefit which has manifested itself (I was not aware of it; a reader brought it to my attention) is that this is a place where the "real world" as such scarcely applies. You will find nothing of politics or current events here, and only occasional notes about economics or society in general
What you will find here most days is a combination of personal on-line journal, thoughts or concepts that have run through my mind, book reviews, occasional fiction, things that are just "going on" in my life, ruminations, and the occasional meme. It is a smorgasbord of my existence (there are literally times I sit down to write with no idea what will be written, and no-one is more surprised than I am when it shows up).
Important Pages:
Ichiryo Gusoku Philosophy: My overall guiding policy on my philosophy is here. (A note: I need update this in the coming year)
Ichiryo Gusoku Goals: My overall aspirational goals are here (See above).
What are the rules?
There are only four.
1) Be kind: In all my years of writing here, I have had to not publish only a handful of comments because, frankly, they were mean or just outright wrong-minded. You can certainly poke holes in my theories or my writing or the responses of others. I just ask you do it kindly. Everyone you are responding to is going through something.
2) No profanity: My mother was an elementary school teacher and a lovely Christian woman, so comment as if you were speaking directly to her. Any profanity will simply not make itself a visible comment, no matter how relevant or good the comment is.
3) No arguing current politics: Politics as it is practiced currently is simply an exercise in "It is your fault! No, yours!" followed by vulgarity and crudeness. Political Science (the practice of forming political societies and their functioning) is far more useful to actually reach a solution.
4) No arguing religion: I state up front I am Christian (useful background for some of what I write) and will happily discuss my own trials and travails and thoughts. What we do not debate is the nature of religion or different religions. Again, see the previous comments on kindness.
Thanks!
Comments are always welcome, but even the act of just stopping by and reading (as an investment of time) is greatly appreciated.
Thursday, January 01, 2026
Happy New Year 2026 Edition
On New Year's Day 2025, I posted a picture along with my Happy New Year's Greeting (for reasons unknown to me, I did not do the same in 2025. A failure on my part). As it turns out - perhaps accidentally - that picture became a leitmotif for my year.
Which made me think: if I were to set a theme for 2026, what would I like it to be?
Setting a theme is always something of a risk of course: there are 365 days to run and, given my recent history, who knows what happens in that time. But setting a theme can be quite different from what occurs during the year. I cannot control the events, but I can control how I approach them.
This - a repost from May of last year - is something that, a bit in conjunction with writing on Humility last year, I have come to see that I need work harder on. And not just writing on Humility; general discourse and interaction - even more so than I can remember - has devolved into "my-sideism" everywhere. My realization last year that this was the "Age of Rage" does not seem to have abated at all.
And that is my hope, my intention - for me, for everyone I interact with, hopefully everyone that reads this. To make this a year of being a good human being.
After all, I hear the opportunities to move up in the field are almost without limit. And there remains very little competition of speak of.














