Friday, March 27, 2026

Infatuation

 Earlier this week I was having a conversation with a friend about a move they were planning.  They mentioned that they had been looking at one particular location in particular, one that they were familiar with and liked the layoff.  "I am infatuated with them, infatuated to the point that I do so many drive-bys that they may think I am casing the place" was the comment.  We both laughed a bit and carried on with the conversation as friends do.

But after I had said my goodbyes, something nagged at my mind, something that that seemed off for 24 hours until it resolved itself.

It was the word "infatuated".

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Infatuate (ĭn-făch′oo͞-āt″):  To make foolish; cause to lose sound judgement; to inspire with foolish or shallow love or affection.

Infatuated (ĭn-făch′oo͞-āt″id):  Lacking sound judgement; foolish, completely carried away by foolish or shallow love or affection.

Infatuation (ĭn-făchǝ-’wa-shǝn):  An infatuation or being infatuated.

From:  Latin infatuatus, to make a fool of (in, intensive + fatuus, foolish)

Webster's New World Dictionary. New World Dictionaries:  New York, 1984.

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I suspect most or all of us are familiar with the concept of infatuation. In our culture - at least at one time - it was associated with the lightness of young romance; it is a staple of the Hopeless Romantic (of which I was one, and in some ways may still be).

In reading the definition - which I cannot remember fully reading before - the elements of foolishness or shallow love or affection fall right in line with the associations I have with it.  It easy enough to understand, of course:  at some point someone notices a person with something more than a little interest.  In that moment, interest can lead to sort of fantasy (no, not the kind the world usually associates with that word).  The infatuated person hangs on every word and gesture of the object of attention.  They visualize what it would be like if there was a deeper relationship.  In an infatuated state of course, this is not difficult:  we know virtually nothing about the other and so only tend to think the best and happiest sorts of thoughts. In a way, they become marionettes on a stage of our making.

It is not just confined to people:  one can become infatuated with a belief system or an interest; in fact, a great many hobbies probably start with some level of imagining "What would be like if I did X"?  The answer is undoubtedly the same as the mythical relationship in our mind:  a sort of flawless execution and expertise that makes everything we touch work without issue.  Our swordsmanship is always flawless, our cheeses are always round and perfectly aged, our sewing without blemish.

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But  infatuation cannot continue.  

At some point, reality starts to break in.  The imaginary relationship becomes real, and suddenly we discover that the person we visualized in our mind is not the same person as the person we now find ourselves with: they have faults and flaws and short tempers and bad days just as we do.  The interest never develops the way we think because getting good at anything takes time:  we spend our swordsmanship doing thousands of cuts, our cheese falls apart, our sewing has become a series of stitching followed by ripping stiches out.

It is at this point that infatuation can take one of two paths.

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The first path - more often than not, the one taken - is that the thing is simply dropped.  "That relationship was never for me" we sigh as we move on, our eyes already on the horizon for the Next Greatest Love.  "I simply cannot make any progress" we sniff as we look at the collection of items we purchased to support our new interest, which suddenly has no more use to us than something to sell at the next garage sale.

If caught early enough of course, the harm is minimal.  "Summer Romances" are called that for a reason, short term relationships that never were going to blossom anyway because someone was leaving at the end of Summer.  "Passing Interests" are the easy way we move on from our current interests to the New Best Thing that will change our life.   

But sometimes this is realized too late:  the relationship that now has a marriage and children and possessions attached, the interest or hobby what we invested so much of our resources in only to find out it was not for us.  As the definition says, we have lost sound judgement and been inspired by shallow affection or love.  Sadly, everyone around us has to pay the price.

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The second path is the path of the death of infatuation.

In order to move to anything else, the infatuation itself has to die - not "die" in the sense of the death of the relationship or interest, but die in the mythical expectations we have of the thing.  If one has ever been in a serious committed relationship or truly followed a hobby or interest, one knows that there comes a point at which we have to make a choice to continue on even though the relationship or the thing is not what we thought it would be at all.  We accept the reality of the situation - the person that is not our magical ideal, the interest that makes us study harder than we thought, the hobby that calls for mastery and not just passing interest - and we invest in it.  It may not be the sappy sweet romance that we originally thought or the effortless mastery that we dreamed of, but we find in them a sort of reality - a "realness" that make the dreams that we had seem made of cotton candy and clouds.

We have learned better than that.  We have the experiences and scars to prove it.

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It occurred, to me, as I listened to my friend rhapsodically describe the place he desired, that this is an issue that much of modern Western society struggles with.

We have our dreams - dreams of relationship, dreams of home, dreams of interests, dreams of careers - that we become infatuated with.  We dream of these things based on the thinnest of veneers - the glance of a person at a meeting, a passing conversation about a job, a video game that makes swordsmanship seem effortless - and suddenly our mind and life is fixed on these things.  We - to use the definition - lose sound judgement and engage in shallow affection or love.  And at the first sign of reality or difficult or the fact that our "dream" is not what we imagine, we pass on to the next thing without stopping.  

We have become a people that seek a world that exists only in the barest of our imaginations, because we do not try or want to do more.  We make no plans to succeed in any of these things, because we turn from those paths long before we would need them.  We avoid the messy reality of people and interests and careers and hobbies, choosing to look down the road at the Next True Love or Next Big Thing.

It is only when we choose to ground ourselves, when we throw the anchor down and the current tears against our boat, that we begin to find the underlying thing - the true True Love or real Big Things - that we were seeking in the first place.


Wednesday, March 25, 2026

2026 Japan: Shūgenji Temple

 Shūgenji Temple is located very close to the Hase train station on the Enoden line, which runs through Kamakura.  Originally, the temple was the dwelling place of Shinjō Kingo Yorimoto (1221-1279), an early follower of Nichiren Buddhism.  Nichiren Buddhism (The Lotus Sect) was a persecuted sect during this period of Japanese history.  Shinjō Kingo Yorimoto was memorialized when, in 1271 when Nichiren Daishoin was brought to the execution grounds, he came running barefoot to hold the reins of Nichiren's horse, vowing to die with him.  Nichiren was exiled and Shinjō persecuted until Shinjō's skill as physician and sincerity led to his eventual forgiveness. 

His residence was turned into a temple in the Edo Period (1603-1868).










Tuesday, March 24, 2026

2026 Japan: Kamakura

 For the first time in many years, we actually had a day post training that we could play tourist.  Our choice was the city of Kamakura.




The city itself is about 36 miles from Tokyo, located on a bay (called Kamakura Bay). Originally a small fishing village, it became a farming community and administrative outpost.  The change in the city came when Minamoto no Yoritomo made it the capital of his newly founded Shogunate; from 1185 to 1333 it served as the effective capital of Japan (while the Emperor remained in Kyoto) under the Minamoto rule and then Hojo Regency.  In the Ashikaga Shougnate (1336-1573), the city held importance as a controlling center of the Kanto region but was at odds with the Ashikaga Shogun, who had moved to Kyoto.  Retaken by force in 1485, it began to fade back to a fishing village after the establishment of the Tokugawa capital of Edo (Tokyo) in 1603.  The city was further damaged by the Great Kanto earthquake of 1923, which killed over 2000 people.

As a result of all of this, Kamakura has a great many temples (it was the early seat of Nichiren Zen Buddhism).  And being away (physically and geographically from Tokyo), it has a sort of funky small town feel.


















Monday, March 23, 2026

March 2026 Ranch Update: Fin De Siècle

 What a difference a month makes. This weekend:


This is literally 30 days earlier:


This month's visit to Old Home and The Ranch was a surprisingly busy one.  It started with a pick-up and breakfast with La Contessa, followed by borrowing the truck from my sister and heading over to the local Self Storage to rent a 10' x 20' unit - I had put in a reservation the day before, but given my luck, I thought the cost of paying a bit early was more than balanced out by the stress I would avoid by worrying for three weeks about getting a spot - and then not being able to.



Heading up to The Ranch, I started with a quick sweep of the house.  Thankfully the roof seems to have made it through the Winter without leaking (Yay!) and no critters have made themselves felt.  We had spoken to our real estate agent about moving the items in the barn to the now-secured storage locker.  "I know a guy" was his response, and I met said guy.  He looked at everything; his only concern was if anything was fragile. Not a problem I replied, we will have cars.

I then went up to visit my Aunt and Uncle (and cousin).  My Aunt is not doing well:  her last chemo infusion was in November (she wanted to avoid one for the holidays so she could feel okay) and she was supposed to start in January, but a series of infection in her feet have left her unable to restart chemo.  The cancer is aggressively growing and the recommendation at this point is for comfort care.  That said, she was awake and engaged during the visit.


I headed back to the barn, where the Cowboy and Young Cowboy were present.  The barn is mostly cleaned out now as they remove their stuff, which will all be out by 01 April; an estate sale is likely to follow.  The Cowboy, as it turns out, has met the buyer (who came up) and his children.  It turns out that he is actually from not too far away.  The Cowboy seemed to like him; it gives me some comfort that it sounds like someone that will really enjoy living there and will take care of things.

It is odd, of course.  The cattle are all now gone to sale, the horse will be out this week.  There was nothing in the Upper Meadow but a lone deflated balloon slowly tumbling in low winds and a Canadian Goose making a patrol.  The barn and its surroundings are mostly empty at this point.  Of note, we all seemed to carefully avoid the fact that this could be the last time we would meet in a long time.


Most of the contingencies have fallen off.  There was one request for a UV system for the pump and a financing request for replacement of the wallboard in the pumphouse that had molded.  Both will be attended to; we close within 30 days.

This is the time of year that my parents would have loved.  Everything is green but not yet overgrown.  The daffodils are starting to fail, but the irises and local wildflowers will soon start coming out.  The days are warm but the evenings are cool.  The turkeys are out on their rounds.  In years past, the cattle would be in the meadows, dark blots against the green grass.

The Fin De Siècle - The end of an era - rapidly approaches.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

A Year Of Kindness: Kindness Begets Expansive Vision




 One of the things that kindness will do for you, if you practice it enough, is expand your view of the world and God's creation.

The place I have found this to be most true for myself is in my relation to Nature.

I have also had a general respect for Nature. I tried not to burn things down growing up (let us be honest, young boys love fire).  I did not litter.  The fish that I caught with my maternal grandfather were always for eating.  

But I had my own not great side as well.  Stepping on snails and slugs.  Randomly ripping off leaves of plants  (mostly wildflowers) for no other reason than a nervous habit.

Being older and trying to be more consciously kind over the years has helped with that.

My fidgeting I have mostly learned to keep to myself now instead the need to strip something of leaves.  I will walk around the snails and slugs, perhaps picking up the snails and helping them across (not the slugs, of course; I merely wish them well).  I have now been known to rescue earthworms in our parking lot after the rain (maybe to a bird's maw of course, but at least that seems better than getting run over or drowned).

I have always had a respect for animals - we always had cats growing up and through my life, we have had dogs, hamsters, chickens, quail, a pony, guinea pigs and of course rabbits - but I find my relationship with them in general has become much deeper than before.  When The Ravishing Mrs. TB travels, I am far more likely to let A The Cat sleep with me, knowing that he is home alone during the day (although I will not sleep as well).  I am learning to read J The Rabbit's moods better as well.

I cannot point to one event in any of this and say "This has made me more kind".  But I can say that through learning to be kind, it has made me much more aware, which in itself enables kindness.

It seems that the kinder one is, the more one finds to be kind to.

Saturday, March 21, 2026

Another In The Fire

"Another In The Fire" has been performed from time to time at our current church.  It is upbeat enough, and I do like the lyrics.  But sometimes I am really struck by something that has always been there but I seem to have never heard before.

In the midst of this song comes the bridge:

"And I can see the light in the darkness
As the darkness bows to Him
I can hear the roar in the heavens
As the space between wears thin
I can feel the ground shake beneath us
As the prison walls cave in
Nothing stands between us
Nothing stands between us"

I do not know what struck me about it the words.  Maybe it was the image - Darkness bowing to Jesus, space wearing thin between the heavens, the ground shaking as the prison walls cave in.  I cannot tell you what appealed to me, but it touched me deeply.

Run time:  8:27.


Lyrics (Note:  These may slightly differ from the lyrics in the video; I cannot find a lyric set for this live version):

VERSE 1:
There’s a grace when the heart is under fire
Another way when the walls are closing in
And when I look at the space between
Where I used to be and this reckoning
I know I will never be alone

CHORUS 1:
There was another in the fire
Standing next to me
There was another in the waters
Holding back the seas
And should I ever need reminding
Of how I’ve been set free
There is a cross that bears the burden
Where another died for me

TAG:
There is another in the fire

VERSE 2:
All my debt left for dead beneath the waters
I’m no longer a slave to my sin anymore
And should I fall in the space between
What remains of me and this reckoning
Either way I won’t bow
To the things of this world
And I know I will never be alone

CHORUS 2:
There is another in the fire
Standing next to me
There is another in the waters
Holding back the seas
And should I ever need reminding
What power set me free
There is a grave that holds no body
And now that power lives in me

BRIDGE:
And I can see the light in the darkness
As the darkness bows to Him
I can hear the roar in the heavens
As the space between wears thin
I can feel the ground shake beneath us
As the prison walls cave in
Nothing stands between us
Nothing stands between us

VERSE 3:
There is no other name
But the Name that is Jesus
He who was and still is
And will be through it all
So come what may in the space between
All the things unseen and this reckoning
I know I will never be alone

CHORUS 3:
There’ll be another in the fire
Standing next to me
There’ll be another in the waters
Holding back the seas
And should I ever need reminding
How good You’ve been to me
I’ll count the joy come every battle
‘Cause I know that’s where You’ll be