Category Archives: Major Issues

A-Z Challenge: G is for Gold

© 2013 Raymond Alexander Kukkee [caption id="attachment_1182" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Gold Nuggets   Photo by Rob Lavinsky Gold Nuggets                           Photo by Rob Lavinsky[/caption]   G is for gold.  Precious metal. The shiny stuff  of crowns, coins and legends.  A noble metal that historically has turned men into fools, thieves, murderers.  A metal that can turn normally  thinking  men into  secretive,  greedy, eccentric, and dangerous individuals.  From the beginning of time men have moiled for gold and paid for it with their very lives. What does gold do to you?   Would you spend years wandering deserts in Australia, climbing mountains in wilds of Canada, or prospecting and  panning for gold in  icy rivers world wide?  Would you tunnel thousands of  feet underground, risking life and limb for wealth?  Have you seen an inanimate lump of metal become something so beautiful in your mind that  it became an obsession?  How can mere metal blind, remove logic, and even invoke insanity? You cannot eat gold. It is just metal.  Think about it. Gold offers economic choices, but out of control, guarantees rewards of  madness. Does ordinary change  to obsession when influenced by the wealth, promise and excitement offered by the shiny metal?  Does this precious metal and others like it influence, or does it become the beauty traditionally held to be in the eye of the beholder?   Does skin  ordinary on the outside become beautiful  if gilded  with gold?  Is the Midas touch real?
  • How does gold affect you?
  • Do you think you have become obsessed with wealth?
There's only one way to discover gold, and how it will affect you. Go prospecting. Find some. That is why G is for Gold.   Is that Incoming I hear?  .    
Posted in Economic issues, Life, Major Issues, Reflections, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , | 6 Comments

A-Z Challenge: E is for Eccentric

©2013 by Raymond Alexander Kukkee [caption id="attachment_1114" align="aligncenter" width="400"]Hope Hope[/caption] E is for Eccentric.  Well, that is different. Are you weird or something?  This is not how we do it. Do it like we do.  What are you, a nonconformist, or are you an eccentric? Do you do things differently? Do you fall in with the crowd, or avoid complying with the lifestyle, methods, and standard, proven ideas offered by your peers?   Are you an individual that makes up his/her own mind at all times? Perhaps that is best considered simple non-conformity or originality.   If we really think about it, that can be a beneficial position of logic and independent thought. Stand up. Be counted.  Be a non-conformist. Good idea--but it is not eccentric. Being eccentric, although also being non-conformist, goes further Eccentricity is non-conformity carried far beyond normal behaviour. How eccentric are you?  Do you have strange habits?  Abnormal ideas? Do you stick chewing gum on the bedpost?   Only eat  pizza on Tuesdays?   How about wearing a long  coat on hot, sunny days?  Talk to yourself?    Do you leave 3 peas on your plate  and save used pop-straws and a rabbit-foot for good luck? How about writing ? Do you write poetry, but only  after dark on Fridays? Quirks of eccentricity, physical or otherwise,  may develop as a habit, personal choice, convenience, superstition or religious beliefs, --but equally, may  be a result of mental or physical illness, lifestyle, teaching, or as conditioning, a specific reaction to individual events, economic situations or even environmental stimulus. The sober, habitual picking up of pennies comes to mind, as does the classic and stereotyped 'bag lady', the gentle, homeless soul pushing a grocery cart full of black garbage bags, each tied more tightly than the next with bits of twine.  She collects articles from the sidewalk in perpetuity and  happily chats  with her unshaven, raggedly-dressed male counterpart, who wears a tattered, long black winter coat and heavy fur hat under the blazing sun of August. Like him, she will wink at you, unabashedly, and read your mind without shame or fear as she offers you part of her sandwich. The word on the street is, --in truth,  unlike her homeless, poor friend,  she's a multi-millionnaire.  Her mental illness has similarly created what we may foolishly label an 'eccentric'. Who are we to judge what an eccentric is, and what eccentricity really means?  What is normal human behaviour?  The fact is, we cannot label or stereotype tics, quirks, or habits-- except with arrogance --and risk erroneous, naive prejudgment of genuine, worthy human beings when doing so.    That's why E is for eccentric.     Is that Incoming I hear?    
Posted in Life, Major Issues, Reflections, Writing Life | 2 Comments