Dialogue In The Dark

No, this is NOT about “pillow talk”, but rather the name of an awareness-raising experience that takes the form of “exhibitions” around the world. The only venue in the U.S. is located right here in Atlanta and this past Saturday I had the opportunity to take part in the experience with my co-worker, Sue.

Do you remember when you were a child and you first found out that there were people in the world who were blind and could not see? Was your first reaction like mine; to close your eyes for as long as possible and try to navigate around without being able to see so you could try to experience what it felt like to be sightless? And the first time you bumped into something or fell, your eyes would fly open to see what had happened? This experience is similar, except your eyes are already open because this hour-long participatory adventure takes place in a completely darkened environment. I mean absolutely pitch-black-can’t-see-your-hand-in-front-of-your-face blackness.

And it is, pardon the pun, eye-opening.

Groups are usually limited to 8-10 people. Our group consisted of 10. Before entering, we were asked to place any light-emitting device such as a cellphone or wristwatch into a personal locker, along with anything loose such as glasses, pens, jewelry, etc that we would not want to lose in the darkness. (When we emerged at the end, Sue had lost a pair of magnifying glasses she used for reading that she hung on her blouse and an earring; fortunately neither was an expensive item) Then each person is given a red-tipped white cane and taught how to “sweep” the area in front of your feet for obstructions.

We were then led into a darkened ante-room where the only light came from individually lighted cubes that we sat upon while we listened to instructions. Our guide would be a blind or visually-impaired individual (literally, the blind leading the blind). We were informed that the entire experience is monitored by staff members using infra-red video cameras throughout the area, and were told what the experience would consist of and what behavior was expected of us (no one removes their clothes or uses the darkness to get “frisky”) and if anyone became so uncomfortable that they could not continue they would be guided out by a staff member.

I’m assuming all of the above and more has happened or they wouldn’t be bringing it up. We were also told to look at the people on each side of us and apologize now because we would most likely be bumping into someone during the experience.

As this was happening, the lights in the cubes became more and more dim until the room was completely dark. At that point our guide entered the room and asked us to stand and walk toward a rail that we had seen in the middle of the room and grasp it with our free hand (the other one was using the cane to sweep the floor in front of us). Once there she told us to walk toward the sound of her voice and we began our experience.

Over the next hour or so, with the voice of our guide directing us, we walked through a park, complete with grass under our feet, birds singing, trees rustling in the breeze and a small stream with a bridge we had to cross; entered a store and identified items by feel and produce by feel and smell; crossed a busy city street at the sound of a chirping crosswalk light while cars whizzed by so fast you could feel the wind as they passed and their horns sounded and people talked and walked by you. We took a boat ride and felt the spray of water on our faces and heard the sounds of seagulls as they flew around us, then finished up in a cafe where we ordered drinks, paid for them, received our change and then sat as a group (still in complete darkness) in a large circular booth and asked questions of our guide for about 15 minutes.

It is difficult to explain in words how completely enveloped in the experience you become. Everything is sensory input from touch, smell, hearing and taste and the removal of sight forces those remaining senses to become heightened and sharpened. Being inexperienced, you sometimes make a mistake (is that a small apple or a regular-sized plum?) or get lost (I swore I was at a dead-end at one point, but after feeling my way along a wall discovered a door I had missed) and even feel some natural trepidation in unfamiliar surroundings.

The empathy for those who are blind or visually-impaired that you gain and feel is absolutely priceless. Simply closing your eyes to try and have the same experience is completely inadequate. Being plunged into absolute and total darkness while in an unfamiliar or even familiar environment gives you just a small idea of what life is like everyday for those who are sightless. And it is interesting that we may learn to see by not being able to see. I know my eyes have been opened to what a life without sight might be like.

My grandfather used to say to me, “Never judge a man until you’ve walked a mile in his shoes.” That mile may be the best thing you will ever do to gain an insight into another person’s life.

If you ever get the chance to take part in the “Dialogue In The Dark” experience I would wholeheartedly encourage you to do so.

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Posted in Atlanta, Georgia | 5 Comments

Happy Birthday, Princess

Happy Birthday to my daughter. You captured my heart on the day you were born and you have never let it go.

Love Forever,
Dad

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Nashville Photos

The photos from Nashville, such as they are, can be found on my Flickr page.

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Posted in Nashville, Photography, Tennessee | Comments Off on Nashville Photos

Mexican Marvel

While I was in Nashville, TN this past Tuesday, there was a retirement party for one of our departing staff. The party was turned into a chili cook-off and someone evolved the idea further into one in which Mexican sombreros (and moustaches) were included in the festivities. I’m sure it seemed like a good idea to someone.

When I returned on Wednesday afternoon, I discovered a sombrero waiting on my desk. Seized by a rare moment of frivolity and silliness, I donned the habanero headgear to elicit a few chuckles from my co-workers. But the laugh was on me as these photos were shot.

Pancho Villa I’m not, but it was an amusing moment for some.

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Posted in Atlanta, Georgia, Humor | 3 Comments

Excellence Of Performance?

Today a 3-page course description for a class entitled “Excellence of Performance” came across my desk. Offered by the educational arm of my employer, the course description detailed how enrolling in this class would show each student how to be their very best in their professional life…how they would achieve an “Excellence of Performance” attitude that would lead to being and doing their absolute best work.

So you might understand how ludicrous it seemed to me to find FIVE spelling errors in the document.

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Posted in words | Comments Off on Excellence Of Performance?

Holy Twitter!

Lately I haven’t been as active as I usually am on Twitter because I’ve been so busy working on one assignment in Atlanta and another one in Tennessee. But tonight I decided to glance at my Twitter page and found that I have 117 people following my Tweets! In the Twitterverse that is nothing, but since I never even imagined having more than 50 it’s pretty incredible to me.

I’d better crank up my Tweet-rate before I lose some, lol.

Follow me on Twitter.

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Posted in Atlanta Concert, Tennessee, Twitter | 2 Comments

Nashville Whirlwind Tour

I finished my meeting in Camden, TN around 11:30AM yesterday morning, then drove the 90 minutes or so back to Nashville for meetings with staff members of two high-ranking elected officials. By the time I arrived at my hotel it was 3pm and I had been up for 12 hours, driving 7 1/2 of that, so I was tired. Still, I had a small window of opportunity to see some of Nashville and I did not want to pass it up.

I was staying at the Marriott Renaissance Hotel on the recommendation of a friend who had stayed there before. The room was very nice.


Although the view wasn’t that great, at least out this window.

But it wasn’t horrible out this window.


Anyway, I grabbed my camera, stopped by the concierge desk for a downtown map and was out the front door of the hotel by 3:10. As I opened the map I noticed an advertisement for a trolley tour of downtown Nashville. This was perfect! Cindy and I typically try to take one of these whenever we’re in a new city to familiarize ourselves with it before embarking on our own personal tours. But I wasn’t going to have time for my own personal tour so this trolley tour would be a fast, easy way to get a history of the city, a sense of it’s layout and some photos. I walked the 5 blocks to the ticket kiosk (right next to the Nashville Hard Rock Cafe on Broadway) and purchased my ticket by 3:15PM, but the tour wasn’t leaving until 4PM. Another great break! I had not stopped for lunch and was starving so I glanced around and saw this on the other side of Broadway.

The Big River Grille and Brewery Works. Apparently there is one at home in Orlando out at the Disney Boardwalk near EPCOT, but I’ve never been and didn’t even know it was there until I looked up the website. They are a “microbrewery restaurant” brewing their own beer. I stepped inside out of the 84 degree heat and told the hostess I needed something to eat fast so I could catch my trolley tour in 40 minutes. I ordered their Sweet Magnolia Brown Ale and an appetizer Quesadilla. Both were very good and I was back and climbing on the trolley car at 3:50PM with about seven other riders.

I took about 200 photos during the tour. I’ll pick the best and get them uploaded to my Flickr account as soon as I can, but I wanted to show you this shot of my hotel with my room location indicated.

The tour was good and educational. I tipped the driver/tour guide generously as I was stepping off because he gave lots of information and provided me with some good photography subjects and moments, but I wanted to tell him that I would have gladly tripled the tip if he would stop trying to be a comedian. Worse yet, a comedian who laughs at his own pathetic jokes with a laugh like Muttley. Believe me, it’s worse when it’s blasted over a PA system.

After the trolley tour I took a walk over the Shelby Street Pedestrian Bridge that spans the Cumberland River, taking lots of photos of the river and the stadium across the river where the Tennessee Titans play. Then, on my way back to the hotel I stopped and bought some souvenirs and postcards for family.

I can see why they call Nashville “Music City.” If it’s not blasting out of store speakers (and I mean EVERY store), they’re piping it out into the street. And if it’s not piping out into the street, street musicians fill the quiet with their “cover” versions of every country song you ever heard and a few you wish you hadn’t (well, that’s ALL of them for me since I’m not a CW fan), while their guitar cases stand open for donations. I was at an intersection where there was someone playing the guitar and singing on each of the four corners.

By the time I got back to the room I was soaking in sweat, so I took a shower and thought about accepting a co-worker’s invitation to join her and another friend of hers who was visiting from out of town that evening for some live music. But it was now a little after 6PM and I was whipped from the long day. I thought I would do some work on the Internet and hit the sack early since I had more meetings to drive to today. However, because of my friend’s recommendation I didn’t really look at the hotel’s webpage in depth, and that was a mistake. My friend does not travel with her laptop so she would not have noticed this, but it turns out the hotel wants an extra $13.95 (why not just say $14?) for Internet access. For real! And that even applies to high level reward program participants like yours truly.

Not going to happen.

Usually when I’m looking at a hotel trying to decide if I’ll stay there, one of the first things I look at is whether they offer free Internet access, either wired or wireless. This was a fairly upscale hotel and I guess I just expected it, especially since it was a Marriott and every Marriott brand I’ve stayed at had free access. I learned my lesson, and will always check in the future no matter what anyone says about how great the place may be. Anyway, I grabbed my laptop and walked 2 blocks down from the hotel to Panera, ate a sandwich and accessed the Internet for free, thank you.

Still, I enjoyed my short time in Nashville and hope to come back with Cindy someday for a longer visit.

Did my meetings today in Murfreesboro and drove back to Atlanta. Tomorrow it’s a short 3 hour drive to Knoxville, TN and then an hour drive to Rockwood, TN for various meetings and then back here to Atlanta for the night. That should be the end of my Tennessee trips for a while.

Wow, that was longer than I intended it to be. I hope you’re still here. G’night.

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Posted in Nashville, Tennessee | 1 Comment

Going To Music City

Leaving the hotel in Atlanta this morning at 4AM with a full day planned in and around Nashville. My only free time will be tonight. I’m staying in a hotel downtown so I can try to experience at least a little bit of Nashville before I leave tomorrow. One of my co-workers who is not currently deployed lives in Nashville and offered to let me tag along tonight while she and another out-of-town friend enjoy some live music. Not sure if I’ll join them or not as I’d hate to mess up their visit with each other, but I think I’ll definitely find someplace in downtown Nashville to enjoy at least a small taste of Music City.

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Posted in Atlanta, Nashville, Tennessee | Comments Off on Going To Music City

Memorial Day 2009

Observed in some form or fashion since its original proclamation in 1868, Memorial Day is observed to allow patriotic Americans the opportunity to show our thanks to those who gave their all in defending our country. Memorial Day gives those of us who enjoy our freedoms the opportunity to honor those who made the ultimate sacrifice so that we might retain those freedoms.

In memory of those who have fallen in defense of the liberties many of us take for granted, Americans, wherever they are, will observe a National Moment of Remembrance today at 3pm local time. This is an act of national unity that has been established to honor America’s fallen and the families they left behind. I urge you to pause in reflection and remembrance of those who gave their lives in service to our nation.

I was reminded last Friday that the late Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Homes referred to Memorial Day as, “Our Most Sacred Holiday” and proposed that “we not ponder with sad thoughts the passing of our heroes, but rather ponder their legacy – the life they made possible for us by their commitment and pain.”

To those who gave their all; to their families, loved ones and friends who lost a part of their lives; I say simply, and sincerely, with a heart full of gratitude, “Thank you.”

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Posted in Holidays | Comments Off on Memorial Day 2009

This Suits Me

I mentioned in my last post that I have a big week coming up as far as work goes. Here’s a peek at how it breaks out.

Tuesday morning at 4AM I’ll be checking out of my hotel here in Atlanta and driving to Camden, TN, which is about 90 minutes west of Nashville, for a 10AM meeting followed by visits to the offices of a couple of high-ranking elected officials in Nashville that afternoon. Wednesday I have another meeting at 10AM in Murfreesboro, TN, about 30 miles southeast of Nashville and then I’ll return to Atlanta where I have a scheduled appointment at 3:30PM in our office. Thursday morning I’ll drive from Atlanta to Knoxville, TN for another meeting at 11AM, followed by visits to the offices of 2 other elected officials and then a drive back to Atlanta.

Here’s what the dashboard area of my rental car will look like.

You DO have to have a GPS for each destination, right?

Yesterday I started thinking I needed to get a new suit. I’ve needed one for a while, but just kept putting it off. Men’s Wearhouse has been running a “Buy One Get One” free promotion, but their least expensive suit that I would want was $400. Then I heard a radio commercial Friday for Jos. A. Banks’ “Buy One Suit – Get Another Suit, 2 Shirts And 2 Ties Free” sale, but their least expensive suit that I would want was $600! I guess I’m just too much of a cheapskate to feel comfortable spending that much money for a suit (or two), especially with all the cabin-building expenses mounting up like rabbits breeding for Easter. I mean, they’re good prices for what you’re getting, I just don’t want to spend THAT MUCH right now. Cindy and I are both trying to be as frugal as we can, but I REALLY needed a new suit.

So this morning I went to the mall across the street from the hotel and bought a suit, shirt and 2 silk ties for a decent price. About half of those mentioned above. I think it looks good on me, but I sent a cellphone pic to Cindy to verify (other customers probably wondered why a flash kept going off in the fitting room, lol) and she said it was good. Really though, how well can you tell from a cellphone pic that’s displayed on another cellphone’s tiny screen?

I hate going clothes shopping. I’m partially colorblind and don’t have a lick of fashion sense, so unless I’m buying something in colors I recognize and can identify, I get a bit cranky. Cindy usually accompanies me when I need more than a pair of jeans to help me with color and fabric combinations, but obviously that wasn’t possible on this adventure. If I had thought about this enough in advance, I would have asked one of my female co-workers if I could trade lunch for their fashion assistance, lol.

But I should mention here that one of the coolest things about the retailer I purchased these from is that all of their shirts, ties, pants, jackets, etc. have the color printed on the price tag! That helped me avoid begging the salespeople for help when Cindy said, “Get a charcoal gray shirt” and kept me from heading to the Outdoor department to look for a grill to color-match.

Anyway, I stayed with basic black (with a nice fabric-kind of pinstripe, hard to describe but not just a flat black) suit, charcoal gray shirt and a couple of black and gray ties, all viewed by Cindy in cellphone pics and ok’d. And it will go with other shirts and ties I already have with me. I did ask the saleswoman too when I was purchasing them and she agreed, but of course I’m not sure they really care…you’re just a sale and I doubt they’re concerned if you look like a clown when you put on their merchandise, as long as you paid for it.

But now I have a new set of duds and that suits me just fine.

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Posted in Atlanta, Personal, Tennessee | 1 Comment

Ah, The Weekend

Things have been busy, both at work and in the old personal life, this past week. We’re off this Monday for Memorial Day so it will be a VERY welcome 2 1/2 day weekend for me. I can use the rest and relaxation.

Busy week coming up, I’ll tell you all about it later. But for now, back to a little pleasure reading, while sort of half-watching one of my favorite movies. Can you identify it from this quote?

“Make a move and the bunny gets it!”

Leave your answer in the comments.

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Posted in Atlanta, Georgia, Movies | 5 Comments

Quotable Quote

“When I was a little boy, they called me a liar, but now that I am grown up, they call me a writer.”

Isaac Bashevis Singer
Nobel Prize-winning author

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Granting Sentience To Inanimate Objects

By way of explanation as to my absence here for the past two days; I lost my Internet connection at the hotel Monday night/Tuesday morning. It would seem to be a problem with my laptop, though checks of all the applicable devices and diagnostics of the system have yet to reveal WHAT that problem might be. This morning, just before leaving the room to go to work, the connection was back. I hope I find that remains the same when I return to the room this evening…or you won’t be reading this. (Success! I have a connection!!)

One of my co-workers at the hotel, who allowed me to bring my laptop to her room last night to check whether it would connect on her working Ethernet connection, submitted the theory that my laptop (a PC) has picked up the energy of my desire for a MacBook Pro and is reacting accordingly. While not a believer in granting sentience to inanimate objects, I will nonetheless attempt to explain to my laptop that, perversely, such a reaction on its part will simply make me inclined to replace it with that desired MacBook Pro even sooner than I planned.

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Posted in Atlanta, Georgia, Technology | 3 Comments

In The Year 52011

I am just getting around to reading the May/June issue of Poets & Writers and among all the usual good stuff is a small piece about the KEO Project. Have you heard of it?

The KEO Project is a proposal that a time capsule filled with messages from everyday people around the world would be launched into space to orbit the earth for 50,000 years, then reenter earth’s atmosphere to (hopefully) be discovered by a future civilization, should mankind still exist.

Submissions are sought from everyone who can write a text message. There is a limit of 6,000 characters (or about 1100 words) so that the largest number of messages possible can be archived in the capsule. This is your chance to write something that may long outlive even the memory of you. The deadline for submissions is the end of 2009, so that there will be time to archive the messages and prepare to launch the satellite that will blast off in 2011. Click on this link to learn more about the KEO Project, including WHY it’s called the KEO. If you intend to make a submission, leave a comment letting me know.

Thinking about what kind of future the KEO Project might find in 50,000 years reminded me of the song “In The Year 2525” by Zager and Evans that was a hit in 1969. The lyrics (in case you’ve forgotten them or never heard them), are below the embedded video.

In the year 2525
If man is still alive
If woman can survive
They may find

In the year 3535
Ain’t gonna need to tell the truth, tell no lies
Everything you think, do, and say
Is in the pill you took today

In the year 4545
Ain’t gonna need your teeth, won’t need your eyes
You won’t find a thing to chew
Nobody’s gonna look at you

In the year 5555
Your arms are hanging limp at your sides
Your legs got nothing to do
Some machine is doing that for you

In the year 6565
Ain’t gonna need no husband, won’t need no wife
You’ll pick your son, pick your daughter too
From the bottom of a long black tube

In the year 7510
If God’s a-comin’ he ought to make it by then
Maybe he’ll look around himself and say
Guess it’s time for the Judgement Day

In the year 8510
God’s gonna shake his mighty head
He’ll either say I’m pleased where man has been
Or tear it down and start again

In the year 9595
I’m kinda wondering if man’s gonna be alive
He’s taken everything this old earth can give
And he ain’t put back nothing

Now it’s been 10,000 years
Man has cried a billion tears
For what he never knew
Now man’s reign is through
But through eternal night
The twinkling of starlight
So very far away
Maybe it’s only yesterday

In the year 2525
If man is still alive
If woman can survive
They may find

In the year 3535
Ain’t gonna need to tell the truth, tell no lies
Everything you think, do or say
Is in the pill you took today ….(fading)

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100 Things About Me

We’re all multi-faceted, multi-talented creatures. Some things are obvious and others are not quite so. Here are 100 things about me that will only be of interest to new readers, since those who have known me for any length of time probably know them already.

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Posted in Personal | 1 Comment

Napoleon And Josephine

What a wonderful ending to an otherwise hectic Saturday.

My mother-in-law and father-in-law belong to the Central Florida Rose Society. At their last meeting they portrayed Napoleon (although “portrayed” is probably a generous description of what my father-in-law did, since he simply stood with his right hand resting inside his shirt over his stomach) and Josephine, as my mother-in-law gave a talk about the famous couple and roses. This link does a fairly good job, I think, of explaining that connection for those of us who may not be familiar with it.

They left Orlando this morning on the first leg of a road trip to Minnesota to visit family, pulling their pop-up trailer and accompanied by their two “Westies”, Annie and Fannie. Around 4:30 this afternoon my father-in-law called me to let me know they were staying at a campground in McDonough, GA, about 30 miles south of where I’m at in Atlanta, and asking if I could join them for dinner at the Cracker Barrel off exit 218 in McDonough.

Of course I could!

I drove down after getting off work at 5:30 and it was SO good to see them. I think I’ve expressed my love and admiration for my in-laws in previous posts. I always tell Cindy that if we ever get divorced…I get her parents!!

We had a great time visiting. I was truly touched that they would plan to make their first stop near me so we could get together. That’s something even Cindy didn’t do when she and Rebecca drove up to our mountain property last weekend (though admittedly with good reason), so you can see how special my in-laws made me feel.

After eating, talking, laughing and visiting for almost 2 hours, it was time to say goodbye. We hugged each other, talked some more and then hugged again, finally saying our final farewells. My in-laws are two of my most favorite people in the world, and it really made my day, hell my week, to get to spend some time with them while I am away from home.

So a big “thank you” to the Emperor and the power behind the throne; Napoleon and Josephine.

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Posted in Atlanta, Family, Georgia | 3 Comments

Impossible Instruction

Everyone pair up in groups of three and line up in a circle.

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Goin’ To The Dogs

Coming out to my car after lunch yesterday my boss and I found a truck parked in the space opposite my car…with a dog at the wheel.


I think this was the truck that cut me off in traffic earlier!

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Posted in Atlanta | 1 Comment

Can We Upgrade?

My daughter IM’d me today while she was in the waiting room at the doctor’s office with both my grandchildren to tell me that my 7-year old grandson, who is a computer whiz, asked if they could “upgrade to a Premium account so we can see the doctor sooner?”

That little guy just cracks me up.

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Posted in Family, Mikey, Personal | 1 Comment

To Boldly Go…

I slept in until 8:30 Sunday morning, my only day off again this week. That felt good. I’m a night owl by nature, so when I’m deployed on these assignments with extended hours it’s a struggle for me to get to sleep at an early enough hour to be able to wake up at 5 or 5:30am. After a quick shower I drove over to Panera Bread for an equally quick breakfast, then over the theater to get in for the first showing of the day of the new “Star Trek” movie.

People who know me personally know that I am a “Star Trek” nerd. I’ve watched all of the TV incarnations and all of the motion pictures, most of them multiple times. I’ve read all the hardback novels and almost all of the paperback novels. I own various incarnations of “Star Trek” memorabilia. I’ve attended “Star Trek” conventions. I have gathered with friends for “Star Trek” viewing marathons, and spent hours with those same friends discussing various minutiae of the “Star Trek” universe.

I say that simply to establish that I would watch paint dry if it had some kind of “Star Trek” connection.

So, JJ Abrams was charged by paramount Studios with the unenviable task of rebooting the mythology of “Star Trek” (one of their most financially lucrative properties, though its shine has dulled in recent years) in such a way as to attract new viewers without pissing off the mass of us who have watched Gene Roddenberry’s vision unfold on the screen since 1966. On top of that, Abrams has made it clear he was never really a fan of Trek, causing some to feel that he might bring a breath of fresh air and others to run screaming “heresy!” across the Internet.

If you are a fan of “Star Trek” and it’s mythology, you WILL be confused at the beginning of the movie as you watch a slightly different history unfold. It is not until later in the movie that you discover WHY that history is not exactly right. Actions by the story’s villain have created a different timeline – a timeline that will be inhabited by our rebooted characters and…someone else.

Abrams is obviously a fan of time travel. He used it in his TV series “Alias” and “Lost” and he has used it to effect his reboot in “Star Trek”. I have no problem with that at all, I am a big fan of time travel stories.

If they are well-constructed.

And this one is. We get the characters we have loved with their same personality quirks and courageous spirit. We get to see the same relationships…and a new one or two. And best of all, to me, we get to see Captain Christopher Pike play a large part in James Tiberius Kirk becoming Captain James T. Kirk.

It will be interesting to see what happens in future “Star Trek” movies (and there WILL be future “Star Trek” movies), especially considering that the slate has been wiped clean and a major, major storyline change has been inserted that will mean everything can take a different direction. What that direction will be remains to be seen.

But it seems that one thing will NOT change;


“I have been, and always shall be, your friend.”

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