The Hopeful Reality at Death

“The day is coming soon Father. When I am going to get there (I Hope) I have strived all my life to respond to the gifts of my Baptism. To live who I am called to be. I’ve asked forgiveness when I have fallen short. And, I have set myself on it again. But the day is coming soon father and I hope that I am invited into that Kingdom. And I am looking forward to tapping Barb on the should telling her to move over and standing next to her gazing upon the Lord for all eternity and singing His praise” – Bob Iafolla

A Look Into The Real World

I recently came across the article “What I Wish I Knew In My 20s” which I thought was a good article I wanted to share…primarily for my children. I grew up with amazing parents who were always able to provide what was needed. They were also hands off in many respects…including when it came time to select a college, consider what I should do when I grow up, etc.

Another aspect of what is rarely, if ever discussed is basic financial principles. Just today, I had a conversation with our lovely neighbor who is 78 years old who was never married or had any children. Her 401K is still with her former employer with whom she retired from many years ago. Apparently, someone from the company who manages the 401K wants her to consider taking out an annuity. In her case, this would be the worst thing she could do (An annuity is almost always a bad idea) Instead, she should have rolled her 401K over into a Traditional IRA and simply invested in an index fund such as the S&P500.

We are now in the midst of exbortant costs and inflation covering everything from housing, college tuition, food, etc that now is a good time to learn some basic and simple financial principles to live by.

Welcome Clare Elizabeth McLean!

We welcomed Clare Elizabeth McLean was born 9lbs 4oz and 21.5 inches on her due date – Saturday, April 23rd 2022 at 12:17 AM. Since it was out of my hands once we got to the hospital around noon on Friday the 22nd I ordered pizzas from Luigis for the nurses and doctors…just as Dad would have done! I was a little anxious to have her be born on the 22nd and not the 23rd so that it will be easy to remember her birthday because Mary was on August 22nd!

St. Clare of Assisi, Pray for us!

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Advice To My Children

The following is based off of the following tweet thread here.
“Be Interested. Talent is overrated—interest is not. Interested people are prone to giving their deep attention to something to discover more about it. They ask questions, listen, & observe. They open up to the world around them.

Different is Beautiful. Growing up, I feared being different—I desperately wanted to fit in. I made bad decisions grounded in insecurity. I only realized later: being different is your edge—your ultimate competitive advantage. No one can compete with you, at being you.

Help Others. This is where the most joy and fulfillment will come from.

Work Hard. If you want to accomplish anything in life, you have to work hard. Don’t believe the hype. Hard work isn’t the sexy, flashy Instagram posts saying “rise & grind”—it’s the ugly, painful effort in the dark, when no one is watching. If you want something, go get it.

Show Up in the Darkest Hour. It’s easy to be there for people to celebrate their wins. It takes character to show up for them in their darkest hour. People never forget who supported them when the chips were down. Be the friend who is always there—in good times and bad.

Change Your Mind. Willingness to change one’s mind is a rarity in today’s society. It’s great to have a strong view, but always open your mind to counterarguments. Stubborn objection to alternative perspectives stalls progress. Strive for strong opinions, weakly held.

Be Kind to Others. Kindness remains severely underrated. It fosters relationships, reduces stress and anxiety, and improves overall happiness. When you are consistently, genuinely kind, you become a magnet for the highest-quality people.

Never Get Too Big to Do the Small. Whether you’re in the mailroom or the corner office, never get too big to do the small things well. Small things become big things.

Adopt a Positive Sum Mentality. Want to get ahead in life? Start genuinely rooting for others to succeed. When one of us wins, we all win—winning spreads. If you adopt that mentality, you’ll become a magnet for the highest quality people.

Stand Up to Bullies. In life, you’re going to encounter a lot of bullies—some loud and in your face, some quiet and behind your back. You may even feel pressure to become one to fit in (I sadly did). Insecurity breeds bullies. Stand up to them—for yourself and for others.”

Juju Part 2

Merry Christmas from Heaven

This we received in the mail just before Christmas. It is a poem Juju had Hughie sent out to all of the family members she had asked for. She continues to be missed!

Juju

I was reflecting on Juju…my Godmother. I had saved this text message as reminder of her and the great joy and spirit which she lived by each and every day. We miss her but know she is with us each and every day!

“Hi Juju, You have always been a pillar and the matriarch of our family in all of our lives. And, you have created many of the most memorable moments. You mean the world to us and we love you so very much. Thank you for being a bright light and true blessing always showing us all what is most important!”

April 4th 2020

Just so I NEVER forget….. April 2, 2020
Gas prices a mile from home were under $2
School cancelled for the rest of the school year – yes cancelled!
Self-distancing measures on the rise.
Tape on the floors at grocery stores and others to help distance shoppers (6 ft.) from each other.
Limited number of people inside stores, therefore, lineups outside the store doors.
Non-essential stores and businesses mandated closed.
Parks, trails, entire cities locked up.
Entire sports seasons cancelled.
Concerts, tours, festivals, entertainment events – cancelled.
Weddings, family celebrations, holiday gatherings – cancelled.
No wakes or funerals
No masses, churches are closed.
No gatherings of 50 or more, then 20 or more, now 5 or more.
Don’t socialize with anyone outside of your home.
Children’s outdoor play parks are closed.
We are to distance from each other.
Shortage of masks, gowns, gloves for our front-line workers.
Shortage of ventilators for the critically ill.
Panic buying sets in and we have no toilet paper, no disinfecting supplies, no paper towel no laundry soap, no hand sanitizer.
Shelves are bare.
Manufacturers, distilleries and other businesses switch their lines to help make visors, masks, hand sanitizer and PPE.
Government closes the border to all non-essential travel.
Fines are established for breaking the rules.
Stadiums and recreation facilities open up for the overflow of Covid-19 patients.
Press conferences daily from the President. Daily updates on new cases, recoveries, and deaths.
Government incentives to stay home.
Barely anyone on the roads.
People wearing masks and gloves outside.
Essential service workers are terrified to go to work.
Medical field workers are afraid to go home to their families.
This is the Novel Coronavirus (Covid-19) Pandemic, declared March 11th, 2020.
Why do I write this status?
One day it will show up in my memory feed and it will be a yearly reminder that life is precious and not to take the things we dearly love for granted.
We have so much!
Be thankful.
Be grateful.
Be kind to each other.
Love one another.
Support one another.
We are all one! ❤️
Copy and share.

Dad

One of the many things Dad has taught me is to take pride in the work that you do. The tractor pictured was for sale and had a buyer but Dad wanted to still fix it up and make it better. Or, when Dad bought a new truck and had his old truck for a few weeks and still drove his old truck with 300,000 miles even though he had a brand new truck in the driveway. He takes pride in what he does and cares for many people beyond himself!

-Dad and I working on Saturday night March 28th waxing my car. He had a great deal of energy and wanted to work hard as he always has. In this moment we didn’t need to communicate. We both knew that this was time we were spending together and it wasn’t necessarily the task before us that we were attempting to complete.

“Eagle’s wings” is sung at a funeral. This tells me just how much music can affect our lives in a positive manner even at times like these. One final comment was seeing my father as the casket was leaving the church and seeing what he called was the “Local 4” bible placed on top of the casket. It isn’t often that I see my father cry but this was one time that I saw him fighting back tears. As I return this week I will remember Dick and the words of the priest that “Life is too short to be superficial or unhappy”

The Starfish Story

It isn’t difficult to make a difference in someone else’s life.

One day a man was walking along the beach when he noticed a boy picking something up and gently throwing it into the ocean. Approaching the boy, he asked, “What are you doing?”

The youth replied, “Throwing starfish back into the ocean. The surf is up and the tide is going out. If I don’t throw them back, they’ll die.”

“Son,” the man said, “don’t you realize there are miles and miles of beach and hundreds of starfish? You can’t make a difference!”

After listening politely, the boy bent down, picked up another starfish, and threw it back into the surf. Then, smiling at the man, he said…

“I made a difference for that one.”

The 7 Deadly Sins

  • After love make sure to take an active notice of the 7 Deadly Sins and make sure to do everything you can to avoid them!
  1. Pride – Pride is the deadliest of the deadly sins. In fact, all sin is in some way a form of pride because sin elevates our ego ahead of all else. The antidote to pride is humility. To learn humility is to learn to live in the reality that each of us is a creature of God called to worship God alone and surrender to him and his plans for us.
  1. Envy – Envy is pleasure in the sorrow of another or resentment over their happiness or success. The lively virtue for envy is admiration for all the gifts God has bestowed on each and every person.
  1. Anger – Because hurt is everywhere, anger is everywhere. Anger is a normal part of human existence and is not sinful unless used for the wrong purposes. The antidote to anger is forgiveness, one of the New Testament’s most central themes. “Hatred is a curse that does not affect the hated. It only poisons the hater. Release a grudge as if it was a poison.”
  1. Sloth – Laziness, uncaring. St. Thomas Aquinas defined sloth as “sorrow or indifference to spiritual good.”  Sloth is when a human heart becomes bored with and inert to the things of God. It is not the same as mere laziness and its countervailing virtue is zeal. 
  1. Greed – greed is the unreasonable desire for riches that drives us to love material things more than we love God and our neighbor. Generosity is, not surprisingly, the counter force for those who tend toward avarice.
  1. Gluttony – Gluttony is an excess of love for food or drink over the love of God. Our culture makes it extremely easy to believe that we should continually indulge our appetites. The antidote to gluttony is asceticism, which creates a “desert environment” within us that helps discipline our lower nature to allow the higher desires to emerge.

7. Lust – ​Dante regards lust as the least of the deadly sins, while most people in western culture would regard it as the worst. Lust is the sin of treating another person as a sexual object or as a means to an end. Chastity, meaning “sexual uprightness,” counteracts lust. The chaste person keeps their vows while refusing to use the other, even a spouse, as a sexual object. Pleasures of the body. Theology of the body John Paul II

Start With Love

To my children…Start with Love. It is the most important! In Fulton Sheen’s book “Victory Over Vice” he writes; “The only way love can be shown is by sacrifice, namely, the surrender of one thing for another…In other words, “Love is willing the good of the other.”

99 Bits Of Unsolicited Advice

From Kevin Kelly at the Technium

• If you have any doubt at all about being able to carry a load in one trip, do yourself a huge favor and make two trips.

• What you get by achieving your goals is not as important as what you become by achieving your goals. At your funeral people will not recall what you did; they will only remember how you made them feel.

• Recipe for success: under-promise and over-deliver.

• It’s not an apology if it comes with an excuse. It is not a compliment if it comes with a request.

• Jesus, Superman, and Mother Teresa never made art. Only imperfect beings can make art because art begins in what is broken.

• If someone is trying to convince you it’s not a pyramid scheme, it’s a pyramid scheme.

• Learn how to tie a bowline knot. Practice in the dark. With one hand. For the rest of your life you’ll use this knot more times than you would ever believe.

• If something fails where you thought it would fail, that is not a failure.

• Be governed not by the tyranny of the urgent but by the elevation of the important.

• Leave a gate behind you the way you first found it.

• The greatest rewards come from working on something that nobody has a name for. If you possibly can, work where there are no words for what you do.

• A balcony or porch needs to be at least 6 feet (2m) deep or it won’t be used.

• Don’t create things to make money; make money so you can create things. The reward for good work is more work.

• In all things — except love — start with the exit strategy. Prepare for the ending. Almost anything is easier to get into than out of.

• Train employees well enough they could get another job, but treat them well enough so they never want to.

• Don’t aim to have others like you; aim to have them respect you.

• The foundation of maturity: Just because it’s not your fault doesn’t mean it’s not your responsibility.

• A multitude of bad ideas is necessary for one good idea.

• Being wise means having more questions than answers.

• Compliment people behind their back. It’ll come back to you.

• Most overnight successes — in fact any significant successes — take at least 5 years. Budget your life accordingly.

• You are only as young as the last time you changed your mind.

• Assume anyone asking for your account information for any reason is guilty of scamming you, unless proven innocent. The way to prove innocence is to call them back, or login to your account using numbers or a website that you provide, not them. Don’t release any identifying information while they are contacting you via phone, message or email. You must control the channel.

• Sustained outrage makes you stupid.

• Be strict with yourself and forgiving of others. The reverse is hell for everyone.

• Your best response to an insult is “You’re probably right.” Often they are.

• The worst evils in history have always been committed by those who truly believed they were combating evil. Beware of combating evil.

• If you can avoid seeking approval of others, your power is limitless.

• When a child asks an endless string of “why?” questions, the smartest reply is, “I don’t know, what do you think?”

• To be wealthy, accumulate all those things that money can’t buy.

• Be the change you wish to see.

• When brainstorming, improvising, jamming with others, you’ll go much further and deeper if you build upon each contribution with a playful “yes — and” example instead of a deflating “no — but” reply.

• Work to become, not to acquire.

• Don’t loan money to a friend unless you are ready to make it a gift.

• On the way to a grand goal, celebrate the smallest victories as if each one were the final goal. No matter where it ends you are victorious.

• Calm is contagious.

• Even a foolish person can still be right about most things. Most conventional wisdom is true.

• Always cut away from yourself.

• Show me your calendar and I will tell you your priorities. Tell me who your friends are, and I’ll tell you where you’re going.

• When hitchhiking, look like the person you want to pick you up.

• Contemplating the weaknesses of others is easy; contemplating the weaknesses in yourself is hard, but it pays a much higher reward.

• Worth repeating: measure twice, cut once.

• Your passion in life should fit you exactly; but your purpose in life should exceed you. Work for something much larger than yourself.

• If you can’t tell what you desperately need, it’s probably sleep.

• When playing Monopoly, spend all you have to buy, barter, or trade for the Orange properties. Don’t bother with Utilities.

• If you borrow something, try to return it in better shape than you received it. Clean it, sharpen it, fill it up.

• Even in the tropics it gets colder at night than you think. Pack warmly.

• To quiet a crowd or a drunk, just whisper.

• Writing down one thing you are grateful for each day is the cheapest possible therapy ever.

• When someone tells you something is wrong, they’re usually right. When someone tells you how to fix it, they’re usually wrong.

• If you think you saw a mouse, you did. And, if there is one, there are more.

• Money is overrated. Truly new things rarely need an abundance of money. If that was so, billionaires would have a monopoly on inventing new things, and they don’t. Instead almost all breakthroughs are made by those who lack money, because they are forced to rely on their passion, persistence and ingenuity to figure out new ways. Being poor is an advantage in innovation.

• Ignore what others may be thinking of you, because they aren’t.

• Avoid hitting the snooze button. That’s just training you to oversleep.

• Always say less than necessary.

• You are given the gift of life in order to discover what your gift *in* life is. You will complete your mission when you figure out what your mission is. This is not a paradox. This is the way.

• Don’t treat people as bad as they are. Treat them as good as you are.

• It is much easier to change how you think by changing your behavior, than it is to change your behavior by changing how you think. Act out the change you seek.

• You can eat any dessert you want if you take only 3 bites.

• Each time you reach out to people, bring them a blessing; then they’ll be happy to see you when you bring them a problem.

• Bad things can happen fast, but almost all good things happen slowly.

• Don’t worry how or where you begin. As long as you keep moving, your success will be far from where you start.

• When you confront a stuck bolt or screw: righty tighty, lefty loosey.

• If you meet a jerk, overlook them. If you meet jerks everywhere everyday, look deeper into yourself.

• Dance with your hips.

• We are not bodies that temporarily have souls. We are souls that temporarily have bodies.

• You can reduce the annoyance of someone’s stupid belief by increasing your understanding of why they believe it.

• If your goal does not have a schedule, it is a dream.

• All the greatest gains in life — in wealth, relationships, or knowledge —come from the magic of compounding interest — amplifying small steady gains. All you need for abundance is to keep adding 1% more than you subtract on a regular basis.

• The greatest breakthroughs are missed because they look like hard work.

• People can’t remember more than 3 points from a speech.

• I have never met a person I admired who did not read more books than I did.

• The greatest teacher is called “doing”.

• Finite games are played to win or lose. Infinite games are played to keep the game going. Seek out infinite games because they yield infinite rewards.

• Everything is hard before it is easy. The day before something is a breakthrough, it’s a stupid idea.

• A problem that can be solved with money is not really a problem.

• When you are stuck, sleep on it. Let your subconscious work for you.

• Your work will be endless, but your time is finite. You cannot limit the work so you must limit your time. Hours are the only thing you can manage.

• To succeed, get other people to pay you; to become wealthy, help other people to succeed.

• Children totally accept — and crave — family rules. “In our family we have a rule for X” is the only excuse a parent needs for setting a family policy. In fact, “I have a rule for X” is the only excuse you need for your own personal policies.

• All guns are loaded.

• Many backward steps are made by standing still.

• This is the best time ever to make something. None of the greatest, coolest creations 20 years from now have been invented yet. You are not late.

• No rain, no rainbow.

• Every person you meet knows an amazing lot about something you know virtually nothing about. Your job is to discover what it is, and it won’t be obvious.

• You don’t marry a person, you marry a family.

• Always give credit, take blame.

• Be frugal in all things, except in your passions splurge.

• When making something, always get a few extras — extra material, extra parts, extra space, extra finishes. The extras serve as backups for mistakes, reduce stress, and fill your inventory for the future. They are the cheapest insurance.

• Something does not need to be perfect to be wonderful. Especially weddings.

• Don’t let your email inbox become your to-do list.

• The best way to untangle a knotty tangle is not to “untie” the knots, but to keep pulling the loops apart wider and wider. Just make the mess as big, loose and open as possible. As you open up the knots they will unravel themselves. Works on cords, strings, hoses, yarns, or electronic cables.

• Be a good ancestor. Do something a future generation will thank you for. A simple thing is to plant a tree.

• To combat an adversary, become their friend.

• Take one simple thing — almost anything — but take it extremely seriously, as if it was the only thing in the world, or maybe the entire world is in it — and by taking it seriously you’ll light up the sky.

• History teaches us that in 100 years from now some of the assumptions you believed will turn out to be wrong. A good question to ask yourself today is “What might I be wrong about?”

• Be nice to your children because they are going to choose your nursing home.

• Advice like these are not laws. They are like hats. If one doesn’t fit, try another.

Juju

From Juju – “You’ve been a great godson and I love you so much. You are a great husband and father and I am SO excited for another McLean. That Mary is one hot ticket and I’ve loved seeing all the pictures. Know that I will be watching over you. Take care of Frankie, Ruthie and Mikie. All my love, Juju”

Mary 1 Month!

Mary now 1 month old! (This was Mary at the Dr. office for her 1 month checkup! Calm, cool and collected…and beautiful!)