Author Archives: combs2jc

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About combs2jc

I am a dad first. I am also a writer, artist, submarine vet and adventurous. Most of my writing is non-fiction. I concentrate on memior and history. I also have an annual Christmas book I put out that is free, "Christmas Patrol". "Christmas Patrol" gives vetrans (multiple countries and services) a chance to encourage those men and women currently serving their country during the holidays. My readers have been asking for a website and here it is. Feel free to write, I read everything. Thank You!

What Encourages Me


It has been a long hard week, and I am exhausted. Yet, I always find things that encourage me to go ever onward and upward. One thing that always seems to encourage me is meeting immigrants and having conversations with them. I have always liked being around immigrants (legal ones I am talking about here). I know the troubles, time, and money it costs to get to the United States. My daughter’s mother and I were married before she immigrated to the United States, and though you would think that made it easier, it did not. (Why would our government make it hard for a veteran with war time service to get his wife into America right? Ya, you keep thinking that.)

What I like about immigrants is that they know why they are here. They know what America offers them. They know America’s great gifts and great faults. They are glad to be here and often come with only the clothes they are wearing and little more. They take whatever jobs they can get, no matter what the pay. They work hard and never look back. They know the opportunity that awaits them here. They know they will not “make it” the first time, and maybe not the fifteenth time. But they know they will make it, they know the opportunity is there and with hard work they can achieve their goals. They just don’t quit. When they make it they give back to the community and think nothing of giving a hand up to others to help them succeed too, and will tell you about every person who helped them. They also know more about our country and its history than most Americans.

This week I met a man from Venezuela and we discussed the great hero Simon Bolivar. (I am writing an article about him, if you don’t know Simon Bolivar you need too. He has always been a hero of mine.) The next person I met was a man who immigrated from Moscow. We had a long conversation, but then I love Russian people, my daughter is half Russian, and I can’t wait to get back to Russia for another visit. Great history great people.

As if that was not enough, my daughter Elizabeth has decided to start her own business making jewelry to help mom and dad. What a kid and only 7 years old. I started to explain to Elizabeth what an entrepeneur is and what it takes to start a business. (I wasn’t talking about a lemon aid stand.) So, we went to a craft store and started taking count of what she needed to start her jewelry making business. We met a wonderful woman who has her own jewelry making business and talked with Elizabeth, adult to adult, about the good and bad of the business, while also giving Elizabeth some great advice. So, Elizabeth has her business plan (she did it, not dad) and her short and long-term goals. I agreed to be her banker to get her started, and since she is my daughter and I love her so much, I told her I would loan her a start-up at 0% interest while explaining the interests a bank would charge and why.

So, I guess my 7 year old daughter is a business woman now and she has done it on her own. Now if that isn’t a week to pick you up and get you going, I just don’t know what is.

I hope you have a great week too! Take care!

English: Monument to Simon Bolivar, with flowe...

English: Monument to Simon Bolivar, with flowers of Venezuela Government, at Venezuela square of Bilbao. Español: Monumento a Simón Bolívar, con corona de flores del Gobierno de Venezuela, en la plaza de Venezuela de Bilbao. Euskara: Simon Bolivarri monumentua Venezuelako gobernuaren lore koroarekin Bilboko Venezuela enparantzan. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: Statue of Simon Bolivar in Washington...

English: Statue of Simon Bolivar in Washington DC, USA (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

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Author Stephen King- 65 Today


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American author Stephen King turns 65 today. King has sold over 350 million books over the years. He has published 50 novels and 5ive non-fiction books and nearly 200 short stories. His books have been made into countless movies. I have only read one Stephen King book, last years’ 11-22-63″ his fictional work on the JFK assassination. I enjoyed that book. My favourite Stephen King movies would be “The Shawshank Redeption” which is one of my top 10 favourite movies ever and “Stand By Me”

Years ago I used to play in “Dead Pools” where you would pick celebrities who you thought would die in the coming year, and I became acquainted with Stephen King’s brother-in-law who was a fellow player. They both went to the University of Maine and married sisters.

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Hey … When I’m Wrong I’m Wrong hahaha


I remember 5 1/2 months ago when I wrote my article on the AS Hindenburg I thought to myself “It will not get many reads, but I have always been interested in the Hindenburg.” So, I wrote the article and posted it. Well, last week for the first time since I posted that article it was finally knocked out of the number one spot for most weekly views. I hear you and will be writing more about zepplins in the future.

And thank you!

You really are the best readers a writer could have.

Joe

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What Were You Doing When …?


Life is made up of milestones, moments in time we remember in detail. Many times these moments change the course of history like the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor the morning of 7 December 1941. Sometimes these moments change how we look at our society such as the assassinations of President John F Kennedy (22 November 1963) or Dr. Martin Luther King (4 April 1968). Sometimes these moments signify the end of a bad time in our society like 20 January 1981, or the beginning of something new and wonderful like Neil Armstrong walking on the moon. At other times, these moments signify the end of an era like 9 November 1989.

What were you doing on …

  • … 20 January 2009, when the first black president was sworn into office?
  • … 1 February 2003, when the space shuttle Columbia disintegrated on its landing approach?
  • … 11 September 2001, when the world trade towers fell?
  • … 25 December 1991, when the Soviet Union dissolved?
  • … 9 November 1989, when the Berlin wall came down?
  • … 12 June 1987, when Reagan gave his “ … tear down this wall!” speech?
  • … 28 January 1986, when the space shuttle Challenger exploded on takeoff?
  • … 30 March 1981, when President Ronald Reagan was shot (first president shot since JFK)?
  • … 20 January 1981, when the Iranian hostages came home?
  • … 9 August 1974, when President Nixon resigned (first presidential resignation in history)?
  • … 4 April 1968, when Dr. Martin Luther King was assassinated?
  • … 20 July 1969, when Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon?
  • … 22 November 1963, when President John F Kennedy was assassinated?

Some dates are shared by the world, some by just one nation, others by just one family or group of friends. Whatever the event, worldwide or personal, the memories tied to that event are personal and involve our family and friends.

Two events from my family’s collective memories mark the beginning and the end of the 1960’s.

Anyone who has parented, baby-sat, or stood in line behind a two-year-old boy knows they are in constant motion. Little boys seem to be grabbing, pushing, pulling, and throwing everything within their grasp; and telling everyone and no one in particular, about it while they are in action. Sleep is the only thing that seems to arrest their verbal and physical assault on the world.

This fall afternoon in the early 1960’s began like so many others. My father was at work, my mother was busy in the kitchen, and I was in my playpen in the living room. The TV was on nearby while I trashed about safely in my playpen exercising my vocal cords. Suddenly all was quiet, my mother rushed into the living room to see what had happened.

She found me standing quietly in my playpen in the corner absorbed by the equally quiet TV. She followed my gaze and saw a black screen with the following words in white, “We interrupt this program for an important announcement.” Next, she saw Walter Cronkite tears flowing as he looked into the camera.

“President John F. Kennedy was just shot in Dallas, Texas …”

My mother still tells the story of how her 22-month-old son told her the president was assassinated. The next event was the culmination of nearly a decade of work by thousands of people, the completion of a goal set by President Kennedy.

My bedtime at age seven was 7 pm; this particular evening was no different. What was different was that by the time I had fallen asleep; my parents were waking me up and bringing me down stairs to watch TV for a few minutes before putting me back into bed. I was not very happy about this at the time I was tired. Again, the master of ceremonies was Walter Cronkite, an excited and happy Walter Cronkite.

However, unlike the earlier Cronkite appearance, Walter shared the airtime; the other person was dressed in a white suit that made him look like the Pillsbury doughboy and clumsily walking across a dessert. This other image was not very good quality either. Soon after we heard, “… one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind …” I was sent back to bed.

Throughout our lives, we confront events that sometimes shape who we are, and sometimes proclaim to the world who we have become. Many of the events in our lives we cannot control, but how we respond to them we do control. Those reactions that seem to contradict our experience, or place others above ourselves are the moments that define our character. When you trust a stranger, when previous strangers have proved their unworthiness to be trusted, when you share your last dollar with a beggar on the street at a time when you do not know where your own next meal will come from; that is the moment when you build your own character.

Have you ever found a small child left alone in a car at the mall? What did you do? Did you make a comment to yourself or companion and continue on your way? Did you call the police and wait for them to arrive? You do not know the circumstances that put that child in the car alone. It could be a parent shopping for new shoes that left that child, or it could be the first time in days that the child has finally slept and the parent is getting medicine from the pharmacy for the child; most likely the reason is somewhere in between. The best reaction may be to keep the car in sight, looking out for the child, until the parent gets back. You do not have time for that you say. No, but you have time to wait for the police. That haggard look on the young mother’s face may be from partying all night the night before, it may be she has not had any sleep the last several days as she walked the floor with a sick child.

What you do and why you do it is a combination of things; your personal experience, personal knowledge, the environment under which you grew to adulthood. However, there is also a part of you that is inherited; we are not talking DNA (though that may be part of it). There are things families share from generation to generation that scientists cannot explain (but they are trying). Years after my maternal grandfather died, I am still finding things I have in common with him.

My grandfather started his adult life before most people do. He joined the navy, wanted to be an architect, worked on the railroad, and eventually worked for himself. He lost a daughter, was married twice, and along the way he collected coins, became a great observer and respecter of people. He always had a paperback in his back pocket when he left the house and wore a snap-brim hat in public. He drew beautiful sketches for the rest of his life, all but a few never survived. Bernerd E. Goodykoontz also had one daughter with his second wife when he was middle-aged.

I never saw my grandfather in public; he was retired when I came along. Except for the work on the railroad and the coin collecting I never knew those things about my grandfather. The coin collecting I found out about after I painstakingly put together a birth year coin set for him (it was expensive for a ten year old he was born in 1905). All the other things I found out about after he passed away. All of those things I have in common with my grandfather every single one (except the railroad). Some may say, “That’s DNA”, but DNA does not explain all of it. It also does not explain why the Goodykoontz men going back 250 years (in my direct line) became fathers in their 40’s and 50’s (Bernerd was the exception, he was 38 years old when my mother was born).

The most striking difference between my grandfather and me was that he kept his personal life hidden inside, while I hide very little, if anything, of myself. We were even of the same physical stature (his suits fit me without additional tailoring).

Here is my point. You are important. Regardless of the particulars of your birth, you were no accident. Someone in the future, one of your descendents, will take an interest in you. It may not even be a direct descendent, it could be a descendent of a brother, sister, or even a cousin, but someone will take an interest. They will identify with you; they will see you in themselves.

At a point in their lives when life seems to have given them a rotten apple, they will draw encouragement from you. They will look to you to discover how to handle their predicament. Maybe they will look to see what they should do, or see what did not work for you, but they will look up to you. That connection that they feel with you will also give them a sense of belonging in the world; you will make them feel like family, even if they were orphaned at a young age. You will give them the strength to continue, when so many others have simply given up.

Give that person a chance; give them the encouragement they deserve. Talk with that person; record your voice for them, or write a letter. Tell them “what you were doing when …”, tell them about your daily life, the things you love and the things that irritate you. The things you say may not seem like much to you, but it will be worth more than silver and gold to them. Though you will never get a chance to meet that person, you may just be the only person who can help them in their hour of need.

Cronkite announcing the death of President Ken...

Cronkite announcing the death of President Kennedy on November 22, 1963 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

President Lyndon B. Johnson and Rev. Dr. Marti...

President Lyndon B. Johnson and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. meet at the White House, 1966 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Neil Armstrong photographed by Buzz Aldrin aft...

Neil Armstrong photographed by Buzz Aldrin after the completion of the Lunar EVA on the Apollo 11 flight (brighter and smaller version) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Astronauts Michael Collins (left), Neil Armstr...

Astronauts Michael Collins (left), Neil Armstrong (2nd right), and Buzz Aldrin (right), with Former President George W. Bush on the 35th anniversary of the Moon landing. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Apollo 11 crew portrait. Left to right are...

The Apollo 11 crew portrait. Left to right are Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins, and Buzz Aldrin. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Challenger Flight Crew

Challenger Flight Crew (Photo credit: cindy47452)

December 7 1941

December 7 1941 (Photo credit: Luke Bryant)

Pentagon Building After Terrorist Attack, 11 S...

Pentagon Building After Terrorist Attack, 11 September 2001 (Photo credit: Marine Corps Archives & Special Collections)

Ronald Reagan

Ronald Reagan (Photo credit: Fresh Conservative)

The fall of the Berlin Wall - November 1989

The fall of the Berlin Wall – November 1989 (Photo credit: gavinandrewstewart)

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Fair winds and following seas, sir


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