Showing posts with label Mike Rowe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Rowe. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Thank You, Mr. Rowe...For The Story That Means So Much


 Unfortunately, I was a day late accessing Mr. Rowe's Halloween edition podcast. Yesterday was filled with holiday preparations. Had I not taken the day off work, I would have--most likely--taken the time to fire up Mike Rowe's latest podcast.

It was a shorter-than-normal cast dedicated to the day special to so many.

Halloween.

Of all the things Mr. Rowe could have discussed, shared, he chose something extremely personal to me and my family. He recited Robert Service's classic, The Cremation of Sam McGee. As per his usual, Mr. Rowe explained why he chose that particular story and what it meant to him. He then masterfully (as a trained performer can do...) read the story, complete with effects to add drama to an already wonderful story.

It game me chills.

The chills came not necessarily from Mr. Rowe's reading, though part of it did. It came from a flood of memories that engulfed me as I listened. Hearing that story, those words, transported me to back almost half a century, to some of the most beautiful terrain in the world. I found myself sitting beside a campfire in a mountain valley shadowed by the Teton range. Surrounding me is family--many who are no longer with us--tired from multi-mile hikes but not wanting to miss my uncle recite from memory the same story, the same poem.

Those years after my dad passed away were filled with family. My mother's siblings, their spouses, and children adopted me, my brother, and sister. They became collectively a surrogate for a fallen father. We spent several summer weeks at the family farm between Driggs and Tetonia, Idaho. We would load up food, bedding, repelling gear, and other things necessary for survival in the wilderness and begin walking. After several miles, we'd camp, have dinner, then sit around a fire and listen to Uncle Arlin tell our favorite Robert Service poem.

As a kid, I lived for it. I even memorized the poem and performed it in a high school poetry reading competition. Basically, those words speak to me soul. As the story flowed through my earphones, I tried keeping up, tried reciting the once-memorized story with a smile across my face.

Thank you, Mr. Rowe. As a daily blogger, I many times search for things to share. I wonder if this particular choice of poems required much thought, or if it's just something you love as much as so many of us. Either way, I'm glad you chose it. I'm glad you shared it. I'm glad I live in a world where I could hear your voice and relive some of my greatest days.

Tuesday, July 18, 2017

Yeah, I Thought Of That...Too


I remember getting the idea--it's simple really. What if you could invent an attachment for an smartphone that would allow anyone to take and record an ultrasound picture or video? I even did a little research, and by "little," I mean I searched the web to see if, 1--it had already been invented, and, 2--a basic idea to see if it was even possible.

Turns out, it is, and it has been.

I've had other ideas that have been created. Back on April 7 of last year, I blogged about another one of my ideas that someone actually produced. Like last year, I'm not too upset about the smartphone ultrasound device being made by someone else. Because it actually exists now, that means I had someone else's idea long after they not only had the idea, but produced it as well. And, like most of my ideas, they usually just swirl round in my brain going nowhere. 

I knew an invention like this would take some pretty serious cash to even get it started, or someone with case who believed in the idea to support it.

I heard a podcast this morning from Mike Rowe. He's the "Dirty Jobs" guy who can tell a story in a charmingly folksy way. Today's story centered around inventors and he had some pretty amazing stats of those who invent things. Turns out, people who come up with new ideas don't stop at one--they have several patents to their name.

And even though my name doesn't appear in the patent office, I know at some point, I've had ideas that came to me. Unfortunately, they came to others, too, and many times, they came to them before they came to me. It's just as well. At least someone is making their ideas become realities.