About Wes

6 thoughts on “About Wes”

  1. Dear Mr. Miser:

    I see that you also grew up in Nebraska. whee did you grow up? I grew up in Falls City, NE. Population of 5,500 in 1966 and now 4,800. My wife grew up in North Loop, NE population of 400 people in 1970s.

    I have lived in the Chicago area (Park Ridge) since 1973, and I have had my law office five blocks from my home since 1984. It makes life a lot easier.

  2. Scoop, you were a major source of two things that were far too few and far between during my foggy Bay Area adolescence – insight and humor. Most of my party buddies back then wrote you off as being either too liberal or simply too far out there, but the few who did connect did something that the rest didn’t – we continued studying. I’m not saying you’re the main reason I went on to get a degree, you definitely helped.
    Thanks, and keep on inspiring (and relaxing) others. We just yet might avoid a childish Armageddon…
    Regards,
    Mondo

  3. Wes thank you again for leading this weekends retreat at Esalen. My level of concentration is vastly improved and learning to combine it with some movement right after as we did has been a real revelation.

    I feel a new appreciation for the practice that I had until now not taken seriously enough.

    Laughing as often as we did was the cherry on top of the whole experience

    Your a gentleman & a scholar

    Cheers

  4. Hi Wes,
    This is a divine appointment; take it or leave it.
    An old Navy friend, whom I’ve not heard from in ages, recently emailed all the squadron buddies a funny piece on the topic of Geezers. For frame of reference, we’re all retired USN fighter pilots [aged 62 & older]. After reading the comic quotes that went along with the funny cartoons, a word search on “geezing” was done to see if the word was commonly used. I thought it was just a term young fighter pilots used to describe old fighter pilots. Your piece “The Practice of Geezing” was first on the list. With no intention of reading the full piece, I began reading.

    Here’s where the divine appointment hit me. I’m a Christian who believes original Scripture is the inerrant Word of God.

    Wes, your despondency over life is where God put the unction to continue reading: Your statement: “I sometimes feel that being alive is more of a burden than a blessing, but I am somewhat ashamed of this sentiment. I was brought up in a culture of humanism that cherishes life, and trying to escape another turn on the wheel feels as if I am betraying my own cause, devaluing everything that I love. Nonetheless, when I hear that life is not a desirable condition, I often feel a sense of relief. If life is not supposed to be easy or enjoyable or filled with obvious meaning, then I can relax. I’m not getting it wrong. This is just the way life on this planet is designed.”

    Wes, I understand the plight of what secular humanism does to the soul. God speaks to me and indicated the need to reach out to you. Buddha is dead; but Jesus Christ lives. Please read John 3:16, Romans 10:13, Ephesians 2:8-9, Romans 10:9. If these verses speak to you, in a way that nothing else has, this was most certainly a divine appointment. You’ll have a refreshed purpose and a whole new outlook on life. If that’s the case, recommend reading the book of John, the book of Romans, and the rest of the NT from Romans on, in order of placement. Feel free to contact me if you would like assistance in any of these spiritual matters. Maranatha, Curt

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