
Tag Archives: Wingspread
Wingspread Ezine for May, 2024
Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
May, 2024 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this E-zine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Writer’s Corner
- Blessed Unbeliever now available
- This month’s story: “Trouble in Paradise”
- This month’s puzzler
- WINGSPREAD Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
Writer’s Corner
Tip for writers: Notice dialogue, description and metaphor used by other writers. These can be adapted for your own writing.
Word of the month: SCABROUS. Indecent, salacious. (from “scabs”). “He began receiving scabrous publications.”
Question for you: What is the best novel you’ve ever read and why? (I’ll publish some answers in our next ezine.)
BLESSED UNBELIEVER novel
Why did Sean, who received his Christian teaching with his mother’s milk, turn his back on faith and walk away? But unbeknownst, grace pursued.

Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.
New story
I remember telling myself, Wow, Eve! The big green snake was scary, but he really talked sense. I ate the fruit and I didn’t die. Anyway, God loves me so much I’m sure one piece of fruit is no big deal for him.
Shortly after we’d arrived in the park God told us, “Enjoy, celebrate, but don’t eat any fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil or you’ll die.” (Adam and I referred to the tree as “the TKGE.”)
I felt so happy when I walked over to the vegetable garden, my bare feet sinking into the most, fresh-smelling soil. I asked Adam, “If God loves us, why would he deny us fruit that looks so good?”
Adam says, “I don’t know; he has his reasons, I guess. Maybe it’s a test. Anyway there’re so many other good trees.”
“Yeah, but I wonder if the TKGE fruit looks different. There must be something special about it.”
“Maybe, but I’m busy here with the garden, so let’s talk about it later.” (In those special days, guys grew and ate green, leafy vegetables.) . . . To read more, click here: https://jimhurd.com/2024/04/30/trouble-in-paradise/
Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.


Windows on our beautiful world
This month’s puzzler
(Thanks to Car Talk puzzler archives.) Three guys check into a motel in the middle of nowhere. They’re running from the law and they have to lay low for a night. They approach the front desk clerk and he tells them that one room will be $30. This is the cheapest motel ever.
They are really strapped for cash so they decide to share one room. They each give the clerk $10 and then they go to the room.
After they leave, the clerk realizes that he overcharged them. They were having a special on rooms, and the price was supposed to be $25, not $30. So, he gives the bellboy $5 and asks him to return this to the three guys, since he overcharged them.
So the bellboy takes the $5, but as he’s heading to the room, he thinks to himself, “Well, there are three guys, and $5. They won’t be able to split this evenly, so I’m going to keep $2, and give them $3.” He says to them, “Here’s $3. You were overcharged for the room.” And they say, “Thank you very much.” He leaves, having pocketed the $2.
So here is the question.
They each spent $10 to start off with. Then they each get back $1. So they each spent $9 on the room. And 9 times 3 is 27. Plus the $2 that the bellboy stole. That all equals $29.
So, what happened to the other dollar? Since they originally spent $30?
(Answer will appear in next month’s WINGSPREAD ezine.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
You recall the guy had two girlfriends—one in Brooklyn and one in the Bronx. So, which one should he visit? The trains to Brooklyn and the Bronx run equally often—every 10 minutes, so he figures if he randomly arrives at the station, he should have equal time with each girl. But that isn’t what happens. Nine out of ten times he ends up going to Brooklyn. So, what is happening with these ten-minute trains?
And here is the answer. Yes, the trains ran equally often, every 10 minutes. That is true. But the schedule was such that the Bronx train would always arrive one minute after the Brooklyn train. So, when the guy would get to the station and go down the steps to the platform, unless he got in there during that one minute window between the Brooklyn train and the Bronx train, he would always take the Brooklyn train because it always arrived first. So he would get on whichever train arrived first. And that was almost always the Brooklyn train.

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Click here https://jimhurd.com/home/ to subscribe to this WINGSPREAD ezine, sent direct to your email inbox, every month. You will receive a free article for subscribing. Please share this URL with interested friends, “like” it on Facebook, retweet on Twitter, etc.
If you wish to unsubscribe from this Wingspread Ezine, send an email to hurd@usfamily.net and put in the subject line: “unsubscribe.” (I won’t feel bad, promise!) Thanks.
Wisdom
Who knew? It was Shakespeare who invented these common words: accommodation, all-knowing, amazement, countless, dexterously, dislocate, dwindle, frugal, indistinguishable, lackluster, laughable, premeditated, star-crossed
Some wise sayings to celebrate spring:
- When one door closes and another door opens, you are probably in prison.
- Age 60 might be the new 40, but 9:00 pm is the new midnight.
- The older I get, the earlier it gets late.
- When I say, “The other day,” I could be referring to any time between yesterday and 15 years ago.
- I had my patience tested. I’m negative.
- Remember, if you lose a sock in the dryer, it comes back as a Tupperware lid that doesn’t fit any of your containers.
- If you’re sitting in public and a stranger takes the seat next to you, just stare straight ahead and say, “Did you bring the money?”
- When you ask me what I am doing today, and I say “nothing,” it does not mean I am free. It means I am doing nothing.
- I finally got eight hours of sleep. It took me three days, but whatever.
- I run like the winded.
- I hate when a couple argues in public, and I missed the beginning and don’t know whose side I’m on.
- When someone asks what I did over the weekend, I squint and ask, “Why, what did you hear?”
- I don’t mean to interrupt people. I just randomly remember things and get really excited.
- When I ask for directions, please don’t use words like “east.”
- Sometimes, someone unexpected comes into your life out of nowhere, makes your heart race, and changes you forever. We call those people cops.

Wordplay — ideas for marketing signage.
- Signage for an Electrician’s truck:
Let us remove your shorts. - Signage for a curtain delivery truck:
Blind man driving. - Signage for a Podiatrist’s office:
Time wounds all heels. - Signage for a Septic Tank Truck:
Yesterday’s Meals on Wheels - Signage for an Optometrist’s Office:
If you don’t see what you’re looking for,
You’ve come to the right place. - Signage for a Plumber’s truck:
We repair what your husband fixed. - Don’t sleep with a drip. Call your plumber.
- Signage for a Tire Repair Shop:
Invite us to your next blowout. - Signage for a Maternity Room door:
“Push. Push. Push.” - Signage for a Car Dealership:
The best way to get back on your feet—miss a car payment. - Signage for a Muffler Shop:
No appointment necessary. We hear you coming. - Signage for a Veterinarian’s waiting room:
Be back in 5 minutes. Sit! Stay! - Signage for a Shoe repair store:
We will heel you
We will save your sole
We will even dye for you - Signage for an Electric Company:
We would be delighted if you send in your payment on time
However, if you don’t, YOU will be de-lighted. - Signage for a Restaurant:
Don’t stand there and be hungry; come on in and get fed up. - Signage for a Funeral Home:
Drive carefully. We’ll wait. - Signage for a Propane Filling Station:
Thank Heaven for little grills. - Signage for a Radiator Shop:
Best place in town to take a leak.
My work here is done. . . .
Trouble in Paradise
Thus, they in mutual accusation spent
The fruitless hours, but neither self-condemning.
And of their vain contest appeared no end.
Milton
I remember telling myself, Wow, Eve! The big green snake was scary, but he really talked sense. I ate the fruit and I didn’t die. Anyway, God loves me so much I’m sure one piece of fruit is no big deal for him.
Shortly after we arrived in the park God told us, “Enjoy, celebrate, but don’t eat any fruit from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil or you’ll die.” (Adam and I referred to the tree as “the TKGE.”)
I remember I was so happy strolling over to the vegetable garden, my bare feet sinking into the most, fresh-smelling soil. I asked Adam, “If God loves us, why would he deny us fruit that looks so good?”
Adam says, “I don’t know; he has his reasons, I guess. Maybe it’s a test. Anyway there’re so many other good trees.”
“Yeah, but I wonder if the TKGE fruit looks different. There must be something special about it.”
“Maybe, but I’m busy here with the garden, so let’s talk about it later.”
I decide I’ll walk over and take a good look at it without telling Adam. He would probably try to keep me from going or at least insist on going with me, but he’s always busy tinkering, doesn’t like to be disturbed—besides he’d probably be bored.
I’m walking among the oak, apple and pear trees, glowing orange and purple maple leaves spiraling down in front of me. Then I spot the TKGE. It seems kind of ordinary, really, but with big red fruit. No fence around it or anything. I think, I’ll just walk over and look at it; I won’t touch it.
Then I see a form gliding through the nearby trees, now revealed, now hidden by the leaves. Smooth, shiny green skin, dark unblinking eyes, looking steadily at me—I’m fascinated. It’s like the dirty parts in a movie—you try not to look, but you do anyway.
I startle when he speaks —“The fruit trees are great, aren’t they? Did God say you can’t eat from any of these trees?”
“Oh no, actually we can eat from all of them, except we can’t even touch that Knowledge Tree there or we’ll die!”
“You won’t die! It’s just that he knows that if you eat it you’ll have great knowledge like he does. He’d rather keep you in the dark. I’ve been around here for a while; I know how these things work. Anyway, you’re special. If God loves you, he wouldn’t want to deny you anything, would he? What’s the point of creating the big red fruit if he didn’t mean for you to eat any?”
His slender head now looms over my shoulder. He seems so logical, trustworthy, the voice of experience. I’m smelling a pungent perfume, feeling the pull of his eyes, and sensing the sweet fruit. I kind of wish Adam were here with me….
All at once, I reach out my hand, grab the fruit, and eat—it explodes sweet in my mouth. I eat the whole thing but, not wanting to litter, I save the core. The snake has disappeared. And I’m not dead! I can’t wait to tell Adam.
I joyously run back to find Adam tilling the kale and Swiss chard. (In those special days, guys ate green, leafy vegetables.) “Adam—I ate the TKGE fruit and look, I didn’t die! We must have misunderstood what God said. It tastes so sweet!”
“O boy! Who’ve you been talking to? Do I have to go everyplace with you?
“Well, you were busy and I was only going to look at it.”
“But what’re we going to tell God? He said don’t eat it.”
“Why did he put it there if he didn’t want us to eat it?”
His face clouds, he hesitates, then suddenly he grabs the core from my hand and eats it. Just like a guy, I think. But is he really hungry? Or just so dependent on me that, realizing I might be kicked out of the park, he wants to be sure he’s kicked out with me?
Now Adam starts looking me up and down—and up and down. I blush. Strange; I’ve never felt self-conscious before. I find some fig leaves and use fibers to sew them together to make loincloths for us. As an afterthought, I sew two extra small round discs for me. We walk deeper into the forest because, for the first time, we just want to be alone.
After a couple of hours I hear God calling out: “Adam, where are you?” (Why doesn’t God call for both of us?) We walk deeper into the forest, playing hide and seek.
God finally catches up with us and says to Adam, “Why are you hiding?”
So my smart husband comes up with a great excuse: “I was afraid because I was naked, so I hid.”
God asks, “Who told you that you were naked? Did you eat the fruit I told you not to eat?”
Adam gets a pained look on his face, immediately confesses, and then passes the buck: “Yep, I did, but this woman that you gave me insisted that I eat it, and you know her—I just couldn’t say no.”
At this point God rolls his eyes, gives up on Adam, and turns to me. I boldly re-pass the buck: “Well, the serpent told me to eat it, and you know weak little me—no sales resistance. Adam wouldn’t come with me—he didn’t even warn me.”
God finds the serpent and tells him the bad news: “Henceforth you’ll be looking at life from shoelace level. And people will step on your head.” The unblinking eyes slink off to disappear into the greenery.
Then he turns to me: “It will hurt you to bear children, and now your husband will be telling you what to do.”
“You mean Adam? How well do you know this man? He can’t even change his mind without consulting me. Can’t follow instructions, no initiative. How could he be my ‘leader?’”
“Well, Eve, you know he’ll be ticked if he isn’t in charge. And even though you have to pretend he’s the leader in public, you can always influence him at home. Trust me; this’ll work.”
“Well, I guess I’ll just have to try to keep Adam from screwing up.”
Then God turns to Adam: “Failure of leadership! Why didn’t you stop her from going? Why didn’t you tell her not to talk to strangers?”
Adam replies,” I’ve tried that before, but you know how hard it is to tell her anything.”
God says, “You thought life was complicated in the garden. But now you’ll have to dig in harder soil, fight sharp thorns and predatory insects and perform sweaty labor. It isn’t going to be a walk in the park.” Adam hung his head and thought about his easy work—the garden vegetables had almost sprung up by themselves.
God replaced our fig-leaf loincloths with the skins of slain animals, kicked us out of the park and posted a guard against our returning. My face turned red when Adam asked God if he could eat the meat. Then he made a fateful decision that influenced all of his male descendants—he promised himself, I’ll never willingly eat green leafy vegetables again. I remember those early “outside” days. We hung on the heavy lattice fence like banished traitors, looking in at the beautiful park we could never again enter. Brambles had breached the fence and the grass inside was browning. I thought, How ungrateful we were; how much we took for granted.
Adam turned to me, “Eve, why did you wander off like that? Anyway, who ever heard of a talking snake? Why didn’t you ask me before you ate the fruit?
“Well, why didn’t you warn me? Why didn’t you put your foot down? Then I never would have gone. Or at least, you should have insisted on going with me. Failure of leadership.”
“Eve, Didn’t you even stop to think? You knew God had a good reason to prohibit that tree.”
“Well, maybe, but it’s not my fault you ate the fruit that I gave you.”
And so we passed the hours in fruitless arguing.
How was I to know that my simple decision would affect our grandchildren’s grandchildren? That they would only be able to dream about the shining park? They’ll blame us for eating, but I’ll bet they would’ve done the same thing. The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.
WINGSPREAD for April, 2024

Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
April, 2024 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this WINGSPREAD Ezine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Writer’s Corner
- Blessed Unbeliever now available
- New story
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
Writer’s Corner
Tip for writers: You can spin a tale that exists only in your head. But if you’re talking about a historic, known place, character or event, you’d better research it and get your facts right. Most of your readers won’t notice or care, but there’s that one that will find the error, then publish your mistake far and wide on Facebook.
Word of the month: PROP BET. Short for “proposition.” Propping is making a bet on something the bookmakers usually don’t take bets on. For instance, betting on the number of free throws in a basketball game.
Question for you: Writing a novel takes writing skill and great research. But it also takes imagination. You must seduce your reader into believing in locations, events or situations that are unusual, spun out of thin air. A favorite example: Charles Dickens tries to convince us that the evil groveler, Uriah Heep, is a believable character. How do you fire up your imagination when you write?
BLESSED UNBELIEVER novel

Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.
New story: “Evangelical: What’s in a Word?”
I can’t control what people mean by “evangelical” any more than I can demand that non-English speakers understand my English. A word means what the hearer thinks it means. Meanings of words change. For instance, “gay” used to mean bright and happy, as in “a gay party.” “Cool” used to refer to air temperature. No more. Thus, I can never guarantee other people will accept my parochial definition of “evangelical.” It used to be that people thought a fundamentalist was an evangelical on steroids and an evangelical was a fundamentalist on Prozac No more.. Today, “evangelical” means something quite different. . . .
To read more, click here: https://jimhurd.com/2024/04/08/evangelicalism-whats-in-a-word/
Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.
This month’s puzzler
(Thanks to Car Talk archives) Many years ago, one of our producers lived in New York. And he was a two-timing guy; he had two girlfriends..
One of the girlfriends lived in Brooklyn and the other lived in the Bronx.
He could never decide which one to visit. He liked both of them equally and decided that he would just leave it to fate. He knew that when he went down to get the train, he would descend the stairs into the subway and pretty soon a train would come. And if it was the Bronx train, he’d get on the train and go visit the girl in the Bronx. If it was the Brooklyn train, he’d get on and visit the girlfriend in Brooklyn. And what made it great was that the trains ran equally often, every 10 minutes.
So he decided that he would go down to the train at random times during the day or night. He didn’t know the schedules of these trains, but he did know that every 10 minutes there would be a Brooklyn train, and every 10 minutes there would be a Bronx train. He figured his chances are 50/50, either way.
However, he finds himself going to Brooklyn 9 out of 10 times. Even though the trains run equally, every 10 minutes to each location, and he chooses random times to go down to the train, he ends up 9 out of 10 times going to Brooklyn.
Why was this happening?
(Answer will appear in next month’s WINGSPREAD newsletter.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
What word has three sets of double letters? And what word has two H’s back to back? There might be a bunch of answers to this one.
The first one is the word ‘bookkeeper’! b.o.o.k.k.e.e.p.e.r! Love that word. There may be others out there, but this one is the one we were looking for.
And for the second word, the answer is, ‘withhold’. Two H’s in that word. And I’m sure there are many more out there, especially if people use Google. But these two were the ones we were looking for.
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Click here https://jimhurd.com/home/ to subscribe to this WINGSPREAD ezine, sent direct to your email inbox, every month. You will receive a free article for subscribing. Please share this URL with interested friends, “like” it on Facebook, retweet on Twitter, etc.
Wisdom

Strategies of an avid reader
Will Rogers on aging:
First ~ Eventually you will reach a point when you stop lying about your age and start bragging about it.
Second ~ The older we get, the fewer things seem worth waiting in line for.
Third ~ Some people try to turn back their odometers. Not me; I want people to know why I look this way. I’ve traveled a long way, and some of the roads weren’t paved.
Fourth ~ When you are dissatisfied and would like to go back to your youth, think of Algebra.
Fifth ~ You know you are getting old when everything either dries up or leaks.
Sixth ~ I don’t know how I got over the hill without getting to the top.
Seventh ~ One of the many things no one tells you about aging is that it’s such a nice change from being young.
Eighth ~ One must wait until evening to see how splendid the day has been.
Ninth ~ Being young is beautiful, but being old is comfortable and relaxed.
Tenth ~ Long ago, when men cursed and beat the ground with sticks, it was called witchcraft , , , Today it’s called golf.

Will Rogers, who died in a 1935 plane crash in Alaska with bush pilot Wiley Post, was one of the greatest political country/cowboy sages this country has ever known. Some of his sayings:
1. Never slap a man who’s chewing tobacco.
2. Never kick a cow chip on a hot day.
3. There are two theories to arguing with a woman. Neither works.
4. Never miss a good chance to shut up.
5. Always drink upstream from the herd.
6. If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.
7. The quickest way to double your money is to fold it and put it back into your pocket.
8. There are three kinds of men:
The ones that learn by reading. The few who learn by observation.
The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence and find out for themselves.
9. Good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.
10. If you’re riding’ ahead of the herd, take a look back every now and then to make sure it’s still there.
11. Lettin’ the cat outta the bag is a whole lot easier’n puttin’ it back.
12. After eating an entire bull, a mountain lion felt so good he started roaring.
He kept it up until a hunter came along and shot him.
The moral: When you’re full of bull, keep your mouth shut.


If you wish to unsubscribe from this Wingspread Ezine, send an email to hurd@usfamily.net and put in the subject line: “unsubscribe.” (I won’t feel bad, promise!) Thanks.
WINGSPREAD for March, 2024
Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
March, 2024 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this Ezine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Writer’s Corner
- Blessed Unbeliever available
- New story: “Pitch Perfect”
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
Writer’s Corner
This month’s writing quote: “If it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.” Elmore Leonard
Tip for writers: Begin your story in media res. You do not have to “begin at the beginning.” Try starting your story just before or just after the peak of the action. Example: “I’m not dead! But I have no idea what happened.” This hooks the reader. Then, go back and start at the beginning.
Word of the month: OBLIQUE DIALOGUE. Good dialogue makes a good story. It should sound natural, though. Just statement-response, statement-response gets stilted and boring; it doesn’t sound natural. Oblique dialogue means that the response is oblique; not just a simple response. For example—Kathy: “I wonder when Mom will get home.” Bill: “I worry about her being gone so much.” Another—Kathy: “Do you think this dress makes me look fat?” Bill (a wise husband): “I think you have great taste in clothes.” Notice he doesn’t directly answer the question.
Question for you: How to overcome writer’s block?
- Get a list of “prompts” and write briefly on several of them.
- Take a piece you’ve written and try to condense into just 100 words.
- Ask “what if?” For instance, what if a character is carrying a dark secret? What if she were born in a different town?
- Mine your own life for people and events that you can use to transform your writing.
- Freewrite. Just start writing. The only rule is do not stop.
Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.

New story: Pitch Perfect
A normal smoggy day at Chino airport. I’d just taken off with my student, Stan, whom I was checking out in the Taylorcraft.
The takeoff was normal, but after we leveled off, our increasing speed tended to force the nose up.
“Trim the nose down, Stan.”
“I am trimming down.”
“Trim down more.”
“I am!”
“Give me the controls.”
I grabbed the dual control wheel and it just about hit me in the face! The airplane was trying mightily to pitch up. . . .
To read more, click here https://jimhurd.com/2024/03/09/pitch-perfect/
Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.
This month’s puzzler
(Thanks to Car Talk puzzler archives.)
A friend of mine who works at a bank was doing her accounting duties. She noticed that there was a balloon payment coming up and she said, “Well, that’s interesting. Balloon. b.a.l.l.o.o.n. There are two sets of double letters in that word. Hmm.”
And so she thought to herself, is there a word in the English language that has three sets of double letters in a row? And as I was working on this one, I came across a word that has two H’s in it, back to back.
So the puzzler has two parts. What word has three sets of double letters in it? And what word has a double H?
Now, there may be 2500 answers to this one, I know. Just have fun with it.
(Answer will appear in next month’s WINGSPREAD newsletter.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
Recall Uncle Enzo had 11 antique cars and his will specified: one-half of them should go to his oldest son, one-fourth to his middle son and sixth of them to his youngest son. How will they divide them up?
Then Uncle Vinny shows up with his car and he says, “Look, I will lend you my car.” So, once he lends them his car, they have 12 cars.
So, now with 12 cars, 6 of them go to the oldest son. That would be half. A fourth of the cars, or 3 cars, go to the middle son, and a sixth of the cars, or 2 cars, go to the youngest son. That leaves only one car.
Then, Vinny takes his car back. The split has happened the way Uncle Enzo wanted it to, because 6, 3 and 2 make 11.
Fractions are fun, right?

Subscribe free to this Ezine
Click here https://jimhurd.com/home/ to subscribe free to this WINGSPREAD ezine, sent direct to your email inbox, every month. You will receive an article for subscribing. Please share this URL with interested friends, “like” it on Facebook, retweet on Twitter, etc.
If you wish to unsubscribe from this Wingspread Ezine, send an email to hurd@usfamily.net and put in the subject line: “Unsubscribe.” (I won’t feel bad, promise!) Thanks.
Wisdom
Wordplay — thoughts on modern era marketing signage
Signage for an Electrician’s truck: Let us remove your shorts
Signage for a curtain delivery truck: Blind man driving
Signage for a Podiatrist’s office: Time wounds all heels
Signage for a Septic Tank Truck: Yesterday’s Meals on Wheels
Signage for an Optometrist’s Office: If you don’t see what you’re looking for, you’ve come to the right place.
Signage for a Plumber’s truck: We repair what your husband fixed. Don’t sleep with a drip. Call your plumber.
Signage for a Tire Repair Shop: Invite us to your next blowout
Signage for a Maternity Room door: Push. Push. Push.”
Signage for a Car Dealership: The best way to get back on your feet—miss a car payment.
Signage for a Muffler Shop: No appointment necessary. We hear you coming.
Signage for a Veterinarian’s waiting room: Be back in 5 minutes. Sit! Stay!
Signage for a Shoe repair store: We will heel you and save your sole, we will even dye for you.
Signage for an Electric Company: We would be delighted if you send in your payment on time. However, if you don’t, YOU will be de-lighted.
Signage for a Restaurant: Don’t stand there and be hungry; come on in and get fed up.
Signage for a Funeral Home:: Drive carefully. We’ll wait.
Signage for a Propane Filling Station: Thank Heaven for little grills.
Signage for a Radiator Shop: Best place in town to take a leak.
And—last but not least—Signage for another Septic Tank Truck: Caution—This Truck is full of Political Promises.
When I fed the poor they called me a saint. When I asked why they were poor, they called me a Communist. —Bishop Dom Helder Camara of Recife, Brazil

WINGSPREAD for January, 2024

Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
January 2024 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this E-zine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Writer’s Corner
- Blessed Unbeliever now available
- New story
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
Writer’s Corner
Tip for writers: If someone hands you a MS and asks you to “look it over and tell me what you think,” never accept it–they may merely be looking for encouragement. Instead, ask them how much and what kind of critique do they want you to give? Developmental ideas? Revision? Copyediting? Plot? Characters? Chronology?
Word of the month: DOOMSCROLLING: To spend excessive time online scrolling through news or other content that makes one feel sad, anxious, angry, etc. (From Webster’s Dictionary) “I’ve got to stop doomscrolling late at night: I can’t fall asleep.”
Question for you: What three books would you want with you if you were stranded on a small island? (I assume no cellphone.) I dunno. Maybe, the Bible (good stories, great plot, greatest self-help book), some C.S. Lewis and perhaps Webster’s dictionary.
BLESSED UNBELIEVER novel

Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold. *Note: If you’ve read this, please recommend it to others. Thanks.

New story: “We Tell Ourselves Lies”
Classic self-deception—I talked myself into a lie so that I could fulfill an intense desire that would work against my long-term interests. The experience shook me. Immediately afterward I repented and my resolve stiffened. But why did I even give myself permission?
Self-deception (SD) is so common. People say all the time—“I know I shouldn’t but… It’s only this one time… I’ll quit tomorrow…. Rules are for other people… I can drive over the speed limit because I’m more skillful (or intelligent)… It won’t hurt anybody….”
Even statisticians play the lottery and believe they’ll win, although they know that statistically they’ll lose money. People say, “I’ll stop smoking tomorrow,” and mean it, but no real intention, no plan, and the next day, the conviction fades.. . .
To read more, click here https://jimhurd.com/2024/01/16/we-tell-ourselves-lies/
Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.
This month’s puzzler
(Credit to “Car Talk Puzzlers”)
Do you all remember Crusty? He was one of our old mechanics from way back in the day. Crusty used to work for us, before we were accredited…
From time to time, people would bring cars into the garage and ask us to check them out because they were thinking of buying this particular car. And Crusty had a particular process he would use to pre-screen these cars.
He would do something rather simple. He would open the hood of the car and fiddle around under there. And then he would look up at the owner and say, “Try to start it now.”
The driver would try, but it would not start.
And then Crusty would duck back under the hood and say, “Okay, try to start it now.”
And the owner would turn the key and it would start right up.
So at this point, he would say one of two things. It was either, “Leave it and we’ll check it out. But, I think it’s a keeper.” Or it was, “Forget this one. This one is no good. Go look for another car to buy.”
What was Crusty doing under the hood? What was that little test all about?
Good luck.
(Answer in next month’s Wingspread Ezine.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
The question was what was the disaster some years ago that caused considerable property damage and casualties? And why did people respond by buying pantyhose?
It was the eruption of Mount St. Helens in Washington State in 1980. The volcanic ash was so fine that it would go right through your car’s air filter and plug up the carburetor, which pretty much all cars had in those days. And pantyhose were fine enough, they had a fine enough weave to them, that if you put them over the air filter, the ash in the air could not get through them.
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Wisdom
Be the reason someone sees there is still hope in the world.
If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there. Lewis Carroll



WINGSPREAD Ezine for December, 2023
Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
December 2023 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this E-zine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Writer’s Corner
- Blessed Unbeliever now available
- New story
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
Writer’s Corner
Tip for writers: Writer’s block? If you don’t have a good idea for the plot of your novel, write a short story. If no ideas for a short story, find a list of “writers’ prompts.” Or just start freewriting, for instance, “Why I can’t find good writing ideas . . . Everyone has a good story in them; you just have to Heimlich it out.
Word of the month: SKIPLAGGING. Okay; I love this word! In an attempt to get a cheaper airline price to a smaller city, what you do is book to a larger city (with a cheaper price), but be sure your flight makes a stop in your smaller city. When it stops in your true destination, the smaller city, you just get off and walk away. Skiplagging. (I don’t think the airlines like this very much.)
Book of the Month: The Complete Father Brown Stories. G.K. Chesterton. Penguin Classics. 2012. Round-faced Father Brown, Chesterton’s loveable, dumpy Catholic priest, is also a stiletto-sharp detective. If there is a murder in a small English town, Brown seems to miraculously show up. Even in the face of Scotland Yard’s objections, he jumps in with his analytical powers, ministering justice but also offering forgiveness and grace. Father Brown Video series can be found on BritBox.
Question for you: If you were, like Napoleon, banished to a small island alone, what three books would you take with you and why?
BLESSED UNBELIEVER novel

Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.
New story: Lone, Wandering, but Lost?
How can some migrating birds find their way from New York to Chile while I can get lost three blocks from home? I’ve had trouble navigating all my life—missing exits on the freeway, getting lost on cross-country flights, even walking out of a downtown store and turning north instead of south. What’s up? Am I just not paying attention? . . .
To read more, click here: Lone, Wandering, but Lost? | Wingspread (jimhurd.com)
Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.
This month’s puzzler
Some years ago, there was a natural disaster in the United States that took human life and destroyed considerable property. The effects of this catastrophe were experienced by people hundreds of miles away from the devastation site.
Because of this disaster, motor vehicles became inoperable.
However, people who went out and bought pantyhose were able to continue driving.
So, the puzzler is this.
What was the disaster and why did women’s hosiery become important?
(Answer will appear in next month’s WINGSPREAD newsletter.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
Okay, a 7 letter word in which you can get 9 words from the letters.
And the answer is the word: Therein. And here are the words:
The, He, There, Her, Ere, In, Here, Rein, Therein (the original word itself)
Sam reported that he found TWO words with TEN words buried in each: “Islands” and “seasons.” Can you find the buried words?
Subscribe free to this Ezine
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If you wish to unsubscribe from this Wingspread Ezine, send an email to hurd@usfamily.net and put in the subject line: “unsubscribe.” (I won’t feel bad, promise!) Thanks.
Wisdom

They say that marriages are made in Heaven….
….But then, so are thunder and lightning.
I know a man who gave up smoking, drinking, sex, and rich food….
….He was healthy right up to the day he killed himself.
The only flair I have is in my nostrils.
People who think they know everything….
….Are a great annoyance to those of us who do.
Be careful about reading health books….
….You might die of a misprint.
Johnny, where’s your homework?….
….Still inside the pencil.
I like local jokes….
….They’re right up my street.
I felt uncomfortable, driving into the cemetery….
….The GPS declared, “You have reached your final destination.”

Children Are Quick:
TEACHER: Why are you late?
STUDENT: Class started before I got here.
___________________________________
TEACHER: John, why are you doing your math multiplication on the floor?
JOHN: You told me to do it without using tables.
_________________________________________
TEACHER: Glenn, how do you spell ‘crocodile?’
GLENN: K-R-O-K-O-D-I-A-L’
TEACHER: No, that’s wrong
GLENN: Maybe it is wrong, but you asked me how I spell it.
(I Love this child)
____________________________________________
TEACHER: Donald, what is the chemical formula for water?
DONALD: H I J K L M N O.
TEACHER: What are you talking about?
DONALD: Yesterday you said it’s H to O.
_________________________________
TEACHER: Winnie, name one important thing we have today that we didn’t have ten years ago.
WINNIE: Me!
_________________________________________
TEACHER: Glen, why do you always get so dirty?
GLEN: Well, I’m a lot closer to the ground than you are.
______________________________
TEACHER: George Washington not only chopped down his father’s cherry tree, but also admitted it.
Now, Louie, do you know why his father didn’t punish him?
LOUIS: Because George still had the axe in his hand…..
_____________________________________
TEACHER: Now, Simon , tell me frankly, do you say prayers before eating?
SIMON: No sir, I don’t have to, my Mum is a good cook.
______________________________
TEACHER: Clyde , your composition on ‘My Dog’ is exactly the same as your brother’s.
Did you copy his?
CLYDE : No, sir. It’s the same dog.
(I want to adopt this kid!!!)
______________________________ _____
TEACHER: Harold, what do you call a person who keeps on talking when people are no longer interested?
HAROLD: A teacher.
_________________________________
Due to current economic conditions the light at the end of the tunnel has been turned off.

Wingspread Ezine for September, 2023
Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
September 2023 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this E-zine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Blessed Unbeliever now available in Australia!
- Writer’s Corner
- New story
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
BLESSED UNBELIEVER novel

The novel was written partly for people of nonfaith. I am happy some have read it and commented on it. I am thrilled that Koorong, largest Christian book publisher in Australia, will distribute Blessed Unbeliever.
Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.
Writer’s Corner

Tip for writers: After finishing your rough draft, label each paragraph with an italicized word or phrase at the beginning of each paragraph. For example, Sally meets John. Use WORD “outline” mode and select “first line only.” You will see only the first lines of all your paragraphs, including your italicized labels. Easy now to see the structure of your piece, and to move paragraphs around to create a better flow.
Word of the month: SKIPLAGGING. Refers to air travel. You book a through flight with one stop in-between and you get off at the in-between stop. The airlines don’t like this because sometimes they lose money.
I asked which five books you would take if stranded on a desert island: I dunno, but here are my ideas of books and authors: Bible, Cadfael Chronicles by Ellis Peters, Henry Noewen, Charles Dickens, C.S. Lewis.
New story: The Churched Atheist
Really though—if you’re an atheist you need church as much as believers do! Behold, all the benefits of churchgoing—singing, making friends, potlucks, social service, moral guidance, coming of age rituals (e.g., confirmation, graduation), social intensification rituals (e.g., births, baptisms, weddings, funerals). You may find a loving, accountability group (e.g., Christian AA) that offers hope instead of despair. You will find a good job-seeker network. A support group for life crises. A place to get married or buried. A place that offers meaning to your life. You might even find free babysitting! You can have all these things without abandoning atheism because so much of church life does not demand any belief in the supernatural
Turns out that churchgoing is good for your health. A 2020 study published in the International Journal of Epidemiology reported that church attenders had a 26% reduced risk of dying and a 34% lower risk of heavy drinking. Church attendance was also associated with less anxiety, depression, hopelessness and loneliness. Church attenders lean toward healthy family and community behaviors. You’ll find good mentors who will hold you accountable and give you honest critique. If you’re older, just getting out of the house and doing something—anything—is good for you. If you’re younger, hey, it might be worth going just to make your parents happy! . . .To read more, click here: https://jimhurd.com/2023/08/31/churched-atheists/ Leave a comment on the website and share with others. Thanks.

This month’s puzzler
Adapted from Car Talk Puzzler archives
Here is a list of six words.
- Mother
- Father
- Cousin
- Uncle
- Brother
- Aunt
Which one of these words does not belong, and why?
(Answer will appear in next month’s WINGSPREAD newsletter.)
Answer to last month’s puzzler:
Remember that a man’s son asked about hitting 160 miles per hour in both the Mustang and the BMW. How did the man know that the BMW would not hit that speed, and that the Mustang would?
Because when he looked down at the speedometer, he also looked at the tachometer. Both of these cars redline at about 6000 RPM. So, at 60 miles an hour which he was traveling at that time, the BMW was doing 3100 RPMs. And he knew that at 120 miles an hour, it would be beyond the redline and incapable of doing 160 miles an hour.
And the Mustang he was driving at 60 miles an hour was doing less than 2000 RPM. It was running around 1750 at 60 miles per hour. So at that point, he knew that this car could possibly get to 160 without redlining.

Subscribe free to this Ezine
Click here https://jimhurd.com/home/ to subscribe to this WINGSPREAD ezine, sent direct to your email inbox, every month. You will receive a free article for subscribing. Please share this URL with interested friends, “like” it on Facebook, retweet on Twitter, etc.
If you wish to unsubscribe from this Wingspread Ezine, send an email to hurd@usfamily.net and put in the subject line: “unsubscribe.” (I won’t feel bad; promise!) Thanks.
Wisdom
How many of these 21st century words do you know?
- Particularity
- Intersectionality
- BLM
- Cancel culture
- Othering
- Rewilding
- Phubbing
- Skiplagging
- Social Media acronyms
- ICYMI
- IMHO
- LOL, LMAO, LMFAO, ROFL, IJBOL
- FOMO
- GOAT
- YOLO


You knew somebody would think of this sooner or later . . .
While there are many, here is one person’s list of the Top 20 Yogi-isms*:
- “When you come to a fork in the road…. take it.”
- “You can observe a lot by just watching.”
- “It ain’t over till it’s over.”
- “We made too many wrong mistakes.”
- “No one goes there nowadays, it’s too crowded.”
- “I always thought the record would stand until it was broken.”
- “Love is the most important thing in the world, but baseball is pretty good, too.”
- “In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is.”
- “Pair up in threes.”
- “You’ve got to be very careful if you don’t know where you are going, because you might not get there.”
- “The future ain’t what it used to be.”
- “I usually take a two-hour nap from 1 to 4.”
- “If the world was perfect, it wouldn’t be.”
- “You don’t have to swing hard to hit a home run. If you got the timing, it’ll go.”
- “Ninety percent of the game is half mental.”
- “Never answer an anonymous letter.”
- “Why buy good luggage? You only use it when you travel.”
- “Take it with a grin of salt.”
- “It gets late early out here.”
- “I never said most of the things I said.”
*Yogi Berra played catcher for 18 seasons with the New York Yankees.
Happy reading and writing!
Searching for Mr. Texas
(adapted from Wingspread: A Memoir of Faith and Flying by James P. Hurd)
The sun has riz, the sun has set, and we is still in Texas yet.
My Uncle John from Amarillo, Texas wasn’t a Fundamentalist. Actually, he wasn’t named John, he wasn’t my uncle, and he wasn’t originally from Texas. I thought I knew him when I was a child, but trying to understand him took up most of my adult life. Recently I quizzed my brother and sisters, scanned through old photographs, Googled his name and searched for information about the Texas Panhandle, all trying to find out who he was. A long search.
John’s real name was Clien John Fowlston but he didn’t like Clien so he always went by John. He was born in Dubuque, Iowa and only later moved to Texas. He was nephew to my grandmother Loretta (he called her “Aunt Ret”).
I wonder about John’s brief first marriage—he never talked about it. But I remember his second wife, Syble—a tall woman, her silver-gray hairbun held tight with a black comb. Texas bred, she had a clear complexion and beautiful, soulful eyes that oozed Texas upper-class grace. Reserved but easy to talk to, she exercised a civilizing influence on John. “Johnny, why don’t you change your shirt?” or, “Johnny, why do you give presents to one child and not to all of them?” or, “Johnny, don’t shout.”
We always anticipate Uncle John and Aunt Syble’s driving up to our house in a Cadillac or Lincoln. (He isn’t burdened with a conservationist conscience. He says, “I always try to buy the car that uses the most gasoline.”) John brings each of us things, like a big Eisenhower silver dollar or ten dollars “to spend on whatever you want.” He brings me a tennis racket (a sport I will enjoy into my sixties). Our family of seven never goes out to eat except when Uncle John takes us to Mrs. Knott’s Chicken Restaurant at Knott’s Berry Farm, an amazing world of tastes and smells.
Uncle John stands six-foot-two and has pale skin and disheveled white hair. His Texas hat complements his gravelly voice. He wears cowboy boots (no spurs) and a belt with a silver buckle around his ample middle, the epitome of a prosperous Texan cattleman. He holds his lips somewhere between a smile and a grimace and when he laughs he says, “Keeesh, keeesh.” He’s loud and Horatio Alger optimistic. He intimidates.
In California John seems exotic . He walks with too much swagger, talks too loudly and is too conservative, even for Dick Nixon’s Orange County. He’s an uneducated millionaire and seems puzzled that other people are not wealthy. He boasts, “After I left fifth grade, I learned everything else that I needed to know by myself.”
But, like the panda bear or the Komodo dragon, one can best understand John in his native habitat—Dumas, Texas. He sits at his massive desk on the fifth floor of the Amarillo building where a sign on his desk reads, “C. J. Fowlston, Investment Counselor.”
I remember preparing to travel to Dumas, our longest family vacation. Long before first light we leave Orange, California in our light-green Ford station wagon packed with all our food for the trip (we don’t do restaurants) and with “gospel bomb” tracts wrapped in red cellophane which we will throw at pedestrians. We join historic Highway 66 near San Bernardino and follow it all the way—Barstow, Needles, Flagstaff, Winslow. We cross the Mojave Desert in the cool of the morning before the burning sun rises. Mother first knew the great Mojave as a small child, when Grandfather drove her and his whole family from South Dakota to California in his new Model T. Their constant quest for water dominated his trip journal. Today the Mojave still challenges us, especially Mother. A canvas water bag hangs on the front bumper and Mother drapes a water-soaked cloth in the passenger window to help with the heat. At night we pull into a miserable little motel in Gallup, New Mexico. The screens are ripped and the floors uneven. But Mother bursts into tears when she finds out how much it costs. Dad packs us up and moves on to a humbler motel.
It takes forever to get to Texas. We roll through Gallup, Albuquerque, Tucumcari and finally into Amarillo. In 1857, Ned Beale used camels to map out this route along the old Santa Fe Trail. The 1880s railroad line followed the Beale Wagon Road and eventually so did Route 66, America’s “Main Street.” Just thirty years before our Texas trip, haggard dust bowl survivors trekked westward along this same highway, traveling in wheezing, radiator-boiling cars piled high with all their belongings. In California I went to elementary school with their kids—we called them “Okies and Arkies.” They wore overalls and smelled your crotch when someone farted. We didn’t like them.
You can’t tell Texas is coming but the mountains and mesas of New Mexico gradually morph into undulating plains as we enter the Panhandle. When we pass the vast ranches and the horse-headed oil donkeys, I wonder, Does the Panhandle produce anything besides oil and cattle? Bold, proud, independent, self-made Texas. She doesn’t even seem to notice we’ve come.
We finally arrive at Uncle John’s ranch, drive through the gate with the cast-iron brand “Derrick Ranch” overhead and park in front of the brick rambler. John and Syble emerge with a warm welcome and soon we’re sipping sweet tea in their living room. A photo hangs on the wall—it’s John and Syble in Egypt, astride camels, with the pyramids in the background. But the heart of the house is behind. A massive wooden door, carved in Taos, New Mexico, opens into a huge rec room with knotty pine walls. A sign hangs over the bar—”No drinking before 5:00 p.m.” Mother doesn’t approve of Uncle John’s drinking. Windows on all sides give a view of the vast, watered cornfields. I can see cows stretching their necks over the fence.
Uncle John introduces me to Texas racism. He boasts, “There isn’t a n— in all of Potter County.” Amarillo is scrubbed clean of African Americans and most Mexicans, people that John tars with the same brush. He once asked my brother-in-law who worked at United Airlines, “Do any n—s or ch—s work there?” Rich replied, “Well, some black people and Chinese people work there.” One time my friend Dave and I were traveling Route 66 from Chicago to California, and after driving way too long without sleep, we stopped to see Uncle John in Amarillo. He immediately delivered his ultimate insult—“You California drivers are worse than Mexican drivers.” Before he would talk to us, he installed us in an Amarillo motel and demanded that we sleep.
Today, John and Syble take our family to fish and swim at Conchas Dam near Tucumcari. We squeeze slices of white bread into little doughballs and plunge the hook into them, hoping to catch some tiny bluegill for Syble to fry up. John seems to want all of us to have a good time. He walks around the dock in swim trunks tied over his pear-shaped body. He’s bare-chested, with drooping dugs and white chest hair. He has a giant appetite, especially for beef and pork, and in later years will suffer from the gout.
Back at the ranch, John maintains four thousand head of polled Hereford cattle that are destined to feed the hungry maws of the likes of McDonald’s and Burger King. The cows come right up to the fence where I can feel their warm breath. I see John out in the field holding my little sister’s hand while she stands atop a huge bull. He lets us ride his cow ponies, one of which runs away with my sister Mary. Mine takes a sharp turn, but I don’t—I fly off and thud to the ground. When I use his .22 to shoot at groundhogs and rabbits, I don’t hit anything so I switch to a shotgun. In the barn we play on the hay bales and dive into the grain.
One evening John invites dozens of booted cattlemen to eat huge beefburgers that he personally grills in the backyard. He warns, “If the insides aren’t bright red, it’s ruined.” He takes us to the gas and oil museum and points out a sign along a rural road that says, “First Oil Strike in Texas.” Then we drive out north of Dumas to the Amarillo Country Club. I don’t see any people of color, except for the waitstaff.
Mother tries to witness to Uncle John. He attends church sporadically, but he isn’t saved. For our family, being saved was like being pregnant—you either are or you aren’t. Most people we know aren’t. We Fundamentalists don’t smoke, drink or go to the movies. (I will later go to my first movie at age twenty-two.) We suspect Uncle John is Episcopal, not out of spiritual hunger but because of his social status. He says, “Those Fundamentalist radio preachers are all crooks!” Our family frequently prays he will get saved.
Uncle John may have been intelligent but the smartest thing he did was arranging to be born at exactly the right time—1901. The twentieth century gave us automobiles, airplanes, factories and two World Wars, all dependent on massive doses of petroleum. In 1918 the Amarillo Oil Company sunk the “No. 1 Masterson” in the lime, granite and dolomite sediments of the Texas Panhandle. It was soon producing ten million cubic feet of natural gas daily and became the forerunner of the greatest gas field in the world.
Perfect timing for John. When John turned fifteen, his family had left Dubuque, Iowa, for Tulsa to work in the nascent oil fields. Oil lust grew and the oil and gas industry revved up to satisfy the appetites of thousands of automobiles and later thousands of warplanes. After ten years in Tulsa and a detour to work the oil fields in Venezuela, John moved to Amarillo to work in the Panhandle fields and rode the oil gusher to the top floor of one of Amarillo’s office buildings where he became a successful investment counselor. I once sat in his office and heard him say on the phone: “The uranium mine seems good? Okay—buy a hundred shares.”
When we finally depart, Uncle John presents us with a plain white, fat envelope. “Don’t open this until the New Mexico border,” he orders. What’s in the envelope? We speed to the border, pull over to the side of the road, open it, and find enough cash to finance most of our trip. John has scrawled on a piece of paper, “Stay in a good motel. Buy a good Mexican dinner in Santa Fe. Detour up to Taos to see the three-story adobe Indian village.” We obey.
Later, when I am a student in Chicago, Uncle John frequently sends me pages of the Amarillo Globe-Times by third-class mail, underlined, annotated and then rolled up and taped. He always encloses a handwritten letter so he doesn’t have to pay first-class postage. Even when he types his letters I can hardly read them because of their elliptical sentences, missing characters, sparse punctuation and hurried scrawl. I try to decipher them and send a postcard back.
After I am married, I remember telephoning Uncle John to tell him that Barbara and I are adopting our first child (Kimberly) from Costa Rica. I can almost feel him stiffen.
“Are you gonna get a white one?”
“No. I think we’re gonna get a brown one.”
“What’s wrong with a white one?”
“Nothing, but we like variety.”
“Well, the rest of the world doesn’t!”
Yet when we visit him in his old age he warmly receives us, along with our two adopted children from Colombia. He takes us to a rib joint and put us up in a motel. He drives us out to the ranch (but not to the country club). This is the last time I see Uncle John.
John gave us great gifts. A long time ago, he moved my uncles’ coffins. Mother’s brother Calvin died from the fever on their South Dakota homestead in the winter of 1917 when he was two and his older brother, Jamie, nine, died two months later. Grandpa put their coffins in a snow bank and then in the spring after the frost left the ground, buried them in Bonita Springs. Later, Uncle John exhumed the coffins and moved them to Hopkinton, Iowa, near the graves of others in the family. It was a touching act and one of the first stories I heard about Uncle John.
Recently I call Joyce Perkins in Amarillo, a kind woman who for over thirty years has faithfully administered the C. J. and Syble Fowlston Trust. She tells me, “The trust still provides money to Cal Farley’s Ranch for Boys near Amarillo. Their motto is ‘a shirttail to hang onto.’ And, because of John’s interest in The Lawrence Welk Show, I send some money every month to KACV-TV, our local PBS station.”
So, who is Uncle John? Is he “Mr. Texas,” a self-taught and self-made man of the world, a loud, opinionated, rich oil- and cattleman with only a fifth-grade education who rose to be a millionaire? Is he a racist, politically somewhere to the right of Rush Limbaugh? He’s all of these. Yet I remember with gratitude his steady interest in our family, his monthly stipends to us while later we were missionaries in Latin America and especially remember his warm welcome for us at Derrick Ranch. Uncle John, peace to your memory.
WINGSPREAD Ezine for April 2023

Spreading your wings in a perplexing world
April 2023 James P. Hurd
Please forward and share this E-zine with others. Thank you.
Contents
- Blessed Unbeliever published!
- Writer’s Corner
- New story
- This month’s puzzler
- Wingspread Ezine subscription information
- Wisdom
BLESSED UNBELIEVER is on the shelves!

In Blessed Unbeliever, Sean McIntosh lives in a California world of Fundamentalist certainty—until that world unravels. Now he’s shaken by contradictions in the Bible. Plus he’s trying to make sense of losing his girlfriend and losing his dream of becoming a missionary pilot. His despair leads him to commit a blasphemous act while at Torrey Bible Institute, Chicago. But, despite his honest attempt at atheism, grace pursues.
Blessed Unbeliever (paper or Kindle version) can be found at Wipf and Stock Publishers, Amazon https://a.co/d/9su5F3o or wherever good books are sold.
Writer’s Corner
Word of the Month: TYPESET or GALLEY version. The book is laid out, formatted and returned to the author for final corrections. (I found 100 errors in the typeset version of Blessed Unbeliever!)
Tip of the month: It’s helpful to sketch out your whole book. For each chapter or section, briefly list major scenes, major characters and major events, and maybe even the weather! This allows you to see the whole topography of your chronology and plot. Even Charles Dickens did this.
Author of the month: CHARLES DICKENS

Born in Portsmouth in 1812, Dickens saw his whole family sent to debtors’ prison while he himself was apprenticed to hard labor with a bootblack. His difficult life informed several of his novels (Pickwick Papers, David Copperfield, Hard Times, Bleak House). The epitaph at his tomb in Poets’ Corner, Westminster Abbey reads: “. . . He was a sympathiser with the poor, the suffering, and the oppressed; and by his death, one of England’s greatest writers is lost to the world.”
Book of the month: Dickens based David Copperfield partly on the struggles in his own life. Here, he created one of his most infamous characters: the “‘umble” Uriah Heep.
Your turn: Who is the most interesting character you’ve ever read about, biographical or fictional? Why? (I’ll list some of these in the next ezine.)
New story: Muleticos: A graceful disaster
In Thee we trust, whate’er befall;
Thy sea is great, our boats are small.
—Henry van Dyke, from “O Maker of the Mighty Deep”
I see Muleticos airstrip appear from behind a hill—my last stop for the day. I test the brake pedals—they’re firm. Here in northwest Colombia the tiny grass airstrips dotting the landscape appear more like pastures than runways. Airstrips that most pilots would eschew. Turns out I should have eschewed Muleticos that day.
To read more, click here: Muleticos: A graceful disaster | Wingspread (jimhurd.com)
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This month’s puzzler: Ralph on a Jet Plane
Adapted from Car Talk Puzzler archives
Ralph, an auto mechanic, has to catch a flight late on a Friday night after a long workday but he’s forgotten to bring his change of clothes. So he changes into a crisp new mechanics uniform that he finds in the shop.
When he walks through security the metal detector alarm sounds. So the guard goes, “Excuse me, sir, would you kindly empty the contents of your pockets?”
So, Ralph empties his pockets. Puts all his stuff in the little tray. Wallet, keys, everything. He tries to walk through again, but the alarm goes off again. So they ask him to remove any jewelry he has or his belt and try to walk through again. He does that and then walks through a third time. And the alarm goes off, for the third time.
So finally, the guard looks at him and says, “What do you do for a living?”
And Ralph says, “I’m a mechanic, I fix cars.”
The guard smiles and says, “Oh; that explains it.”
So, what’s happening here? Hint: it wasn’t just auto repair mechanics that were having this issue. And remember, this was a long time ago, so this issue never happens now. But it happened then.
(Answer in next month’s Wingspread ezine.)
Last month’s puzzler. Recall the three candidates for a detective job. The head detective gives them a test, with a clue in one of the town’s libraries “stuck inside a book between pages 165 and 166.” Two of the candidates rushed out the door. The third just sat there—and he got the job. Why?
Answer: Everyone knows this, but not many people think about it. There is nothing between pages 165 and 166, just as there’s nothing between pages one and two of the book. Page one is the right-hand page and page two is printed on the back of that page.
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Wisdom

Football Wisdom
“Football is NOT a contact sport, it is a collision sport. Dancing IS a contact sport.”
– Duffy Daugherty / Michigan State
After USC lost 51-0 to Notre Dame, the coach’s post-game message to his
team was: “All those who need showers, take them.”
– John McKay / USC
“ If lessons are learned in defeat, our team is getting a great education.”
– Murray Warmath / Minnesota
“The only qualifications for a lineman are to be big and dumb. To be a back, you only have to be dumb.”
– Knute Rockne / Notre Dame
“We live one day at a time and scratch where it itches.”
– Darrell Royal / Texas
“We didn’t tackle well today, but we made up for it by not blocking.”
– John McKay / USC
“I’ve found that prayers work best when you have big players.”
– Knute Rockne / Notre Dame
Why do Auburn fans wear orange? So they can dress that way for the game on Saturday, go hunting on Sunday, and pick up trash on Monday.

Mary brings good News to Eve




