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Monday Morning Memo

Adventure

April 1, 2005

Adventure

begins with dedication to a cause

“What giants?” said Sancho Panza.

“Those you see there,” answered his master, “with the long arms, and some have them nearly two leagues long.”

“Look, your worship,'' said Sancho. “What we see there are not giants but windmills, and what seem to be their arms are the vanes that turn by the wind and make the millstone go.”

“It is easy to see,” replied Don Quixote, “that you are not used to this business of adventures.”

– Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote (1605)

Outwardly we laugh at the absurdity of a man jousting with windmills, thinking them to be giants. But inwardly we crave his sense of mission and purpose, his dedication to a cause, his willingness to pay any price to achieve the honor of his beloved.

So who is the silly one? He, for seeing beyond what is, to serve a beauty that could be, should be, ought to be? Or me, for remaining trapped in a black and white world where little men hide behind technicalities?

“Her name is Dulcinea, her kingdom, Toboso, which is in La Mancha, her condition must be that of princess, at the very least, for she is my queen and lady, and her beauty is supernatural, for in it one finds the reality of all the impossible.” – Don Quixote

In Cervantes' book Dulcinea is not a woman but a vision of goodness, beauty and justice that energized Quixote to rise above himself and attempt the impossible.

May you find your Dulcinea, friend, and in her the reality of all the impossible.

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Random Quote:

“When I was growing up, parents would whack their kids on the ass if they didn’t obey.

No one thought anything about it. But if you hit your kid with your fist, you were going to jail. Not cool.

In the classic ass-whack, the Dad would grab his kid’s left forearm with his left hand, lift the kid in the air, then give him a couple of swats on the butt with the open palm of his right hand. If the Dad was talking to a friend, this whole sequence could happen while Dad continued talking to his pal. It was such a small thing that kids often forgot to cry.

In those days, an aerial ass-whack was the equivalent of your mom speaking your name sharply and waggling her finger at you.

Then someone wrote a book suggesting that Dads should use something other their open palms to whack their kids. “If you swat them with your hand, your child will fear YOU. But if you whack them with a thing, they will fear the THING instead.”

Okay. If you say so.

Then someone decided that it wasn’t cool to whack your kids at all. You should just say mean and hurtful things to them.

Uh-oh. Now we’re listening to a psycho.

Then came the day of tiger moms, always hovering, always pestering, always causing their kids to be fearful of failure, fearful of falling short, fearful of not being the child their parents were hoping they would be.

If you are a kid today and are not being raised by tigers, you are likely being raised by helicopter parents, always hovering, pestering, causing you to be fearful of dangers, fearful of strangers, fearful of friends from bad families, fearful of bullies, fearful of mean girls, fearful of falling down and skinning your knee, fearful, fearful, fearful of climbing that sweaty, steep, rocky trail that is this wild adventure we call life.”

- Roy and Pennie Williams, August 22, 2025

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