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Author Archives: Michael Calderwood

Disheartened Patriot

13 Sunday Jul 2025

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Living Our Values, Perserverence, Social Responsibility, Words matter

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Disheartened Patriot, Faded Glory, Leadership, Lost America, tattered principles

In 2020, I wrote “Pragmatic Patriot.” Since then, I have lost much of my positivity about the United States of America.

What changed?

So many bonfires continue to burn, with our most sacred and vital principles as fuel. Tribalism has grown worse. Education is abandoned in favor of indoctrination. Books are banned, hard-fought rights revoked. The undefended among us are violently threatened, gleefully attacked, detained, and arrested by armed, masked, and unidentified persons. The United States military is supporting these terrifying acts on American streets, under the guise of a psychotic government position that criminals and terrorists are invading the country. A nation that once soared to the moon now sends people to twenty-first-century concentration camps.

Conspiracy theory is exacerbated by ugliness and amplified by a willingness – even eagerness – to make all manner of accusations against our neighbors. Hate decorates shirts and hats and slobbers out in rants and posts. Many who fuel the rabid bile serve in positions of power in our government.

Still, for every act of aggression, there are acts of generosity and resilience that define the best of what America may again be. In small towns and big cities, millions of Americans rally in protest of a crumbling morality, testifying against the terrible, illegal, and cruel acts directed by our most senior elected officials. Our courts are filled with patriots waging battles for the Constitution against lying madmen and women.

Has the time passed for the dream that is America?

I am disheartened, no longer pragmatic. But I have hope that our better angels will return.

And I am still a patriot.

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Our Daily Bread

20 Tuesday May 2025

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Art and Artists, Communicating, God vs Country, Living Our Values, Prayer and Reality, Social Responsibility, Words matter

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Our Daily Bread

A tinkling bell announces arrivals.
Sights, scents lead to temptation, salvation.
What to touch, what to taste?
Answers lie half-hidden behind the counter,
beckoning in tall glass cases.

Give us this day our daily bread
A complement of diversity stands in service,
ready to meet wants, needs.
To the left, day-old offerings,
To the right, shining richness.
Extravagant decadence?
Let them eat cake.
Essential sustenance?
Let them eat.
Feed the hungry. Sate the beast.

Forgive us our trespasses
Day passes.
Resources dwindle.
Redistribute across racks and shelves.
Make it seem like more, or at least enough.

As we forgive those who trespass against us
Toiling,
feeding others so they can feed their own.
Family, community, travelers.
The lost.

And lead us not into temptation
Who will be fulfilled?
Who left wanting?
Who will be left tomorrow?

Or the next day?

But deliver us from evil

A tinkling bell announces departures.

Late to the Bakery - Cindy Stiles, Artist

Late to the Bakery – Cindy Stiles, Artist


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Our Daily Bread/Late to the Bakery

08 Thursday May 2025

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Art and Artists, Beautiful Cambria, Communicating, Words matter

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Cambria

The Cambria Center for the Arts offered local artists and writers the opportunity to collaborate for the current gallery exhibit. Painters created works, and writers composed a short accompanying piece. The only limit imposed was 250 words maximum. I selected a painting titled “Late for the Bakery” by artist Cindy Stiles. Her work set me thinking beyond bread and cake. I offer this poem entitled “Our Daily Bread.”

Late to the Bakery – Artist Cindy Stiles

Late to the Bakery - Cindy Stiles, Artist

Our Daily Bread

A tinkling bell announces arrivals.
Sights, scents lead to temptation, salvation.
What to touch, what to taste?
Answers lie half-hidden behind the counter,
beckoning in tall glass cases.

A complement of diversity stands in service,
ready to meet wants, needs.
To the left, day-old offerings,
To the right, shining richness.
Extravagant decadence?
Let them eat cake.
Essential sustenance?
Let them eat.
Feed the hungry. Sate the beast.

Day passes.
Resources dwindle.
Redistribute across racks and shelves.
Make it seem like more, or at least enough.

Toiling,
feeding others so they can feed their own.
Family, community, travelers.
The lost.

Who will be fulfilled?
Who left wanting?
Who will be left tomorrow?

Or the next day?

A tinkling bell announces departures.
_________________________________________________

In addition to the gallery collaboration, photographer Nigel Paul (who I wrote about here) exhibits his stunning works of creatures who call the area home.

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Marian’s Key

24 Friday Jan 2025

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Beautiful Cambria, Dreams and Reality, Friendship, Home, Living Our Values, Words matter

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

art, Community, creativity, inspiration, writing

The table stands next to the front door, up the stairs or down, depending on whether one is coming or going. The deep red color, now faded and worn around the edges, reminds me of New England autumns, where barns sit in fields of drying grasses, bracing for the coming snows.

The table saw its share of snowy Connecticut winters. Now, it serves in the mild Mediterranean climate of California’s central coast. Its main enemies are sunshine and scratches from things dropped or scraped along an edge. Grocery bags, recycling bins, and grandchildren brush by or bump against the graceful lines of its simple, sturdy design.

The table holds keys for cars and doors. They drop on the way in and scrape on the way out. The miscellany winds up in the miniature brass bathtub atop the wood. It is adorable, clanky, and whimsical.

A particular key, attached to a yellow plastic tab with “Marian’s Key” written in Sharpie, has been living in the tub for a while now. It looks like several others cut at the local True Value hardware store. The tag is always angled to the left, pointing across the street to where Marian’s house stands.

Much like its owner, the house is both simple and elegant. The more you get to know them, the more the sophistication and effortless ambiance delight and surprise. From the beautiful oak that shades the front to the “oh my!” delights of the outdoor spaces, there is no shortage of oases. What at first glance looks to be a single level unfolds into a multi-tiered journey into serenity. Outside, a turn to the right at the rear of the home reveals a luscious blooming preserve, rosemary bushes sharing their signature aroma with brilliant flowers and shrubs.

None of this happens by accident.

The home has evolved over the twelve years we have been neighbors. A thoughtful renovation, done lovingly over months, transformed the property. A soft sage green seats the place into the environment rather than imposing itself boastfully on the neighborhood.

The landscapes are all Marian. Many days, I look across the street to see her with a sun hat pulled low and garden gloves tight, wielding an arsenal of garden tools and, on occasion, brute strength to place, move, plant, gravel, and stone the perimeter. She’s never quite satisfied with how things lay but doesn’t grumble about it.

Soon, she will have a new place to transform, closer to her family, farther than the short walk across our shared street. Many friends and neighbors are both happy for her and sad for ourselves.

A lot of things change over twelve years. We age, we struggle. Families grow closer and move farther apart. Life brings health and heartache, each in a different measure. We selfishly hope for one more page, another delicious paragraph, a pithy phrase in a breath-stealing sentence. We slow, but we do not stop. We will move on to the next chapter and remember the stories that came before.

The red paint fades as the bathtub’s brass patina grows warmly tarnished. The yellow-tagged key’s title may rub away, but each color will remain vibrant in the picture etched in our hearts.

Good neighbors, good friends, good memories.

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Shattered Compass

06 Wednesday Nov 2024

Posted by Michael Calderwood in 2024 Election, Living Our Values, Social Responsibility, Words matter

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

dark days, dying democracy, what did we do?

I gaped, unbelieving, as the images burned through the screen. Alien flags tore into a solemn ideal in a sacred place. All understanding vaporized before the unforgivable desecration of the nation I sometimes took for granted. If there is a devil, he was front and center.

I raged.

The world crumbled.

And now we are here.

The figurehead rots before our collective eyes while the coven cackles and builds the pyre higher and hotter. Fueled with hate, lies, and ruined lives.

The train of transgressions is long, the sins endless, turning the words of Jesus into a sweatshirt slogan, a bloodied shroud perfumed with snatches of flags of Our Fathers.

I knew you, my friend, my colleague, my neighbor. Why do you choose that side of the moral divide? How can you disdain decency, celebrate insults and threats, and cheer violence?  Are you damaged in ways I don’t see?

Is that really you?

All that is left is the courage of concience. Vote.

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CCHD Reports

21 Saturday Sep 2024

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Beautiful Cambria, Cambria Healthcare District, Emergency Services, Words matter

≈ Leave a comment

Public Records Request initial documentation received. Not a position on the current bond issue – just data for folks who may want to look at official records first-hand.

These reports cover buildings, infrastructure and slope investigations, violations, recommendations and non-recommended options.

Critical additional information requested from CCHD will include any remediations taken since these documents were filed.

Corresponding documentation requested from CCSD, particularly any additional reports from the Fire Department/Fire Marshal.

CombinedReportscompressedDownload

Rust Never Sleeps!

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Old Man

31 Saturday Aug 2024

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Dreams and Reality, Living Our Values, Perserverence, Words matter

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Memory

Greyed hair mumbling heart
moving slowly
slowly losing
moments courage faith
Wizened but no wiser

Gauzed and threadbare dreams
the boy the young man the father
sepia-edged
colors drained
sounds muffled
memories mottled

In the gloaming
reality lies soured with regret
what fight remains ends
in the privacy of his ridiculousness
where spent passions fade away

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The Greatest Gadfly

11 Tuesday Jun 2024

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Beautiful Cambria, Clay Tiffany, Community Involvement, Glendora, Humor, Local Journalism, Local politics, Perserverence, Public Access Cable, unity Broadcasts, Unusual Community Access Hosts, Words matter

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Tags

Big T, Clay Tiffany, Epstein Files, Glendora, Jeanine Pirro, Jeffery Epstein, Kevin Gallagher, Nick Tartaglione

The Legend

For me, there is only one personality who stands atop the Gadfly Hall of Fame. The late, great Clay Tiffany and his masterpiece of Public Access Television, “Dirge For The Charlatans.”

See Clay in action!

Clay Tiffany’s unusual appearance and voice were the epitome of a smirk, underscored by his signature catchphrase “all right?” Standing tall, his blazing red afro, permanently scowling face, and wardrobe that always looked culled from the rack labeled “1950’s muckraking reporter” at the local community theater wardrobe closet. He was awesome.

Tiffany was relentless. His diatribes were part Perry Mason and part Perry White. A pugnacious fearlessness led him into constant verbal, legal, and, sadly, violent physical confrontations with elected officials and public servants throughout the small village of Briarcliff Manor in Westchester County, New York.

Recklessly Tough

Clay never let anyone intimidate him, sometimes to his detriment. Mayor, commissioner, judge, clerk, and police departments all exchanged shots with him. Even then-Westchester County District Attorney (and later FOX spectacle and currently US Attorney for the District of Columbia) Jeanine Pirro heard from him, loudly, publicly, and obnoxiously. Some of those shots were nearly deadly.

Briarcliff police officer Nick Tartaglione was often the target of Clay’s accusations of corruption, civil rights violations, violence and intimidation; pretty much anything a novelist or screenwriter might throw into the mix to create a character of “bad cop.” Nick did not like that and allegedly assaulted Tiffany several times, once beating him nearly to death. This attack triggered an FBI investigation, a major lawsuit with a significant settlement in Clay’s favor, and Tartaglione’s dismissal from the police force. (A dismissal that was later reversed, with Tartaglione being reinstated and receiving back pay.)

Tartaglione went on to bigger and worse headlines, including this one:

4 bodies found at home of ex-Briarcliff Manor cop Nick Tartaglione

And more recently,

Epstein told lawyers that cellmate Nicholas Tartaglione’ roughed him up’  

Yes, that Epstein.

Now we can add this one:

Ex-NY cop who used zip-tie, point-blank executions in 2016 murders gets 4 life sentences

Gone

Clay Tiffany passed away in March of 2015. Concerned neighbors notified police when they hadn’t seen him for a few weeks. He had no known family. His vast archive of videotapes of “Dirge For The Charlatans” remains unavailable. However, an effort is underway to convert them to digital and produce a documentary on the life of the most fantastic citizen journalist/Community Gadfly few people ever saw. I hope to see it completed and shared.

Buried Treasure, All Right?

To quote veteran Westchester journalist Phil Reisman in his piece “Dirge for a gadfly.”

“Tiffany told the truth as he saw it. Even crazy people can be right sometimes, but Tiffany’s problem was that it all got lost in the paranoid noise.”

Interesting

Since I first posted this piece I have been contacted by multiple Documentary filmmakers and investigative journalists interested in Clay Tiffany’s story. These inquiries have raised some interesting questions. How did Clay Tiffany really die? What other Clay investigations touched deeper into the political and business worlds of Westchester County and beyond? A rewatching of another of his Dirge For The Charlatans broadcasts reveals a host of names (around the 40-minute mark) who are now in very public national positions.

What happened to all of Clay’s tape recordings, his files, his connections? Just how many nerves did he get on during his escapades? And where are the Dirge For The Charlatans tapes? Will they ever reappear?

I don’t think Clay Tiffany, our investigative reporter and world-class Gadfly, would let these questions go unexamined. All right?

Peace Out

I often think of Clay Tiffany while following the local cast of unique citizens, mentally overlaying his trademark smirk and the incredulous “All right?” he would add for emphasis. 

Long live all the Gadflies, All Right? 

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Reluctant Samaritan

30 Tuesday Apr 2024

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Communicating, Homelessness, Living Our Values, Social Responsibility, Words matter

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Do Unto Others, Fading, humanity, inspiration, Judgement, Losing reason, religion, self, what we forget, What we remember

A visit to the doctor turned into a bout of self-examination.

Appointment Day

The late April Friday was cool and windy. My wife and I headed out to our medical appointments in San Luis Obispo, a reasonable and beautiful drive from our Cambria home.

My session was a follow-up for a recurring problem common to men of a certain age.

I checked in a few minutes before my 3:15 pm appointment and was soon escorted to an exam room. As I started down the hall, I heard a familiar voice prattling away – a voice that caused me to duck my head and turn away quickly. It was a voice of a man I had come to know over the previous few weeks.

And here he was, sharing a confusing explanation for his lateness in getting to the office. 

Simon

My first encounter with Simon was not great. He had come into the business center agitated and demanding. It was difficult to figure out what he wanted, and the more I tried, the more combative he became. After a few tense exchanges, it became evident that the whole situation was headed towards the shredder. I’m usually able to work with difficult people, but not that day. Thankfully, a cooler head intervened, defused Simon, and figured out what he wanted.

I later learned that he had a reputation for being aggressively hostile, becoming more disagreeable as he aged. Is he experiencing an acceleration of decline? Perhaps.

Over the ensuing weeks, he came back to the store and was, for the most part, calm and a bit contrite. His confusion seemed more evident with each visit: missing documents, missed appointments, and an inability to explain what he was there to do. My teammates and I were able to help him with a few tasks, but we were always on edge, not knowing which Simon we would face. 

Reluctant Helper

With my consultation completed, I headed downstairs to rejoin my wife. Unaccustomed to the parking lot, she headed towards an exit further down the complex, exited, and turned onto the main road leading us back home. As we headed north, I spotted Simon shuffling down the sidewalk, heading away from the office we had just left. It seemed odd since the medical complex had plenty of parking and easy access to public transportation. 

So why was he heading further away?

I realized that, like him or not, Simon seemed to need help or a quick check to see if he was in trouble. Should we turn back? A short moment of indecision was soon followed by an aggressive U-turn , and there he was. My wife let me out of the car and pulled into a parking lot to wait.

The Woman

I walked back and met Simon, but he was not alone. His new companion was an older woman walking a bicycle laden with what appeared to be her worldly possessions. They were engaged in conversation, which I couldn’t quite hear. I called out, “Simon, is that you?” He looked at me, but there was no recognition. The woman asked if I knew him, and I responded, ‘Yes, we live in the same town.” Simon then asked my name and how he knew me, clearly struggling to connect the dots. I explained to him where we met, then where I work, and something registered. I asked a few soft questions to ascertain his condition and ability to care for himself.

During this exchange, the woman watched us closely, again asking how I knew Simon. She explained how she was helping him locate his car and would walk with him until he found it. I realized she was trying to help him and was not keen to leave him with another stranger. I assured her I would help Simon find his way and that she didn’t need to worry. She watched warily as Simon and I continued down the road.

A Long Walk

As we walked, Simon kept repeating things to me, explaining, as if talking to a dull student, exactly where we were headed. He was as much a petulant child as a frightened elderly man trying to find his way home. I found myself acting as a caregiver, holding his arm as we navigated rough patches of sidewalk and busy intersections. He shared why, running late, he parked half a mile from the medical offices but couldn’t find the building where he thought he was supposed to be. He was baffled by the nurse he swore he did not know but who knew all about him. I flashed back to an overheard phone conversation with the receptionist, giving directions and encouragement to someone on the other end of the line.

He spoke of a postman who wouldn’t help him and students who didn’t even acknowledge his requests for assistance.  

We walked on, Simon confidently describing his car’s year, make, color, and Rotary sticker. He  kept saying “404” and “just past the Jack In The Box.” I knew where the fast food place was, so on we trundled: Simon, an old confused fellow, and me, a not-young man, wondering why we were on this path together.

And there it was. Just past the Jack In The Box, a few steps down the side street. A small motel with the number 404 on the front. The car sat at the far end of the lot, just as described. I asked him if that was his car, and he responded by raising the key fob clutched in his hand. The lights blinked, confirming success. As we got closer, I saw the Rotary sticker affixed to the rear passenger window, as he had described. The car sat unlocked, and the driver’s window rolled down. Simon stared at it, then at me, and said, “The window is open. Did I leave it open?” Then, “Tell me your name. How do you know me?”

I was concerned about him getting behind the wheel and driving the thirty miles back to our village. He answered my doubts by describing his route: exit the parking lot, turn right onto Santa Rosa Street, and head straight north until home. And he was right. So I said goodbye and wished him well.

I walked up the short hill to the corner where 404 and Jack In The Box faced each other and waited. After a few minutes, the beige Toyota appeared, turned right, and drove slowly past me. Simon, hands at ten and two, eyes straight ahead, was on his way home. Maybe a guardian angel sat, invisible, helping him navigate the scenic road back to what I think of as heaven on earth. Or perhaps he just had great luck. Either way is fine with me.

Reflection

As I walked back to where my wife was waiting, my mind spun. Why did I avoid Simon at the doctor’s office? Why did we take a different exit from the parking lot? Why was I so reluctant to go back and check on him? What changed on the walk? And how do I reconcile all these questions, doubts, and painful awareness of my bias?

I don’t practice a particular faith, but two parables come to mind. First, was this my road to Damascus moment, where my blindness lifted, and I immediately became a new person with a passion for doing good works? Yeah, no. I was responding to my moral compass.

The second parable rings more true. Though the priest and the businessman were replaced by some callous students and a harried postman, a Good Samaritan did indeed appear, offered aid and comfort, and watched over Simon as he went on his way.

I wish I knew her name.

The Augary of Beauty’s Demise

Karen Sorensen, Artist

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Novella

07 Thursday Dec 2023

Posted by Michael Calderwood in Communicating, Dreams and Reality, Words matter

≈ 1 Comment

In my novella
you are the pain.
In yours, it is me.

My notebook
empty spaces
where answers should be.

Your notebook
raging scratch-outs
more like gashes.

We start
a new paragraph
rearrange the words.

In our story
the ending
stays the same.

Someday
we might lay down
this terrible sword
disguised as a pen.

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