Being at the right place at the right time.

I have often spoken about events in my life that have been pivotal or hinge points. It has come with an awareness of being in the here and now to recognize it for what it is and to know I was in the right place at the right time. It happened with Lambda Crystal when I saw the potential in Canada enough to start an importing company. That recognition led to over seventeen years of self-employment, an international business, global travel, fantastic life experiences both good and not so good.

I am excited about the potential of becoming an Amazon Partner in logistics and further developing a business income in the States as well as international expansion for Rapidgo. So many things to think about and consider.

My life is about to change significantly over the next while.

I got this! This moment has been made for me. So many things from years past have come together to define this moment in my life.

James, I am so proud of you!

 

Amazon Logistics dsp@amazon.com

Nov 3, 2018, 5:07 PM (13 hours ago)

to me
Hello,

Congratulations! We have received an incredible response to the Amazon Delivery Service Partner program, resulting in a competitive selection process. We are very impressed with your qualifications and experience, and we are excited to inform you that you have been selected to move forward to the next step in the process.

As a next step, we will invite you for a phone interview with an Amazon team member within the next couple of months. You will receive an email to schedule a 30-minute interview closer to the relevant date.

You are not required to do anything at this time. Feel free to visit logistics.amazon.com to learn more about the program.

We look forward to learning more about you in the near future.

Regards,

Amazon Logistics

Redacted

In this crazy world, sometimes it is important to point out the obsurdity of political endeavor. I recently posted these onto Twitter, FB, & Instagram.

Welcome Back James – Begin Again

 

Well, I made it through the anniversary of Mary’s transition. As I look at her pictures each day it doesn’t get much easier. I miss her very, very much. I have set a goal of honoring her every day for my next 90-Day Adventure. I started Jul 16, the anniversary of when she arrived in Raleigh. I have uploaded stories, pictures and videos for Clara to discover at some point in her life and will want to know more about her mother and the strength she imparted to her.

It has been nearly a year since I posted on my personal site. So many things have happened. I feel compelled to mention the success I had in transferring all my websites to a new hosting company. Growing and learning as I went. Challenges with the last company led to my inability to post online for many months. I am so excited to have a newer server with a good hosting company, Liquid Web.

So I am back to posting on my jameswmfrank.commemoratemylife.me site. Yay!

I will post on accomplishments since posting in 2017.

Mary Boleyn Arrives at RDU

July 16, 2017

Mary arrived to much excitement at Raleigh-Durham Airport.  We had everything prepared at the house for her stay.  We prepared a king-sized bed with separate bathroom, all her favorite foods (M&M Peanuts) and drinks (Kool-Aid – Grape), apples with peanut butter.

As soon as we got to the car, Mary insisted on opening her suitcase to show us two paintings she brought us. One by Clara and one by her.

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Some Things You Can’t Fix

This is my daughter and granddaughter on Fathers Day. I was asked to start the conversation about final arrangements for the funeral with my 34 yrso daughter. There are so many things to clarify. We went through approval on the obituary. The music was selected. The words to be read were identified. The letters to be read afterward and left for the next generation to discover were collected. The wishes for a party were discussed. There were tears on both sides. I expressed my anger at the inevitable. You see, this discussion was not about my passing, but for my daughter who has a fatal disease, called cystic fibrosis. It is a genetic disease that was passed from her mother and myself to her without knowing we both carried a recessive gene. It is, somehow, not right that any parent must have this discussion with their child. It is even tougher for a father to not be able to “fix” something for their child. I post this because baby boomers have learned that not everything in life is always fun. Some things cannot be fixed. I wear a CF bracelet to remind myself continuously of that fact. What source of strength from within you do you call upon when thinking and planning and fixing are not options?

CML Logo

I decided that it was time for CML to have a logo. As I was going through all the websites to make sure they were connecting properly to their databases last week, I was struck by how much the CML website was not what I wanted it to look like. I also remembered that I had seen several logo producers that were charging very little to get started. I decided to give one a try – Fiverr.

After only one revision, they came up with this logo that I am very impressed with and have used as the front page of the site as well as making into a backdrop for a podcast.

I have a plan to interview Brian Tracy in his hometown by taking three backdrops to California and setting up an interview studio. I am convinced it will work and bring CML and Boomer to Zoomer to greater awareness.

Grateful, & How 2016

To put it simply – Mary Mount

This lady has changed my life forever – in a really exciting, yet contented way. Being around her for the last year has allowed me to feel alive again. I mean really alive. Being in the moment so much of the time. Sharing so many thoughts, feelings, opinions, without fear of reprisal or condemnation. Without her, 2014 would have been completely different.

The first day in Durham – met Mary for a tour.

Silver moon drive to Hyco Lake, Valentines Day at the RV, Moving in day with RV in March, Trip to mountains, Lyme Disease, T-trials, Trip to Andersonville, GA, Trip to Canada and East Coast, Best summer ever at Hyco Lake, Trip to Washington, DC, Meeting Mary’s friends, admiring Mary in all she does, Birthday at beach, Mary’s birthday at Biltmore House, all the pictures, the mushroom, all the birds, feeding the animals and adventures with the squirrels, the passing of Harley, my sister’s stroke, all the gardening, kayaking on Hyco for first time, exploring northern NC including Virginia, VIR adventures, repairing Margret’s house, meeting Worth, deciding to let go of CML and to build Rapidgo larger, trip to Canada to get license renewed with Dan, developing CML and all the techie stuff I had to do, all the workouts at the club, learning my way around Roxboro, obtaining and growing seeds into flowering plants, getting Vet health care, filing US income tax for prior years.

Those were the best days of my life.

 

 

 

Memories of my best friend Marc Ciriello

Lisa;

You need to know that our reconnection has been equally cathartic for me as well. I have had no one to share the great times I had with my best childhood friend. No one else could even begin to understand the loss we both have shared and kept quietly inside us for so many years.
Yes, Marc and I listened to hours of Jazz together. I am not sure if it was the same apartment, however, he would be studying for nursing school and I would sit and listen to the hours of Jazz in a dimly lit room while he toiled over the books. I was so proud of him and wanted to be just like him when I grew up.  I worked at St Thomas at the time and hated going to Firestone. I would leave his place to work the night shift as an orderly. I tried to work as many extra shifts as possible just to keep from going home to my parent’s house on Merriman Rd. Often I would sleep on the top floor of the hospital where they kept the extra beds. No one ever came up there and I could keep to my solitude. Quite often I would just stay there during the morning rather than go to school. Marc knew that and worried about me, but trusted that I knew what I was doing. He only encouraged me to get high grades. He was so smart and did well at Hoban High as well as nursing school.
I remember Marc and I going to a coffee shop near Kent State and seeing a young girl sing a Paul Simon song, Cloudy. It was my first introduction to a coffee house and gave me the impetus to later take up playing the guitar while stationed in Berlin, Germany. We also went to a Jazz club, not remembering where. I felt so grown up and cool hanging out with my friend who seemed to know so much about the world. To this day, I love a piano bar, with Jazz in the background and looking out over the water in Florida. I so miss Marc when I communicate with you. Men don’t cry, but my eyes are sweating a bit right now.
One summer’s day Marc showed up in his MG Midget and said he had just gotten his income tax return. I had also gotten mine. We decided to go on a road trip together. I know I wasn’t eighteen yet and he was because we ended up in New York state and Marc was worried about me being underage to drive his car. We drove to Buffalo and crossed into Canada, my first crossing that probably led to my later move to Canada for over forty-five years. I remember us arriving in Toronto and buying a hot dog at what is known there as Exhibition Place. The vendor told me I had to pay him $1.25 US for a $1.00 C$ hot dog. I was amazed that a foreign currency could be worth MORE than the almighty US$.
From Toronto, we headed to Montreal and broke into a place called Old Fort Henry on the Saint Lawrence River on the way. We found a secluded entrance and snuck in during the night to look around rather than pay the entrance fee during the day. We didn’t take anything but felt like great adventurers. By the time we got to Montreal, Marc had some really bad infection going on so we went to the ER where they did not speak English. Eventually, Marc convinced them to give him a prescription for an antibiotic and we decided to head back to the US where they spoke English. Marc was so sick that he didn’t mind that I was underage to drive the MG.
I found a park in the middle of the night in New York, got our sleeping bags out and we crashed, not having any idea where we were. I kept dreaming that it was raining all night. When we woke up and looked around I had parked on some grass and put out sleeping bags about twenty feet from a fountain that sprayed mist over us while we slept. Eventually, we made our way to New York City, our first time there in either of our lives. It had been three weeks since we had contacted our parents and it went like this for both of us as we phoned home from the first floor of the Empire State Building after three weeks. Hi, mom! (mothers) Where have you been and where are you? We are in the Empire State Building in downtown New York City. (mothers) Seriously, WHERE THE HELL ARE YOU? Seriously, we are in a phone booth on the first floor of the Empire State Building and are about to go up to the top floor to look out. Needless to say, they were both relieved that we were alive, at the same time I was really glad we were not in the same room with them. I know, awful kids. If my daughter had ever done anything that foolish, I would be so upset. Not letting them know where we were was not a smart idea.
I remember before we headed out, we went to the Ciriello & Sons bar and put a case of Coke in the small trunk of the MG along with two sleeping bags and clothes stuffed into paper bags. We must have told Angelo that we were headed out. I remember him being at the bar at the time. Who was that waitress that worked there at the time? I remember bussing tables there for tips and her repeatedly telling me that a busboy was not some kid waiting for a bus and to get those tables cleaned. To this day, I can smell the kitchen and the dark, dank stairway to the basement where extra supplies were kept. I remember being allowed to make salads up in advance and staying late to clean up.
Another story for another time was when we went to the Cathedral of Tomorrow for a night service, just to get the experience/
By the way, I have learned to play some Jazz guitar. I own a Martin and Guild acoustic, a hollow body Jazz guitar and a twelve string. plus a Banjo. This is me playing a song at my great, great grandfather’s grave in the Andersonville, Georgia Cemetery where he died after being captured during the Civil War. That guitar has been with me nearly fifty years.

Well, darling, I have an appointment at 7:30 am at the VA clinic in Durham and should put my head down.
Much love and respect.
James Wm.