As the year 2014 comes to an end this week, I got to thinking: how in the name of Zeus’s butthole did it pass so quickly?! I guess when a year is 1/68th of your life, that’s what happens. In any case, to slightly paraphrase a cherished line from the movie Frequency—one that my bride and I use quite often—“We’re still here, Chief.” And that’s the best part.

In recent years we’ve both battled serious illnesses. We’ve lost family members, and quite a few friends—one as recently as earlier this year. That’s life, I guess; it sucks sometimes. But while we remember the past, we mostly choose to look ahead, as we’ll be doing this week on New Year’s Eve.

SCIENCE FICTION BECOMES HISTORY

1984As a kid I read George Orwell’s classic dystopian novel, Nineteen-eighty-four, a science fiction story if there ever was one. That year would never come; heck, the 1960s were way too cool and would go on forever. There would always be the Beatles and the Stones, the Four Seasons, Woodstock and Haight-Ashbury. Big Brother would never be watching…would he?

Well, 1984 is now three decades in the past. How in hell did that happen?

In 1968 I saw the enigmatic science fiction movie, 2001: A Space Odyssey, based on a story co-written by Arthur C. Clarke and the film’s director, Stanley Kubrick. Wow, 2001—that year would never happen. Hell, that’s a whole ’nuther millennium! So even that is thirteen years in the rearview mirror.

And look at some of the scary things the story portended. How about the dangers of technology? Who could forget HAL? (“Good morning, Dave.”) While technology has given us so much, there are still inherent problems. Perhaps it was HAL who hacked Sony, ya think?

Or how about the threat of nuclear war? By the ’60s we’d already witnessed atomic power, and in the novel at the end,2001 the evolved Star Child detonates an orbiting warhead belonging to one of Earth’s superpowers. Needless to say, that threat hangs over our planet to this day.

NEW YEAR’S EVE

While December 31st is another excuse for many to drink and party, we who are older—and, hopefully, a bit wiser—will celebrate in our own way. In the afternoon my bride and I will go to a San Diego State basketball game and get hoarse cheering on our Aztecs. We’ll have our traditional lobster dinner at home, then watch Sleepless in Seattle—a great movie on New FrequencyYear’s Eve or any other time—and, of course, Frequency, before turning in long before the ball falls.

So 2015: bring it on! After all, We’re still here, Chief.

                                                    Happy New Year!

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