Friday, October 27, 2017

Time, The Avenger


Does time exist? This has been a philosophical quandary for years. For example, the philosophy of time that takes the view that only the present is real is called “presentism,” while the view that all points in time are equally “real” is referred to as “eternalism.” 

Regardless of this argument, time - a man-made concept - does exist. We use a clock to measure time; information about time tells us the durations of events, and when they occur, and which events happen before which others. Nevertheless, despite 2,500 years of investigation into the nature of time, there are many unresolved issues.

One of those unresolved issues is whether we really need to have Daylight Savings Time as part of our world. This is a timely subject since DST ends at 2 a.m. Sunday, November 5, which means we turn our physical clocks back an hour and “re-gain” the hour we “lost” back in March.

There are advantages and disadvantages to adjusting time. Among the “pro” arguments: while changing the clocks does not create extra daylight, it does impact when the sun rises and sets; this creates an additional hour of natural daylight, and longer evenings, thus both boosting the economy and motivating people to get out of the house. Activities such as boating, golf, shopping, and dining out, are all increased when it’s light out.

More natural light means energy savings, too, because people are less reliant on artificial light for activities. A 2016 study by researchers from Prague’s Charles University and the Czech National Bank on energy use and DST found a positive relationship between latitude and energy savings.

Studies have also found DST contributes to improved road safety by reducing pedestrian fatalities by 13% during dawn and dusk hours, and that there is a seven-percent decrease in robberies following the spring shift to DST. (No word on whether robberies increase seven percent after the autumn shift.)

For all this DST rah-rah, there are some concerns. The biggest negative is health-related. Changing the time disrupts our body clocks. For most people, the resulting tiredness is simply an inconvenience; for others, however, the time change can have more serious consequences. A 2009 study in the Journal of Applied Psychology links the lack of sleep at the start of DST to car accidents, workplace injuries, suicide, and miscarriages. Further, the early evening darkness after the end of the DST period is linked to depression. And the risk of suffering a heart attack is also increased when DST begins. (However, the extra hour of sleep we get at the end of DST has in turn been linked to fewer heart attacks.)

Several states are exploring the idea of removing DST from their lexicon. Florida is not among them, nor does it appear on the horizon in Tallahassee. Nor does moving all of Florida into the Eastern Time Zone; currently, the western half of the Panhandle is in the Central Time Zone. But that’s another discussion for another time.

Monday, October 2, 2017

You And I Will Meet Again


The first "real" concert I ever saw was Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers. It was June 1980; I was 16, finally able to drive, and picked up Audrey Harwith in the 1971 lime green Pontiac LeMans to go to Pine Knob and see TPATH with opening guests Tommy Tutone. It was their Damn the Torpedoes tour, and they opened with "Here Comes My Girl," the second track on the album.

It was the beginning of a beautiful musical relationship.

At the time, I'd be hard-pressed to say TPATH was my favorite band. That honor had once belonged to Electric Light Orchestra (around 1976), and had shifted to The Beatles by the time I reached high school. It took a few more years, and albums, for Petty & Company to replace the Fab Four at the top of my musical list, but by the mid-1980s, that status had been achieved.

Number 1 on Gaba's list ... for more than 30 years.

I was blessed with the opportunity to attend 14 TPATH concerts over the years. The best of the shows - and the best concert I ever attended - was when TPATH toured with Bob Dylan. My cousin Larry Stern attended the show with me (we had damn good seats), and the show itself was amazing, even before Bob Seger joined them on stage to croon "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" for the first encore.

I've been asked often why Tom Petty is my favorite, and I don't have a definitive answer. In part it's the powerful lyrics and stories he put together. In part it's the seamless meshing of melodies and rhythms. In part it's because, let's be honest, his voice made horrible singers like me believe we could become big-time rock stars, too!

In large part, though, it's that he could relate to the "everyman" (much like Bruce Springsteen) - like the time he fought his label MCA's attempt to release his Hard Promises album at a $9.98 list price instead of the standard $8.98. (He threatened MCA he would withhold the album, and urged fans to write letters. The album was released at the lower price. Its cover shows Petty in a record store, standing in front of a crate of albums selling for ... $8.98.)

When I was growing up, I used to analyze lyrics, searching for hidden, deeper meaning in life. Songs  I could relate to. Songs that were about me. In Tom Petty, I found a treasure trove of such lyrics, all depending on the mood in which I was at the time. "Learning to Fly" ... "A Face in the Crowd" ... "Even the Losers" ... "You Got Lucky" ... "Dogs on the Run" ... "I Won't Back Down" ... just a few of the songs I related to in my darkest, highest, or most defiant moods.

Tom Petty is a friend I never met, but who got me through numerous times of turmoil. And for that, I thank him.

My favorite TPATH song is "The Waiting," which is pretty amazing since my Top 10 list probably has 40+ songs. And I'll probably post the video a bit lower on this thread. But I'll go with that first song from that first concert as a starting point.



RIP, Thomas Earl Petty. You were one of a kind.