Have You Ever Lost Something Valuable At The Movie Theater?

Have you ever gone to the movies and left behind a personal belonging that you didn’t even realize it was missing until you made it all the way back home at which point you reacted in serious alarm? The other day, this happened to me, but I have to admit it’s also a funny story that taught me a very valuable lesson.

It all began on a cloudy, drizzly, and cool August day where I decided to head to the theater for a bargain matinee. Having received much critically acclaimed buzz, I chose to see The Spectacular Now which was about a senior in high school suffering from alcoholism and a broken soul. For just under two hours, I was so deeply engrossed in the main character of Sutter, who is played by actor Miles Teller, that I held a deep urge to go the bathroom during most of it.

While I sat there, I did my best to sit as comfortably as possible, not only with that urge, but also with the physical pains I continue to deal with in my body. Like always, I sat in various weird positions in the relatively empty theater as I tried to ease my pain as well as that urge to run to the bathroom. What I didn’t know was that one of the pockets in my cargo shorts was halfway open and it was the one that always holds a pouch I carry that contains my personal crystals and recovery chips.

When the movie ended, I ran to the bathroom deep in thought about it, especially it’s ending that left me wondering what would happen to Sutter in life. By the time I got home about 25 minutes later, I was still preoccupied with thoughts on the movie. That was until I reached down into my pockets to empty them and relax for the evening, as I had no plans to go back out again. Unfortunately, it was in that moment where all of that reflection, deep state of pondering, and tranquility I was feeling, evaporated instantly as I realized my special pouch of trinkets wasn’t in my right pocket.

I did what most people might do in this situation, which was then to feel in that pocket a ton of more times thinking that it might miraculously appear there with one of those attempts. It didn’t of course and I ran around the house thinking I might have set it down in the places I had gone to since arriving back home. But I hadn’t. So I raced out the door and into my car thinking maybe, just maybe, it might have slipped out in there somewhere while I was driving. But it hadn’t. After a few more times of repeating the same behaviors almost obsessively by going in and out of the house to look for it, I got into my car and decided to start frantically driving back towards this theater, forgetting about all appropriate driving measures.

My phone fumbled in my hands and almost dropped to the floor as I broke even my own cardinal rule of using it for anything but a phone call while I’m driving. I searched in desperation for this theater’s direct phone line on the web and when I found it, I realized it was only the recorded line. After barely listening to the message, I hit zero multiple times thinking that would connect me quicker, but it only reset me back to the beginning of that recorded message. Finally, I mustered up a slight bit more of patience as I merged onto the highway heading towards that theater, and hit the right combination of numbers to get the recorded voice to tell me what the direct phone number was.

When the manager answered the phone from the theater, I rambled off as quickly as possible the exact location where I sat and what I had lost. I know I probably sounded quite desperate, but this pouch contained some things that had deep meaning for me, especially with where I’m at in my life right now. I said something of the sort to that manager who then placed me on hold as she went to look for it. As I continued rocketing towards that theater, I realized I had reverted to my old terrible driving skills. By the time I was no more than a mile or so away from getting back to the theater, the manager came back on the line and told me she didn’t find it. I responded that I was almost there and would help her look again, convinced she had missed it. Minutes later, I was entering that theater again, but this time wondering if I was going to interrupt the next movie being shown by having to ask people to move while I searched for the pouch. Thankfully, neither was true.

After kneeling on a floor that I wished I hadn’t and placing my hands through all that stickiness to find nothing, I got that sinking feeling inside that the pouch was gone for good. Regrettably, I even asked the manager as I got ready to leave the theater if she trusted her employees who cleaned the theater as I thought maybe one of them took it. If anyone could have seen me leaving the theater my second time that day after giving that manager my contact information in case it turned up, I would have looked like I had just attended a funeral.

With a last ditch amount of hope, I drove recklessly back home, breaking my own driving rules once again as I thought maybe somehow it was there and I just hadn’t seen it in my previous frantic search. As I ran back into the house, and past my roommate’s dog who looked at me like I was crazy, I headed upstairs to my bedroom, and unbelievably, there it was. Sitting on my bedside, where I had left it the night before, the pouch had never even been put it in my pocket earlier in the day when I had left for the theater! As I placed it back in my pocket, I thanked God immensely and forgave myself with a smile for how silly the whole thing was.

There’s a lesson in this story for me. And it’s about slowing down, even in my times of greater stress. If I had just taken one of my own moments, breathed, and allowed myself to have a little less fanaticism about my supposed loss of that pouch, I would have realized it had never been lost in the first place and saved myself a lot of unneeded hassle…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

Michael J. Fox Is Truly An Inspiration

I grew up watching a funny sitcom named Family Ties that I’m sure many people around my age still remember fondly. Having first aired in September of 1982 and running all the way through May of 1989, the family show starred a young and healthy actor by the name of Michael J. Fox, who played a boy named Alex P. Keaton. During it’s run, he went on to garner three Emmy’s and a Golden Globe for his acting in the show. And for all those who weren’t watching him in it, they probably came to know his name anyway when he appeared during the same period of time in Robert Zemeckis’s Back to the Future Trilogy as Marty McFly. As his career’s success story continued to rise, unbeknownst to everyone else, he we diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease in 1991.

In the years that followed his initial diagnosis, Michael J. Fox did what most would probably do in his shoes after receiving that news, he went on with his life as best as he could and continued acting. Over the next five years he pursued his movie career and worked in over 15 of them, of which one of them, Doc Hollywood, is on my list of all-time favorites. By 1996, Fox went back to his roots and got a lead role as Deputy Mayor Mike Flaherty in the primetime television show Spin City, which quickly became a hit. During his four years on the show, while his health continued to decline, he earned praise for his role by receiving another Emmy and three more Golden Globe’s. After four seasons with the show, and opening up to the public about his deteriorating health condition, it became too much for him to continue acting in it. But what I have always loved best about Michael J. Fox is that he’s never been a quitter. And while he may have started disappearing from the acting spotlight around 2000, instead of giving up and letting the disease win, he created the Michael J. Fox foundation where he began to dedicate his life to finding a cure for Parkinson’s disease.

Since its inception, the Michael J. Fox foundation has gone on to invest over $325 million and become the largest private funder to finding the cure for this disease he suffers from. After six year went by where I only remember hearing his voice in some animated films, he appeared in a commercial in 2006 where he visibly showed signs of the disease. At the time, I can remember being shocked at how Alex P. Keaton and Marty McFly had grown up and gotten to that state of health. But I also remember being hugely impressed with how humble Michael J. Fox was in being able to show the world what Parkinson’s really does to a person.

Over the years that followed after that commercial aired, Fox spent most of his time supporting his foundation but had some noticeable cameos in shows such as Boston Legal, Scrubs, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and The Good Wife. But it is what is happening in his life during this fall television season that has proven to me that Michael J. Fox is an inspiration for anyone suffering form any disease or disability. Beginning this September, he is back to being the star of a family sitcom entitled The Michael J. Fox Show. It revolves loosely around his own life but is based on a news anchor named Mike Henry who initially gives up his career when he’s diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and then later returns to the limelight. I am excited for Fox and hope for the best that his show becomes widely successful as Family Ties and Spin City did because of him. I know at least for me that I’ll be watching as I don’t believe a disease has changed his gift of acting.

It is estimated that seven to ten million people today suffer from Parkinson’s disease and Michael J. Fox is one of them. For someone who had such a widely popular acting career as a young adult, Fox has proven to the world that even with having such a terrible disease, he will never give up fighting and doing what he does best, raising awareness of it, trying to find its cure, and all the while, showing everyone he still has what it takes to be an incredible actor even with all his disease’s limitations.

Michael J. Fox is truly an inspiration to me and I pray that God blesses this show and the rest of his life. And I hope that one day soon, his foundation will find that cure…

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson

The One Direction And The Beatles Crazes

I decided to take on a slightly different spin with today’s entry solely because of the latest craze, which seems to be taking the world quite literally by storm. So what is this craze? Two words. One Direction.

The first time I ever heard of the name One Direction and found out what it was all about was during last season’s X Factor show. It’s one of the two reality based shows I allow myself to watch and that’s only because I respect Simon Cowell’s musical opinions as he seems to have a knack for finding real singing talent. And during last season, he spoke often of this boy band group he discovered. After doing some research on the Internet, I learned that the five boys who made up this group had appeared as solo artists on the 2010-11 season from the UK Version of X Factor. Each had failed to make it on their own to a round that would have brought them to the judges home. But based upon a suggestion from one of the other X Factor judges, they were brought back to compete as a group and ended up making it to the finals where they placed third overall by the end of that seventh season. Shortly thereafter, Niall Horan, Zyn Malik, Liam Payne, Harry Styles, and Louis Tomlinson signed their band One Direction with Simon Cowell’s Syco Records.

Since January 2011, their fame has risen rapidly. First a book licensed by them entitled One Direction: Forever Young (Our Official X Factor Story) was published and topped a best seller list. Next, their debut single “What Makes You Beautiful”, reached number one on the UK Singles Chart and then became the most pre-ordered Sony Music Entertainment single in history. The band subsequently signed a record deal with Columbia Records in North America and their debut single here hit number 28 on the Billboard Hot 100 and later sold over 4 millions copies. Their first studio album Up All Night was released in early 2012 and became the UK’s fastest-selling debut album and toped the charts in sixteen countries. The same album bowed atop the US Billboard 200 chart, making them the first British group in US chart history to enter at number one with their debut album. As a result, they were inducted into the Guinness World Records. The album also became the first by a boy band to sell 500,000 digital copies in the US and by August of 2012, had sold over 3 million copies worldwide. Their second album, Take Me Home, was released in November of 2012 and it’s first single “Live While We’re Young”, reached the top ten in almost ever country it charted in. The album itself sold 540,000 copies in its first week in the US, debuted atop the Billboard 200, and topped charts in more than thirty-four other countries. And both albums were the number three and four best-selling albums of 2012 globally, selling 4.5 million and 4.4 million units, respectively. The most startling thing I learned though about this pop group is that they already are a $50 million dollar making business. And lately, on almost every channel during each commercial break of any show I’m watching, I’m being inundated with previews of their upcoming documentary movie entitled One Direction: This is Us. What’s ironic though is that up until a few nights ago, I had never heard them perform as I’m not typically a boy band fan nor do I rarely listen to pop music. But I decided to listen to a song they performed live on the only other reality show I watch, America’s Got Talent, which had them as a guest for week 1 of the semi-finals results show.

What stood out more to me than anything as I watched them perform, was actually not their background music, their voices, or even them, all of which seemed pretty good. Instead, it was all the screaming girls in the audience that the cameras panned in on who were crying, shaking, and holding their arms out as if Jesus was on stage. And all of this reminded me most of the footage I watched long ago of The Beatles in a movie named A Hard Day’s Night, which chronicled a couple of days in the lives of that group. After doing some comparable research, it appears that One Direction really could be the 2013 version of The Beatles. In their heyday, The Beatles were a hip young boy band pop group that garnered millions of fans across the world, especially female, much of whom also reacted in the same way I saw on live TV with One Direction. The Beatles went on in their musical career to become the best selling band in the United States, as well as holding the most number-one hits on the Hot 100 chart with 20. They received 7 Grammy Awards, an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score, and it has also been estimated that they have had lifetime sales of their music of over one billion units. Rolling Stone even ranked them back in 2004 as the best artist of all-time.

While I really can’t say I understand why there was such a craze back then with The Beatles nor why there seems to be one now with One Direction, I can say that both have demonstrated great musical talent. While neither of their music styles are my cup of tea as I’m really more into ambient, trance, deep house, and electronica types of music these days, I do give them both credit for having pretty amazing voices, great stage presences, and knowing how to work the crowds of fans.

In regards to One Direction, they seem to be really down to earth and act just like any average goofy young boys might act with each other, especially when girls are around. And from what I read on the web, it appears most of those girls are finding all of them quite attractive like teenage girls and young women did all those years ago with The Beatles. So I’m guessing that these are just some of the main reasons for their rising notoriety. Whether they can continue to follow in The Beatle’s footsteps over time remains to be seen. For now, there are definitely striking resemblances to both group’s progression of popularity. While The Beatles went on to produce solo careers for John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr, making them even more of a success, I’ll be looking forward to see if the same happens to One Direction down the road. Either way, I give the group credit for their quick success story and musical talent. I just hope they remain humble, as they appear to be doing so now, and refrain from following in some of the other footsteps of famed artists who went more in the direction of producing massive egos and even worse, getting into drugs.

Regardless, I wish you well One Direction. May God bless you in all your future musical endeavors. Just don’t let success go to your heads ok?

Peace, love, light, and joy,

Andrew Arthur Dawson