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the magazine for men who give a damn
Murray A. Lightburn’s new album could very well be the sonic equivalent of STAND Magazine’s tagline: It is a record for men who give a damn. The music that I like to listen to and want to listen to, that’s what I’m pulling from, and that’s where I’m coming from. We make a lot of decisions because of what we like or don’t like instead of what’s right or true, and that screws us up a lot of the time. It’s really hard, and I think it’s due to different levels of growth.
The main players in the story include Parsifal, a young man from Wales, The Fisher King of the Grail Castle, and Kundry, a queenly, mysterious, mystic woman (a female counterpart of Merlin), along with Parsifal’s mother Herzeleide, who carries the sorrow of Parsifal’s father’s actions. The wound to The Fisher King signifies a wounding to man’s sense of potency and his self-esteem. The wounding in this “private part” of himself will not heal and equates to The Fisher King’s “fall from grace” (the noble part of the king has fallen from grace). The second Grail Castle opportunity is not gratuitous and coincides with a man’s mid-life crisis; a time when men re-evaluate their whole lives and hopefully re-discover meaning and potency.
In episode 60 of the STANDcast Dwayne Hayes, editor in chief of STAND magazine, is joined by Dr. Dain Heer, author of the book Return of the Gentleman. He also talks about what it means to be a gentleman, what it means to honor oneself, and the elements of intimacy. Special guest: Dr. Dain Heer • How do we honor ourselves • 5 elements of intimacy
It’s an 8-mile slog from America’s first lighthouse on Little Brewster Island, around Thompson Island, and back ashore at the L Street Bathhouse in South Boston. In ’96, I did this kid’s book, Dangerous Dan, and that’s where the whole Frazz thing, still unnamed, started to gel in my mind. He’s simply a good man who’s reached his limits. He would have loved to have Caulfield’s spunk and spirit himself, but he knows that Caulfield is quicker, sharper, smarter than he is, even if Caulfield doesn’t always realize it himself.