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I've just enquired with our mods if we can have a thread just to celebrate the kindness, support and tenacious work of EnolaGaia. Sadly, the gentleman has passed on (please see the RIP thread) which has come as a shock to many of us including me. I'm hoping this thread will be a place where we can share stories about him as well as hopefully a source of comfort for his friends and family. And I don't think he'd begrudge us all a few chuckles here and there either, so long as it's here and there that is.

I've got a few private message quotes from him I'm looking forward to sharing here for everyone, perhaps not today but when it feels right instead, stuff that will give us all a smile. X
 
Wasn't prepared for this at all. This is such a great loss, I feel devastated by the news. We might all be (to some degree or another) 'strangers on the internet', but Enola's thoughts, ideas and knowledge became such a fixture in my online life, and for so many long and wonderful years.
Thank you, Randy, for your excellent contributions and for all that you've done here. I will miss you very much. Shine bright, always x
 
And now I know the secret origin of Enola Gaia!
Who or What
is
"Enola Gaia"?


The B-29 bomber Enola Gay was the vehicle for the world's inaugural nuclear attack on Japan.
Enola Gaia connotes an envisioned vehicle in the service of something considerably more global and more benign. All my computers have been named Enola Gaia, and I use this label as the rubric for all my private work. Some would call Enola Gaia my free-floating signifier or my teleological meme. I think of her as my totem...​
 
I, too, am sad about EG moving into the vaster context. I hope he stays in touch via dreams, apparitioning, apporting, planchettes, and especially texting.

EG, after you have had a break to get used to your new abilities, I hope you drop in here from time to time. You were one of the members whom I wished to meet on this earthly plane at an UnCon.

Edit: I wonder if EG has had a chance to meet with Charles Fort yet? Just think of the interviews he can now do!
 
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Really sad news. Along with all the others I will miss his input immensely & all the effort he put in over the years to make the place work as well as it does. He could always be relied on to bother tracking down details others couldn’t find & I was frequently amazed at his breadth of knowledge on a range of subjects. Always the voice of reason & devoid of bullshit, he also seemed a warm & open personality with a wry sense of humour. Agree the place won’t be the same without him.

Can you pass on our condolences to any family/friends if you’re in touch with them & tell them how fondly we’ll remember him.
 
And now I know the secret origin of Enola Gaia!

Apart from his general interest in the fact that the plane--Enola Gay--was the mechanism that led to the Cold War's nuclear rivalry and placed the shadow of the bomb over his generation, @EnolaGaia had two neat links with the plane (forgive me if this is on his website, I haven't checked):

1) He somehow (he never explained how) inadvertently damaged it while it was being restored for a 50th anniversary display at the Smithsonian!

2) His father was a flight mechanic stationed on Guam with a USAAF long-range fighter escort squadron in 1945 when Tibbets and his crew were on the nearby island of Tinian. His father met Tibbets and his men, and years later Enola found a baseball signed by Tibbets and members of the crew following an inter-island game a few weeks before the Hiroshima mission.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Tibbets
 
Apart from his general interest in the fact that the plane--Enola Gay--was the mechanism that led to the Cold War's nuclear rivalry and placed the shadow of the bomb over his generation, @EnolaGaia had two neat links with the plane (forgive me if this is on his website, I haven't checked):

1) He somehow (he never explained how) inadvertently damaged it while it was being restored for a 50th anniversary display at the Smithsonian!

2) His father was a flight mechanic stationed on Guam with a USAAF long-range fighter escort squadron in 1945 when Tibbets and his crew were on the nearby island of Tinian. His father met Tibbets and his men, and years later Enola found a baseball signed by Tibbets and members of the crew following an inter-island game a few weeks before the Hiroshima mission.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Tibbets
One night we got into a heavy conversation about some topic he also cared about, I can't remember what it was about but he replied with ..

"I have a reputation for "transforming into a machine" during crises and effectively / efficiently dealing with whatever the Cosmic Joker throws in my path. My late best friend of all time pinpointed this as my most impressive superpower.

Among other things, I spent 8 years as a front-line representative for the Social Security Administration, overseeing a welfare-dependent population of circa 17,000 unfortunate and needy souls. I dealt with a lot of folks in crisis as well as a lot of their crises. However ...

I already knew at that point in my life my empathy / sympathy only extended to people I knew and valued. In my professional role I was "official", cut no corners, and let the chips fall wherever they may. If someone needed help I was the guy who knew how the systems worked to get them help ASAP. If someone tried to rip us off or owed money back I was so fearsomely effective at nailing them that the agency secretly reviewed all my cases overnight for a month before concluding I was simply doing the job by the book.

Our client population asked for me by name, because they knew whether the news was good or bad I'd give 'em straight answers and a clear explanation for things.

Here's my point ... I don't have the "automatic benevolence toward anyone / everyone" gene. In the job described above I dispensed more aid and more punishment than anyone, but I didn't "care" in the sense of letting it get to me personally. My colleagues who "cared" all washed out.

This is why I didn't go into medicine as my extended family continually urged me to do during my early youth. I've provided first aid and other emergency help at (e.g.) accident scenes and been a caregiver in other situations, but I've long known in my heart this wasn't the sort of role I was really cut out for.

Same goes for parenting ... I don't have the "all kids are a blessing; I wanna have some" gene.

Make no mistake - I have tons of respect for parents, caregivers and medical professionals. It's just that their path isn't my path. A half-century of experience has validated my youthful beliefs about this.."

.... he also wasn't afraid to have a laugh though and seemed to have a soft spot for us more silly posters so I reckon we're going to miss him as well. I'll try to find some of his less profound stuff lol.
 
His quote in his signature - I knew the job was dangerous when I took it - I believe to be a quote from the true-life adventures of Henry Cabot Henhouse III, better know to one and all as Super Chicken. In the lyric, the singer mentions (from SC's POV) to his erstwhile partner in crime: "Fred, if you're afraid you'll have to overlook it, Besides you knew the job was dangerous when you took it"

superchicken.jpg
 
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