Friday, May 1, 2026

When the Traffic Camera Becomes the Judge, Jury and the Executioner


It was an early April spring morning on the Island. I was heading to Plainview Hospital on Long Island to work, moving through my usual hustle on the Old Country Road. The sun was directly in my face, blinding me as I drove to work.


The image in question you are looking at is me being captured by a traffic camera. The road was empty, and according to that dystopian system, I went through the intersection in violation of traffic rules. But if this had been a police officer instead of a programmed camera, there’s a strong chance and probability that would have been let off. I was in scrubs, ID, and stethoscope and was clearly on my way to work, and the sun was interfering with my visibility.

But with a camera, there’s no conversation. No discretion. No context. Only the image and the rule. No gray areas except 0s and 1s.

By the time I received the ticket in the mail, I was already in another state for work. Fighting it didn’t feel worthy of my time. My time is more valuable than the cost of the fine, so I paid it and moved on.

Still, it left me thinking about something deeper. George Orwell’s 1984 and the idea of “Big Brother” come to mind, this constant, watching presence that records everything but understands nothing. Imagine what happened can be applied to other facets of our daily lives. It's on scary brave wicked new world. A system that sees actions but cannot interpret intent. Again, it does not discern gray areas; it only enforces. 

And that’s the unsettling part. When enforcement becomes fully automated, there is no room left for human judgment, mercy, or context. Only compliance and penalty.

In that sense, it feels like we are slowly drifting into a world where Big Brother is no longer a fiction, but a functional reality.

Gorgeous Day and Costco Gas is Packed


 



Happy St. Joseph the Worker Feast Day and also May Day

 


For the Gospel Reflection on May 1st



Reading References

  • First Reading: (Acts 13:26–33)

  • Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 2)

  • Gospel: (John 14:1–6)

Reflection on the Homily Today:

Today we celebrate the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker. A feast that was instituted by
in 1955 as a response to ideologies that reduced work to mere production and stripped it of its dignity.

From the beginning, work is presented as something good and holy. In Genesis, after each act of creation, God saw that it was good. Work was part of God’s design. But after sin entered the world, work became burdensome, “by the sweat of your brow.” What was once a blessing became, in many ways, a struggle.

History shows us the consequences when human dignity is ignored. We have seen slavery, exploitation, and unjust labor conditions. People reduced to tools, valued only for output. This distortion of work ignores the truth: work is not just about results, it is about the human person. Dignity. 

This is why the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker is so important. It reminds us that work is sacred. It is not separate from our spiritual life, it is part of it. God worked in creation. Jesus Himself said, “My Father is working still, and I am working.” Christ sanctified work through His own life.

Saint Joseph lived this reality. As a carpenter, he taught Jesus the value of labor, discipline, and responsibility. Through Joseph, Jesus entered fully into the human experience of work. And this shaped His teachings, His parables reflect the everyday lives of workers: farmers, fishermen, shepherds, and servants.

Work, then, is not just what we do, it is part of who we are. It connects us to God’s ongoing creation and to one another.

So today, we reflect on the countless forms of work around us: parents caring for their children, individuals laboring in offices, hospitals, schools, and homes. The work of providing, cleaning, teaching, building, these are not small things. They are sacred acts, often done quietly, almost unconsciously, like breathing.

Work is good.

Work is holy.

And when done with love and dignity, it becomes a participation in God’s own work. St. Joseph, pray for us. 

Amen.

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Nature is Beautiful 😍




This was right outside my car. The deer 🦌 of course didn't know I was in the car next to it. Highly domestic. 

Male Ducks Are Called Drakes

 


What the Eye Saw

 


The Tales of a Clinician


If You Can’t Look, Imagine Doing It Daily

The other day, I had a patient, details held purposefully for HIPAA reasons.

This person has been bedbound for over ten years. As a result, they had developed three unstageable wounds to the sacrum and bilateral gluteal areas. These wounds require dressing changes twice a day or BID.

When the second change was due, there wasn’t enough support around to hold the patient still. The patient’s primary support person was present at the bedaide. When asked, this individual willingly agreed to help hold the patient during this process. That alone was appreciated.

As the old dressings were being removed, this individual commented on the smell. Then I asked if they wanted to take a look at the wounds to see its progression.

They vehemently declined.

They said the last time they saw the wound, they vomited.

This person, by the way, is the patient’s only loved one who is always there all day to be with this patient. 

Make of this exchange what you will.

This is why some family members deeply appreciate and respect clinicians, because not everyone can do this. Not everyone can see it, smell it, touch it, and still show up again later to do it all over.

But some do.

Every single day.

And yet, there are still people and family members who show little to no appreciation for the work.

That part is hard to comprehend if you ask me.

Because if you can’t even look…

Imagine doing it daily. 

Care to share some experiences from your line of work? 

God bless you for reading this. 

Pal Ronnie

Mass Readings and Reflection for April 30th, 2026


First Reading: (Acts 13:13–25)

Responsorial Psalm: (Psalm 89)

“I will sing of Your steadfast love, O Lord, forever.”

Alleluia

Jesus Christ, faithful witness and firstborn from the dead, has loved us and freed us from our sins by His blood.

Gospel: (John 13:16–20)

Reflection

All you have to do is look around at work and you will see how people interact with each other with their titles on their ID cards and their behavior towards one another. Most of us hate the idea of service to others. Even at home, we can see it. But to love is to serve and to serve is to love. That is why today’s readings draw us into a powerful and humbling truth: we are servants who are being sent.

In the Gospel, Jesus speaks immediately after washing the feet of His disciples, a radical act of humility. The Master becomes the servant. And then He tells us plainly: no servant is greater than the master. This is not just a statement, it is a way of life. If Christ lowers Himself in service, then our path cannot be one of pride, status, or privilege. It must be one of humility, obedience, and love in action.

This message is especially striking in a world that constantly pushes us toward recognition, status, and visibility. Yet Christ redirects us: the true blessing is not in being seen, but in doing, in living out what we know to be right.

In the First Reading, we see this lived out through Paul. When he speaks in the synagogue, he does not impose something foreign. Instead, he meets the people where they are. He walks them through their own history, Egypt, the wilderness, the kings, and then reveals Christ as the fulfillment of everything they already believe. This is wisdom in evangelization: to understand people, to meet them in their reality, and to guide them toward truth with clarity and respect.

The same spirit is seen in the life of missionaries of old.
These missionaries endured the same, their lives reminds us that answering God’s call often comes with cost. It may require leaving behind what is comfortable. It may demand perseverance through misunderstanding, hardship, or even loneliness. But God supplies the grace needed for the mission He gives.

And this brings the message home to us.

We may not be sent to distant lands or frontier towns, but we are sent nonetheless, into our workplaces, our families, our communities. The call remains the same:

  • To serve rather than to dominate

  • To meet others where they are

  • To bring Christ into real, everyday situations

There is also a quiet but important truth in today’s reflection: goodness often goes unseen. The world amplifies negativity, conflict, and failure. But countless acts of service, sacrifice, and love happen daily, hidden, unnoticed, yet deeply valuable in God’s eyes.

Christ assures us: “Blessed are you if you do these things.”

So the question is not whether we know what is right. The question is whether we live it.

Today, we are invited to:

  • Embrace humility over recognition

  • Serve faithfully, even when unseen

  • Trust that God’s call, no matter how small it seems, is meaningful

Because in the end, to receive the one who is sent is to receive Christ Himself.

And to serve in His name is to participate in His mission.

Amen

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Oil Is Still Rising


Oil prices are still going up. That would’ve made a great investment.

Now you see why everything you touch at the store costs a fortune.

Is this what “making America great again” looks like?

Just asking questions.


Pal Ronnie