Thursday, February 23, 2012

WALLETS

For the minimalist:
The Single-Sided Bi-Fold
Easily holds a few cards
and cash
 $40 with initials tooled in.
(shipped to your door)
These wallets are made to order, and are hand cut, hand tooled, and hand stitched
in Louisville, KY. 
Custom designs available
contact highlyrighteous@yahoo.com
to order or discuss your custom wallet.

Do you feel lucky, punk?


My boss, Mike, has been inviting me 
to go shooting with him for a long time now, 
but I have been putting it off.

Then, yesterday, after running out of excuses, I tagged along.



This was my last six shots fired on a competition/combat setting,
where the target moved in range between 25 and 50 feet, turning 
sideways and backwards, all at random.

Well, do you?

Sunday, February 19, 2012

Making our own way: five questions with people you should know.


In life, we essentially have 1 major decision to make: 
Go with the flow, or make our own way. 
Anything we do beyond this is based on that  one decision. 
Through the life of this blog, I am going to feature some people that I find interesting or that inspire me. 
All will be people who make their own way.

The first person I'm going to feature is my long time friend/brother, Tony Benzick
Tony is a writer, father, artist, and all around romantic.
I've never met someone so in love with the words
of his grandparents and those who came before them. 
Tony is a true Kentuckian, and his writing reflects his love for the language and lifestyle
of his own.




Q. What's the first thing you think about when you wake up?
A. The dreams i was having.

Q. Who's your favorite Kentuckian?
A. Jesse Stuart.

Q. Why do you write?
A. I like to create things and then watch how they exist on their own and in the minds of others.  There is bunches of creativity in everyone, by keeping it inside and hidden you are doing wrong.  Writing is my good deed of building up the collection of existence.

Q.  Steve MQueen or John Wayne?
A. Steve McQueen.

Q. Why?
A. Because of Harvey Mushmann and coffee enemas.



" A talk with grandad" - Tony Benzick


Them boys used to race to get over that county line
Playing ignorant to the fact that a state wide call has been put in
This was just their day to day 
You see
You can’t tell a Kentucky man
        A country man
Nothing
The world has changed many times since I first started mine
And you don’t need to keep up
Cause like it or not 
You’re brought along
Dragged along
You can’t stay behind and you can’t outrun it
You see you aint born American
You’re made that way
You’re made into all of it 
Even those parts you don’t want
I remember you as a boy
Sticking your finger through the screen instead of going out the door
Boy you did that before you were made American 
And I think after all the places you done gone
You know we suffer different 
We suffer all too American 
My uncle
With your name
Died loggin in Oregon 
After he went awol
And my daddy made me show military police where he was hiding
I didn’t know he was a logger til I heard he was dead
I hated my daddy from then
I was eight
I never ran for the county line but I always felt like that’s what I have been doing 
I was made American 
And at some point you came outta that screen door 



Sometimes your stomach will feel raw so you’ll need to stop drinkin for two or three days
And you’ll feel indecent often
But here is where you are
So be here in a way you’ll appreciate in the end 

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Blow up your TV, throw away the paper.

I was born in a small town. Then, I moved to the city.
All though I love the city
I have a strong connection to the country. 

We've been doing some work on a farm, on the outskirts,
and I have to say that a day of hard work
on a farm
on a beautiful day
is like a 
vacation

 Sometimes I take for granted that I live next to a river.
Up close, you can see milk jugs
and logs floating by
with birds perched on top.

Then, when I see it like this,
I realize...



Friday, February 10, 2012

LIVE IT. OWN IT.

        

Highly Righteous/Finely Tuned
is dedicated to preserving the things that
once made this country great. 
Not politics. 
Not left wing/right wing rhetoric,
but classic craftsmanship, strong words,
and love/respect for the people who came before, 
as well as those who carry on tradition in the 
name of freedom.
HR/FT is art, love, appreciation, and owning our country again.
It's about getting our heads out of the 
TV, Cell Phone, and shopping mall,
and actually living the life that we have. 
HR/FT is about not ever having to be concerned
about what is "normal" or "acceptable".
HR/FT is about making it on our own, our own way.
Live it. Own It.