Offline
Background
Name: Mike
Birthday: August 31
Gender: Male
Status: Married
Ethnicity: Caucasian
Religion: Christian/Protestant
Location:
TUSCALOOSA, Alabama
United States
School:
Tuscaloosa High School, Tuscaloosa, Al, 1970
University of Alabama, 1974
University of Alabama School of Law, 1977
Work:
Law Clerk and Staff Attorney, State of Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals, Montgomery, Al, 1977-1979
Assistant District Attorney, Tuscaloosa County, Tuscaloosa, Al, 1979-2006
Executive Director, Turning Point Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Services, Tuscaloosa, Al, 2007--
Hometown(s):
Tuscaloosa, Al Montgomery, Al
Quote:
"If you just learn a single trick, Scout, you'll get along a lot better with all kinds of folks. You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view...Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it."--Atticus Finch, from "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Nell Harper Lee (1960)

About Me

I was a career prosecutor for twenty-eight years, specializing in child abuse, domestic violence and sexual assault. I "retired" to become the Executive Director of Turning Point Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault Services in January, 2007. I was a child of Disney and the cold war, a follower of Davy Crockett, El Fego Barca, and Zorro, well schooled in the art of duck and cover and the joys of a good fall-out shelter. I watched the development of manned spaceflight with amazement. I was stunned by the assassinations of John Kennedy, Martin Luther King, and finally Robert F. Kennedy. I was a nervous student during the Vietnam War and watched the roll of lottery numbers. I've gone from 45s to MP3s, VHF/UHF to High Def, Beta to BluRay, Texas Instruments to Dell, and rotary dialing to blue tooth. Someone started a sexual revolution and forgot to tell me about it. I never made it to Woodstock but knew the times were a changing. I watched Challenger disintegrate in a major malfunction, Operation Desert Storm, the Towers fall on 9/11, journalists embedded with the troops on the way to Baghdad, and Saddam swing in a grainy phone camera video. I spent Y2K on the Natchez trace and the clocks kept ticking. I watched an election decided by the Supreme Court rather than the people and fretted through a flu season without vaccine. I contemplate the possibility of a pandemic flu and eye my pet Cockatiel with suspicion. I've lived and continue to live in interesting times--a true gift, the Chinese say.

Interests:
Civic involvement: Founding Board member, Tuscaloosa Children's Center, an advocacy center for victims of physical and sexual abuse; Former President, Child Abuse Prevention Services, Former Board member, Turning Point, now Executive Director; Member, Tuscaloosa County Department of Human Resources Quality Assurance Team Leisure: Antiques, Camping, Collecting Signed First Edition books, Cooking, Fishing, Gardening, History, Movies, Music, Reading, Travel.

My Photos (1)

My Videos (1)

My Journals (4)

 Not long after retiring from the District Attorney's Office to become the Director of Turning Point, our domestic violence and sexual assault services program, our local newspaper published a small article on the growing numbers of retirees entering second careers.  No writer was given a by-line.  It was a brief wire report.  The gist of the article centered around "Boomers" whose formative years were in the late 1960s.  The article noted a growing trend among graying boomers to end one career and begin a second, often in the arena of social services.  The author opined that my generation was returning to its level of social consciousness originally experienced in the days of our idealistic youth.On Sunday, July 20, 2008, Nicholas Kristof, a columnist for the NY Times, wrote a column entitled, "Geezers Doing Good".  It's worthy of being shared.  It appears below in its entirety. 

Op-Ed Columnist

Geezers Doing Good

 

Published: July 20, 2008

This month Bill Gates starts his new full-time career as a humanitarian, leaving behind the software bugs to swat the kind that cause malaria.

Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times

Nicholas D. Kristof

 

We often think of those trying to save the world as bright-eyed young people, but Mr. Gates is part of a booming trend: the “encore career” as a substitute for retirement. Definitions are still in flux, but an encore career typically aims to provide a dose of personal satisfaction by “giving back.”

Some 78 million American baby boomers are now beginning to retire, and one survey this year by a research institute found that half of boomers are interested in starting such new careers with a positive social impact. If we boomers decide to use our retirement to change the world, rather than our golf game, our dodderdom will have consequences for society every bit as profound as our youth did.

One example of this trend is Peter Agre, a medical doctor who won the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2003 for research on ... on ... well, on something to do with cell membranes that I still don’t understand. Dr. Agre could have run his lab indefinitely but was restless to assume a challenge that would more directly affect society.

He thought about politics, but ended up taking on a fancy administrative position at Duke University, thinking he could help shape students and education. Then he became restless again, and this year he took a substantial pay cut to head the Malaria Research Institute at Johns Hopkins University.

“It wasn’t a matter of being a Mother Teresa,” Dr. Agre said. “It was a matter of, ‘Boy, that sounds like fun!’ ”

Yet he concedes — a little bashfully — that there is also a thrill at the possibility of helping overcome malaria, one of the great scourges of humanity. These days, Dr. Agre presides over a team of 20 scientists working on everything from designing malaria vaccines to engineering a malaria-resistant mosquito that in theory could outcompete others if released in the wild.

Marc Freedman, author of a book called “Encore: Finding Work that Matters in the Second Half of Life,” notes that adolescence is a relatively modern concept; until the 19th century teenagers normally were treated as adults. In the same way, he says, a new life stage is emerging — the period of 10, 20 or even 30 years after one’s main career is completed but before infirmity sets in.

The best things that graying do-gooders bring to philanthropy is their management experience and Rolodexes. Bill and Melinda Gates are most noted for showering billions of dollars on public health, but perhaps just as important has been the hard-nosed business sensibility they invoke, demanding metrics to demonstrate that particular approaches are cost-effective.

Aside from Mr. Gates and Dr. Agre, another general in the war on malaria is Rob Mather, a British management consultant who — thank heaven! — isn’t very handy with a TV remote. Mr. Mather was trying to turn off his set in June 2003 when he accidentally flipped to another channel and was riveted by the image of a 5-year-old girl who was struggling to overcome severe burns all over her body.

Mr. Mather suggested to several friends that they swim as a fund-raiser for the girl. Because Mr. Mather is relentless, the swim ended up involving 10,000 people in 73 countries and raised hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Bowled over by the possibilities of mobilizing people for good causes, Mr. Mather set up a swim the next year to raise money against malaria — and this time 250,000 participated. He left the business world and founded a group called Against Malaria, now one of the world’s leading organizations battling the disease.

Mr. Mather browbeats businesses into donating services and covering overhead — “we have 17 legal firms working for us, and we’ve never paid a legal bill” — so every dollar donated to the organization ends up actually used to buy bed nets for families that can’t afford them.

He said he had just received e-mail about an African village that had 387 cases of malaria per month before the bed nets were distributed and seven cases per month afterward. Mr. Mather’s work has resulted in hundreds of thousands of bed nets being shipped abroad to save lives so far — all of which he finds rather more fulfilling than his previous, more lucrative career.

If more people take on encore careers like that, the boomers who arrived on the scene by igniting a sexual revolution could leave by staging a give-back revolution. Boomers just may be remembered more for what they did in their 60s than for what they did in the Sixties.

I invite you to comment on this column on my blog, www.nytimes.com/ontheground, and join me on Facebook at www.facebook.com/kristof.

 

Added: July 21, 2008
Views: 84 | Comments: 0 | Bookmarks: 0
bonjovi says:
Posted: August 30, 2008 4:13PM EDT
patreaves says:
Mike, Sounds as if you are quite a remarkable person. Certainly our world has been ever changing. I, like you, saw the assination of JFK, King, and Robert Kennedy. I observed as Challenger errupted into nothingness and left the lives of those they each left behind shattered. I was at home from work the day 911 happened and was in total shock.
Certainly, I'm glad we've had men like you who would stand against crme n our world. And I feel honored to have the opportunity to read a little of your life of service to your community, and to the country in which you live
Posted: July 19, 2008 10:29PM EDT
Cby says:
I share your loss. We enjoyed the short life of our kitten, Skittles. He got sick eating at a neighbor's house around the time pet food was contaminated and caused kidney failure and death for many pets. He was eight months old and much too young to die. In that short time he lived we were revived. His enthusiasm and affectionate nature was hard to resist. Our hearts opened wider and grew softer because of him.
Posted: July 16, 2008 10:44PM EDT
Add your Comments:

  Submit