If You Read Only One Blog This Year
"You’re raising the volume of your voice but not the logic of your argument.”
Friday, April 11, 2025
Very different goals
Wednesday, April 02, 2025
Wireless-less
Imagine if you will a middle-aged male, one who has not been in any sort of shape for the better part of a decade, traipsing through life completely naked.
Not a pretty sight, is it?
Well, that's exactly how I felt for an entire week. Naked. Was it freeing? Somewhat, yes. But more so, it was unsettling. I felt exposed. Sort of like that dream where you show up to school wearing only underwear.
'Twas a Monday when one of my offspring (who shall remain nameless just in case she reads this some day) inadvertently left my phone outside. After awhile I noticed a quiet rain had begun to fall. Then as one is wont to do I began to wonder where my phone was.
Turns out it had crossed over to that big Apple store in the sky.
Stripped of my personal voice assistant, access to every song in the known universe, and the ability to play the wordle any time and any place, I was left to survive with virtually no connection to the outside world. I mean, I still had internet access on the computer. And access to my wife's phone, if needed. As if any of us can remember anyone's phone number at this point in human existence.
Driving to and from work? What if I was in an accident? Had car trouble? Got lost? Granted, the last one isn't likely, but at my age you can't completely rule it out.
I think I missed my music most of all. A couple of times I almost broke down when I started to say, "Siri, play..." before realizing she was no longer there.
And don't even get me started on using the bathroom. I'm just sitting there, like an idiot, twiddling my thumbs!
At long last, after $623 to pay off my old phone, my new little bundle of memes, songs, and vitriolic political social media posts arrived.
Slowly, things have gotten back to normal. I'm wordling, sharing hilarious memes, and most importantly of all, listening to any song I want to.
To think we used to have to buy individual albums, then flip the cassette over and guess how long you needed to fast forward the tape so that you could re-listen to a song all because your tape deck didn't have a rewind button.
To think people used to take long car trips with no cell phone. What happened when they had car trouble? It's impossible to know.
Most probably walked to a payphone or got help from a kind passerby. The rest? They were most likely kidnapped, tortured, and murdered. Or worse, eaten by wolves or bears. A lucky few simply starved to death.
Funny to think if I had a question about something, I would have to ask someone and just trust whatever they said. Or go look it up in my father's twenty-year-old set of encyclopedias. Thank Al Gore for the internet where anyone can post anything at all so you know you are getting the most complete and accurate information available.
So what was it like without a phone? Sure it was nice to spend more time with the kids and not have to ask my wife three times what she just said.
But would I want to go back to a time before phones?
Probably.
But only if you could guarantee I'd have a quality tape deck. With fast forward and rewind.
And the Bic pen with the blue cap and clear hexagonal barrel, so that I can spend ten minutes reeling the tape back in when it inevitably unwinds.
Saturday, March 15, 2025
Another Alabama spring
Bradford pears are out, you can tell
By the sneezes, the beauty, and the smell
Give those D.C. cherry blossoms a fight
Weatherman calling for storms tonight
Seems strange dodging bullets from the sky
But Mama said we never ask God why
Supper simmers over ashen coals
Dusk giving way to blue bug light glow
When springtime comes to Alabama
Hear the song of the yellowhammer
The southland's in bloom, it's seventy-five
Short sleeves in the day, run the heat at night
Winter wasn't cold but it sure seemed long
Wind thru the whipporwills my favorite song
Our six-month summer will soon be in swing
Here's to one more brief Alabama spring
Ball fields are starting to come alive
Recall playing shortstop in eighty-five
Big League Chew and some orange Gatorade
Something awakens old memories made
Birds headed north, mosquitos eating well
Bid early sunsets a welcome farewell
The air cools nice 'neath the Lenten Moon
Gonna be time to start mowing soon
When springtime comes to Alabama
Hear the song of the yellowhammer
The southland's in bloom, it's seventy-five
Short sleeves in the day, run the heat at night
Winter wasn't cold but it sure seemed long
Wind thru the whipporwills my favorite song
Our six-month summer will soon be in swing
Here's to one more sweet Alabama spring
It's dogwood winter and dirty bare feet
Crane flies mating and a screen door creak
Thunderstorm rain softens rust red clay
And I think of springs so far away
When springtime fades from Alabama
Still hear the song of that yellowhammer
Summertime swells in the land of cotton
Younger days there are not forgotten
Winter wasn't cold but it sure was gray
Closed my eyes and the season slipped away
Thank God for allowing me to see
Another stormy Alabama spring
Bradford pears are out, you can tell
By the sneezes, the beauty, and the smell
Give those D.C. cherry blossoms a fight
Weatherman calling for storms tonight
Friday, March 07, 2025
Pages
I've been trying to smile the way I used to
Been trying to feel each moment rushing by
Been trying to savor every sip of whiskey
Not just swallow it down quick to numb my mind
Been spending more time watching the kids play
Been trying to go easier on myself
I don't know why, maybe it's just what happens
When you've read more pages than there are pages left
I don't get upset when I'm stuck in traffic
I'm not in any hurry to reach the end
Here's to my aging Gen X demographic
And childhoods the world will never know again
Been trying my best to carpe some diems
'Cause there are no more books on my bookshelf
Funny, ain't it, how carefully you turn them
When you've read more pages than there are pages left
Been trying to live life outside my phone
And stop thinking about the bad things at all
But it's hard to hear God's eastern bluebird's song
Over gunfire ringing out in third grade halls
Been trying to teach my kids to show kindness
There's already too much hate everywhere else
You think about the world and how they'll find it
When you've read more pages than there are pages left
Been trying to soak up each pink sky sunset
And the magic I've learned that every morning brings
My favorite place is where she and the kids are
Their smiles and hugs and laughter, my favorite things
I've been trying to smile the way I used to
Been trying to go easier on myself
Sometimes you'd like to start the book all over
When you've read more pages than there are pages left
Wednesday, February 12, 2025
26 times two
Saturday, February 08, 2025
Death of a season
Dearly beloved, we gather this weekend to commemorate Super Bowl Sunday. But what we are really doing is saying goodbye, marking the sad but not unexpected death of another football season. Gone too soon, just like all the others before it.
Oh sure, there's the UFL. Arena league. But that's like trying to replace the loss of Aunt Rita by sitting and listening to Uncle Randy drone on and on for two hours about the weather, Ronald Reagan, and being at the urinal next to Roy Clark "that time we went to Branson." ("I looked over at him and said, 'I'm a pickin.' 'Cept he thought I said peekin'. We didn't get to stay for the rest of the show.")
So as much of America gathers this weekend putting on brave faces feigning joy and laughter, please remember this is a funeral. The 2024-2025 NFL and college football seasons. Gone. At the senseless age of a hundred and sixty-nine.... days.
That's right, in the time it takes to impregnate a woman (not counting courting her, dating, the inevitable break-up-and-get-back-together, etc.) and see that pregnancy reach minimum viability, football as we know it has been taken from us.
Oh, sure we'll eat -- Mrs. B has planned a menu of buffalo wings and multiple dips. Probably gorge ourselves. That's how we drown our pain. It's a cry for help.
And yes, we will cheer when our team scores a touchdown; or any time they show Taylor Swift. Where do you think the term "celebration of life" came from? That's right. Football. You're welcome.
And if you're not a fan, let me speak to you if I may for a moment. Because I know it can be hard to know what to say to someone who has suffered a tremendous, grave loss.
First, let's start by going over what not to say:
"Hey, March Madness will be here soon. It'll be ok." This is well-intentioned, but unhelpful. March Madness is the three-week bender you go on after your wife leaves you. Sure you feel better for a little while. But when it's over, she's still gone, you're out of alcohol, and you beat yourself up asking, "What was I thinking picking UC-Irvine to make the Final Four!?!?"
Then there's the always popular, "It was a beautiful season." Yes, but what will I do next weekend? And the next? And the next?
Last, and most annoying, "You know, there's more to life than football."
...
...
...
Get out! Get out of my house! Now! Go on!
More to life than football. What do you think I am, some uber-energetic self-starter with three thriving businesses, my own social media platform, and access to the health and financial records of every citizen of the United States of America???
Instead of these tired, cliched phrases, maybe try something consoling like, "You've got to be the strongest person I know." Or "Hey, I will completely understand if you go into your annual off-seasonal depression now and will not expect you to be productive or want to be around other people until for at least six weeks."
Or maybe bring up a funny, shared memory of the dearly departed. "Remember back in week one. The season was so young. So naive. We actually thought the Cowboys had a chance to make the playoffs."
So on Sunday, while you're listening to Uncle Randy complain about his gout and realizing your cheese ball will never measure up to Aunt Rita's, God rest her soul, please take a moment to remember those of us suffering.\]
Yes, we go through this every year. And no--it never gets any easier.
Because while you see Commissioner Goodell awarding the Lombardi Trophy, I see him administering last rites.
Here lies the 2024-2025 football season. You will be missed.
OK, maybe not by Giants fans.
Wednesday, February 05, 2025
A pizza story
What, are you planning to lead legions of kids away from town with mounds of delicious pepperoni and cheese while donning your colorful jerkin?