12.09.2004

Paint it Black

Gene and I had our first art show this past Tuesday. We each submitted one painting from our Painting I class at the local community college. The instructor calls us "The Guys". It's fun.
We drug the whole family to get there.

Gene's was "Girl with Duck".




Mine was "Tom"


You Ain't Nuthin But a Corn Dog

This is the only meat the girl will eat.
I will let the photos speak for themselves.














11.23.2004

I Believe in Yesterday

It is the threshold of the holiday season. It is expected to be a whirlwind of emotions at my camp. This morning I asked myself, "Last season was my last with Zach, but where was I the year before that?"

My parents came to Flagstaff to spend it with us in our new town home. We were nowhere near him. We had little reason to believe his outcome, and for that, this morning, I felt regret.

Last season we huddled together with clenched throats and wet cheeks of bittersweetness, sucking every drop of life with his every breathe. This season we will be reflecting, wondering why we did or didn't do things. We'll remember actions past and conversations spent. This is what I will be Thankful for this season. I will be thankful for the opportunity to know the time was limited, and I will begin to focus my gratefulness towards my children, my wife, and my family, even if they are seeming to very easily tramp on my nerves.

My holiday gift to others: if you have a brother or sister that you don't see eye to eye with, or a dearly important family member that you have had a disagreement with, please stop being so selfish. Appreciate the living now, and recognize the living because next season, they may only be a reflection.

11.19.2004

And I Think To Myself

Yesterday was my first ever North American Feast. It was catered by the parents of the Flagstaff Montessori Pre-School and Kindergartners and held at Emma's school. I poke fun at the Politically Correct name, but on dissection of the title, it seems to make a hell of a lot more sense than "Thanksgiving." Or at least better resembles what we tend to really do on that particular Thursday every year.

*Side Note* I just read that Abe Lincoln declared Thanksgiving a holiday on October 8th, 1863. Exactly 140 years later Ellie Rae Grace Weien was born.

Back to the feast, it was a delightful way to spend lunch. Emma and all of the kids were ecstatic that their parents were crunched next to them on the doll-sized chairs with their knees pressed firmly against their shoulders. For Abbie and I it was the entertainment prior to the Feast that will forever be seared into our memories.

The dusty children washed their playground hands and were seated on bottoms and knees to the side of the giant classroom. The soft-spoken teacher, Ms. Maria began to introduce each of the songs that they had been learning the past few weeks. The first one would of dampened the eye of any hardened individual. "God Bless America" which came out more like,
"Gawd Bwess Amewica! Wand dat I nove!"

Priceless.

It was followed by enthusiastic corny turkey songs and even "Over the River and Through the Woods" with phrases I never knew existed. But those three to five year olds knew almost every last word.

I was waiting for my favorite song that Emma had been sharing with us:
"I'm a little acorn brown, fallen on the cold cold ground.
Somebody came and stepped on me, that is why I'm cracked you see...
I'm a nut! (knock twice on head with knocking sound) KNOCK! KNOCK!
I'm a nut! KNOCK! KNOCK!
I'm NUUUUUUTTY!"


It just kills me to watch her perform it. But instead Ms. Maria says, and our last song is one that the children have been working very hard on, it's "A Wonderful World" and they will hand sign the words as they sing.

My chin and shoulders dropped, and suddenly I felt angry with myself for standing in the front because I was going to lose it. Emma NEVER even hummed this one, it was a side-swiping surprise. Perfect tackling form.

Although there are countless songs that remind me of my brother, that tune was one of Zach's most favorite, as well as mine. We both first heard it and memorized it from a movie soundtrack. Ironically, that movie was, Platoon.

So, it is very special to me to begin with, then this soft-spoken gentle teacher has her class of adorable, little, innocent, loving, children sweetly serenading us with their high-pitched, angelic voices. And to top it all off, they are attempting to sign all of the words so just in case I could not hear the jarring memories, I could read them with gestures too!

"I see people shaking hands say, 'How do you do?'"
They're really saying, 'I love you'"

"Thanks for coming, enjoy the meal."

11.09.2004

Wasting Away Again
Notes of a distraught airline passenger

I'm suppose to leave at 5:33.
Not 5:30. Not 5:35.
Fine.

Get to the airport. Never-mind the four hours I had to leave early to do it. And the flight has been delayed. It will now depart at 6:16.
Not 6:15. Not 6:20.
Fine.

Hell, its 3:45. I don't have to drive anywhere, so I go have a beer.

Isn't it funny how "they" make you come so early to the airport now? Who are "they" anyways? Miller, Smirnoff, Jose Cuervo, and Jack Daniels, that's who.

Anywho - So I have a beer and read my magazine in the obnoxious Fox Sports Bar, filled with recycled smoke air. It's 4:05 now. Done with that seis dolares cerveza that just made me more thirsty.

Beer #2, the Jumbo, for one buck more and twice as much fluid. - Wooo-Wee! It is 5:30 and I am thinking about how much I have been thinking I had spent on deciding when I should leave Flagstaff so that I will not miss my flight. Kind of like time spent on waiting for jolly Ole St. Nick to come down the false gas chimney.

In case I am some kind of unexplainable idiot, I finish my beer, pay my bill and scurry out of the bar with a tagging cloud of cigarette smoke. Conveniently, the bar is right next to my gate. The flashing running light sign says to my blurry, fogged eyes, "Boarding Time 6:46."
Not 6:45. Not 6:50.
NOT FINE!

Bored and lazy passengers wait like klondike sled dogs scattered around the boarding area. None are standing at the desk. The grey-haired, overweight, assistant in a red sweater stands alone at the desk. He is a pudgy Mr. Rogers with a few too many Jumbo beers from next door.

Concerned about my family waiting in Sacramento for me, I ask a simple question in my most polite tone with a casual manner since I just drank a pony keg in two glasses, "Why is the flight delayed?"
"Because it is not here." the angry man snaps. He must of smelled the tar-drenched clothes I presented to him.
I laugh, attempting to break the sudden aggressiveness.

"I can see that, but do you expect any other delays, because I have..."
"The plane hasn't left yet" he interrupts.
"Okay," I pause to re-approach with some sort of civility, remembering that I am in the eye of the heat-warped city of Phoenix, "When I got here it was delayed til 6:15, now it is going to be 6:45..."

The silverback swivels his round head to the red lighted sign, seeming confused by my statement.

"... Did you know that it was delayed to 6:45?" I ask.
I think to myself, "You should of said 6:46, you dummy, speak their language!"

"We know when they tell us!" he barks as his noggin swings back to me from the sign.
"Well, I have people meeting me there. For their convenience I would like to be able to call them to let them know when to pick me up."
The tense creature glares at me. I think I see a twitch in his blank stare."

Blink.

"When will you know when it will be here?" I quickly spit my question.
"Check back in 15 to 20 minutes." he loosens.
"Thanks! That what I needed to know."

I notice my blood pressure rising, my breathe quickening, my fists clenching as I back away from the #@$%ing desk. I feel victorious, although I know nothing new.

I call and leave a message for my mom declaring that I know why Mr. Rodgers feels so comfortable treating me and others with his demeaning manner: they know that we don't have any sort of weapon to use on them. Foul beast.

I think I'll go have a beer now.
Honorable Mention
There was a foul stench in the air.

No dairy farm or Spreckles Sugar beet factory that notoriously gave my home town of Manteca the nickname of "Man-Stinka" is still existing. The processing plant was blown-up, the dairy bulldozed and replaced with countless chain department stores and restaurants in their place. Yet it still reeked.

The stench was a fine mixture of slightly digested milk and leftover pizza from the belly of my 11 month old nephew, Caleb.

We were participating in the beginning celebration of a family friend's (Leslie Due's) wedding rehearsal party. This consisted of drinks and snacks at the bride's parents' home.



Poor Caleb had been fussy all day because of the constant interruptions from his common routine of sleep and meals. We fed him in preparation of the rehearsal party. He ate like a starving tiger cub.

He was crawling all over the home on their new carpet as time simply caught up with him, so we thought. His mother, Kristi, chose to hold him to calm him down before he would finally pass out. Guests wanted to hold him, but Kristi declined their advances.

Standing next to Kristi and Caleb, I suddenly heard an all too familiar sound of a small body spitting up. As I turned towards them, I got to witness the completion of the first eruption of chunky food on my sister-in-law's arm. Before I could complete the clearing of a path by moving the footstool and children's playthings in front of their chair, the boy regurgitated violently three enormous spews of his warm dinner.

Kristi almost captured every morsel between her chest and his small body. The two rushed to the bathroom. Her immediacy was not faster than the baby's gag-reflex, however. Kristi's sweater sponged most of the absorbent material immediately, leaving a scattered and horrific sifting of raunchy particles.

My mom and I took the emergent roles for clean-up of Kristi and Caleb, as well as the trail of fallen debris from the living room (new carpet), to the kitchen, to the hallway (new carpet), and into the bathroom. I did very well, only nearly losing control the one time Kristi pointed her head to the side and held her heaving head as if her tummy wanted to participate too. She choked it back, allowing me to cough out exhausted air instead of something else.

For this brave and speedy action taken on by my mother and me, and the extreme test of intestinal fortitude by Kristi, I would like to give us all Honorable Mentions for the 2004 flu season awards. Being that the cause of this outing most likely was caused by gobs of rich food, we couldn't honestly take the grand award. Pa Gene is still champion there.



The best part of it all was to have my sister-in-law dress like a clown from loaned clothing from a woman twice her height; allowing her to wear this cool little ensemble...



...with a smile as her badge of courage.
News Flash
In fear of having terrorists poisoning the pulse of the American junk food supply, the Oakdale Hershey's Chocolate Factory no longer offers public tours of it's facilities.

The only reason anyone ever visited the cow-poke town is now flushed down the fear-mongering toilet. It is a sad day when commoners can't partake of watching unhealthy addictive treats being made for free. Sounds like a great reason for a company to cut a burdening expense to me. I wonder if the paranoia ever entered Anheiser-Busch's or Coor's mind?

Gawd, I hope not. I think that is one of the seven signs of the Apocalypse.

10.26.2004

Grandpa Hall of Fame

It is another outstanding start for this FLU Season, no doubt about that. And with each FLU Season there are certain individuals that repeatedly rise to the occasion for their team, each and every year. This year's First Most Valuable Person for the 2004 Flu Season is...

(drum roll)

Pa Gene! For his outstanding performance tonight, in his driveway!

An ill four year old girl was sleeping in the back seat of her mother's car after being picked up from school today. As the mother was inside the grandparents' home retrieving the second child, she unknowingly left a gurgling gut full of salami and grapes sloshing inside the sickened child.

Pa Gene, our hero, had a feeling, a sick sense, if you will, and ran outside to catch a glimpse of his first grandchild strapped into the car seat. What he encountered was a barfing fiasco. The child had begun spewing chunks of her lunch all over the back of the automobile. Pa Gene called for back-up. The mother carried the limp cookie-tosser into the house, while the fearless veteran vomit collector cleaned the vile-drenched interior.

Because of his strong stomach and immediate reaction, the car upholstery was saved and the girl was quickly cleaned and returned home. Both the hero and the victim are doing better at the time of this writing.

Here's to you Pa Gene, our First Most Valuable Player for the 2004 FLU Season.

10.23.2004

Break Dancin'

Ellie, just busta move!

10.21.2004

Great new band name

Just an idea we came up with at work, a great new militant feminist rock band called,
"Mary Cheney and the Bush Twins"

- talk amongst yerselves

10.20.2004

Never a Straight Face

In keeping with the Ellie Rae Grace tradition of not holding one emotion longer than her breath, here are the Sisters' Birthday photos of my girls prior to the big Cinderella play.





Make a Wish

As a kid, I "loved" Disney films. As a teenager, I was too old and too "mature" for them.Then I became old enough for it to be "cool" to appreciate their vast library of films and extensive history. Then I began to hate the conglomerate and their textbook hero/heroin story-lines. Now, I have two young daughters, and the cycle begins again.

There is a reason why Walt Disney's vision became and remains successful, and that is because of the founded family values and lifelong morals they represent. Sure they have their ups and downs, so does everyone, but it did not take a multi-million dollar movie or a world-renowned theme park to make my daughter's Fourth Birthday "The Bomb!" (maybe I am dating myself); all it took was a group of people that still hold that true family and community value to heart and openly share it in a wonderful public setting.

I am talking about the Northern Arizona University cast, director, and audience of the matinee performance of Cinderella on October 16th. To me, the matinee performance resonated the truest form of "One Community" to date. ("One Community" is a marketing campaign to unite the businesses of Flagstaff with the University's functions). It was, by far, the greatest example of kind-hearted and fun-loving individuals that softens me to the core and reminds me why my family and I sacrifice so much to remain here.

My daughter, Emma, loves all of the highly marketed Disney princesses. She owns numerous toys with the wide variety of races and beauties that Disney has created over the years. It was one of those special coincidences that on the weekend of her Fourth Birthday, the University was performing a rendition of the well-known story, Cinderella. We immediately purchased tickets and planned her special event around this matinee showing. Emma's two best friends, Lilly and Olivia were invited to attend the showing and were encouraged to dress as princesses.

With a crazy idea, I contacted a theater student, who got me in touch with Barbara Jo Maier, the director of the performance. I just wanted to see if, maybe, my daughter and her friends would be able to get some photos with Cinderella on stage after the show to commemorate the special event. What all of us got in return is something this community should be made aware of and applaud openly. Barbara Jo arranged for one of the most rememberable moments in my life and definitely in my young daughter's life. We arranged for Emma to meet the Cinderella. I thought it would be best if we saved it as a surprise at the event. When we got there, all the girls got their tickets



and found their seats.



The Director came over and wished Emma Happy Birthday, then told her that she was going to meet Cinderella after the performance. This is what a four year old girl looks like when they receive such great news.



The play began, and Ellie and I quickly darted to the lobby. This is what Ellie and I did during the play:


then we



and lastly, we



Until we heard the roar of the audience, and then we snuck inside with the camera and some flowers for Emma to give to Cinderella. Grammy Sally was close at hand to grab the baby. I took to the stairway, camera and bouquet in hand. The cast bowed to the clapping crowd. The Prince announced our celebration at hand and then asked for Emma to come down to the stage. Emma put her shoes on. The Prince asked if there was a Birthday Girl named Emma. She waved to the Prince and scurried down the aisle, with Lilly aiding her. Olivia said that she was afraid of the "pink guys", two of the cast members and decided to stay with Gina. I handed off the flowers to Emma and led her to the stage. Emma gave Cinderella the flowers...



...and started to walk off of the stage before she was stopped so that the song could be sung. The entire audience and cast serenaded her. She hid the best way she could in the open space.



Afterwards, the Director presented an awesome present to Emma, Olivia and Lilly, silver bracelets with a charm with the letter "C" engraved on them.



We were ushered to the lobby, and everyone got to get photos taken with the cast members. We got the girls with the Fairy Godmother (who Lilly was dressed as)



as well as with the main attraction.



Other girls were dressed for the occasion.



It was a fantastic experience. Then we headed for the second best part of the party...


... the cake!

I asked Emma later that night, "What did you think was the best part of the play?" She immediately replied, "When I got to go on stage with Cinderella and they sang 'Happy Birthday' to me."

Thank you Barbara Jo Maier, all of NAU's cast and staff, and the wonderful participating audience for an amazing song, one which will always be cherished in my and my family's heart; for at least on this night, we did live "happily ever after."

10.14.2004

... and Eat it Too!

To celebrate the birth of our Ellie Rae Grace, we had cake. Ellie did not let us down. You should feel like you were there.


Here she sits, completely amazed that everyone in the room is actually standing around watching her without her having to scream for it. "It's good to be the Queen," she's thinking.



"What the El is going on here? Whatcha gonna do with that thing. Its on fire! oooo! FIRE!!"



"Well, if you insist, maybe I'll just try a taste."



"Wwwr. Wris wis grwood wruff!"



"What are you looking at? Haven't you ever had this before?"



Even Casey got into the action. Casey is really happy that it's Ellie's Birthday!



"I think I am full now."



And here is Emma duplicating her eating her first birthday cake without hardly a crumb on her.
On the Road Again

This has been posting I have been wanting to place for so very long. Pardon the tardiness, but it should be worth the wait.

So you might of caught my rant about the road signs in Phoenix, on 5/16/04 "One for the Road." I have a sequel now, but even better, I have photos to prove this madness of a rat-race town and how it melts the minds of its members.

Seems that Arizona Department of Transportation, affectionately dubbed ADOT got wind of my blog site and decided that I might have a good point on their hazardous electronic signs. July 1st we had to go down to the ever-burning city in the desert for a doctor's appointment for Ellie. On the road to the heat pit, we noticed that all of the electronic road signs had changed. Instead of tempting the speed racers to slam into a cement wall while looking for their cellphones in the cabin of their fiberglass coffins, ADOT feels that a website would better assist the hi-tech traveler. Here is proof.



As I was capturing the evidenced of their heat-warped thinking, our car passed this lady at 65 mph. Yes, she is calling someone... at 65 miles an hour.... oh boy, country boy in the city...

10.08.2004

Lend me your Year
Well, it is official. Ellie Rae Grace Weien has survived one full year as of tonight. My beloved youngest daughter is officially one year old today, er this night, uh this morning. Abbie and I have prevented ourselves from giving the Child Protection Agency ammunition to arrest us, and she is a healthy, growing, and developing child.

Our toddler is growing up so fast I can't believe it. She has been standing for a month or two now. She is interested in walking, but wise enough to kneel down and crawl when needed. She is smart. The type of smart that you know you are being manipulated. She understand that clapping her hands means that someone will provide a new color and textured piece of food for her to either gobble or toss violently to the floor for the circling dog. If you don't she will scream. She has teeth like an alligator. I don't remember Emma having so many sharp oral tools at this age?! She has more hair than me and weighs over half as much as her sister, who is ALMOST four years old too! Oh man, I feel the time melting like a cheap Wal-Mart candle.

My two girls relationship is a love-hate textbook example. By themselves they are immaculate. Together they are the fine swirling mixture of oil and vinegar - not real great by themselves, but combined with a little bread, ¡Magnifico! And the dog agrees. At bowling someone had Goldfish they were nibbling on. They offered it to the group. Many hands dove for the dry cheesy crunchies. Mine stayed still. I can't even look at them or Cheerios. I am afraid that the vacuum dog will soon agree.

I love this little critter and can't believe a year has passed so quickly, yet if I stop and think of all of the whining that she produces, then I become amazed that it has only been one year.

You know that scene in Forrest Gump?
"You're momma sure does care about yer schoolin'" the principal said to the young boy.
Forrest responded, "uh uh uh uh uh".
That is my one year old when your face is not staring at her every moment. She is like an audio hologram. If you move your head too far to one side it goes off.

"But Jake, she is so cute!"
So are baby mountain lions at her age.
"But Jake, you have to be exaggerating!"
She can swipe a hunk of flesh from your leg or arm or face if you show fear. Gawd Forbid! Don't stare into her eyes!
"But Jake, isn't she so amazing?"
Amazing that she can't sit still.
"But aren't you proud?"
Sure, especially when she will go limp for an undetermined amount of time when I hold her upside down. Like a kitten held from the scruff of the neck, she is the safest when held that way. I don't officially know how long she would allow me to drain all the blood from her body to her head, only because it scares me how much she may be enjoying the free buzz.

WARNING! Don't leave a beer unattended. She can smell a vacant opportunity from across the house to grasp her tiny fingers around a brown bottle of cerveza fria.

Later today/tonight we will celebrate her birth. I expect the birthday cake photos are going to be classic. Casey will be fat from endulgance too. Check later for photos. For now enjoy this classic photo of the sisters. Grammy Sally and Pa Gene had the girls photos taken recently and the poor photographer had a hell of a time trying to catch the picturesque angels seen in parenting magazines. This one is true to life, I think.

9.24.2004

Other People's Stories

A teacher was telling Abbie that she had gotten a letter from a parent asking the teacher to excuse her from the homework that was given the day prior. It was handwritten in the usual fashion. It read something like this:
"Please excuse Heather from the Math homework for last night.
She had diar... (the last word was scratched out and began again).
She had deir... (again the last word was scratched out and again they continued).
She had the shits."

A teacher that Abbie works with has a son in her class. The coworker told Abbie of a discussion that was had about two weeks ago when the father was out of town. One morning the boy, a sixth grader, ran into his mother's bathroom in a towel while the family was getting ready for school.
"Mom, I have something to tell you, but I don't know if now is the right time." he declared.
"Well," his mother gingerly responded, "What is it?"
"I don't think I can make any more sperm." he revealed. "You know the little balls I have?"
With her eyes almost popping out of her head, his mother answered, "Uh, yes."
"Well, they are gone!"

9.17.2004

The Dream
I didn’t think of it until after the girls were fed breakfast and I was thumbing through some CDs for our morning music. Then it hit me like a flash of light. The instances condensed and focused on my memories and filled me with jarring emotion. I became drenched with warm remembrance of my brother.

It was the closest I had been to his soul since New Year’s Eve on the phone when I last told him goodbye. I told him, “It is ok to go now.” The tender child-like hand that clenched mine through a fine black cloth reinforced me with hope and maybe even some faith.

The dropping lights, the dancing dolly, and the bear hug were all him. I could picture his scrawny body playing the ghostly tricks on us, but I was never given the gift of actually seeing him. All of those are still memories gone. Curiously, never once did I recall the sick body in a bed or wheel chair, which is refreshing now as I write.

It amazes me how these feelings can bury themselves so deep into me just to be launched to the surface at the drop of a hat. The dream is overflowing with conscious reminders replaying with meanings and symbolism, interweaved with current discussions and happenings.

I am writing as if in a dream. The way we recall the segments in overlaying fragments; unaware of the chronological order unless clues are given.

“I haven’t had an uncontrollable break down for a long time... I am handling my emotions well, being true to myself.” I told my counselor proudly. Honestly boasting at the time. I said that two days before the sleeping movie played in my skull. She wanted me to still “check-in” in a month or so. It has been almost two months of physical and mental awareness of my feelings since I started seeing my counselor.

At the first appointment I was confronted with her question, “When you are depressed, do you ever think of suicide?”

“If anything, I fear death more because of Zach.” was my answer. It was the same statement I made to co-workers the day before this dream. We were speaking of people we knew who had loved ones that had committed the fatal deed.

“If there is life after death, and you can communicate to us, what will be the sign to me, so I know?” I requested from Zach at our last visit with him in Colorado.

I was in a room with no windows. There was construction in silent progress surrounding me. Boxes and various items were scattered, unorganized, stacked haphazardly. The only light in this room came from brand new contemporary track lighting. There were two strips, perpendicular to each other. I was standing, talking to Derrik on my cell phone, scheduling a time for us to meet with one another.

I glanced upward to my right at one of the lights on one of the strips. As I spoke into the phone the same light I was watching, twisted and fell to the floor. Fear flooded me more than wonderment.

“What the hell?”

I looked at another light on the other strip and it also repeated the twist and drop that the first light had performed. I remember thinking that maybe I had some sort of telepathic control on the items. I felt that it was a dream where I possessed special hidden powers.

“Two lights just fell from the ceiling.” I told Derrik hastily.

He laughed.

I paused, then attempted to continue with whatever it was I was just talking about. Still thinking that I had some force inside me, I turned my eyes to the other side of the room. A loud rustling was shifting weight behind some boxes out of my sight as a device used for transporting heavy objects, a dolly, came rolling out unmanned from behind its’ hiding place. It shot out on its’ two wheels and ran past me, right in front of me.

Then it struck me that I had no control of this phenomenon. It was not me. It was something or someone else. Knowing, but not waiting to second-guess my new hypothesis, I blurted out something from my past, “Stop it Zach!”

The dolly stopped immediately by dropping its’ front metal tongue hard onto the cement floor, scraping to a sudden stop.

“What?” screamed Derrik on the phone.

“Zach is doing this!” I hollered back. “I have to go.”

I hung up without looking at the phone.


“I Try” by Macy Gray just began while I was writing this section. It is one of the songs I thought was extremely fitting for the Zach DVD I created. I decided to keep it out and save it just for me. Is this song my real-life track lighting dropping to the floor? Maybe it was the showing just now of Memphis Belle, Zach’s most favorite movie. I just sat through the showing on HBO, knowing I was going to be writing this today. Or maybe it is the million other “coincidences” or reminders that I run into daily.

My main purpose for going to counseling was to allow me to begin healing emotionally and to “clean off my plate”. I wanted more room to start digesting the life events that are surrounding me daily. I had not felt the elation, the high of daddy-hood that I was consumed with when Emma was born. I had not been able to allow myself to feel that intoxicating pride and joy of being a father again with Ellie.

Since I started talking about it with my qualified stranger, I have been very successful at appreciating the living moment. I have begun to enjoy being and feeling alive again. I can sit still and play and observe the new experiences for both of my girls with a wide grin.

Ellie is on the verge of walking. I have been able to hold her tiny hand and help her. Emma wants to snuggle with me again. She lets me hold her hand the sweetest way a child can, making me feel invincible. I attribute these small things to my counselling.

With all this accomplished, I still fear death. I do because of the things that the reaper would steal away from me. The way he mugged and bludgeoned my brother. Because of this, I question faith, as I am certain most do when a loved one is snatched from them. Now, when I say faith, I am not talking about a defined religion. I am implying my relationship with God. My personal relationship with the higher being and the reasons and purposes that I am here today.

At the end of a horror film I watched last night there was a voice questioning the antagonist demon or devil spirit, “Where do YOU live?”

The devil answered, “In the weak and the wounded.” - So very true.

Right now, I am the weak until I can regain my faith, and I am wounded. Analyzing this dream I can start to heal and grow stronger. I think I can explain a few things and their meanings to me:
The room is the basement at my brother’s home.
The child’s hand underneath the black cloth was testing my faith. It is my connection still to my sibling and my future to my family in my afterlife.
The dolly, the hug, the lights are the present relationship and communication with Zach. It also is telling me to move on I think.

Derrik and someone else that I do not remember came over to the basement after my abrupt hang-up. I explained to them what had happened with the lights and the dolly and that I knew it was Zach.

They thought I was crazy.

I asked out loud, “Zach could you show them it is you?”

Immediately and simultaneously, all three of us were lifted from the floor about a foot or so. I was surrounded in an invisible blanket of warmth. I envisioned in the dream of how children feel the need to show their excitement when they see each other. When they hug each other off of the ground.

We all were hugged at once. They believed me then.


So was this “hugging” God? Was it the power of Love? Was it the power of Love through Zach with God?

At the time it was relief and excitement that Zach was near me spiritually again. He was truly with me for the first time in nearly a year. I never saw him. His body did not ever materialize. He was there only in spirit, and with such consuming strength. It was something no photograph can carry. It was more powerful than a memory of a real-life event. But that wasn’t the most amazing part of my subconscious organizing of my mental state. That came later in the dream.

I was alone again, speaking to him. I was telling him I wanted to see and touch him. There was never any verbal response from him. A black curtain or flowing cloth beckoned me to touch it. From the flapping folds came the impression of a child’s hand. I grasped through the thin sheet and held his hand. It was so small, so warm as if human, as if blood was pulsating through it.

Enlightenment and recognition came to me that he was no longer here physically.

Then, I awoke to the radio alarm clock.

6.14.2004

Two is Not Enough, Four is Too Many
so i was thinking. maybe two kids are enough. i have always wanted three kids, but my brother always wanted to go to war too. if we were to try and then have another girl, i would not mind at all, however it would make me lose faith that i still have since zach told me he would give us a boy to communicate to us. do i want to get an answer to the big question of after-life? guess there is just a fifty-fifty chance on that one. pretty good odds for vegas or reno, but still a gamble.

then there is the human nature ignorance to 'want' one child of each sex, or to want a boy to 'carry on the family name.' there is even the machismo vomit that i have participated in about not 'sticking a stem on the apple.' all of that is crap.

my only hesitation is that i don't want what has happened to me to happen to my girls... becoming an only child to have to carry on the care and responsibilities of my parents, alone. there are a lot of benefits of a larger family, true. there are other benefits of keeping it small, the environment, financial burdens, etc.

still the resounding voice of 'c'mon, you know you want a boy, right?' rings in my head, frustrating me, angering me. honestly, it doesn't matter to me, at all, what the sex is as long as it is healthy and abbie stays healthy too.

quit while your ahead. maybe. a friend of mine with four children has said before, (and i feel it is true unless the children are staggered over more than ten years) that 'it is just a small segment of my life (child-raising) and it is well worth it now.' I like that thought. and i still feel that my purpose here isn't to be some world-changing graphic designer. not anymore. my purpose is to give a good life a good chance and be the best father i possibly can. that emotion overwhelmed me when emma was born. i was hoping that ellie would help to revive that emotion in me, but with my brother dying, it was not given a good chance. i sat with her last night watching and playing with her, like i did with emma three years ago, and i saw a glimmer of hope of it returning. i want that. i can enjoy that.

i can't fathom the costs of daycare for another, food for another, and god help me, any medical hiccups with another. but i suppose the same risks involved with one child are the same as with three. so what have i concluded after all this mumbojumbo? i'll get back to you on that one.


5.16.2004

One For The Road

Went to on a road trip recently. On our trip from Flagstaff through Phoenix to Tucson there are numerous overhead illuminated message signs. They are intended to inform people of traffic or road hazards coming up ahead. It appears to be a statewide campaign for we saw all of the same messages:

"For Road Condition Information Dial 5-1-1"

And I can't help but think to myself, "That is fantastic, just in case there were no fatal car accidents in my future, I can now rest assure that there will be one real soon."

Picture some fella scrounging around the passenger seat through his attaché case for his cell phone. As he is busy thumbing through keypad guard passwords and dialing he is suddenly stopped by an 18-wheeler's back bumper that had slowed down because the lady in front of him is busy scrounging through her purse looking for her cell phone.

I mean, wouldn't a simple "The road is clear as of 4:32 pm from here to mile post 245." be a lot more sane?"

It's just a thought

5.13.2004

I'm Not Just a Member, I'm the President!



Emma wanted to wear the green dress with the red ladybugs on it. She was going to the babysitters' and insisted on wearing her fancy black dress shoes. I came in the living room to put my shoes on and go to work.

"You look pretty, Emma." I said.
"Thank you." she replied sheepishly.
"Nice shoes." I continued.
"Thank you." she repeated.

Abbie was in the kitchen and began to tell me about the conversation they had just had before I entered the room. She said that Emma had come out just as she was with the spring dress and dress shoes. Abbie suggested she wear shoes more appropriate for a three year old playing outside.

"Why don't you wear your new pink tennis shoes we just got you? They would be better for playing outside with all the other kids. Plus they are really cute."

Emma blinked and thought about her mother's suggestion, then expressed her own thoughts on the matter.

"Yeah, the pink shoes are tute (cute), but I want to be beaudiful!"

A few moments later, I just had to take a photo to go with this story. I am foretelling one of the reasons why I will not have any hair by the time this one moves out of the house. That reason is captured in this single photo.



Plus, I have another one only three years behind this one, who only twelve hours later was doing this - ARGH!!

Doesn't really matter though, because I don't like combing my hair anyways.

Right?

Right?



4.14.2004

The 60's Are Over
I'm sitting at work. I hear a man's voice outside of my third story window.

"No more blood for oil. Praise the Father, the Son and the Holy Ghost. Hallelujah."

I stand and look out the window towards the off-key singing. The long brown haired man in his mid to late 20's is sitting on a cement block with his guitar and backpack.

"A gentle college war protester" I thought to myself.

I sit back down at my computer only to be enticed to the window again by the man's angry voice.
"You have a devil laugh. I was wondering where that devil laugh was coming from."

I look again and see that he has moved to the ground level window underneath me and is speaking to the women inside the building through their open window. He turns and heads back to his pulpit, as I hear a cackling laugh taunt his back. He spins around quickly and gestures with his hands together in a prayer fashion, and bows his head to the voices. Then, since his sarcastic motion was not seen by his trapped audience he re-approaches the window.

"Do you know what I have to say to your devil laugh?"

Then he goes through the buddhist-like movements again, followed by a commentary.

"Praise the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. And the Four Corners."

He then faces North with his hands up, pauses, then faces the three other cardinal points of East, South, and West.

"Do you want to see me dance?" he says as he finishes his Native American graces, and begins an arrangements of marching steps in all four directions. He continues on for about a minute with a few different gyrations with his knees and flailing arms before he stops and informs the devil laugher what she just witnessed.

"That's a warrior dance. A warrior dance" he repeats as he finally swaggers back to his guitar, only to stop again and give his bowing head with praised clasped hands to the window one more time.

"I only mean positive words and positive feelings." he clarifies.

I think to myself, "Could of surprised the hell out of me. I thought you were a crack-head tap-dancing for hits of junk."

As with most public nuisances, everyone carries on with their work in their workplace ignoring the free spirit outside. That is until he begins to yell out to passerbys.

"Practice celibacy."
"Hey, if you try celibacy for five minutes, I know you will be rewarded."

Eventually, the cops came and squashed the beatnik's glory. The "man" kicked the soap box out from underneath him. I didn't hear the applause, but I know my fellow employees and I rejoiced the cop muzzle placed on the fruitcake.

I'm all for peace and love, and voicing of opinions. I dislike the blabbering declarations of drunk -like pain in the asses though, especially when it is beautiful outside and I have to work.

4.04.2004

Down the Tubes
So I was sitting there in an airport commode stall. I just checked the time on my cell phone and placed it back into my pants' pocket that was shuffled around my ankles when a digital sounding ring echoed off of the metal dividers and tiled floor. I checked, but it was not my phone.

"Russell Connor," the man in the stall next to me answered his phone.
"I always have time for my partner." was his response to the voice on the small device.

"Ker-FLUSH!" one of the mechanical toilets activated.

I chuckled to myself that NO business is too important for his business partner. Then it sounded as if the small area did not like the reception possibilities and disconnected the man from his associate's urgent call.

Moments later, the electronic ring shattered the somberness of the airport restroom a second time, this time from the sinks just outside my stall door. The faceless voice answers, "Russell Connor" again.

"Ker-FLUSH!" chimes in another porcelain device.

"One minute as I ... "
"Ker-FLUSH!"
"... move to a better area to talk ...
"Ker FLUSH!"
"... to you."

It was like a voice activated symphony at a toilet opera, instigated by this man's cell phone. Kind of like Disney World where your conductor movements control the various musical instruments.

Wonder what his partner was feeling like with the echoing sound effects.

Wonder why he even answered the dang contraption at all. I am glad that he washed his hands though.

4.02.2004

I Feel Like Chicken Tonight!
The family is in the girl's bedroom. It is bedtime. I am laying down Ellie in the crib. Emma is getting her pajamas on as Abbie picks up the toys off of the floor.

"It smells like a dirty little boy's room in here tonight." Abbie exclaims, even though it probably is her sixth grade classroom scent clinging to her sweater.

Without a beat Emma turns around to me and asks, "Did you fart?"

I wish I could keep all of these little instances locked in my brain. I know I only retain about five percent of the constant humor that is swimming with me. For instance, I got "informed" that Emma had been saying, "chicken butt" all day at preschool earlier this week.

Apparently, "chicken butt" is now offensive, or at least at a preschool.

"Why would she be saying that?" you might wonder.

Well, it all goes back to when that movie star brat was popular with the Home Alone films and he hosted Saturday Night Live. (I am not going to give him the credit of typing his name, plus I don't want to have to check how to spell it.) Anyways, he was in Al Franken's, "Stuart Smalley" skit where Al is "not a licensed therapist. . . but has attended many twelve-step programs" and would give advice to successful people. This one skit the kid would constantly ask Stuart, "You know what?" and Stuart would say, "What?". Then the boy would say, "Chicken butt!"

There you go. Well, it stuck with me, and now it is living, breathing, growing through my offspring.

And do you know why?

Chicken Thigh.


3.28.2004

Munsoned in Phoenix
On my way home from a grueling week at the ADIM conference in California, I was standing on the side of the terminal on my cell phone with Abbie. I like to people watch, and the place was packed.

I was discussing with my wife how America West had put me in another irritating and unacceptable situation, (because that is what America West specializes in - totally screwing up your itinerary that you have already paid good money for - overbooking seats - canceling flights for no reason - just generally pissing off and inconveniencing good outstanding citizens and customers.)

Back to the point. I was standing there on the outside looking in, talking to my lady when a figure comes speeding through the terminal with an armload of items, a baseball cap, and a scruffy blond beard. I recognized the person immediately, but did not have the time or the gall enough to stop the obviously late passenger. So instead, I just blurted out, "Hey, Woody!"

The man jerked his head over to me, and his smirky grin gave me the proof I needed, "Looking good, man!" I finished my incomplete thought, surprised that my observation was successful, and gave him a thumbs-up.

He finished his smile with a nod of recognition then turned into the nearest gate. By the time I fumbled my camera out of my bag, it was too late. Besides Abbie hearing it all on the cellphone line the entire time, this is the only evidence of my fleeting moment with Mr. Kingpin, the Natural Born Killer, the White Man that Couldn't Jump, Woody from Cheers, the man otherwise known as Woody Harrelson:

3.13.2004

Emma's Philosophical Phrase of the Day:
"Daddy, there are shadows in your coffee."

What Time Do You Get Up?
"May I be et-tused?" Emma asks in her sweet, non-stopping, consistent, chatty, girlish voice.
"Yes you may. Please put your dishes into the sink, then you can go play." I thank the heavens that she is done and is going to go to another part of the house, hopefully.

When my three year old is on this natural high first thing in the morning, all I can think about is that little Looney Tunes mouse:
"somepeople sayItalk toomuch doyou thinkItalk toomuch Idon't thinkItalk toomuch... "

Wishing for silence while I finish feeding Ellie her breakfast, Emma jumps from her chair at the table and does a full ballerina pirouette. It is perfect. Her nightgown lifts in a precise circle surrounding her tiny waist.

I blame my impatience with such a sweet child on the fact that I am only halfway through my first cup of coffee this morning.

She drops her Disney Princesses heart-shaped plastic plate into the sink and pirouettes to the center of the kitchen again. The entire time looking down at the fascinating and spectacular defeat of gravity her nightgown performs.

"I am going to dance for Ellie." she decides.
"Are you going to sing too?" I ask for clarification.
"No, just dance." she replies.
"Thank you God." I think to myself as I reach for another bitter taste of freshly brewed java.

3.07.2004

Yeah, I Got Skills
Six Degrees of Separation - a.k.a. The Royal Flush
Emma will not use a bathroom in our house if the door is closed and the fan is operating. She knows from past experiences that it will not smell good in there. Because of this, Emma informs all of us when she has to commit a bowel movement.

She is either not aware of others, or she really doesn't care what anyone will think when she announces,
"Mommy, uh, Daddy, uh... don't go into my baffroom cuz I have to go poop!"

Besides the imagery she creates, she also leaves the bathroom door wide open during her "interlude." We are working on that, but we both are really more happy that she is potty-trained.

So, recently, she has started this thing where she warns us, sits upon her throne with the door wide open to the outhouse, and then proceeds to tell us that she can't go anymore, or that "it's stuck" or something similar to that. It is most likely the heavy doses of cheese she consumes on a daily basis, but that is not the purpose of this story.

Today, Abbie and I are completely relaxed and lounging on the couch. Ellie is sleeping and Emma is playing, reading, eating, and hanging out with us. To remain lazy and to keep her busy, we often give her little things to do for us. I like to brush my teeth while I watch television, so I ask her if she would go get my toothbrush. That is when she declares the personal details of how she needs to take a dump before she exits the room and then she will get my toothbrush.

"After you wash your hands, please!" I shout to her as she leaves.

That is when Abbie turns to me and states how she really hopes Emma doesn't announce to the entire preschool during the week that she has to go potty and that they better stay out of the restroom because it will stink.

After a few minutes we hear:

"Mooooom!" Emma hollers from the commode.
"What Emma?" Abbie responds.
"I can't go poop anyyyyymooooore!"
"Do you have to go more?" my wife asks.
"Yes." Emma replies.
"Then either sit and wait a bit longer, or wipe and get off the toilet." instructs Abbie.

I can't help it but say sideways to Abbie on the couch, "Sh!t or get off the pot."

We giggle.

Emma washes her hands and comes out to us. Reminding her again the rules of finishing the job before you leave the john, Abbie begins,
"Emma, you can't be yelling at us from the toilet, you need to ..."

In Emma's common nonchalant way, she shifts the conversation to what is bouncing insider her melon at that exact moment and says to me, "Do you want me to get your toofbrush?" She asks while her mother continues.

"... you need to either poop or get off the pot." Abbie finishes her sentence not even noticing where to the real conversation has drifted.

Emma turns her clinched brows at Abbie and corrects her lecturing mother,
"I didn't say POOP! I said TOOFbrush!"

2.26.2004

So What Are You Really Saying?
So enough with the sad stories... for now.

Emma is talking to Pa Gene, "Me nub titties."
"What?" Pa Gene questions.
"She loves kitties." Abbie injects.
"Oh," Pa Gene relates, "Me no nub titties."
"uh" Grammy Sally adds, "I think you do like them."

A moment drifts like what Paul Harvey calls a pregnant pause.

Pa Gene retorts, "Yeah, me nub titties too."
Twist of Fate
Don't you just love it when a film twists and turns and ends up giving you something you weren't planning?

The last time I went to the theaters and saw a film was this past summer while my family was in California on vacation. I was working and putting in extra time. A friend invited me to join his family in watching The Pirates of the Caribbean. It wasn't too trying on my mental state, so I enjoyed the numbness.

Last Monday my mother-in-law was watching my girls and brought up the idea for Abbie and me to go see a show. The way the schedule fanned out, Fifty First Dates was the easy winner. Although I am pulling through this thing called life, I was not anxious to spend money to remind me of my loss. A humorous getaway sounded refreshing.

The flick was textbook. Through different scenes I could hear his laughter echoing with mine and the people around us. I knew it would be to his pleasing. It is funny how the simplest of things trigger responses we never consciously were aware existed. I once heard a Vietnam veteran explain to me the sound of bullets ripping through flesh. He was amazed because he had finally witnessed a film that had captured the sense. Because of that noise, he said memories flooded his brain more than it had for over twenty years. This was the tingling sensation I felt Monday.

So Drew Barrymore's character has no short-term memory. Induced by a horrific car accident, she is destined to wake-up every day as if it were the day of her accident. Adam Sandler, who was one of my brother's most treasured actors is the gigolo that falls madly in love with the absent minded beauty. Of course, many laughs are had as a love story progresses. It was a fair and more importantly, different way to spend an evening.

It wasn't until the very last scene when the Hawaiian musician, Israel Kamakawiwo'ole's rendition of "Somewhere over the Rainbow/What a Wonderful World" fades in as Barrymore's character awakes to meet her "new" daughter, husband and life again for the very first time that I completely lost it.

I have had a few days to decipher all of what was going on in my brain as I quickly swung my jacket on and paced out to the frozen vehicle, wiping pain from my cheeks:
• It was a cocktail of a paradox of the character trying to remember, while I am trying to forget.
• It was the introduction of her child, the greatest highlight of life I have yet to discover, and she doesn't even know her.
• It was the intention of humor with familiar artists I knew he loved to watch.
• It was the foolish attempt on my part to believe that a two hour movie could chocolate dip my emotions enough for me to wander home and go to bed unscathed.
• It was the false illusion I have led myself to believe that I have gotten over that disgusting hump.
• It was the fact that he loved that song, that I put it into the DVD commemorating his life.
• It was that the original "What a Wonderful World" by Louis Armstrong, which both he and I were first introduced to on the Platoon soundtrack was both one of our favorites.
• It was me wanting to blame someone for this piece of shit situation.
• It was happiness to hold my babies, but fear of losing them.
• It was an anger that I was completely blind-sided and now breathing deeply to hold back uncontrollable gasps of wet air.
• It was all of these things and more brought on by the simple human humming and fingers strumming a ukulele.

I know Abbie felt the tension too. We got to the car and each sighed. I might of sighed several times.

"I wasn't expecting that!" I broke the silence.

We laughed.
the way the eyelids drift shut reminds me of your pain and my loss
so little strength, but so much devoted

2.05.2004

Salami, Ham, and Cheese
It had snowed, a lot. We were nestled in our home, wading out the daylight hours. I decided on some sandwiches for lunch and offered to make some for everyone. All declined. I turned on the TV and put in "Mr. Deeds" that I had gotten on DVD for Christmas. I diligently created the master pieces and returned to the living room to snuggle into a humorous and filling lunchtime treat. And there she was!

Emma had planted herself right in the seat where I was planning on sitting, right in front of the boob tube. It was the perfect spot for someone with a plate full of food that required inhaling while watching a funny flick, and she was gleefully bouncing in it.

She had to of known that I had been fantasizing about this rewarding meal for at least twenty minutes. She had to of known that the same exact place where her tiny little bottom was rested was the best seat in the house at this precise time. She knew alright and she wasn't going to budge.

"Hey baby, can I sit there and watch my movie?" I asked with a calm persuading tone.
"But my mommy is reading to me." she batted her doe deer-like eyelashes at me.

She was sitting right next to Abbie, but I failed to notice because I only had eyes for this single position. So I let the dripping disappointment roll off of my back and chose the footstool directly perpendicular to the throne-spot and began my movie and delicious delicatessen delight.

I was about half-way done when the three-year-old rose and wandered off from MY seat. I promptly stood and scooted to the warm cushion without at sound. The movie seemed much funnier from this direct angle. I was content.

Then....
"Daddy you dook my dot!" The lower lip puckered as she whined these words.
"Eh . . . er, but you got up honey, I thought you were done sitting here." I mumbled.
"Dut I was just detting my baby doll!" her pitch increased, as she tightened the grip of the plastic toy in her curled arm.
"Just let Daddy finish his sandwich then I will let you have it back" I pleaded.

Silence.

I had to look away from the saddening sight, so I glanced up at Adam Sandler.

She began a routine that words cannot explain. It was precision. It was a speedy tongue-lashing given as delicately as only a young child can give without insulting. It was sincere, and it was heavy with truth.

"It's not dery nice to not div me my dot. Do I ever dake your dot when you det up? NO, I don't dake your dot. Dats NOT nice!"

I heard a crushing hush of one, my wife, sitting next to me. Emma's sweet eyes had turned grey with disapproval and I realized the terrible, terrible crime I had just committed. I grabbed my paper plate peppered with crumbs, apologized sincerely to my first born and scampered into the kitchen.

2.03.2004

New Year's Eve Poem

I wrote this New Year's Eve with the intention of putting it here. Got a little distracted after the new year. I found it while cleaning up some files today. Not real sure I feel the same way anymore. I miss him more than I thought.

Just got off the phone
Just told him goodbye
Just had to tell him one more time
That I love him

Just repeated his words
Just strained to understand
Just had to hear him tell me again
That he loves me

Just gave him my blessing
Just gave him my promise
Just gave him reassurance
"It's alright"

I had told him my goodbyes to his face
With tears running down mine
I've told him every time I left him
Alone in his bed

I am weak,
As tired as he looks
Wasted each time
He is buried in my imagination

Sleep little one
Let the thoughts settle
The love warm
Your eyes rest

1.05.2004

Just Passing Through
The brave man in the bloated teenager's body has left us for now.