1625. Reflections on a Saturday Night

Still drained and devoid of new ideas. I think this is the toughest part of the writing process. When you are devoting so much to one, two, or even three projects and proposals and the rigors of daily life and the drama that goes with that intervenes, it is hard to step away and take the day or two that you need for yourself to be the best possible version of yourself.

I’m saying that I may be making myself sick. I’m also saying this too shall pass and all the other snappy lines people come up with as a way to cope with stress. I’m coping and getting through all the things that need handling (if slowly). This too shall actually pass. November 1st is the deadline for a lot of things going on in my universe, so I suppose the blog that night will be a relief.

 

Some Thoughts:

  1. My eye is still wrecked. I wore the patch for a couple of hours and even napped in the afternoon as a way to rest the eye and rest myself in general. I needed it. I need more I think.
  2. Cyclones went down in a shootout. 48-45. Sure it is a loss, but the offense did a great job.

1624. Social Filter

Kids say the darndest things.

They say, for example, “What’s under your shirt?”

I stared confusedly at the little girl and she looked back up at me with big eyes and determination. She asked again. This time I shrugged. The third time she asked I was curious enough to try and figure out what she was talking about. I said, there is nothing under my shirt. She was more persistent than that. She pointed and demanded her answer. I flooled the short line of her finger to my belly and then it hit me.

“That’s my belly.”

“Oh.” and then a moment later, “Why is it so big?”

There is no good way to answer that, so I did what I assumed all embarrassed people would do in that situation. I  grinned and pinched her cheeks and called her adorable. That bought me enough time and bashfulness to slip away into the gathering throng of kindergartners where I quickly collected my own and escaped what was fast becoming a socially awkward–and depressing–situation.

 

Some Thoughts:

  1. This blog is shorter than most because, as I found out, I cannot write in pain. I got something in my eye tonight and it wound up shutting down the eye completely. Now I’m a good hazmat rinse away from feeling better. This too shall pass.

1623. Why I Want My Boys to Play Football

It is no secret to the readers here that I failed at college football. I’ve often been accused of wanting to get a ‘do over’ in football through my kids. Sure, that provides a simple path to understanding, but I’m not that shallow. My failures in football have very little to do with athleticism and everything to do with my state of mind at the time I played and the years leading up to it.

Football is about a lot more than physical skill or even what happens on the field. The sport, more than any other I’ve encountered, really allows an individual to develop ‘teamwork ethos’ that ability to perform—and enjoy performing—as part of a unit and understanding that the unit is ultimately responsible for any individual success. This is less the case in sports like Basketball (which my relatives who’ve shared with me would prefer the kids all play) where one or two good players can make a team and even in a loss can remain bright stars. Look at Kobe Bryant, one of the top 5 players in Basketball today, yet he plays for a team that has as much chance of being successful as the Knicks do.

Beyond that idea of team ethos is this psychological concept of explanatory style. This is a measure of how people reason through their successes and especially failures. I believe that football exposes ones explanatory style and creates the conditions to harden that individual by constantly being faced with challenges that stretch their ability and mental and physical fortitude. I often hear the argument that this can be gained through other sources, but few sources offer the raw spotlight that football does in our culture. Under those Friday night lights you are being watched by everyone. You fail or succeed under a microscope and thus you learn to deal with success and failure under a microscope. This has a lasting effect on people beyond merely football. There is a reason why so many corporate CEOs and political leaders were once star athletes. In the crucible of sport—especially football—you learn to become a public presence. These are the skills I never learned in the years before college and this is what contributed to my failure when I realized that epic responsibility.

My kids may never play in the NFL or even be good enough to make it on a college club, but they have the fortitude to play now and that will give them life skills they can build upon throughout their lives.

1622. Waiver Wednesday

Late at night and I’m largely burnt out this week. Here are some picks:

 

NYJ over NE
The Jets are reeling and need a win. The worst problem is that the team defense is predicated on a strong secondary–especially at the corners, and they do not have that.  Still, they have a legitimate pass rush that will get to Brady one time too many.

BAL over ATL
I still don’t get all the excitement and talk about ATL and NO being real teams this year. Where?

BUF over MIN
Asiata? Who is that guy? Here is what I do know: Bridgewater is a rookie. Orton is not.  Nuff said.

MIA over CHI
Miami steals one here despite the weather disadvantage. It is one of those 50/50 games, but I have not seen CHI playing tope-end ball lately and Miami is working as best as they can.

DET over NO
see BAL above.

GB over CAR
This is going to be a high scoring game to be sure. The CAR D is not even a shadow of what it was a year ago and that means Newton is going to need a 300+yrd game to compete. Lets just hope no evil bastards try to twist his ankle after the play again.

IND over CIN
In yet another 50/50 dogfight the Colts emerge as victors.

CLE over JAX
the 2014 poo bowl. These teams are barely recognizable as professional these days. In truth, the Jags could be beaten by at least one Florida college team. CLE is getting by but not very far by.

SEA over STL
Dangerous road game in the Lu, but coming off a home loss this team will be fired up and ready to get back to basics. That means ball control and giving the defense long periods of rest between the hard hitting three and outs.

WAS over TEN
I think Washington has two starting QBs. I also think one is a lot more like a rookie this year and it shows.

SD over KC
KC fooled me before, but I doubt San Diego will be fooled. These guys have a strong balanced attack and a hungry new RB who seems to be ready to roll.

NYG over DAL
Another win in Giants Stadium South. Yeah, I saw the game last weekend. Yeah it sucked. I bet it sucked worse for the o-line that got humiliated. I bet they want a little taste of revenge…

AZ over Oak
If it weren’t the Raiders and there wasn’t history there, this would be a trap game. I think JAX would destroy the Cards. I think the Raiders will play them tough. Like one (of like 47) Cards QB said, you gotta forget about the record and think about what they are capable of.

DEN over SF
This could and should have been the Super Bowl. Den would have and will win.

HOU over PIT
I should go for PIT. All the signs point to PIT, but I am not going to do that.

 

1621. Authenticity

I think I know why I moved to a small town in Arizona. I think I’ve known for a long time. The key is authenticity. The key is that core relationship between the small town and the very compact and overpopulated city that I lived in for the first 18 years of existence. A surprising number of New Yorkers live in this corner of AZ. When we see each other we are far more friendly than we would’ve been had we run into each other on the streets of NYC. There is no unified bond between New Yorkers when we are all in New York. We become a tribe of the few only when we leave and in that leaving begin to recognize the similarities between on another and that gossamer bond of understanding that surrounds us.

I didn’t do name brand stuff in New York. I suppose I did name brand in a sense. I did name brand before it became name brand. The small shops and food joints that would later grow to be nationally recognized commodities were once known as ‘the place down the block we get food’ or ‘that spot around the way where we get our shirts.’ There existed a certain familiarity there which blossomed into local and often global understanding. I got to hang out in the sound booth and watch hip hop acts learn their rhythms. I stood by awkwardly as Treach and Queen Latifah fought over relationship issues I was too young to understand. I sat for lunch with Guliani and presented an award to Dinkins. These acts were not seen as huge or braggadocio, they were every day things a lot of kids did. I remember hanging out on the east side a lot of nights and seeing Joan Rivers walk her annoying little dog. There were always folks around but nobody mobbed her. She was just an old lady who lived around the way. The experiences were authentic. They were not born of media frenzy or big box store bought simulacrums of real stuff.

In my town we have this place called Helen’s. She makes a legendary tri-tip sandwhich, but my boys prefer the cheesy steak-fries (which happen to have shreds of real steak mixed in with the cheese). A few weeks ago I was in the shop talking with Helen’s sister and thinking, this is exactly the kind of folksy stuff that ends up on a cooking show and replicated a hundred times over. This is what Dave’s BBQ was before Dave sold out.

I don’t live in NYC anymore. I don’t live in an urban area. However, the beauty of NYC isn’t that it is urban. The beauty is the authenticity and the connections and the experiences. This is why real New Yorker’s avoid Times Square like its a Texas Hospital. The authenticity of that space is gone. The authenticity of my town is still there. I have real connections and relationships and feel engrained in the history and with the people and places as they rise from the dirt and being a part of that is a bit like being a part of Harlem as it rose–before it became the tourist spot it is today.

I measure my life in authentic moments and enjoy where I’m at when I can have those moments.

1620. Blank

Technical difficulties forced me to post this late…

 

If I could stare at a blank screen for 10 minutes I would do that tonight. I’m a bit worn out emotionally, physically, and especially creatively. There is something to having that cycle of loading up creativity, letting it loose, and resting. There is not rest for me this month, but the Zen music from yesterday did provide some helpful insight on what to do when you are away from your creativity: listen to good music, forget about the world for about 30 seconds, don’t watch bad football teams be humiliated, and stay off facebook.

 

Not that facebook is apparently relevant anymore. My students reminded me of how unhip I am by letting me know that facebook died ‘a million years ago’. Now they instagram and snapchat. I’m not a fan of the shift towards purely visual or absurdly immediate communication mediums but I’m even less of a fan of being at the old age end of the tech curve. I suppose that is an aspect of aging, but I don’t fully believe it.

 

Here is something I do believe: I believe that Mondays are unexpectedly difficult. I believe I’m a better teacher now than I was a year ago. I believe I’m less organized now than a year ago but it has nothing to do with the improved level of teaching. That has more to do with passion and heart and spirit—all of which spring from my writing.

 

Even writing as brief and unenergized as this.

 

1619. Zen

I’m listening to Zen music and trying to strike a chord of inner peace after what turned out to be a long and trying day. Here is what I learned:

  1. While the walls are thin, they are infinitely thicker than the open air between two backyards as you are ripping your kid a new one for deciding his need for attention ‘right now’ is far more important than the building project I’m doing that, if I step away from ‘right now’ will come crashing down–which it did.
  2. The garage sensors are apparently below the front end of a car and will still slam the garage door down forcefully and repeatedly with the car stuck in it. Yeah, that happened too.
  3. Bees like flowers in my front yard. They like them so much that they’ve decided to never leave. Perhaps they’ll seek residence in my air vents. Perhaps they already have.
  4. Kids still cheat at video games.
  5. I’m good at a few things and communication does not appear to be one of them. At least not unless I write it down. Then I’m decent.

I find myself unusually negative this weekend, which is why I’m listening to an 8 hr zen track and considering the healing sounds of thunder and rain. I don’t know if any of it actually works without me moving towards a meditative state, but it can’t hurt.

 

1618. Soccer in the Hot Hot Sun

The tricky thing about coaching is understanding your players. As one ref put it, “I’m not reffing the world cup here.” Tell it to the coaches and parents who have these expectations of success for their kids that is often at odds with the ability of the players. Today I coached two soccer games and learned a lot about how disparate the skill levels of players can be and how one player can actually make or break an entire team.

The boys play on two different teams. The mid-kid, who is seven, plays for the 6-7 and 8-9 teams. The fiver plays for 6-7 and boy #1 plays 8-9. The first game was the 6-7 and it was clear from the onset that we were dealing with a team that had multiple players at the 7 yr old age level and skill level. We don’t have that luxury. Or substitutes. We play 6-6 and only ever have 6 players for a given game. Today, being hot and humid, was a very tough day to play a game. We fought to a 4-5 loss and I can honestly look at the game and say we should have tied or won. What sucks is that we would’ve done a lot better had we had the one kid who missed the last two games. It isn’t that he is an outstanding player it is that he is a body and an aggressive one at that, and having the one sub allows kids to stop, breath, and not become overwhelmed. When your top kid is off his game it shouldn’t mean you lose. You should be able to pull him out for a minute, let him regroup and get right. We couldn’t do that and the result was a few kids who were sad about losing and the other half of the team that apparently had no idea what was going on to begin with.

8-9 was the opposite story. It was 7-0 at the end of the first 10 minute quarter. After that our players stopped taking the game seriously. We won by some large margin, but what was interesting to see was how our team devolved into a group of selfish kids who really wanted to score all by themselves and abandoned all the fundamentals of teamwork we’d taught them to that point. I suppose that is the other side of disparate skill levels. If you feel you are infinitely better than your opponent you will start to behave in a foolish manner. That there is the core of the trap game.

I hope both teams figure something out before the next games.

1617. The Balance of Choice

I’ve been giving a lot of thought to rituals and choice. We have so much opportunity–especially in U.S. society–to create lives for ourselves. There are barriers to choice to be sure. Not everyone is born with the same opportunity to lift themselves into the life they want. Not everyone is born with the same idea of what a great life will be. The downside of choice is that we are often victims of it as well. Much like I once wrote about politicians being locked into a choice for fear of being considered flip floppers, we are often locked into the choices we make in life–either through the false walls we build for ourselves around those choices or through the very real bindings that come with age, time, and even location.

The other day someone I love told me I was having a mid life crisis, because I had–supposedly abruptly–made a choice that was so far away from what would be normal for me that it had to be that I was in crisis. I am not, of course, in crisis. In truth I’ve spent the last 1600+ days developing a much deeper and nuanced understanding of myself and my needs (writing will do that to a person. It is definitely worth the 10 minutes). Still, the walls of responsibility make every new choices a hard one and might not always stand up to the trials of time and experience.

I write this to suggest, however vaguely, that we are all subject to the choices we make and that we are all human creatures who learn and grow and change and sometimes act maturely and sometimes not and sometimes change our minds. It doesn’t make us villains. It doesn’t mean we are worse or better people for it. It does mean that we learn and we grow and we admit that we don’t have all the answers and we don’t ever have all the information and that the world changes and changes us and the results of that can shape new understanding and new beginnings and new rituals.

Twenty years ago I was a 175 lb kid who’d just messed up his knee and learned that the life he’d planned for himself over the last 10 years was over. He–I–didn’t have what it took to be that guy. Perhaps the seeds of that failure were sewn long before. Perhaps it was never something meant to be. We cannot ignore the fact that the universe has a way of leading us in the right direction if we just stop and listen.

Twenty years passed and I’m a lot older and maybe a hair or two wiser than that cocksure kid was the hour before his world fell apart. Twenty years, fifty pounds, and a lot of scars later I’m firmly aware of what makes me happy, motivated, and healthy, and what doesn’t. I’m also a lot more aware than that kid who thought life was about him. I don’t have all the answers yet, but I do know that everything we do and can be boils down to the choices we make. I realize that, though that kid was wrong and life isn’t all about him, he–I–have to be the one to step forward and make the choices that make better, stronger, and ultimately happy.

1616. Somebody Elsie’s and other stupid news stories

Watching Fox 10 Arizona I was fortunate enough to witness the stupidest thing ever said on television. You can tell by a person’s expression even tone of voice if they are being serious. Sadly the newscasters seemed outwardly serious when they dropped a news story about the new trend of #somebodyelsie. I did a search on the term and found it shared as a humorous joke and not serious in any other way than the hashtag situation linked above. Unsurprisingly, the newscasters who aired the story also went online and posted their own so-called somebodyelsies.

A somebody elsie is not a new thing. It is defined as turning the camera around and, instead of taking a picture of yourself, taking a picture of somebody else. Holy revelation, Batman. This is truly the stupidest news story I’ve ever witnessed. To devote time to a story in which you tell people that it is trendy to take pictures and that in fact it might be a new idea is mind blowingly ignorant. Of course I shouldn’t be terribly surprised. The preceding story focused on a proposal by (i don’t remember the group) to pee in the shower in the morning in order to save the water you’d use peeing in a toilet and flushing. During the segment they showed images of people spry painting their dying grass green. The tangential connection was not lost on me.

Please tell me I’m off and wasn’t supposed to take this seriously. Of course, the section of news was called the buzz–stories everyone is talking about…

Later in the broadcast the news harped on Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella because of his comments about women asking for raises. He says in part that not asking for raises provides you good karma. He went on to say, “The system will give you the right raises as you go along.” Women at this Women in Technology conference were mightily pissed. Here’s a flash, Nadella feels like nobody should ask for a raise. Not just that women shouldn’t ask for a raise. Unfortunately he’s had to back away from his valid comments in order to appease the masses. I kinda agree with him. Don’t ask for a raise unless you have to. Allow the system to recognize your skills and for the management to recognize your willingness to put at least some faith in the system. Don’t lose faith until you must.

Maybe that’s just me. People tend to think I’m a pushover though.