Country singer Toby Keith recorded a song called "Don't Let the Old Man In" that was apparently inspired by Clint Eastwood. The two were playing golf together in a charity event a few years ago when Clint remarked that he was about to turn 88. Toby asked what kept him going, and Clint's reply was "I get up every day and don't let the old man in."
Monday, July 31, 2023
I'm trying not to let the old man in, but modern travel makes it difficult
Country singer Toby Keith recorded a song called "Don't Let the Old Man In" that was apparently inspired by Clint Eastwood. The two were playing golf together in a charity event a few years ago when Clint remarked that he was about to turn 88. Toby asked what kept him going, and Clint's reply was "I get up every day and don't let the old man in."
Friday, July 28, 2023
You wake up one day and realize you've been sent back to the 80s...now what?
Wednesday, July 26, 2023
We come here every year for a week of exhausting relaxation
Probably my favorite thing about Slippery Rock University is the fact that, for more than 60 years, fans attending University of Michigan football games have cheered when the public address announcer gives updates on the Slippery Rock football team.
This is funny because Slippery Rock is a tiny, obscure Division III school nestled in the hills of Western Pennsylvania, while Michigan is, of course, Michigan (I can say that respectfully despite being a fan of THE Ohio State Buckeyes).
It all started in 1959 when the Michigan PA guy started announcing the score of Slippery Rock games simply because he thought the name "Slippery Rock" was so funny. And he was right. Now it's a tradition at Michigan Stadium for the crowd to give a raucous cheer any time it's announced that Slippery Rock is winning.
I bring this up partially because I just love the story, but also because Terry and I spend one week every July on the Slippery Rock campus. It's where our church holds an annual Bible school/retreat we help to organize and run.
This retreat is known as "the Gathering." I have been attending Gatherings since 1989 and had never given the name a second thought until a few years ago when someone remarked that "the Gathering" sounds creepily like the name of a Stephen King book.
For years I had been telling people we were headed to "the Gathering." Only then did I realize it sounded like we had joined some sort of weird cult. It's both horrifying and hilarious.
Trust me when I say, the people who attend the Gathering are very nice folks with whom we enjoy spending time. There is nothing especially creepy about them.
Our days at Bible school are filled with classes in the morning, recreational activities in the afternoon, an evening assembly with a featured talk and/or musical performances, and generally spending time with people we have come to know and love over many years.
Each day is packed with activity, and by Sunday of Gathering week we are usually dragging. As I used to say when I served as superintendent of the event, there ain't no tired like Bible school tired.
Anyway, I thought it was important today for you to realize two things:
(1) Slippery Rock, if you didn't already know about it, is a great school.
(2) There are probably better names than "the Gathering."
Monday, July 24, 2023
My wife makes fun of me for that time I was a neighborhood narc
This happened maybe 15 years ago. It was the Fourth of July or right around there, and some people who lived near us were shooting off fireworks.
Friday, July 21, 2023
I eat fast food maybe twice a year. I don't think I'm really cut out for it.
The danger of railing against fast food is that you can easily come off sounding preachy and self-righteous.
Once my body realizes I've ingested a slab of fried meat and a cardboard sleeve of greasy fries, it immediately lodges a formal physiological protest.
It's not intestinal or anything. It's just that vague overall feeling of being stuffed, bloated and nutritionally deprived. I lose most of my energy and virtually all of my will to live as my digestive system begins working through the processed glop I have given it.
That's when I tell myself, "OK, even twice a year is too much. I shouldn't be eating this stuff."
And I don't, at least until another six months go by and I need to grab something on the run. I try to convince myself that maybe it will be better this time.
It never is.
You can make fun of my almost-daily kale salads all you want. At least with kale I've never considered giving up eating permanently.
Wednesday, July 19, 2023
I'm wondering if leaving my wife little notes in an attempt to be romantic is too cliché
Some months ago, I began writing short notes to Terry and leaving them in places she will find them.
- In the bathroom drawer where she keeps her toothbrush
- In the little cannister of coffee she stores in a kitchen cupboard (RECENT VARIATION: I put one in the K-Cup holder of our coffee maker.)
- On the driver's side seat of her car
- Resting on or near the TV remotes
Monday, July 17, 2023
My life has devolved into a battle against the driveway weeds
I don't water our lawn, so I don't feel bad when it starts to turn a brownish green about this time every summer.
I'm also not too put out by the honeysuckle that grows unimpeded along the fence and threatens to claim our entire property if left unchecked.
There is, however, one plant I cannot stand. I don't know its name, and I don't actually care.
All I know is I want it dead.
I'm referring to the insidious weeds that somehow manage to take root in the cracks of our driveway then proceed to grow like...well, like weeds.
Each year I wage a battle against these little green monsters that inevitably ends in my favor, but not before much weeping and gnashing of teeth (on my part, not the weeds').
I don't know why these small botanical devils enrage me so much, but I can't stand it when they make their first appearance in mid-spring. I get even madder when I pull or spray them and they pop right back up less than a month later.
Just die already, demon plants.
If only I felt half as much enmity toward the weeds that grow in our flower beds. Our yard would win awards if I hated them the way I hate the driveway weeds.
I think it has something to do with the fact that the driveway didn't ask for any of this. The lawn is fair game because it's several hundred square feet of plant material that understands its position in life. It knows weeds are part of the deal when you're a large blob of sod.
But the driveway? The driveway is a dozen or so innocent concrete squares that know little of plants and care even less. Its only job is to convey our cars smoothly onto and off of the road, and it does this beautifully.
Then suddenly weeds burst onto the scene and ruin everything for the poor driveway. They have the audacity to grow from cracks a fraction of an inch across. They besmirch an otherwise pleasantly gray expanse running up to your garage or alongside your house. They are an eyesore that refuses to go away without the application of brute force or copious amounts of Round-Up.
I have a grudging respect for their staying power and tenacity, but that does nothing to reduce my desire to kill them.
Of all the things that threaten our society today, driveway weeds are among the least regarded and therefore among the most deceivingly dangerous. Ignore them at your own peril.
Now, I will freely admit this is not the sentiment of, say, a 25-year-old single person. This is the way a grumpy 53-year-old homeowner thinks and the way he blows a relatively minor irritant all out of proportion.
But I'm telling you, don't sleep on the driveway weeds. They're crafty. They're relentless. They have no qualms about making your life a landscaping hell.
Death is too good for them, but I will nonetheless deliver them there with a small pointed shovel in my hand and a smile on my face.
Friday, July 14, 2023
I'm trying to remember how we planned vacations in the pre-Internet age
- How did I make hotel reservations? That is, how did I know my hotel options, and where did I find the correct phone numbers to call? I couldn't just Google that information back then.
- How did I purchase (in advance) tickets for the two Montreal Expos baseball games we attended? Did I send them a letter or something? How did I know how much the tickets would be? Where did this information come from?
- How did I know the correct driving route to cover the 560 miles from my house to Downtown Montreal?
Wednesday, July 12, 2023
We're going to the Paris Olympics next year and I'm pretty sure we'll be sleeping in the street
Some months ago, my daughter Elissa called and asked, "Hey, do you want to go to the Olympics?"
My response was a somewhat bemused, "What?"
She repeated the question.
"The answer to that is always 'yes,'" I replied, "but tell me more."
It turned out Elissa had won a lottery giving her the right to purchase tickets for up to three events at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Seeing the Summer Olympics in person has long been a bucket list item of mine, so I didn't need to be asked twice.
When the day came to buy tickets online, Elissa was equipped with a list of our preferred events and the amount we were willing to pay. As you might imagine, some sports are more popular than others, to the point that you're much more likely to score front-row seats to, say, handball than you are for women's gymnastics.
Elissa spent a frantic 15 minutes typing and scrolling, coming away with four tickets each to a women's quarterfinal field hockey match, a women's quarterfinal soccer match, and the one thing on which I had my heart set, a full day of track and field.
In the event, gaining admission to these events was the easy part. And I'm sure we'll have no problems booking a suitable flight to take Elissa, Terry, Mark and me to France next summer.
The issue lies with our accommodations. We immediately tried booking Airbnb and Vrbo houses, only to be denied each time without explanation.
No explanation was needed, though. The owners of these rental properties are (wisely) going to jack up the prices by a factor of 3x or more, and they were all waiting for the market to sort itself out before fixing their fees and accepting reservations.
We also tried several hotels, but in most cases, you couldn't book anything outside of a 365-day (and in some cases a 400-day) window preceding your arrival.
Now we're getting to the point of being one year out, and as I type this, we're still looking for places to lay our heads for the week we plan to be in Paris. The cheapest VRBOs are $3,600 for six nights, which actually isn't bad but also doesn't provide the type of bed situation we need.
We may ultimately end up staying somewhere outside of Paris and taking a train into the city each day, which would be OK.
But part of me still wonders how comfortable a sleeping bag under the Arc de Triomphe would be on a warm French summer night.
(NOTE: A few days ago, long after this post was already written, we were able to procure a nice Airbnb in Paris. That's a relief, of course, but I hope you don't mind me having strung you along there for a couple of minutes.)
Monday, July 10, 2023
I love the concept of beach vacations. It's the execution that presents problems.
As I type this, I'm sitting in the enclosed patio of our rented house in Bethany Beach, Delaware.
Jared is across the table on his laptop writing media notes that are, as he says, of interest only to a very small group of writers and broadcasters covering tonight's Major League Baseball game between his employer, the Tampa Bay Rays, and the Seattle Mariners.
Elissa is to my right crocheting a yarn bikini for the plastic goose that sits in the front window of her house (that statement is 100% true).
Jack is reclining on a nearby chair, playing on his phone.
Light music is coming from Jared's laptop. We are all conversing and laughing.
This, to me, is exactly what vacation should be.
Here's the problem, which I know isn't really a problem at all: The Atlantic Ocean is about 400 feet away. Our nephew Chandler is driving up from his home in Newport News, Virginia, and due to arrive in a half hour or so. Once he gets here, we're all going to change into swimsuits and head to the beach.
That is, after all, why we drove 9 hours from Ohio. This is a beach vacation, and beach vacations by definition involve going to the beach.
I love the idea of going to the beach. And I love the first 10 minutes of being at the beach.
Then it all kind of goes south for me.
I'm not a water guy, but I plan to spend some time in the chilly ocean waters because I would hate to leave here in a few days without having done that.
I'm not a sand castle builder, but I'll chip in if everyone else is doing it.
The boys and I will toss a ball around, which is fun but after awhile makes my 53-year-old rotator cuff cry out for mercy.
We were never a beach vacation family until we first came here to Bethany Beach in 2016 and had a really good time. Seven years later we're back, having coordinated the complicated schedules of eight 20-somethings, a teenager, and two parents.
I wanted to recreate that 2016 vacation, though I realize now that what I wanted to recreate was not so much the beach part of it. It's being together that most appeals to me, whether or not we ever get close to the water.
There's also this: As I have often noted, I am not a particularly good relaxer. Or at least I don't relax in the same way other people relax.
I almost always need to be doing something. So far on this trip, that has meant playing several games of cribbage, enduring two disastrous losses in Battleship to Jared, washing and putting away the dishes, making our bed, doing some laundry, carding a brisk round of mini-golf, and taking a walk.
Some of those are vacation-type activities while others are not. All of them give me satisfaction because that's just the way I am. Getting stuff done is what I like, whether I'm at home or traveling. I suppose it's how I maintain some semblance of control over my existence.
I admire real beach people. People who can plop down in a chair, slather themselves in sunscreen and read a book for hours. People who don't mind sand in their shoes. People who never tire of frolicking in salt water.
I am not one of them, nor will I ever be. But I admire them.
At the same time, I almost never feel particularly stressed or uptight. I'm perfectly happy the way I am.
You have your way of relaxing, I have mine.
There are sting rays in the ocean, you know. The only foolproof way of avoiding them is not going to the beach at all.
Friday, July 7, 2023
Spotify is an all-around better experience, but I still use Apple Music
Depending on who you ask, Spotify has something like five times as many users as Apple Music. They are the two dominant players in the world of streaming music, but it's really no contest in terms of subscribers and total users.
I have accounts on both platforms. We pay for family subscriptions to both.
Yet I can't tell you the last time I used Spotify.
On the surface, this makes no sense. Spotify is #1 for a reason. They have a better user interface and, in my experience, a better algorithm when it comes to recommending new music I might like.
The only reason I continue to use Apple Music is that – again, in my experience – it is far more accommodating when it comes to handling local files. And by local files, I mostly mean my vast library of bootlegged live concerts and obscure classical music CDs.
In other words, the stuff to which neither Apple nor Spotify own streaming rights, and that therefore you have to upload yourself.
I have gigs and gigs of this sort of music. A number of years ago when I tried to transition away from Apple Music, Spotify simply wouldn't accept a lot of these files. Some uploaded and processed just fine, but most simply went away when I attempted to port them over.
I tried a few different times, but I was never able to get most of my local files onto Spotify.
Since that's mostly what I listen to, it was easier to simply stick with Apple Music, on which I never seem to have any issues with local files.
Now before you say it, I am well aware that many, many people have no problem using local files on Spotify. I've tried their prescribed methods for uploading this music onto Spotify, but it has never worked for me.
So I stick with the clear #2. I choose Pepsi over Coke. Burger King over McDonald's. Crest over Colgate. Figuratively speaking, of course.
There are two potential morals to this story:
(1) Companies need to realize that one bad user experience, or one glitch in their product's technical capabilities, can decide a lifetime of brand loyalty.
(2) I am too lazy to try and make Spotify work for me.
I hesitate to tell you how true I believe #2 to be.
Wednesday, July 5, 2023
Can we keep our yard at graduation party levels of nice?
Which of course we won't, since Jack is our youngest. Oh, if/when we have grandchildren and they have their own grad parties, we'll help in every way possible.
But never again will we be in charge of the preparations, and that's a good thing.
Grad parties are exhausting, and not just on party day itself. The prep takes weeks. The clean-up takes days.
Here's the one upside of hosting a grad party at your house, though: Your yard has never looked so nice.
Jack's party was in mid-June. Starting in mid-May, we weeded, power washed, mulched, mowed, trimmed and generally transformed our property into something presentable.
Not Yard of the Year presentable, but certainly grad party-worthy.
The question is, are we going to do what's necessarily to maintain it?
Summers are busy for us, and there are going to be stretches when we're simply not home.
On the other hand, life is so much simpler the following year if you keep up with yardwork the summer before.
The smart money says we'll keep it looking good for maybe a year.
Check back with me in summer 2024.