Daddy, Read me a Book … Whack!

Books, books I read them every day How many stinkin’ children’s books Will I have to read today? OK, so I’m not bothered by all the books I’m reading my daughter. It’s fun and I agree with my wife that it’s a much healthier habit than teaching her to throw darts or saw wood in the back yard like I was trying to do last week. She’s only 1-year-old after all, and doesn’t understand the whole measuring thing. So we’ll stick with books. But it sure can be tedious, especially when you’re reading the same one over and over again 13,000 times in the span of 15 minutes. If you’ve ever overcooked broccoli, that’s my brain by the time I’m through. Mostly I read to her at night when I’m supposed to be changing her diaper and getting her ready for bed. I plop down on the floor among some of her pillows and wait for her to crawl over with a book. I know she’s ready for me to read it by how she whacks me in the head. It’s her special way of saying, “Read, fool, now!” So I start reading and she crawls off to get another one, which she will of course hit me in the head with, and the whole process starts over again. If you see me on the street and wonder what all the welts and bruises on my forehead are, it’s just a little nighttime book reading. Many times I get the […]

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Hey Technology, What Makes You Such a Bigshot?

The world has heaped praise on one of the hottest new tech items out there — Apple’s iPhone. African Bushmen, who don’t even know what a phone is, are standing in line to buy one. The dead are coming back to life to take a look. Some hail it as a device that will end global warming, detect buried treasure, give you a massage and full makeover, bring peace and riches to the world, drive your car, and, if you have the time, even make a phone call. Me? I’m unimpressed. Yawn! Why? It’s a phone. A very fancy, cool, hip, tricked out, full of stuff phone, but strip it down, and ultimately it’s just a tin can tied by string to another tin can. Maybe it’s the age I am, but technology doesn’t impress me much anymore.

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Gettin’ Back on the Bus

We’re a society that loves change. Very few things totally satisfy us, so we’re always looking to take what we have and update it, modernize it, change it, improve it and generally make it, well, crappier.But I think I’ve found the one thing we can’t say that about. The one thing that has seen little if any changes over the years. I spotted it while out running the other day and stared in bemusement as it rolled by: a school bus. Yes, a big, yellow diesel-belching school bus, filled with screaming kids that looked like an insane asylum on wheels. It could have been a brand new bus for all I knew, but the world would never know. Modern advancements, or at least modern design, have long passed over the venerable school bus. It’s the instrument of transportation that time forgot — a throwback to yesteryear that is the only constant from one generation to the next. And I, for one, am glad. It brings back memories. There was nothing better as a kid than a school field trip or an away soccer match in a beaten-up bus. Any time you piled in, with all its funny smells and vinyl seats marred by unexplainable stains, it was a good day.

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Level Me a Shed

Does anyone really care if a work shed is level? Does anyone know if it matters? I mean, come on. With all the problems we have in the world — the poverty, the war, the sickness, the Hollywood muckity-mucks running around with no underpants — does a little uneven-ess truly matter? By uneven, I’m only talking about a good 5 or 6 inches off, in multiple angles, and directions. People stare, tilt their heads and ask, “Am I screwy or is your shed bending over to tie its shoes?” Now, I’ve written about my shed and its problems before, so I should clarify: These aren’t the old problems — this is since I started working on it. Some things don’t want to be fixed, and my shed is one of them. When last I told of the great story of my work shed, the floor was rotting out, the base beams for the walls had turned to sawdust and a nudist colony of squirrels had opened up a spa in the rafters. (They, or someone else, ate a WHOLE bag of winter rye, and now instead of a floor, I have a green grass carpet from what they spilled.) It was a mess, so I went to work. I ripped out the floor and decided to replace the beams around the base by jacking up the shed. My brother has hydraulic jacks, and I pictured myself lifting it up little by little with a few pumps, sliding new beams under […]

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The Quiet Returns

And then it was all quiet … sort of. It seems more and more these days, holidays roll in like hurricanes: plenty of warning, yet never enough time to prepare. Winds lash the trees. The water rises. You scramble, you bite fingernails, and you wish you had gotten out of town when the weatherman warned you. “Why didn’t we go to Tahiti!” But that’s also what makes the holiday so much fun — so exciting. Mothers who come and stay for a week. Mine, even though the refrigerator had long since exceeded its carrying capacity, thought it necessary to buy loaf after loaf of bread from the Spanish Bakery, searching out any little uninhabited region of the fridge to cram it in. We never ate the bread, so I’m still not sure why she kept buying it. The storm isn’t just a metaphor. It did actually come on Christmas morning, as you might recall, just as my mother was driving up from Tampa. All week she had watched the weather, petrified of a strong front that was threatening to bowl her over as she made her early morning run for St. Augustine. She braved the winds and driving rain, hydroplaning at one point on backroads and dodging tornadoes she just knew were coming for her. “What do I do if I see a tornado?” she asked the night before while preparing herself mentally for the journey. “I pull over and jump in a ditch, right?” “No,” I told her. “It’s […]

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What a Very Different Christmas

What a very different Christmas from a year ago. What a wonderful Christmas morning. A year ago, my wife was pregnant, awaiting the birth of a moose child who was already two days late. We woke up on Christmas morning, opened presents and started getting ready for people coming over when the little one decided to kick a hole in her cozy confines. That was the beginning of 28 hours of labor, a c-section and six days in the hospital. It was around 10 a.m. when my wife noticed the “trickle” and made a call to her doctor. “How quick can you get here?” the doctor asked. “Now?” my wife replied. “We’re having people over at 11.”

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All I Want for Christmas

I don’t ask for much each Christmas. Just a few essentials, a couple luxuries … and a pony! (Still don’t have that last one.) The little kid in me just can’t help but make a list, so here’s a sampling of this year’s: • Stank-O-Matic 3000 Gas Mask and Hazardous Materials Suit — As the father of a little girl who turns 1 on Dec. 26, I can honestly say the first year of dealing with diapers has not been as bad as expected. Sure, it’s never a pleasant experience, but I can’t recall a single Category 5 diaper — the kind with smells that will warp glass or make the threads of your clothes disintegrate. But that said, I know the Dark Lord of the Poops — who can burn nostrils and devastate the land in more ways than one — could pop up at any moment. I need to be prepared and sure could use a Stank-O-Matic, just in case. • Hope — In the coming year I would like to finish at least one project around the house. But the truth is, I have no hope. So I just need a little of it to keep my spirits up. Everyone needs hope, and I need a little extra for my wife, too. (Also, please disregard the large club she has penciled in on her list.) • Sense — I could use a big bag of it. Recently, thanks to my co-worker Mike Horn who had to go […]

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The Research Paper that Ate My Column

If this column seems unusually, I don’t know, crappy, I blame the research paper. Yes, the research paper ate my column. I’ve begun a graduate program in media management through the University of Missouri’s Journalism School. It’s all online, designed for working-class stiffs like me who don’t have the time to move up to the frozen tundra of Missouri and who have always preferred going to class in their boxer shorts at all hours of the night. That, in fact, was the marketing ploy that sold me on the program — “midnight in your underwear.” Anyway, I’m really enjoying it, but it takes a bit of adjustment to become a student again. At Flagler College, I’m surrounded by students all the time. But they look up to me as a mentor, a genius and a dashing man of wisdom, which is what the sign on my door reads. I say things to them like, “look here, whippersnapper” or “at what point did you realize your brain had fallen out?” I coach them, and scold them, and they on a weekly basis let the air out of my tires.

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In the Ear of the Beholder

My little girl, Amelie, turns 1-year-old this month. Incredible how time flies. It was Dec. 26 of last year that she made her ever-so-slow descent into the world and changed our lives forever. Now, as we close in on that milestone first birthday, it seems incredible how much she has changed. From lump to little girl in less than 12 months. It sounds more like a ready-to-eat stuffing commercial or one of those weight-loss ads. Boy, how the changes do come. Little feet are suddenly big feet. They were tiny, like a bird’s. Now they look like flounders. She’s toddling around the house, not without help from chairs and other supports, but it’s walking in my book. She has dozens of expressions, is gaining height and has more hair than some zip codes. But there’s one category I’m still not sure about: talking. Does she talk or doesn’t she talk? That is the question. To tell you the truth, I’m up in the air on that one. She’s never been a baby talker, uttering those cartoon-esque “goo-goos” or “ga-gas.” Instead, this sweet little angel with honey brown curls and eyes crisp as polished apples has always chosen a much less refined “Heh!” It sounds like what a trucker might give out while wolfing down spicy sausage.

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Time to Redesign the Shed

It’s always been a fine shed, capable of holding immense quantities of bolts I’ll never use, bags of solidified concrete that I figure scientists of the future will bring back to life and every piece of odd-shaped wood the world has ever known. My shed is a modern art do-it-yourself kit waiting for assembly. But the last year or so, the old girl has developed some problems, namely that the plywood floor in the back started rotting, collapsing, and swallowing anything in those farthest, deepest, darkest regions of the enclosure.

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