Archive for the ‘Real Life’ category

Another loss for Doug’s family

February 6th, 2015

Some of my newer friends won’t recognize the name Mary Bastianelli; she is the mother to my dear departed friend Doug and, I’m sad to say, passed away earlier this week.

I never met her, but I did reach out to Mary and her husband after Doug’s death. Evan’s middle name is Douglas, and so for the first couple of years of his life I would send Mary and Al photos and notes about my little boy’s harrowing early days and then his bloom into full health. Mary always wrote very sweet letters back, and sent a copy of “Goodnight Moon” that we read to this day.

I don’t know the circumstances behind Mary’s passing, but I do know that somewhere, Doug welcomed her with a bear hug and that wide, mischievous grin. I’m glad they’ve been reunited.

The NFL has a trust problem

February 2nd, 2015

I’ve spent the morning debating whether to write about the state of Roger Goodell’s NFL, but this overheard exchange may seal the deal.

Two co-workers — and I work with professional auditors — were opining in the men’s room whether the Super Bowl was fixed, whether the last call at the end was, as one said, “You know, politics.” You know, because the commish and the Pats’ owner are best buddies.

First: Come on. No coach wants to lose the Super Bowl. That’s just dumb. And yet… and yet these two men, whose job it is to pore over corporate accounts looking for any sort of intentional or unintentional wrongdoing, unironically opined that a coach might have thrown the game so the Commish’s favorite team would win. And I’m not in the heart of Seattle; here in Dallas, all we care is that the Iggles or Potomic Drainage Basin Indigenous Peoples don’t win the Super Bowl.

The NFL has a trust issue.

As Gregg Easterbrook often says, the league doesn’t have to be America’s favorite sport. Baseball was once, remember, until real and imagined scandal brought it low. And this past season has been rife with real and imagined scandal, culminating in the Super Bowl win whose trip to the Big Game is openly attributed to breaking the rules. That’s not even taking into consideration the laughably tone-deaf (and I am being incredibly generous there) responses to the Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson issues.

I love football. I love the NFL. Something’s got to be done. Because when “Deflategate” or “Ballghazi” or whatever fizzles — and it will, because what commish would take back the Lombardi trophy from the team responsible for his ascendancy? — my co-workers won’t be the only ones floating ridiculous conspiracy theories. After that, it’s a quick trip to “eh, the game is rigged” and an exodus of fans.

How about we win without cheating?

January 22nd, 2015

I don’t write a lot about sports. I *consume* a lot of sports, especially during football season, but writing about it? Well, I’ve always left that to sportswriters, whose command of history and statistics I always admired.

Until now. Because some of those sportswriters are thinking about the past and not the future.

Last Sunday, the New England Patriots won the 2015 AFC Championship. No big whoop, except that not a day later, allegations of cheating came up. Allegations apparently accurate enough that the league is “distraught.”

This is not new for the Pats, which is unfortunate in itself. Worse is the reaction of some sportswriters and commenters, who have said, “It was a 45-7 blowout. Who cares whether the Patriots cheated?”

Hell, a Slate writer opined America should thank the Patriots for being so bad, like they’re the NFL’s Scarface.

The problem is, while Scarface is ostensibly a piece of adult entertainment, the NFL is hugely influential to college students, to high-school students, to children who play football.

It’s not just a Texas thing. Just ask ESPN’s Gregg Easterbrook: Football is an all-ages sport now, possibly the most played, and what happens in the pros is reflected all the way down. The good and, unfortunately, the bad.

And so you have a league already foundering for its light treatment of spousal and child abuse faced with a winning team that’s made a habit of cheating. You have writers saying, “Who cares? They won.”

You have kids watching, reading, consuming everything about their beloved sport — as I did — and getting the message: cheat, as long as you win.

Cheat. Just win doing it, and you’ll get a pass from the writers and the fans and the league.

Let’s turn that around. Let’s have the Luke O’Neils of the world remember what sportsmanship means. Let’s show the kids playing Pop Warner and the young men representing their universities that you can win without cheating.

Nobody needs to be Scarface. The Patriots have the talent; they certainly don’t need to cheat. And we shouldn’t give them a pass for doing so.

Hail to the Chief, Baby

December 17th, 2014

So this happened yesterday:

Me: But damn, the Secret Service was giving me the eyeball.

Co-worker: Well you do look pretty

Me: Thank you!

Co-worker: suspicious today.

***

So yeah, I was near a former U.S. president. He came to visit my day job, which is at once not surprising — it’s a major location, though not the headquarters, for a multinational corporation — and fascinating — because it’s where I come to work every day, and we don’t see many folks from outside the firm, VIPs or not. I did not meet him, did not shake hands, any of that, though I was posted strategically close to my “baby,” a 20- by 15-foot interactive touchscreen detailing the firm’s history and culture.

I did get the up-and-down from Secret Service agents, but was conspicuously wearing my work badge and also had been approved in advance or some such thing.

Honestly, more important in my life is that last weekend I heaved my utter disgust with my own writing to one side, finished revisions on a manuscript, wrote a base query letter, and started tailoring it and then sending to agents. I know that’s a process akin to winning the lottery, but I’m out there workin’ it now, which feels really good.

Plus it gives me the mental excuse to start writing the next one, partly because I’m not sure the two *other* completed manuscripts would find an audience so early on.

Dear Evan: ‘I hate everything now!’

November 4th, 2014

Dear Evan –

Today is Election Day 2014, but I’m not sure I want to write much about that. Your mother and I voted early last week, while I was off work for your birthday. I am interested in politics — it was my minor at college — but pessimistic. Your mother is even more interested, and motivated. However you turn out, I hope you always take time to vote. It’s a privilege not granted in many places. It’s a privilege often not granted here in the United States, which is why I hope you vote for the people who will serve all Americans, not just a few.

Well. I guess I wanted to write more about voting than intended. I’ll stop now, though. Maybe I’ll write more about it later this week, when the shenanigans of today are less top of mind.

Mostly I want to share snippets of your now-four-year-old life.

The most embarrassing (right now): Your mother and I, early on, decided against circumcision. Obviously, that means you’ll need to clean the bits yourself. Your doctor was worried, though, because your foreskin hadn’t been cooperating. We had some success for a bit, but then you went back to being unable to pull it back far enough. I explained after one bathtime that if we didn’t keep at it, you might need to get the circumcision. You asked what that was, and I simplified by saying you’d need surgery to remove the foreskin.

To my surprise, you began wailing. I was startled, and then laughed at your next statement: “I hate everything now!”

I hear you, little man.

I love you,
Daddy

Out Today: ‘Running Away’

September 26th, 2014
Running AwayThink you have weekend plans?

WRONG.

Here’s why your weekend plans now involve Julie Hutchings’ “Running Away.”

Once upon a time, I was all about Charlaine Harris’ “True Blood” books. I’d seen Harris talk while covering Comic-Con, and she was funny and nice, so I read the first few of her books.

They were fun. I read a few books, and then I stopped, and that was it.

A while back, I got to know Julie Hutchings on Twitter, saw she’d written a supernatural action-romance along the same lines, “Running Home.” “Running Home” was fun, like Harris’ books, but Eliza Morgan affected me in a way Sookie Stackhouse didn’t.

Eliza is the girl I hung out with in college, the girl you always called because she brought the room to life. When the book ended, I wanted to spend more time not just finding out what happened to her, but *with* her.

I wanted more.

Well, now there’s more. And here’s what “Running Away” is all about.

Eliza Morgan is desperate to escape the horrors of her mortal life and understand why death follows her, leaving only one man, Nicholas French, in its wake. He’s the one she loves, the one she resents, and the one fated to make her legendary among the Shinigami– an ancient order of vampires with a “heroic” duty to kill. He’s also decaying before her eyes, and it’s her fault.

On the ghostlike mountaintop in Japan that the vampires consider home, Eliza will be guided by the all-powerful Master for her transition to Shinigami death god. When Eliza discovers that sacrificing her destiny will save Nicholas, she’s not afraid to defy fate and make it so—even when Nicholas’s salvation kills her slowly with torturous, puzzle-piece visions that beg her to solve them. Both Nicholas and his beloved Master fight her on veering from the path to immortality, but Eliza won’t be talked out of her plan, even if it drives the wedge between Nicholas and her deeper.

Allying with the fiery rebel, Kieran, who does what he wants and encourages her to do the same, and a mysterious deity that only she can see, Eliza must forge her own path through a maze of ancient traditions and rivalries, shameful secrets and dark betrayals to take back the choices denied her and the Shinigami who see her as their savior. To uncover the truth and save her loved ones, Eliza will stop at nothing, including war with fate itself.

Go get “Running Away” now. I command it.

Remembering Doug, four years on

September 19th, 2014
Andy and Doug

Of course we'd been drinking.

I don’t do a lot of callbacks here, but it’s Sept. 19, four years and a day after Doug Bastianelli – one of my best friends and a constant fixture during my Chicago days – suffered a massive heart attack and died almost immediately. You can read my more immediate reaction, posted just a couple of days ago.

It’s funny; we still talk about Doug all the time in my family. Maybe it’s because Evan’s middle name is Douglas, in the big man’s honor, or maybe it’s just because he was so big, larger-than-life big, that Doug managed to associate himself with… I don’t know, with everything. I don’t want him to become some sort of mythic creature, which is why I’m glad four years ago I wrote partly about how flawed he was (and, even so, how he made me a better person).

I miss Chicago sometimes — well, a lot of the time — and part of it is that I remember it as a cloudy, sometimes rainy, sometimes snowy place where I would be pulled from going full-on introvert by Doug and his laugh and his encouragements to get out and drink and meet people and enjoy life. Through him, I met Tara, whose heart (maybe even love?) got me through an immensely difficult time. I made friends with Cher (not the singer) and Jenny Calligan (whose heart I should have pursued, something Doug never let me forget) and Jimmy Z and all manner of new friends.

I learned (somewhat) how to dress to impress.

I cried on a couch — we cried — over lost relationships as Annie Lennox wailed “Why?”

I stumbled into work bleary-eyed many a day after one of his epic Wine Nights.

I lived, I guess. He made me live a life over the course of a few years.

Really, go read the other post. I’m sore-hearted today from missing my friend.

Dear Evan: Goodbye, sweet Gus

July 21st, 2014

Dear Evan:

Yesterday Gus, our sweet, dumb, gassy golden retriever, left us.

“Left us” is a weak euphemism. We put him to sleep, a less weak euphemism but still somewhat heartless. He was mostly unable to work his back legs; he lost almost all control of his bladder; he was losing what little mental faculties he had. He was in pain, panting constantly, up most nights unable to get comfortable or to slake his thirst or because he still tried to get outside to pee or poop. His right eye drooped and was somewhat sunken after what we think was a stroke. He had cancerous growths on his tongue and neck and belly.

And yet he still had a sparkle, still occasionally rolled onto his back and kicked his legs in the air, his version of playing. So we held on until the bad times clearly outweighed the good.

I will write later about Gus’ awful early life, how he was found and rescued by your mom and Aunt Rachel, how his name was your first word. I can’t do it now. I can barely write this without bawling.

On his last few weeks, we indulged Gus more and more. We fed him scraps, something he repaid by gassing us liberally. We played and let him sleep (something he did a lot lately, often not waking until we shook him) and petted him until our hands were tired.

We put off the decision again and again until we couldn’t without acknowledging it was for us, not him. He was hurting. So we made an appointment with the vet that had seen him regularly the past few years.

On his last morning, we took Gus to a local taco shop, got him a big plate of brisket and bacon. I forked it out in smaller segments, so quickly did he wolf it down. He got tortillas, too, and half of my burrito. I wasn’t really hungry. We cried, there at the outdoor patio. I’d spent the night before dreaming that we got word he was fine, that it wasn’t cancer, that we could help his joints. I hate those dreams now. Hate them.

We took him to the vet. Once in the holding room, Gus got nervous, as he always did. He hid his head between my legs; your mom and I just petted him, over and over and over, until I said, “Okay” and she poked her head through and called the vet. Gus was led in back, given a catheter, and brought again to us. We laid him some towels on the floor and sat with him, petting him, crying our fool eyes out (as I am doing now), and the vet gave him one shot — he relaxed almost immediately, and his head drooped to the floor, and the harsh panting he’d had for months eased.

Another shot, then, and he slowed, and I wept, hiccoughing, unphotogenically. The vet listened through a stethoscope, and just when I thought I’d gone dry, she said quietly, “He’s gone.” And he was. And I wasn’t dry of tears after all.

We petted him for a long time after that. He had one paw reached out, touching my foot, as he did every day I worked in my home office, every weekend morning when I sat at my desk and watched movies or played video games or wrote. I refused to move my foot from his paw, even as I felt it lose its warmth. We’d brought his favorite plastic bone; we couldn’t afford to have Gus cremated, so I asked that they take his bone wherever he wound up. We got a lock of his tailfeathers, and asked that they make a pawprint as well. I don’t know that I can ever look at that, though.

And that’s it. We left. We went across the street to a bar and began drinking before noon. I wrote sunglasses inside, like some celebrity, but we explained to the bartender and she understood. And then life moved on.

We’ll get a pup to replace Gus, but not soon, not just yet. I hoped beyond hope last night, the night of his last day, that I’d wake to hear his panting, or leave the room to see his dark outline on the cool tile just outside the back door, like some fantastic story. But no.

You’ve asked, of course, and we’ve read you the tale of the Rainbow Bridge and all sorts of niceties. I suspect you won’t remember Gus other than as a smelly golden blur. But maybe I’m wrong. Maybe you will. And maybe I’m wrong about other things, and he will be waiting for me somewhere, someday. Maybe.

I love you,

Daddy

Dear Evan: Coming home

May 12th, 2014

Dear Evan:

Once upon a time, I had a job where I traveled. Not an excessive amount, but enough, and other than the inefficiencies of air travel it was okay.

Then I moved home, and we had you, and I took a job with much less travel. And now I don’t want to. Isn’t that crazy? I just want to sit in the battered camp chair on our back porch and listen to you make up stories while you play with your Mighty Machines.

Most of the time, I feel singularly underqualified to be a father. I’m not young, and I don’t always have the energy or the patience to keep up with you, and I didn’t spend years preparing in any way.

You, though, have started to bridge the gap. You coo “I looooove you” and put your hands on either side of my face, or say “I missed you when you were at your office,” that sort of thing. You give sudden smooches, and throw your whole little body into hugs.

So I don’t want to go away for almost a week. At least coming home will be even better.

In case you ever read these letters in the future, I want to add a quick note about what’s going on in the world.

This past weekend, the first openly gay player was drafted in the National Football League. I hope that someday you read this and shrug. That it’s as uneventful as a black man playing professional sports is to me, when certainly that wasn’t the case not too long ago.

I mention it because your middle-namesake, Doug Bastianelli, was a football fan and a proud gay man. He would have cheered, as we did, and cried a little, as we did. I wished he could have seen it, but am glad you did in his place.

I love you,

Daddy

Dear Evan: Tall

May 6th, 2014

Dear Evan:

Yesterday evening, I sat on the floor next to you playing cars. You stood, having created a combination parking lot (for the fire trucks, sports cars, etc.) and construction site (for what you call “mighty machines,” still very much your favorites). I noticed, in a rare quiet moment, that if I slouched a bit, you were as tall as my upper body. It was a startling, happy moment.

EvanThat’s an odd statement, I know. Bear with me.

Not so long ago for us, you weren’t even as long as my forearm. I was nervous to hold you in NICU, nervous I would somehow break just a tiny, gangly thing. Months later, once you were home, I could easily cradle you in one arm, head near my elbow, while I worked on my laptop with the free hand.

But there you were, chattering away to the both of us, almost half as tall as me. Height is a big deal to you, and I’m not surprised. Your personality may fill a room (and it does), but you’re still a tiny person living in a place where almost everything is out of reach.

It’s no wonder you idolize your 6’6″ cousin (though you call him uncle) Scott. To you, he can literally touch the sky, the moon, the clouds.

But don’t let him have all the fun. You’ll get there. You’ll be tall, like me, like your mother, like your cousins (Scott and otherwise), like my brother and sister.

No matter how tall, though, I’ll always want to cradle you in the nook of my arm.

I love you,

Daddy