Apr 202008
 

My dad used to put together an annual deep sea fishing trip for his employees and customers, and would always have an extra slot or two for come-withs (generally us kids, taking turns year to year). He’d plan a three-day trip to Destin. Two of the days were for general playing, and he’d charter a 65′ sportfisherman for the fishing day. Just Dad’s party on the boat; nobody else. The boat came with captain, deck hands, equipment, supplies—everything. You were 35 miles out in the Gulf of Mexico, and all you had to do was fish and drink beer.

I got to go three times in twelve years, and oh man, was it ever one hell of a good time. Ever eaten triggerfish that was alive 20 minutes earlier? Do you have any idea how lustrous and just, well, blue the water is out there? It’s breathtaking, and I don’t throw that adjective around lightly.

They’re some of the best times I’ve ever had. I usually caught red snapper (lots of fun) and trigger, with an occasional grouper or amberjack. Other guys who were more experienced would set up for king mackerel or wahoo, and I think I enjoyed that almost as much as a spectator as I would have a fisherman.

Unfortunately, he doesn’t do the trip anymore. One minor reason is that a lot of the folks who used to enjoy the trip have moved on to new jobs, but the main thing is the new fishing restrictions in the Gulf. In an effort to restore and maintain the fish populations, the per-person limits are now low enough to make the value of the trip dubious. (Can’t fault the reasoning; just saying.) On a good trip, a dozen of us might catch 400 pounds of fish, and we’ve simply reached a point where we need to take an active interest in ensuring the sustainability of such things.

In any case, it was my turn two years ago, on what turned out to be the last event. And Lea found out the day I left that she was pregnant.

Lea’s my wife. I’m her husband. Husbands and wives make plans. And our plans were always for two children. We designed and built our house thinking that. We did our long-term financial planning thinking that. We decided I could be the sole breadwinner thinking that. A third child was not in the equation.

So this is major freak-out news, dig?

And Lea, not wanting to ruin my trip, didn’t call and tell me. She kept it to herself for three days. What an incredibly selfless act. What a woman I married.

So understandably, I was home for all of five minutes when she spilled it, and then we both freaked out together. Holy shit. What are we going to do?

After the worst of the shock passed, we decided that as serious as the situation was, we could permit ourselves a week of floating while our emotions settled. We’d talk about what to do then. No penalty in doing nothing for seven days. Probably good for us, actually.

After that week, we looked at our options. Neither of us particularly wanted to move. Nobody thinks it’s fun, but I’m really, deeply, viscerally opposed to it. I’d love to move two more times the rest of my life, okay? So on to other options.

We had kicked around the idea of building a detached garage before, in terms of having a shop and a spot for an eventual fun car. Lea took this idea and suggested we make the detached garage bigger. We could then turn the in-house garage into a study for each of us, another bathroom, and a family room, and recover the fourth bedroom (my current study) for the baby. We’d get a home equity loan to pay for the work.

We slept on it for a day or three, and the plan still stood up. Lea was sketching by now—she’s good at that—and we decided it was time to call a few someones for estimates. We made appointments. I was feeling better with a plan taking shape, and one night I caught my breath and said “you know, I didn’t know this was the next challenge, but it is, so bring it. Go hard or go home!” (I heard Diablo Cody say that on Letterman, and I loved it.)

Shortly before our first contractor was to show up to talk to us about our plans, it became clear that Lea was going to lose the baby. She wouldn’t be joining us after all. (I kind of thought it was a girl, and had been calling her “my hellion unplanned daughter.”) Actually, she was all but named Tabitha. If she’d been a boy, we hadn’t quite decided, but David had a lot of promise.

It was one of the most emotionally draining periods of our lives, as short as it was. To be pummeled with the news, then freaking out, then adjusting, then beginning to get excited, then losing…well, it was something. I wished I could have taken more of the hurt from Lea. Naturally, she experienced it all of the same ways I did, but also on that maternal level I couldn’t understand.

When Lea was planning, she tied little ribbons on the chain-link fence in the backyard to denote boundaries for things like breezeways and landscaping. One of them is still out there, and I think of our baby that wasn’t every time I see it. More germanely to my life today, I think of what I said about not knowing what the next challenge is, but to bring it.

And then I wonder whether I have enough of that spirit day to day. I count my blessings. I have a beautiful family. I have truly close friends. I have a career that both rewards me personally and makes it possible to support a comfortable lifestyle for my family and me. That’s a jackpot right there. That’s stuff that many people don’t have.

At the same time, I question whether I’m doing all I should do. As important as it is that I keep doing what I’m doing—father, husband, friend, and all that is associated—I feel like I’m capable of more, and I need to start figuring out what that “more” is. I need to write, then pursue, some “stretch” goals for the second half of my life. I want to cultivate an affection for that challenge, not just handle it reasonably well when it blindsides me at 4:00 on a Monday afternoon. And that’s what the ribbon still means to me.

I think 2008 is probably the ribbon’s last year with us. It’s been out there two years, and UV is merciless (it used to be red, believe it or not). I expect I’ll look for it one day and it won’t be there. Its fibers will finally die. I don’t want what it’s come to evoke in me to die with it.

Go hard or go home.

 Posted by at 5:34 pm
Apr 192008
 

The Indy Japan 300, which was supposed to be last night at 11, is instead tonight at 9 because the track was too wet. Better time to watch live—I probably wouldn’t have made it last night and would have had to record the end of it—but the scheduling snafu apparently means I don’t get it in HD. They’ve bumped it to ESPN Classic.

Bitch, bitch, bitch. What problems I have.

I’m pleased to have fallen into my IndyCar Series fanhood after deciding to watch my first Indianapolis 500 in 20 or so years last year. It’s a minor time commitment, and it’s nice to have something to follow during the huge college football hiatus. The quality of the racing is generally excellent. To me, it’s a bit startling how boring NASCAR is compared to this—particularly the restrictor plate races.

Danica has historically run well here, and she appears to have a good car today, though she’s complaining of a bit of understeer. They’ll tweak her tire pressure at her first stop to compensate. I certainly would like to see her win one soon.

(edited 2303 CDT) Danica won it! As late as 20 laps to go she looked as if she was going to be lucky to get even a Top 5 finish (there are 200 laps in the race, and the first one she led was #198), but her fuel strategy did it for her. She grabbed a couple of spots charging hard, and seemed to be topped out—but then one by one, everybody blinked in front of her. She (and her team) executed perfectly the whole race, nursing the minor handling problem and conserving fuel in a bend-don’t-break strategy, particularly on the final leg.

And in the end she was the only one with the juice to get there. Congratulations, Danica! Many more!

 Posted by at 9:46 pm
Apr 182008
 

From Organic Mama:

Do you have any special talents?
I can place my entire fist in my mouth. I am freakishly good at specifying our precise, to-the-minute arrival time home when on a trip. Once upon a time two women I slept with became roommates, and both of them were still talking to me six months later. I’ll count that too.

Do you regret anything about your past?
Starting smoking.

Do people ever mistake you for being a different race?
No. I’m unambiguously a big goofy white guy.

Do you collect anything?
Wristwatches, most passionately. Also books and DVDs.

Would you tattoo someone’s name on your body?
No.

What do you worry about the most?
Being a good father.

Do you have any friends with “benefits”?
No. I was never any good at that. Any regular sex I had/have was/is always in the context of a monogamous relationship.

How old were you when you moved out of your parents house?
21. I lived there through college.

Whom do you miss right now?
I miss my mom sometimes. I miss geographically inconvenient close friends like Heather and Amy.

Are you drinking anything?
Sam Adams.

Do you like beer? If so, which one?
I love beer, unfortunately, and have the physique to prove it. Sam Adams Boston Lager is my commonly available go-to. I’ve been drinking a bit of Anchor Liberty Ale, which is superb, lately.

Do you carry any form of contraceptive with you?
No.

Do you have any weapons for personal protection?
Yes.

What is the last restaurant at which you ate?
Spice of India.

What is your favorite fruit?
Banana.

Do you believe “Once a cheater, always a cheater”?
Not absolutely, but it certainly seems to work out that way a lot of the time.

Do you sit on public toilet seats?
Yeah, if I have to. I try not to.

What is a goal you would like to complete this year?
Implementing an unhurried, productive, and reflective morning routine.

Last person with whom you had an argument?
I can’t remember. Lea and I had a stimulating and useful discussion last weekend, but I wouldn’t say it rose to the level of “argument.”

Have you ever run away from home?
Sort of. I once told my mother I was running away to the Faircloths (our up the cul-de-sac neighbors) because of “Dad’s out of town too much, bedtime, and broccoli.”

Where were you 2 hours ago?
Standing in the kitchen going through the mail.

Favorite concert you have been to?
That’s out of perhaps as many as 150 concerts, and I couldn’t possibly pick just one. The ones that pop in my head:

  • Kiss, Huntsville, 1990
  • Steely Dan, Nashville, 1993
  • Kiss, Birmingham, 1996
  • Saxon, Atlanta, 1998
  • Tori Amos, Nashville, 1999
  • Cheap Trick, Rockford, 1999
  • Kiss, Birmingham, 2000
  • Cheap Trick, Huntsville, 2000
  • Sammy Hagar, Nashville, 2002
  • Paul Stanley, Atlanta, 2006

Are you listening to music?
No.

Describe the shirt you are wearing?
I’m wearing this shirt.

Do you know anyone named Bob?
Yes.

What is your favorite candy?
Wild Cherry LifeSavers.

Do you take your daily vitamins?
No.

What color is your vehicle?
Silver.

Where is your most ticklish spot?
The roof of my mouth.

Last thing you bought from Walgreens?
A pillbox, I think.

What do you think about the president?
C-.

What are your favorite pizza toppings?
My favorite pizza is sausage, mushroom, and onions, but I’ll eat just about anything.

How much money do you have on you?
None. Who carries money on his person around the house at night?

When did you last go swimming?
Last summer.

How old are you parents?
Dad just turned 64. Mom would be 60, but she died seven years ago.

What is your greatest fear?
Something happening to my child.

When did you last hold a baby?
A couple of months ago.

If you had the opportunity to open a store, what would you sell?
No idea. I would never open a store.

What did you last cook?
Steaks.

Do you have over 200 MySpace friends?
No.

What is your favorite piece of furniture you own?
A funny little antique piece my mother gave me that is somewhere between a bookshelf and a hutch. It’s in our foyer.

Where is your favorite place to eat?
Viet Huong and Surin. Mikawa for sushi. Pauli’s for a steak. Bandito Burrito Co. for Mexican. Probably Outback for a stuff-on-the-wall.

What is your favorite movie theater?
Monaco Pictures at our new Peoplequarium is fantastic.

Do you have a favorite number?
Pi.

 Posted by at 8:29 pm
Apr 172008
 

It’s unlikely any community anywhere has a more positive impression of the space shuttle program than the Huntsville area. Marshall Space Flight Center is here, as is the U.S. Space and Rocket Center. Spaceflight is in the water. Indeed, I work in an old NASA building, and it’s certain some giants of the program have been in my hallways sometime in the past. I know scores of people who work, or worked, on the shuttle. Everyone does.

I drive right by where Wernher von Braun worked daily. (This post isn’t particularly about von Braun, but I wanted to include this photo because I think it’s one of the baddest-ass photos of anyone ever. This sumbitch is in charge of this shit, right here.)

Anyway, I do love the shuttle, even if von Braun didn’t. (Isn’t it interesting that our next program is so much closer to his original vision of where things should go?) Whenever possible, I shuffle my calendar so that I can watch launches and landings live. I get chills every single time.

Nevertheless, the downsides are easy to quantify. Based on its operational history, you have a base 2% chance of dying when you strap yourself into the thing, and that beats the hell out of most anything else you can do. From the beginning of the program to the present day, each mission averages about $12 billion. How much of the program’s benefit could we have realized without the risk and cost of sending human beings?

Inevitably in these conversations, someone trots out “we built the shuttle because we fell in love with the idea of a reusable spaceplane, and then we had to build the space station to give it something to do” (or some close variation). I sometimes wonder whether there would be a space station if it was all up to private industry, considering the positives and negatives of such a thing to a board trying to write a good annual report every year.

Not that I think NASA’s going anywhere. We have military interests in orbit, for one thing, and such interests shall always terminate at a federal office and not SpaceCo, even if SpaceCo gets a lot of business making it happen. But I am pleased that I’m around at a time to see the era of private spaceflight blossoming. As much as I wish I’d seen the Apollo missions live, I think this new chapter has the potential to be even more exciting.

A lot—not all—of what we’ve done with manned spaceflight utterly fails a truly rational analysis. Machines are considerably less fragile, and we don’t mourn them when they stop working. The lander that splattered all over Mars a few years ago wasn’t anyone’s father, Little League coach, or deacon.

But we send people because dammit, it’s cool to send people. And what is that coolness? It’s really nothing more than that human drive to explore and discover, right? Good luck squelching that. Good luck sticking it in a cost analysis.

I cried when Challenger exploded. I cried—considerably more angrily—when Columbia burned. I was all set to blame some chronically short-sighted paperwork-bound government drone for it—and depending on your reading of the findings, you can certainly blame that guy if you want to.

But you know what? That guy’s in Research Park, too. That’s not government, or everything-but-profit-be-damned, or anything else so easily demonized. It’s just human.

We have astronauts because we are awed. It doesn’t have to make the regular kind of sense. It’s space.

It’s one of the very few issues for which I answer “just because.”

 Posted by at 6:14 pm
Apr 162008
 

Shall we go over a couple of money language items, folks?

  • “$2 million dollars” says, literally, “two million dollars dollars.”  What you really want is “$2 million,” which says “two million dollars.”  I suppose you could just write “two million dollars” as well, or “$2,000,000.”
  • “.59¢” means I can buy 100 of them for 59 cents, because they’re each fifty-nine hundredths of a single cent.  If you want the expression that means “59 cents,” go with “$0.59,” “$.59,” or “59¢.”  You can’t use the . and the ¢ together.  Dumbass.  Uh, I mean “for your future reference, ladies and gentlemen.”  (sickly insincere smile)

A bit or five on verbosity?

  • Please think carefully about whether you need to say “on a daily basis.”  Just “daily” is fine.  Do you exercise on a daily basis, or do you exercise daily?  See?
  • “At the present time”?  What, you mean “now”?
  • I loathe the word “utilize.”  I have retreated from my previously hardline stand and allowed that it may have some applicability in discussions of resources and procurement, carrying a connotation of efficiency.  But “use” is just fine in other situations.
  • “Orientate” sounds uneducated, period, and I don’t give a shit if it’s in your dictionary.  I was stunned, then uneasily accepting, then finally appalled when The Right Honourable Margaret Thatcher used it when eulogizing President Reagan.  Despite her considerable oratorical skill, it’s a base backward construction, and it’s obscene.  The word is “orient,” and even the Iron Lady can be wrong.
  • “In a manner so as to.”  Not exactly common, I know, but I actually encountered that in a software specification early in my career.  I’ve never forgotten it.  Cross the first five words out, and the meaning is the same.
 Posted by at 8:39 pm

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