Friday, June 29, 2012

Support Your Local Pyrotechnician

Well, toast my buns and bake my beans! Next Wednesday is already the Fourth of July. Seriously? How in the name of John Phillips Sousa did we get this far into the year this fast? Will somebody tap the brakes just a little, please?
Be that as it may, the holiday of flags, food, fairs, family reunions and fireworks is upon us. Many will celebrate at our town’s homegrown annual picnic and fireworks show at the local high school athletic field. This has rightfully become a cherished tradition over the years for thousands of locals (my family, included) and non-locals alike.
Fortunately, we Crescenta Valley denizens can choose from several other nearby celebrations including the mother of all fireworks festivities at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, the decidedly more upscale and privileged atmosphere of the Lacy Park Fourth Festivities in tony San Marino and several others. For what it’s worth, my vote goes to the celebration at CV High. Support your local pyrotechnics, I always say.
If you’ve followed My Thoughts, Exactly recently, you know why this will be the first year I don’t have to close up all of the windows in my home and put a stack of CDs in the stereo to blare throughout the house while we’re gone so that our dogs hear less of the bombs bursting in air. We’ve also always left lights on and curtains closed so our canine clowns couldn’t see the bright flashes in the nighttime sky. After all, there’s nothing like coming home from a wonderful fireworks display to find that a pair of neurotic, jittery, freaked out, quaking, mentally unstable, 80-pound hounds have spent the last several hours clawing their way into closets, behind sofas, under beds and any other place they could break-and-enter to try and escape the apocalyptic clamor coming from the valley below. Sigh. I sure do miss those pups.
But back to the holiday at hand; as you probably know (unless you’ve been interviewed by Jay Leno lately) the Fourth of July commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. And in case you’re wondering, there was no annual Fourth of July Nathan’s Hot Dog Eating Contest for all the brand spanking new U.S. citizens back then. Not to step on my colleague, Mike Lawlor’s historical toes, but archival records tell us that before firing off a loud round of artillery to salute the occasion, General George Washington marked the Independence Day holiday by giving his soldiers not foot long hot dogs (or burgers or corn on the cob for that matter), but a double ration of rum. Those colonials knew how to party, right?
Speaking of parties worthy of the history books, the Bristol Fourth of July Parade in Rhode Island has been held since 1785, making it the oldest continuous Independence Day celebration in the U.S. That’s impressive. Then again, I think our own Montrose Christmas Parade is that old, isn’t it? Or maybe it just feels that way when you’re waiting endlessly in between slow moving entries. But I digress.
I can’t let this Fourth pass without mentioning those who continue to make it all possible, our military. There’s a Facebook meme making the rounds this week that shows a bleak photo of an American soldier traipsing through desolate sands of Afghanistan along with a caption that reads: “I was going to complain about my day today, but then I realized … It isn’t 120 degrees. I’m not 5,700 miles from home. I’m not dressed in full uniform. I’m not carrying 70-plus lbs of gear. And there is little chance of me driving over a bomb today. Thanks, to all who serve.”  Amen to that.
So let the fireworks fly! Let the burgers grill and pass the ‘tater salad, please. Let freedom ring – and may God in His boundless grace and mercy continue to bless America. Happy Fourth of July, everyone.
I’ll see you ‘round town.


Note: This is a version of my column first published yesterday, 6.28.12, in the Crescenta Valley Weekly newspaper.

© 2012 WordChaser, Inc.

Friday, June 22, 2012

Holding Down the Fort

I’ve had a uniquely special relationship with a certain coworker in my small office for the past eleven-and-a-half years. In addition to the “normal” Monday through Friday, 8-to-5 business hours, he and I have worked closely together late into the night on too many occasions to count. We’ve been a team through many working weekends and even on holidays when it was the only possible way to meet impossible deadlines. Though I would never bring it up, he more often than not has fallen sound asleep while I tap away at the keyboard or stare blankly at the ceiling fan overhead in search of a solution or idea – his barely audible snoring not helping in any way with the work at hand.

And yet, although I have logged many long, late night office hours over the years, my coworker has been here even longer, holding down the fort. I have often had the opportunity to leave for a meeting with clients, or to go out for dinner with my wife and kids, or leave the office to simply do something other than work. My coworker, however, almost always has stayed behind and waited patiently for my return – acting as the ever-vigilant office security guard or simply busying himself with all sorts of miscellaneous activities, one of which typically included napping. As I mentioned, I never spoke to him about his tendency to drift off to sleep during working hours, but he knew that I knew he took advantage of my permissiveness. There were no secrets between us.

You could say that my coworker was also the goodwill ambassador for my business, always greeting visitors or delivery people with his overly friendly manner and welcoming ways. Guests relaxed visibly in his presence and in subsequent conversations would often ask me to give him their kindest regards.  

During any given week, I would all too often vent to him about particularly frustrating clients – or about not having enough work or having too much work or not enough time to do the work or having to once again go out and look for more work. No matter how much I ranted, however, I could always count on him to quickly calm me down and remind me in a way all his own that work is only work. It’s the relationships in life that are most important.

To say that this coworker was like one of my family would be misleading. He was family in almost every possible way except one – he wasn’t human. He was a goofy, tail-wagging, shoe-stealing, sleep-seeking, clothes-hamper-raiding, big, loving dope of a dog; my near constant companion, friend and coworker.

And now, he’s gone.  

Last Saturday, after weeks of expensive treatments and loving care for his failing kidneys, oceans of shed tears and not nearly enough emotional preparation for the inevitable outcome, we said goodbye to “Darby,” our family’s beloved yellow lab and the last of our dogs. (You might remember that I wrote about losing our beautiful golden retriever girl, “Sierra,” fourteen months ago. Yes, it’s been a tough year-and-a-half.)

I simply cannot find the words to express how much I miss that dog every waking minute of every day – and so far – during already too many restless nights. I have no guilt in saying that he was my favorite dog. Ever. He was my constant companion. My work mate. My protector (in his own mind, at least). The greeter of the UPS man. The passionate, tireless tail wager. Chaser of tennis balls. Incorrigible thief of shoes – even right from your feet if you wore slip-ons.  

He was our power-failure proof alarm clock. If we slept in even 15 minutes past our usual weekend routine, Darby would impatiently go to the hand towel hanging on a rack in our dressing room, take one end of it in his teeth, pull it off and bring it to my side of the bed. He’d continually nudge my arm with his nose until I woke up, then look at me with an expectant, “do you SEE what I have in my mouth and aren’t you going to do something about it?” expression.

As a younger dog, he and his golden retriever sister would have nothing of sleeping on our bedroom floor at night like mere dogs. Oh, contraire. The foot of our queen size bed was fine for Sierra, but not for Darby. He had to share our pillows and would position himself every night with his back to the headboard, and his face on one of our pillows. Yes, that meant one of us got to sleep with his other end pointed at us. And I loved it. Both dogs got too old eventually to make the jump to our bed – a fact my wife loved, but which I never really got used to.

I hope they have high alpine lakes in heaven, because this was a dog who would swim until near exhaustion whenever we’d take him to Mammoth. We would eventually have to hide whatever tennis ball or sticks we were throwing in order to keep him from going back out into the water yet again and exhausting himself in the high altitude.

Darby was proof that a dog can have gourmet tastes. His absolute love of pizza “bones” (crusts), slices of cheddar cheese and anything with chicken in it, would make him sit patiently and bore holes into you with big, round, black eyes as intense as any I’ve ever seen – until you’d break down and give him a piece of whatever it was you were eating. And then another. And another. He could hear a spoon on the bottom of a peanut butter jar or carton of cottage cheese from across the house and would suddenly appear at your side with his well-practiced “you’re gonna give me that, right?” look on his beautiful, goofy, always-loving face.

Darby was a male dog who never quite got the hang of lifting his leg. He’d kind of half squat, have lift one back leg and let fly – often on his own feet as he got older. Not exactly a proud moment for me, his owner. The few times in his nearly twelve years with us that he actually did lift his leg like a “normal” guy dog, we would whoop and holler and strut around so proud of his accomplishment – we probably frightened him from trying it again for years.

He was the first “self-walking” dog I’ve seen – always grabbing his own leash in his mouth and walking ahead of you as if you weren’t needed at all.

When we’d leave the house without him, he would go behind the couch in our living room to press his big, black nose against the window and watch us drive down the driveway with a “hurry back home!” look on his entire face. And hurry home, we would. Upon parking, he would be upstairs on the balcony overlooking our driveway, his nails click-clicking on the wood deck as he paced back and forth waiting for us to come back in the house – his nose poking through the balcony railing to better see us and his tail wagging furiously in joyous greeting of his family arriving home.

Darby was shrewd enough to stay off our family room couch in the evening as long as “mom” was awake, but he’d open one eye and carefully watch her walk upstairs to go to bed. As soon as he knew she was in bed, he would quietly get up from wherever he was, walk over to the couch and hop up on the cushions to settle in for a comfortable while. I’ve never seen a dog who loved comfort as much as he did. I hope he’s comfortable once more and no longer weary of the fight to stay with us another day, another hour.

They say that writing is the loneliest of professions, to which I agree. Working solo is a necessary part of the job. And yet, until now, I’ve never really been alone thanks to loving, faithful companions and ‘coworkers’ like Darby and Sierra.

This week, my office is lonelier than ever before. I find myself looking for the big, furry dope every time I get up from my desk. I’ll start to say something about this or that project before I remember that he isn’t there to hear me. He and Sierra are off in some heavenly meadow chasing after bright green tennis balls and snuggling together for well-deserved naps.

I know we’ll be reunited someday, but until then, it’s my turn to hold down the fort. Goodbye, dear friend.

I’ll see you ‘round town.


Note: This is an extended version of my column first published yesterday, 6.21.12, in the Crescenta Valley Weekly newspaper.

Friday, June 15, 2012

The Good, the Dad & the Ugly

At our house, Father’s Day has always been one of those holidays that sneaks up on us. That’s because, somewhat like that kid we all knew in school whose birthday happened around Christmas every year, both my and my youngest son’s birthdays are always right smack dab on or near Father’s Day. My father-in-law’s birthday is one week before and a favorite niece’s birthday is the day before mine. Throw in miscellaneous mid-June graduations, weddings and subsequent anniversaries and you’ve got the makings for a very busy, overscheduled month.

Nevertheless, I do have many outstanding Father’s Day memories.

For example, one of the all-time best Father’s Day gifts I’ve ever received is hanging on the wall above my desk as I write this. It’s a simple, framed certificate awarded to me 26 years ago by my dear wife and our two kidlets soon after we officially became a blended family. The certificate was written and signed by my wife and our then 4-year old son and daughter (one of hers, one of mine). Even though the precious signatures on it have long since faded away with age, to this day I tear up when I read the wonderfully uplifting and affirming things it says, like, “In appreciation of: The countless bedtime stories read complete with sound effects even if this is the fifth time in five nights we’ve picked a particular story.” What I wouldn’t give for the opportunity to do that sort of thing with those kids again. And again.

Another cherished Father’s Day memory is the whacky home video the same above-mentioned group made for me years ago while I was traveling down under in Australia on business. The video featured them singing, dancing and shouting out Father’s Day greetings. It was hilarious and touching and moving all at once. To return home and watch the video they’d made while I was so far away was simply priceless. Nothing bought from Brookstone or Bass Pro (aka: “Man-Land” around our house) could have topped it.

That said, I’m definitely not one to turn down gifts of any type or size. Especially presents like the new, bright yellow chain saw my two younger boys pooled their own money to buy for me at Home Depot one Father’s Day a few years ago. I mean, seriously ... does it get any more awesomely manly and testosterone-drenched than to receive a chainsaw as a gift from your two sons? Not hardly.

Father’s Day has been more than a little bittersweet for me since my own dad passed away nine years ago this month. To say that he was not the most sentimental of men would be like saying a block of ice is cold and hard. I always had the impression that he’d have been perfectly happy if Father’s Day, Christmas, anniversaries, even his own birthday could somehow come and go without a single person acknowledging the occasion. How very sad.

Maybe the capacity to feel and express emotions can skip generations, like recessive hairlines and blue eyes. If that’s so, I must have gotten what should have been my Dad’s portion of sentimentality in addition to my own. Just ask my family. I’m all too often an emotional train wreck looking for a place to happen – which, actually, can be a good thing when planning special occasions. That’s because it really doesn’t take much more than a hug and a heartfelt card or a phone call from far away family (sorry, but text messages and e-cards don’t count) to make my eyes flood as predictably and profusely as a backed up toilet with overnight guests on the way.

However, I do have my eye on a lovely turbocharged hedge trimmer with LED work lights and self-leveling laser guidance system. No, wait. The newly redesigned, super thin Macbook Pro would make a truly epic Father’s Day for me. In case anyone asks.  

I’ll see you ‘round town.


Note: This is a version of my column first published yesterday, 6.14.12, in the Crescenta Valley Weekly newspaper.

© 2012 WordChaser, Inc.

Friday, June 8, 2012

Divine Dancing

A church isn’t exactly the first place you think of going to be inspired by dancing – especially dances with names like “the Dougie,” “Cha Cha Slide” or “Cupid Shuffle.” What happened at the church my wife and I attend last Sunday afternoon, however, was inspirational beyond, well … beyond belief.

But first, a brief meandering down memory lane.

As far back as I can remember, my family has attended church. I was raised in the Presbyterian Church. My Grandparents were prominent members of Glendale Presbyterian. My parents belonged to La Crescenta Presbyterian and my siblings and I were regulars at the various youth activities there. Now, if you know anything about the Presbyterian denomination, it’s not exactly a hotbed of wild celebration and emotional release. Trust me, they don’t call Presbyterians the “Chosen Frozen” for nothing.

How dull and dry were our services? Even the Catholics showed us up. When I was in high school during the 70s, two members of my rock band whose families attended local Catholic churches would often invite me to play drums at their contemporary “guitar mass” services. Okay, so we didn’t exactly rock the rectory, but six- and twelve-string guitars, electric basses and drums were a whole lot more praise-worthy to my teenage ears than a matronly organist laying down a dusty hymnal groove for a purple-robed choir. Ahem. I mean, Amen.

Okay, scroll forward a few decades. As an adult, my faith ‘evolved’ (to coin a phrase ripped from recent headlines) towards the more evangelical, non-denominational church and – after spending years at a couple of different local churches – my wife and I became members of Lake Avenue Church in Pasadena. Having transitioned from a less-than-two-hundred member church to a so-called “mega church” of over 5,000, it took us a while to adjust to worship services that often included a full concert orchestra, professionally produced dramatic presentations and a video monitor the size of a drive-in movie screen (for readers under 50, Google “drive-in movie.”) After attending for more than 11 years, however, the numbers of people and production-values of the services seemed totally normal to us.
That said, early this year, my wife and I found ourselves as part of new church plant, called Fellowship Monrovia. We were drawn to the new church not only by the powerful, Biblical teaching of its force-of-nature Pastor, Albert Tate, but also by its mission to be a church of unique diversity.

Sure, it’s a schlep to drive the 20-some-odd miles out the 210 freeway from our hometown of La Crescenta every Sunday morning, but it’s been nothing short of a weekly blessing to witness and be a part of not only the miraculous growth of this new church body, but also of its truly remarkable diversity.

The Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. once declared Sunday to be the most segregated day of the week. I have to think that – were he alive today – his heart would be gladdened to see what’s happening at churches like Fellowship Monrovia.

Take this past Sunday, for example. After the second service, we all gathered together with blankets and lawn chairs across from the Monrovia Community Center in Library Park for our first ever all-church picnic.

There on the green expanse of lawn, under the stately oaks and a remarkably blue early-June sky, it was a vision of heaven-on-earth to watch singles, couples and whole families of many colors and backgrounds, political views and economic statuses – from newborns and toddlers to teens, college-age hipsters, middle-aged grandparents and walker-wielding seniors – thoroughly enjoying the opportunity to fellowship together.

After picnic lunches were eaten, water-balloon battles were waged and kids' faces were painted, the church’s diversity was even more apparent as an impromptu dance crew assembled in front of speakers set up on the park’s outdoor stage and many of our group began (each to the best of their abilities) to dance. To watch members of this beautifully dissimilar group teach each other to how to dance the Macarena, Electric Slide, Cupid Shuffle, the Samba and other wonderful (and yes, somewhat cheesy) line dances was an experience I won’t soon forget.

Last Sunday afternoon, it was easy to imagine that God was sitting on His heavenly throne, watching the scene below, smiling and doing a happy little seat-dance of His own.

I’ll see you ‘round town.

Note: This is a version of my column first published yesterday, 6.7.12, in the Crescenta Valley Weekly newspaper.

© 2012 WordChaser, Inc.

Friday, June 1, 2012

My Not-So-Small Town

My son has lived in Montana for the past two years and came home to Southern California for a long-awaited visit this past week. This is a guy who was born and raised right here in the sleepy Crescenta Valley, although he has always felt like a misplaced soul – having a personality and passion for pursuits much better suited for wilderness and woodlands, lakes and rivers, wide open spaces and wild, wooly creatures.

God bless him, the boy has found his personal paradise in Western Montana.

That said, like most local teens, however, he learned to drive years ago on the uniquely congested surface streets and nearly-impossible-to-navigate freeways of Los Angeles County. (I still say Driver’s Ed classes should be reinstated as a vital part of the high school experience, but that’s a topic for another column.) I would bet there are some Indy car drivers who would stress out trying to get from point A to B on our stupidly complex and confusing streets and highways.

As a native driver, let’s just say my son was well practiced in the fine art of vehicular survival. He was so comfortable driving here, he would often park his small pickup truck and ride a motorcycle through the local labyrinth of near-misses, uninsured motorists, distracted drivers and motorized morons. For two years, in fact, his primary transportation to Pasadena City College about 20 tricky miles away was by motorcycle. (And yes, somehow his mother survived this phase.)

Beyond that, the boy was very much at home and comfortable living in “the big city,” even if that city is our so-called “small town” of the Crescenta Valley. So, imagine our surprise when – after being home for only a few days last week – he told us that he couldn’t believe how hectic and hurried it seemed coming back home this time. With a surprised and somewhat shaken demeanor, he said that this place he knew for twenty-some-odd-years as home, suddenly seemed depressingly crowded and stressful.

I’ve seen this same thing happen to other transplanted CV residents. A good friend and former neighbor of mine (a born and raised Southern Californian who was also on the coaching staff at CV High School) moved his family many years ago to the foothills of Southwest Colorado. After a couple of years away, he returned for a visit and was blown away at how seemingly congested our streets were, how aggressive are drivers had become, how crowded with storefronts and signage along Foothill Blvd. seemed and how utterly confusing our freeway system now was to navigate. It seemed hard to imagine that he had ever lived here.

When my oldest son moved his family from the Northern Los Angeles bedroom community of Santa Clarita to the island of Oahu more than six years ago, his first trip home to the mainland was a real eye opener. In spite of having thrived in the daily nightmare of traffic that is a hallmark of Saugus/Valencia area, after being away from it for only a year or so, even the once-routine 30 mile drive from LAX to La Crescenta left him in shock and awe at the pace of traffic and the high-caliber angst of the drivers around us.

So, what changed? Did our streets suddenly get busier since my son moved to Montana? Did local drivers turn into NASCAR knuckleheads as soon as my former neighbor left for the Rockies?

I think it’s primarily a matter of perspective. When you’re immersed in our environment every day, you become used to (or numb to?) to streets and parking lots overflowing with cars, trucks and motorcycles, crowded restaurants and the overall busy-ness of living here. But get away from the size and scope of our surroundings for even a little while and it all looks different somehow.  

As I took my son back to LAX for a ridiculously early flight back to Montana last Friday, we drove along an eerily empty Foothill Blvd. in the predawn darkness. My son said, “Dad, even the main highway through Missoula isn’t this huge!”

While we may be a “sleepy” by Los Angeles suburb standards, in comparison to true small towns a great majority of other places in the U.S., there’s simply no denying that we’re a big city.

I’ll see you ‘round (the big) town.