Before I get to the point, allow me a brief digression.  Some twenty years ago, my brother and I were sitting outside on the steps, casually discussing when was in store for our future.  Ours were not the common dreams of poor kids in the throes of everyday daydreams.  Our future did not involve football glory or fame borne of film or television.  Nope, we chose more…  earthbound dreams.

You see, at the time my brother was having troubles with the opposite sex, dating-wise, and I was having troubles getting members of the opposite sex to realize that I was not – in fact – a tree, but someone with some measure of relationship potential.

How did that impact our dreams?

My brother and I both confessed that we saw ourselves as single fathers of adopted children, living together somewhere on the eastern coast trying to raise our daughters well.  My brother imagined himself becoming a law enforcement officer, and I imagined myself in some area of the arts.  (Don’t forget – neither one of us saw any future in which we were married.)

Well, twenty years later, and our juvenile predictions have come to some measure of fact!  Well…  With one major exception.

My brother is a little more impetuous than I, but our collegiate career brought forth many changes for us.  For one, women actually started to pay attention to me…  For good reasons.  For another, my brother altered his ideals slightly.  Suddenly, our lives were taking shape and our ideas from the past were becoming the realities of the present.

My brother decided upon a different career of service: teaching.  If you allow for a few hiccups in my professional career, while I currently dally in retail, I am selling product related to the arts.

More importantly, however, after several attempts, we both struck gold.  My brother married a fine woman, also a teacher, and I found someone who complements me so well I often have to pinch myself.

But even more so than finding our own wonderful life partners is when happened to that whole parenting thing.

While my brother and I were the product of the stereotypical broken home with single parent, and we both imagined ourselves ending up as such, it didn’t quite work out as we had planned.  My brother is now the very proud father of some 300 children…  No, no, no…  After a mild twist of irony, my brother and his wife have 8 amazing children.  That twist of irony? Of the 8, only two are girls, and they were adopted a few short years ago.  So, with the exception of being married, my brother’s prophecy came true for the most part.

My prophecy of self takes a little more stretching to accept as truth.  Sure, I work in the arts…  Peripherally.  Yes, I live on the eastern coast.  I also shunned perceived fate and married.  And then, real fate intervened.

Well, actually it was my wife’s biological clock, but that’s neither here nor there.

(Okay – so that was a longer digression than I had anticipated.)

As I’ve already written here, my wife and I have been together for quite a while, and married for ten years.  About five years ago, the discussion of parenthood came up in earnest.  We’d broached the topic briefly when my wife’s father was battling cancer.  Understandably, my wife wanted her father to be able to hold his grandchild before he died, but as it just couldn’t happen, we shelved the notion of having a child.

When the issue came up again, it was more about my wife’s internal clock and whether or not we even wanted one or more children.  I also had to deal with my own past, and wrestle with notions of becoming like my own father.  (My father was – as I have described – the only physically present absentee father I have known.  He had mentally given up on me and my mom, he just hadn’t made that move physically.)  Once those hurdles were crossed and we decided that we would at least try to have a child, and live with the results regardless, our foray into the world of parenting had begun.

I made the mistake of joking that no mater the outcome, we would at least have fun trying to have a child.

Karma, in its best Rod Serling suit, got me back.  My wife got pregnant with the first try.

Momentarily stunned, when I found out, all I could say at the time was “well at least something of mine can swim!”

The pregnancy itself was smooth for the most part, and when we went for that first ultrasound, again I opened my mouth.  The doctor left on the heart monitor so we could listen to our baby’s heart, and I blurted out “that’s gotta be man-made,” a line from our favorite movie.  When it was revealed that our child was a girl, I offered a potential name, suggesting that we name our child after my wife’s father, who had died some time before.

Well, then the adventure was on.

The rest of the pregnancy went well, but stress from my employment situation, combined with an error at the hospital, left the recovery difficult, and leaving us without the option of more children.

(A side note to any men out there that have not yet experienced fatherhood: if your child is to be born via c-section, do not let them sit you in the OR facing the doctor!  I didn’t eat spaghetti and meat sauce for a year.  Consider yourself warned…)

There were difficulties early on, with our daughter, some from the delivery, some from the fact that she may have needed to cook for a few more days.

Either way, we were blessed with a beautiful little girl, who took almost no time to show which parent she would potentially take after.

While she is now in every way my wife’s own “mini me,” early on she took more to me, primarily in her facial quirks, but also in her love for biscuits and fried chicken.  After all, at least half of her DNA was rooted in the deep south.

As she has grown, our daughter has evolved into a miniature copy of my wife, save her giant feet, prompting the jokes that my DNA couldn’t get far off the ground, or that my wife’s German heritage stomped all over my Irish roots.

What has been so amazing in this new life is watching a totally blank slate evolve into a person all her own.  We can see her process things that I or my wife will do, and sometime later they come back at us, with that little tinge of her own limited life experience coloring the phrase or event ever so slightly.

This is definitely something I would have missed (whether or not I was married) had I adopted a child.  (It should be noted that both my brother and I had decided upon adopting older children, as they are often the most neglected in the foster and adoption process.  And with my brother adopting two and my having one – despite the circuitous route – we both got our little girls.)

Sure, it’s been frustrating trying to help raise this child.  She is far more attuned to my wife than myself, both by just the amount of time they spend together and by biology.  She is also a child, and children do frustrating things because they are always learning, but then parenting is also a learning process, so it tends to all work out in the end.

It’s interesting to interact with our friends that have young children that are a little older than our daughter, and watch their faces as we talk about something the wee one has done, and watching a look of bemused recognition.  Apparently it’s perfectly fine to give helpful advice to friends about parenthood, but it’s also fun to watch your friends go through those growing pains too.  That’s fine, though…  Like I said it’s a learning process for us all.

Four would appear to be a particularly good year for a kid.  My daughter is learning to appreciate music other than the Backyardigans or Barney, and is willing to watch the occasional “mommy or daddy” program, giving us a break from Spongebob or Caillou.

She also loves to help…  Well almost.  She hates picking up her own toys and stuff, but is more than willing to help collect the trash or help in the kitchen.

She’s also developing her picky eating habits, so we’re counteracting that with not only the usual desert bribe, but also by getting her involved in menu planning and assembling dishes.

In fact, part of Thanksgiving dinner this year will include dishes she helped make with mommy, as well as her own “crazy glazy carrots.”

Things have not been easy these past few years, but it’s been an amazing ride.

And I guess that’s what I’m most thankful for: the coming unknown.

Whereas your relationship with your own parents is pretty much predetermined, one’s spouse and child are relations that are chosen.  My wife and I chose to have a child and bear the responsibility for that life.

And I’m glad we did.  I still have concerns; still have fears.

But this little goofball makes it all the worth while when she comes racing to me when I get home from work to give me a big hug.  Or when she climbs up to give me a goodnight hug.  Or when she discovers a bad pun for the first time, and howls with laughter.

Being a parent is a real risk, but despite my wish that we had been able to try a few more times before actually getting pregnant, it’s a risk I am very thankful we took.

(I’m also admittedly thankful that we’re not using my daughter’s recipe for Thanksgiving Turkey…  But more on that later.)

Happy Thanksgiving to all…

(The Squirmy one, at a recent doctor’s visit, apparently helping to diagnose her cow’s lactose intollerance.)

I have two friends on Facebook (actual friends mind you, as in I have actually spent time with them in person) that have me thinking about giving thanks.

One of my friends has posted daily about what she is thankful for.

The other hasn’t posted in a few months, since her last update to announce that her husband of 25 years had died.

While I knew Joe more as my friend’s husband than I did as my own friend, I was saddened by his passing for two reasons: one, he was a fine fellow whose company I enjoyed.  Two, I know just how much my friend and Joe were a great couple, great friends and partners to each other, and his loss to my friend would be a great one.

What exactly does this have to do with me?

Well, it just makes me thankful for every day I have with my wife.  We’ve been pretty blessed as a couple, inasmuch as our tests have been outward originating, and far less from our own doing.

My wife is easily my best friend, and a wonderful partner.  Sure, things have been tough of late with the economy where it is and my back injury limiting what I’m able to do, but despite that, we’ve been able to persevere.

But the one thing that may now never change is how much I will treasure the moments – good, bad or otherwise – that I have with my wife.  My friend and Joe had over 25 years together, and no matter how much you think that they had a full life together, there is always that sense of loss.  That empty place in one’s heart when you lose your life partner.

My wife may not be perfect, but considering the fact that I am in no way shape or form going to come anywhere close to perfection myself, that’s okay.  What my wife is, however, is the best thing to ever grace my life, and I’m thankful for that like you wouldn’t believe.

As we reach this day of thanks, after this major life-changing event for my friend, I am counting my blessings.

And it is a singular blessing that I am most thankful for: that this beautiful woman I met over ten years ago said “yes.”  That she looked past my flaws, and accepted me as a partner.  That she is as much a geek as I am.  That she produced a beautiful little girl for us to care for.

That she…  Just…  Is.

Since we can never know just when our ticket on this ride is to be punched, I am thankful for having a wonderful companion for the ride.

And thanks to my two friends for helping me find a way to convey that message.

I love you, Sweetie.

And Thank You.

Happy Thanksgiving all…

A friend of mine got married last week, and I was able to supply lots of advice for how to handle marriage and the ceremony.  Most of it was tongue in cheek to be sure, but there was some truth in nearly everything I told him.

You see, it was ten years ago today that I did just what he did: I got married.

Got hitched.  Added the ball and chain.  Tied the knot.

Essentially, I formalized the best decision I ever made.

While I had been in relationships before meeting my wife, the 13th of January 1998 proved to be the day that changed everything.  I’m not the most sentimental of folk, but that day made me a believer in some of the more off-the-wall contrivances of romance.

I knew immediately that I had met the perfect woman for me, and that I would spend the rest of my life with her.  It was love at first sight.  (My wife was apparently on daylight savings, as it took her about an hour to determine the same for me.)

We haven’t had the easiest of marriages (cancer, career issues, a back injury and the difficult delivery of our goofy and wonderful child have seen to that), but our marriage has been the one constant that I know I have relied on for some semblance of normality at the end of the day.

I definitely got lucky in finding the perfect partner for the rest of my journey, and hopefully she feels the same.

For ten years now, I’ve had the joy of being able to spend time with a beautiful, smart, funny, (thankfully) goofy, and sexy woman.

I got the better part of the deal.  I got my wife: a fine combination of Nora Charles, CJ Cregg, Princess Leia, Alex Guarnaschelli and Mikel Dayan.  My wife got…  Fred Flintstone with more back hair.

No matter what, I am definitely better off having shared my life with my wife these ten (plus) years, and I am thankful and lucky to having her with me as life continues.

I certainly don’t think things would have turned out as well for me had I chosen a different door…  And I’m really glad I didn’t.

These really have been the best years of my life, and I have my wife to thank for it.

Happy Anniversary, Sweetie…  I love you.

I woke up this morning from another migraine-induced dream, but for once, I was all to happy to have had the dream.

If you are new to this blog, or aren’t familiar with migraines, permit me this explanation.  Migraines are not just bad headaches, but small seizures of the brain (and when particularly bad, the CNS) that render the brain somewhat useless.  The brain gets rewired for the duration of the attack, jumbling the brain much like tipping over a file cabinet and putting the files back in a different order.  Everything gets affected in varying degrees, from basic language, to factual information, and even emotions (although this occurs to a far lesser extent).  This is why if you ever spend time with someone while they are suffering from a migraine, you hear them interject words that don’t work with the frame of the conversation or drop words altogether.  (This is how the word “refrigerator” became such a buzz word in my family.)

I digress.

When these changes to the brain happen while you are sleeping, dreams become the canvas of temporary insanity.  Imagine jumbling frames from the films of Kurosawa, Bergman, Tarantino, and throwing in a few frames of Sesame Street (or worse: Telleytubbies).  The dreams are usually vivid, intense, and very surreal.

However, for once, the dream was one I’d have over and over, if I could.

The dream was a mishmash of emotions and memories from various points in my life, and I could not begin to tell you why those memories were chosen.  The setting was my room about the time I was in high school, in the late 1980s.  The premise was that I was expecting someone to come over so that I could teach them to use MS Word.  (This makes sense, as computers were one thing I had a knack for, and I was often asked to show people how to do stuff in Word when they were only familiar with WordPerfect.  In fact, I have helped my wife with this to this day.)

The second component of the dream is a little odd.  As it turned out, the friend was my wife.  However, where physically she was like she was when we first met, mentally she was as she is today after our having been together for so long.  (This is what was somewhat confusing in retrospect: I was with my wife at two different time of her life.  Basically her brain from now was in her body from when we met.  If I tell you she was like Kitty in the X-Men story “Days of Future Past,” it will both help explain the situation to you, and expose my inherent geekiness.)

The third component was the one I enjoyed so much: the emotional component.  The emotions I felt when I was with my wife in the dream were a combination of the emotions I experienced from various points in our relationship: the odd combination of fear, excitement, and anxiety of the moment we met, the joy felt during each reunion during the time we would see each other on weekends while I finished college, and the warmth, happiness, and contentment I feel when I am with my wife today.  It was a heady, intense cocktail of emotions to feel all at once, but one I was happy to experience, even though it meant waking up in intense pain from the migraine.

I’m sure all of this seems silly and over the top, but it was nice to have a migraine induced dream that made me feel good before making me feel like crap… if you understand my meaning.

One thing it did was also confirm what I already knew: I married well.  Not in the sense that I married someone who makes my life easier, but in the sense that I found someone who is the perfect yin to my yang.  Or, if it’s an easier analogy, she (and lord help me for being reduced to making this quote) “completes” me.  We’re coming up on our tenth anniversary, having been together for eleven years now, and of all of the major decisions I’ve made over my lifetime, marrying my wife is the best one I’ve made.

The migraine last night gave me a nice, early anniversary present, allowing me to experience all of the emotion from one of the best days of my life, the day my wife said “yes.”

And the day I got my Dream Girl.

Another one of those multi-topic posts of whatever I’ve had on the brain of late.  Starting with:

  • Apparently, not long after leaving office while giving a business address in Canada, former President Bush announced he would soon begin an international speaking tour.  Like his town hall meetings, the audience is to be preselected to his skills as an orator.  Bush hopes to be able to open for Raffi at least ten times this year.
  • Alton Brown recently sat for a series of video interviews on the food blog Serious Eats.  The best is the description of some fried chicken he had during the motorcycle tour broadcast on Feasting on Asphalt.
  • It amazes me that in today’s economy, where auto companies are severing ties with dealers (and not allowing said dealers to return the cars to the manufacturers) and nearly every industry is downsizing, that this online dealer remains in business.  After all, it’s hard to slum it in a $150 sundress.
  • Caught a few minutes of a cooking show on American Life TV (yes – before a rerun of M:I) where one ingredient was referred to as Graham Masilla.  Ah, the wonders of diversity.
  • A new football league is starting up.  No, not the UFL…  The LFL – the Lingerie Football League.  I’m guessing this is Victoria’s Secret.  (This, or that lingerie models stink in a 3-4 defensive formation.)
  • Saw Star Trek with the wife.  Holy crap what a great movie!
  • And finally, I’ve succumbed.  I’ve been borgified.  I’ve started a Twitter account.  Weep for me.

The family’s been sick for weeks now, with some head and chest cold that just will not die.  When you’ve been sick for so long it’s nice to have a real comfort meal, and today I finally got mine: a salad of fresh, organic radishes, radish greens, olive oil, and chunks of bleu cheese.  Nummy!

I say “subjective” because when I eat this, I cannot be in the same room as the wife.  She calls any variety of bleu cheese “foot cheese.”  S’okay – I’m still not used to the pate she prefers…

I’d have more to say if I weren’t tapping this in from the mobile…

My gut is screaming at me not to ignore Arizona.

I’m married to a woman whose family is from Pittsburgh.

My choice is clear: Bud Light.

Sigh… Alright… Steelers, 24-23. (MVP Could be Fitzgerald either way, but it’ll probably go to Roethlisburger.)

More tomorrow, including why I feel like Arizona has a chance.

Later…

Btw – congrats to new parents D&A!

Hi all,

First and foremost, let me give thanks for my wife who has done so much more than necessary this past year since the problems with my back and leg surfaced.  I also want to thank my daughter for being her usual Squirmese self.  Thanks also to my mom who has her own health problems, but has done well for herself in light of our inability to be more than emotional support of late.  I also thank my mother-in-law who has rolled well with all of the screwy changes to scheduling due to these health issues.

I also need to thank my boss and co-workers at the store for pitching in and covering me while I was out, and for letting me keep the job considering the screwy economy.
Thanks to Anthony for providing a nice, mindless, but fun wager on football to give me something else to focus on.

Thanks to the people that voted for the democratic ticket for showing that Hope has…  Hope.
Now, on to less serious things to be thankful for this year:

  • Sarah Palin, for providing the first presidential election spoiler in years not named Ralph Nader.
  • Ed Brubaker, for the best continuing story in comics in years, The Death of Captain America.
  • Jon Favreau and Robert Downey Jr, for the best movie of the year, Iron Man.
  • Flight of the Conchords, for the best audio release of the year, the soundtrack to their TV Show.
  • Elizabeth Massie, for her usual great job on an established mythos, with her story Corazon de Oro, from Tales of Zorro.  (Can’t wait for her story for The Phantom: The Ghost Who Walks.
  • M*A*S*H and Mission: Impossible reruns, for my anytime viewing while I’ve been recovering.
  • NCIS and Chuck, for being the best shows on broadcast television.

I can’t think of anything else at this point, but I’m certain I covered both the important and the not-so-important.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone…  Enjoy your tryptophan!

I just want to take another moment to thank my wife again for everything she’s done while I’ve been completely useless and dealing with my back recovery. She has had to adapt and deal with so much these past few months, and she continues to do more than she deserves. I genuinely look forward to being able to help out and give her the much needed break she deserves.

Thank you, Love. For everything.

Happy Anniversary to my beautiful wife, who I met in 1997, and wed in 1999.

Needless to say, she’s the best thing to ever happen to me.

Well… Except for Squirmese!

Happy Anniversary, Sweetheart. I love you!