Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Ep. 44: Late is not better than never

December 17, 2013

This is too weird. Only a few weeks after the tragic derailment on my line, the Hudson Line, the morning train to Grand Central has become arriving early.

Normally, one might rejoice. However, since it usually arrived slightly late, I could briskly walk down the hill and always have a couple of minutes to decompress before I stepped onto the train and settled into my seat.

Now, the train arrives 1-2 minutes early, rather than late, so that it sits in the station for a couple of minutes, but leaves exactly at 7:30.

Today, I made barely-barely made it. As the tell-tale beep and flashing lights went on, I literally yelled "Hold the train!" to the conductor who had signaled all was clear to shut the doors.

It would have been the third time in less than a week that I missed the train as I was coming down the pedestrian stairs from the bridge that runs above the tracks.

Missing the train would have meant having to wait another twenty-five minutes, putting me into the office almost half an hour later.

So, in my case, three times is not a charm; and it is not better to be late than never.

Usually, I've got a little leverage and no one is watching when I unlock my office door. However, my boss and I are neighbors now. Last Friday, in perfect coordination with my train misses, she moved into the office right next to mine. Alas, she not only does she get in half an hour earlier than I do, but she lives along the same train line as well and has a few kids of her own. Meaning, while I've gained some parental empathy, there's even less room for excuses.

When she took over our team six months ago, she began booking early morning team meetings. Ugh. It gave me just a few minutes to turn on the lights and my computer, check to see what room it was in and grab a pen and pad of paper.

This completely threw off one of my colleagues, Liz Lemon, who for the last two years arrived an hour later. Single and free, and living in the city, she could stay late to finish work, sleep in and then leisurely roll out of bed to walk her dog the next morning. Not any more.

Our old boss was very matter-of-factual and albeit always punctual, each of us had built a hard-earned rapport with her, so that we weren't as self-conscious about our arrival times as we are nowadays.

The old boss came in from Connecticut each day, a two-and-a-half hour commute each way! So although she got up a lot earlier than I, we were at the office almost at the same time. Since she had a train to catch, she also always left earlier than me too. And although her office was right next door to Liz, they had an understanding based on 6 or 7 years of working together.

Starting all over with the new boss has been a bit of a rocky journey. She has a very different approach, which is more hands-off and managerial; as opposed to the old boss who was well-versed in our profession and our procedures.

Nonetheless and allthemore, although it feels like we're beginning to level off of the steep learning curve in the office, I've still got to adjust to this new train schedule. I've simply got to get out of the house a few minutes earlier and let go of my impulse to help with crying babies who need a bottle or their diapers changed. This is particularly true since we just had snow and the temperature has been holding below freezing, which means that although the roads are salted, the sidewalks are often still frozen with thin sheets of ice. I was cruelly reminded last night when I body slammed into the pavement as I was ten feet away from our back door. Luckily, for my neighbors this compelled me to spend the next hour breaking ice and salting the sidewalk.

So apart from the anxiety caused by almost missing the train for the third time and a sore elbow from the fall, at least it was a fairly smooth walk to the station this morning.


(The sidewalks are clean and salted about Dominguez Manor this morning)

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Ep 43: Better Tidings

I truly wish I had better tidings to bring. But simply for the daily record, I'm posting a few photos, but have little to say lest my musings be wrought with worry and exasperation.





Thursday, August 15, 2013

Ep 42: Forget me-knots

Yesterday, I giddily cleaned out my handy-dandy laptop attaché. I get a certain visceral satisfaction out of keeping things clean and orderly. Organizing and then reorganizing to squeeze out a little more efficiency of my work or daily routine simply makes me tingle.

Except when I forget to refill.

There are a few items I must have in my bag every morning before I walk out the back door. Emphasis is on "few," because unlike most women I know, who simply add a bag to their daily luggage when they can't find something in the land of the lost, i.e. their very own portable black hole-slash-time machine where everything is thrown and lost to frazzled moments in everyday history and the unsolved mysteries that their men are usually to blame for "Well, you wouldn't have to wait if you remembered where you put my hair brush."

Like I was saying, unlike others, the few items I port each day are essential to my daily routine: my company dog tags (ID), my wallet with just credit cards, license, and train pass (no three year old receipts or coupons for "25% off your next purchase at Ann Taylor"), my round-robin of keys, a pen or two, my iPhone, a pack of gum, a mini-umbrella (only if the forecast suggests one ) and some tissue.

Alas, I forgot to refill on the tissue last night. Granted, I don't need them every morning, but on occasion I will have, presumably, allergy-prompted sinus build-up that requires draining. Without my usually dependable store of Kleenex or Starbucks napkins though - I'm screwed.

The train seats are simply too close for comfort to desperately rely on shirt sleeves, the loose ends of crusty old used tissues or a stiff page from the PowerPoint presentation I printed out to review during the commute home; it's too uncouth and embarrassing to execute, which usually means I have to resort to those annoying sniffles that get stronger as we get closer to our final destination because you've got to put the vacuum in reverse and then simply swallow or store the build-up. Ugh, simply not a pretty process.

Oh, but don't worry, I'll spare you the slimy details of the expulsion, because this little diddy actually has a happy ending.

Once seated and right after we picked up the overweight Indian dude at Cortlandt Station who apologetically wanted to squeeze into the seat next to me, so that his big ass and arm would overhang into my space the rest of the ride (sorry, apologies not accepted), I remembered.

I remembered that indeed I had remembered to refill. Except I hadn't replenished with one of those compact drug store packages, nor did I replace with a scrunch of coffeehouse brown tearsheets.

Rather, to my pleasant surprise, as I assessed what were my essential items while composing this lament-cum-exhortation, I found the almost-done roll of toilet paper in the side powercord-charger pocket of my bag. Hallelujah!

And so it is. It pays to be routinely organized, because than you're on rote-control, so that if you forget you actually probably really haven't forgotten, but just forgot whether you did or not.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Ep. 41: This, Our Daily Bread



Olivia Luz, our little princess was born two weeks ago tomorrow.
She is merely one of my many daily blessings.

Lately, almost all of my one hour of "free" time has been spent playing semi-mindless WWF during my daily commute to work.

I'd word-whittle my time away on the return trip too, but these days I'm almost always the guy with a little drool sliding down the side of my snore-hole.

The first true love of my life, writing, has had to take a back seat to juggling two babies, a manor-of-a-home, a happy marriage, a blended family made of rambunctious boys, and my evolving 9-to-5 (i.e., there is no such thing as job security anymore, adapt to the culture of "constant improvement" and reorgs, or - be ready to fill that cardboard box).

I'm writing now because this catharsis is long overdue. No complaints apart from the fact that I don't have time to pen my thoughts, share my observations and express my appreciation for all the wonderful little things that fulfill my days.

As I told Margarita yesterday whilst shoveling in my last scoop of her heavenly Posole, "As veces, estoy en la oficina y me pregunto 'Porque estoy aquí?' Entonces regreso a casa, a mi familia y cenas maravillosas como esta-y recuerdo."

"Sometimes, I'm in the office and I ask myself 'Why am I here?' Then I return to my home and family, and wonderful meals like this and I remember."





Monday, July 1, 2013

Ep. 40: Eureka all over again

Milo and I went for a walk around the block early Saturday morning, while the whole hood seemed to still be in bed. During our stroll he reminded me of an invaluable lesson: less is more.

It is a lesson I've been learning all my life, one which I must be reminded of all too often.

For I've learned that much of the stress and anxiety we contend with in life is simply a consequence of pursuing more and ending up with less.

At first glance, our routine struggles may seem purely in the name of something better, when most often we are merely maintaining the status quo.

However, if we dig beneath the surface often you'll find a disconnect between our pursuit of luxury and a basic foundation for happiness.

Most of us have far more than we really need to be happy. Much of our limited time is wasted either simply storing stuff for nothing, never to be used again, or in the vacuous pursuit of being entertained; when with very little effort we can either entertain ourselves, or better yet, each other.

That's what Milo reminded me of when we took our little stroll about the block. Every walkway was a detour; every driveway was a beginning to a new adventure.

The treasures we found along the way were precious, the value of each piece punctuated with a genuine quizzical inspection and a declaration of pure elation and discovery, as if every infantile "Unh!" was Eureka all over again.

Our trove was priceless and included a flower, one dead and shriveled-up worm, un palito, three rocks, a Popsicle stick, a loose wad of dried grass and a whole lot of curiosity and appreciation for the little things.


Thursday, June 6, 2013

Ep. 39: Fodder for a novel

(Sigh)

Oh my gosh.

Ugh.

These have been some of most truly trying and stressful weeks of my life.

Hence, the Peekskill Commuter's prolonged and pronounced absence.

'Nough said. Someday over that rainbow I will have to write a novel.

Life is never dull.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Ep 38: Vale la Pena

Thursday, May 22

Tonight, the train was a conduit to a mass exodus of tourists and New Yorkers heading north for the long weekend. Rather than having to endure the dreaded traffic of tomorrow many seemingly had smartly chosen to leave early, lugging their luggage and babies along with them.

In a way, by living in Peekskill I feel like I'm on permanent vacation.

Well, sort of. I still have to get up early every morning to either go to work or get Milo; I still have to work for a living; and I still don't feel like we're completely settled in enough, to relax and feel like there is something on the long list of house repairs (we desperately need a new attic fan) or seasonal changes (30+ window screens) that I should be working on otherwise.

We're getting there though.

Initially, I had figured the end of May, but that's a week away and there's at least a summer's worth of changes that need to be made.

I'd try to do them late at night, but after taking care of Milo for an hour, dinner, a bath and a little prep for the next day, I'm kaput.

Plus, by Thursday morn I'm ready for the weekend.

Wednesdays are not merely hump days for me they are literally ones where I must go over a mountain.

Yesterday began at six AM when I drove into the city to barely beat the traffic. It only took a little over an hour, as opposed to the three hours it took last week when I left at 6:45.

Then, after work, I drive an hour into to Bloomfield to have dinner with the Boys; except this time Enzo had a middle school spring concert that began at 7 and after 7th grade orchestra, girl's chorus, boy's chorus and then band; you had the four equivalents for 8th grade. Ugh. Over the two hours Enzo only performed in one of those eight sessions.

When it finally ended at nine, I took the boys over to Subway for some sandwiches.

At 9:35 I was on the road again.

After stopping for gas, then a large espresso at the first Dunkin' off the Parkway, I went over Bear Mountain and finally arrived home around 10:30.

I was pooped even after the triple shot of caffeine, not only because of the long haul through this weekly journey around the world and back, but also because the last stretch of the journey, right after crossing the Bear Mountain Bridge, is Route 202, an ugly and utterly treacherous and twisting 4-mile trek in the dark along a cliff. I swear traversing this road is solely responsible for taking a day of my life away each week.

Nonetheless and allthemore, I do it, if only because I love my kids and need to endure despite the imminent danger and subsequent duress.

In Spanish we would say, "Vale la pena" - it's simply worth it, regardless of the pain and trouble.

(UPDATE: I was wrong, all these extra passengers are due to the West Point graduation happening this weekend. Just overheard two guys from down south chatting and chumming over their common destination up and right across the river from Peekskill.)

Photo Caption: Each trek along this 4 mile stretch each week takes a day off my life

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Ep 37: The Son Also Worries

Mom's texted photo of her giant showboat cocktail, 
evidence that she would be even less anxious to get to a shelter, 
did not reassure me.



Tuesday, May 21

Milo continues to teeth, so I was up at 2:45 for an hour trying to sooth him. Poor Chelsea had to leave at 4 for work this morning, so she barely got five hours of sleep, if that, considering Olivia has been kicking and hiccuping a lot more lately.

When I arrived to the track around 7:45 there was barely a soul, maybe half a dozen, waiting on the platform. This was in stark contrast to the 7:32, which always has dozens upon dozens already waiting by 7:20 or so.

At 7:50 the droves descended upon the surrounding parking lots and the drones finally filed in. The mass entry was like a refugee scene from an apocalypse or pandemic film; or rather, more like a zombie movie.

The rush of the AC helped mute the distant chatting of three women at the front of the car, so the ride was fairly tranquil. With the haze of a hot day in the making hanging over the Hudson, the ride in was also uneventful - no derailings, no tornados.

Alas, looming disaster is not too far away considering Mom is on vacation in Branson, Missouri this week. The weather channel warns "Tornado Risk Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri," with severe thunderstorms likely to hit this area on Wednesday.

At first chance I texted Mom and asked her to find the nearest shelter. She informed me that she was on a show boat on the Swanee River somewhere.

I promptly replied, "Please stay safe Mom. I know showboats don't have shelters. Remember, The Wizard of Oz was just a movie, and Dorothy was simply dreaming, whereas tornados are all too real."

She reassured me that after the show she was going straight back to her condo at the timeshare complex and that she now knows where the shelter is.

Hmmm, her casual, unconcerned reply was not that helpful. I still worried and wondered if she would actually make the effort to go to the shelter at the first sign of a twister.

Ugh, oh the worries of a doting son.


Monday, May 20, 2013

Ep 36: Tranquilo, Lorenzo


Maybe, YOU need to take a chill pill Pops!

Monday, May 20

It was a tough morning on the train.

The woman sitting next to me was a nervous wreck. She kept fidgeting and fiddling with all her toys including a laptop which she could not get to connect to the ether; an iPhone in a sequined case; a reading tablet; a green leather laptop bag; a fancy patent white leather handbag, and her eye glasses.

She kept shifting and adjusting and waiting for something to happen throughout the ride. 

Dyed platinum blonde with a black leather motorcycle jacket, she looked like she was in her early fifties, desperately clinging to the first half of her life by throttling anxiously forward, attempting to make meaning through meaningless busy work.

It was hard to ignore her. Unlike most  of our fellow passengers, who were either sleeping, quietly reading or simply pondering the day ahead, this hot potato was constantly moving, but seemingly accomplishing little. Ugh.

After the first couple of minutes of her spasms I wanted to tell her, "You sure are nervous," but decided it would probably make things worse or, at minimum, make things awkward for the next hour.

As we rolled into the mile-long tunnel into Grand Central she got ready to jump out of her seat. Poised, her knees began bouncing her bags and things as she tried to sit still, anxiously wondering when I would move out of my seat, so she could pass me.

Blondie sat up stiff and straight in her seat and was like a sentinel scrutinizing each person that was ahead of us, calculating and mentally pushing the lit elevator button. I could almost hear her mind pushing, "Come on everybody, move."

Meanwhile, I sat still and steady through the ride and slow inching into the station. The only things moving for me were my thumb composing this post and my eyes shifting occasionally to my left to catch a glimpse of what this lady was doing now.

A few minutes later, while I was walking down Park, a barely twenty-something version of Nelly stepped up to the curb next to me.

Taking the green light, she strode ahead of me and I noticed she wore practically the same exact outfit as the thorn who was at my side just ten minutes earlier: a short leather jacket, a cotton tee that hung past the dangling waist straps of her jacket and lithely covered her ass, tight black jeans, and the same ankle high leather boots. It was probably the same outfit that they both saw in last month's edition of whatever-fashion-magazine this girl was carrying. 


The only difference were the models and how they wore their retro 80s outfit: the one without crow feet was a natural brunette, who wore her hair up in a sloppy  bun and her boots untied, with tongue and laces dangling wild and free; her jacket was also unzipped and she seemed genuinely unconcerned about anything.

Perhaps, there is no good and positive or valid point with my scathing observation. All I really know was that I was annoyed, and writing about her simply makes me feel some sort of visceral redemption.

Perhaps, it is really I who needs to take a chill pill. 


Tranquilo, Lorenzo



Friday, May 17, 2013

Ep. 35: The man who has everything, has Nothing to complain about

At least, I have Milo - who makes me smile every time he calls me "Papa"

Friday, May 17

I woke up this morning hoping it was Saturday. Alas, or rather, thank God, it's Friday. I'm confused.

By 6:40 the haze had lifted and I was in the shower scrubbing, soaking, simply trying to wash away my earlier disappointment, so that I may readily embrace responsibility.

As I've told my colleagues a couple of times this week, I may be disappointed by how my work morphs into a homogeneous blah of boringness after all the edits, rewrites and approvals, but, at least, I have a job, and moreover, it's a job I love to do.

So, at least, I have a warm bed to pull away from; at least, I have a beautiful home, Dominguez Manor ; ), which I can home to and call my own; at least, I have a great bunch of boys that I am looking forward to playing basketball and watching Iron Man III with this weekend; at least, I have a little baby boy who looks up to me, scoots to meet me upon my return home and makes me smile with every garbled "Papa"; at least, I have a beautiful wife who I am deeply in love with and who is carrying our little princess, Olivia; at least, the sun still shines every morning I have to get out of bed to go to work.

At least, I'm alive and well and can write, because I love to write.

Okay, I feel better now.

Caffeine is kicking in, the two guys incessantly chatting about their boring lives have faded with the focus upon this composition, and we're almost at Grand Central Station, spoke-and-hub for the greatest city in the world.

I have really have nothing to complain about.


At least, I have this gorgeous view on my commute home



Thursday, May 16, 2013

Ep 34: Splurge a little; purge a lot

Sometimes, you've just got to splurge to purge.

Thursday, May 16

Once, maybe twice, a week I relent my quest for purity and get a Goose Island Honker's Ale before boarding the 5:32 train home.

It is a small indulgence that eases me into the ride northward bound, one that costs me a little less than four bills and a willingness to concede to a catnap if I have to.

That said, for the last 34 years I've often beat myself up over the long term costs of this, mostly, innocuous inebriation.

Beleaguered by the guilt of not being more willing and able to give up this poison for a longer, healthier life, I simply mediate with binges of abstinence. The usual attempt at detoxification lasts no longer than three days; most of the time these desperate measures are the result of a bout with a stomach virus, food poisoning or a very rare hangover.

Alas, on average, every couple of years I must endure these nights of terror; of bone-gnawing chills, body aches, gut-wrenching, and incessant expulsion of bodily fluids, all usually coupled by a few hours of fever, than a flood of perspiration.

Hence the vows of "never again" and over-confident pledges of purity. Needless to say, this renewed commitment does not last very long.

I think I know why.

Sipping the last quarter of my beer as we rolled past Morris Heights my contemplation led to the same elucidation that compels me to jump off the wagon over and over again.

Life would simply be too frickin boring and intolerable if it were all about always doing what is seemingly best for you.

Because it is not always best for you.

An occasional indulgence in what's bad for you, can be good for you in the long run. The benefits run the gamut of stress relief, loss of inhibition, expression of emotion, a willingness to talk with strangers, self-satisfaction, unfettered glee, genuine happiness and the compulsion to live and enjoy the moment.

Granted, drugs and alcohol and other vices are not prerequisites for experiencing this menu of benefits, but they sure as hell often help. Especially if you're a stressed out father four-cum-five, corporate drone, manor-owner, hour-long commuter, middle-aged, only somewhat-accomplished and always-yearning to-accomplish-more guy like me.

So go ahead, indulge. I'm giving you permission - live a little , as they say. You just don't know when it will all catch up to you. So, you might as well enjoy it while you can.




Monday, May 13, 2013

Ep 33: The Merry Mexican; we must all bow before the light


Who came first? Our culture o Cantinflas?

Monday, May 13

Last night, for our Mother's Day dinner, we sat below a large portrait of "Cantinflas", Mexico's all-time greatest comedian.

Film star of the forties, fifties and sixties, he is a legend through most of Latin America. His filmography spans six decades, from 1936 until 1982.

As I was trying to explain to Sidney, he is as funny as Jim Carrey and Will Ferril combined. In truth, his genius is more like a combination of Jerry Lewis's antics, Robin William's wit, the verbal dexterity of Matt Damon, and the linguistic innovation of Shakespeare. Charlie Chaplin once commented that he was the best comedian alive.

His unique manner of talking is known as Cantinflada and during his heyday it was not uncommon for Spanish speakers to say "¡Estás cantiflando!" whenever someone became hard to understand in conversation. La Real Academia Española officially included the verb, cantinflear, cantinflas y cantinflada in its dictionary in 1992.

Born Mario Alfonso Fortino Moreno Reyes in 1911 in Mexico City, Cantinflas was a champion of the working class and impoverished both on and off the screen thorough his political and charitable deeds. His talent and good deeds ultimately made him a folk hero throughout Mexico and for several generations.

In 1993, after his death from lung cancer, thousands appeared on the rainy day for his funeral in Mexico City. The ceremony was a national event, lasting three days. In the US, he is honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

In essence, as I ate my chile rellono smothered in mole, I realized that Cantinflas is the epitome of "The Merry Mexican," who accepts the harshness of life with a grain of salt, adds a squeeze of limón y chile to make it flavorful and is more than happy to laugh at himself, especially if he can simultaneously make fun of others who take themselves too seriously.

The epiphany got me wondering, "Who came first? Cantinflas or our cultural reputation for eternal cheerfulness?"

I'm apt to believe that Mr. Moreno merely embodied and projected the gnawed-up apple core of our culture; much like Vicente "Chente" Fernandez, Mexico's greatest living singer has interpreted the sappier side of how we handle life and it's endless bounty of little glories and it's occasional gush of lovelorn tragedy.

I also like to think that in my own small and somewhat-humble way, I too manifest my heritage with my optimism in spite of other's obstacles; a youthful wit that admittedly lies dormant beneath 14 years of angst-ridden and impatient parenting; the counter-corporate funny fotos of my family that I have hanging in my office; and my humility in the light of life...

...for, in the end, we must all bow before the light.


Some of the counter-corporate fotos of my family
that I have up in my office that show that
I am indeed a merry Mexican...













Friday, May 10, 2013

Ep 32: Running down Requa; the wrong side of the mountain


God bless America! We're slated to hit 77 in NYC today.

Friday, May 10

Running down Requa I caught a glimpse of the majestic mist hanging over the Hudson.

I wanted to soak it in, but I was running, late for the train.

My lament lasted only a few minutes because five minutes after our first stop the entire river was swallowed up by a magical blanket of fog and for a moment it felt like we were either on a vintage amusement park ride or in some scene from the Shanghai Express.

Alas, there was no Marlene nor any exciting episodes with Chinese warlords, and the thrill promptly ended once we rolled into Croton-Harmon.

Speaking too soon, we slipped back under cover as soon as we left the last stop before Grand Central and the dissipating heat of flanking thoroughfares fueled by exhaust and anxiety.

The beauty of the blur lasted for many miles, past the veiled prison-town of Ossining (i.e. home to Sing Sing), past the legendary Sleepy Hollow and its headless henchman, and past the Governor Malcolm Wilson Tappan Zee Bridge*, until we came into the clear between the Palisades and Croton-on-the-Hudson.

Once we sunk into the Bronx and then Harlem all hope was lost; the swaths of red brick and pale concrete reminded me that my joy ride was over.

Back to work, back to worrying about mediating teenage angst and self-interest with parental duty and the bigger picture; back to banging my head against the wall of ex-spousal indifferences; back to the aggravating concern of absent-minded and perilous childcare; back to being the stripped screw at the office; back to being a greying grown-up at the top of the mountain of my life.

The view into nothingness looked good until it cleared; perhaps I'm looking down the wrong side of the mountain.


*Spanning almost three miles it is the longest bridge in the state of New York. It was named for an American Indian tribe from the area called "Tappan"; and zee being the Dutch word for "sea".




It is right to give thanks and praise to pace of the snail;
seen running with me down Requa




Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Ep 31: Outta Commission ['cause Life is Never Dull]


Every boys' home should have a basketball court.

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

The Peekskill Commuter has been quite out of commission lately. With all that's swirling about in my noggin and all the calls to duty, there's virtually no space or time or place to conveniently compose these posts.

Life has been occupied by one task after another: assemble this compost box; now create a basketball court for the boys; pick up and move a 200 lb antique desk dresser into the house by yourself; move all of the furniture out of Dominic's bedroom, for the fourth time in a month, by yourself, so we can paint; take care of the baby; refurbish and refinish another antique armoir; take five minutes to eat some cold ribs, cheese and a beer; buy and set up a bifurcate faucet and garden hose system, so we don't have to drag the 100 foot hose back and forth across the flower bed every night...


A real man's lunch: cold ribs, cheese and beer.

And that's just a sample of the work that's waiting for me a home; don't get me started on the mountains they've got me moving back at the office. Ugh!

As a colleague commented yesterday after I told her about my latest childcare conundrum, "Life is never dull...[for the Peekskill Commuter]."

At least I've got that going for me. : )

PK

Turning another man's tarnished junk, into my treasure.




Friday, May 3, 2013

Ep 30: More like hour by hour



Friday, May 3

Here it is, Friday again.

For me, the realization is not the celebratory TGIF that it used to be.

Rather, it's the scary acknowledgment that yet another week has passed.

More than ever, I fully understand why old people often say "Enjoy them [the kids] while you can..." or simply "Time flies," because before you know it...you're dead. (See Ep. 11, Don't Blink!, April 3, 2013)

I used to believe that a positive twist on the inevitable - time does fly, but don't forget you're the pilot - could counter the disconcerting loss of control.

Alas, no longer. Now, at times, it simply feels that will power and the power of positive thinking are powerless against fate.

I am busier, and relatively happier, than ever, but sometimes it feels like I'm Bill Murray in Groundhog Day - I wake up, make coffee and Milo a bottle, take a shower, get dressed, kiss my beautiful wife goodbye, triple check that I have everything I need, run down Requa, and hop on the train. And before I know it I'm waking up at six AM to do it all over again.

This morning a conversation with a colleague who lives one stop north in Garrison, intervened.

We talked about art fairs and fishing licenses and secret keys that opened the gates to virtually private lakes. I responded that such leisures and pleasures might have to wait another season, because after two months I felt I was still busy moving into our new house.

She responded with an understanding smile, "Well I guess you've just got to take it day by day."

"More like hour by hour," I replied, with a tired chuckle.

I'm 45 and if I'm lucky I'll live twice long, it only seems that the next half of the journey will go twice as fast.

Guess, I better buckle that seatbelt.



Monday, April 29, 2013

Ep 29: What goes around, comes around

Monday, April 29

On Saturday morning at 4 a.m.,I woke to the sound of Milo crying. I dragged myself into the nursery, fully expecting to cuddle and carry him around for a few minutes and then put him back down to sleep, shortly thereafter.

However, when I pressed him against my chest, he was soaking wet and there was a funny smell, not readily identified as poop.

Being that I had thought this would be a routine soothing, I had left my eyeglasses on my dresser, and blindly made my way to the baby in the dark.

After placing Milo on the changing table and inspecting his diaper, which actually seemed fairly dry, I realized that something was truly amiss.

With one hand on the baby, I leaned toward the crib and made a manual inspection - his sheets were all wet and squinting I could see something dark and chunky in the middle. Finally, I realized I had no choice but to turn on the light.

There was vomit everywhere, on the sheets, on his PJs, in his hair.

Milo, as usual, was handling all the trauma quite well. I picked him up and took him to take a shower.

While we were cleaning up, Chelsea came to inspect what was going on. After we dried off the baby and dressed him again, we put him in bed with us.

Of course, he threw up again. Ugh.

My immediate thoughts were that we had overfed him.

Earlier that evening we had chosen to eat out instead of at home, because our dining room was filled with furniture from the adjoining living room and parlor, while the recently refinished floors dried.

I had also been eager to try some of the local restaurants in Peekskill and our neighboring townships too .

Using Yelp, we chose to try Taormina, a shabby chic nouveau Italian joint, that at first, and second, glance, looked like the kind of place where the working class go to have a nice dinner.

I was immediately impressed by their martini - dry, with just a hint of vermouth; filled to the rim. And most importantly, the food was good too - butternut ravioli , chicken martini and chicken napolitano.

Despite the discovery of a piece of plastic in Chelsea's dish, I would give this place high ratings.

If anything the only low marks for the evening were against me and my lack if restraint. I vividly recall the frenzy I was feeling that led me to over indulge when dessert was served:

"Adela do you mind if I try some of your lava cake ?"

"Um, baby are you done with your carrot cake?" [That would go well with the vanilla ice cream...Hmmm, should I finish my cannoli...?]

All the while, I was so entranced that I was compelled to share tiny bits and pieces with Milo, even though he had eaten plenty already.

Ironically, I had filed a story at work earlier that afternoon about the obesity epidemic occurring across this country. Three fourths, 3 out of 4, of all adults are overweight - half of those are considered obese. The stats are sadly similar for children. As a result, children born today are very likely to live shorter lives than both their parents and grandparents.

Ugh, hence my eventual guilt over this mess.

Nonetheless, I'm not too worried because we are blessed to have Adela cook for us - she prepares fairly healthy meals in small portions.

Well, that was Friday.

As per the awful smell of his diaper my wife, Dr. Chelsea, suspected it was actually a virus with some fancy name that she liked repeating all weekend long.

Alas, the virus did not like her and poor Chelsea - : ( - had to contend with it last night while working overnight at the hospital.

She called me this morning from the ER, where they were giving her fluids via IV. She said the room where she tried to sleep in last night looks like a war zone. As awful as I feel for my 5 month pregnant wife, I'm sure glad I don't have to clean up that mess...

Since Milo woke up at three and would not go back to sleep until I put him in bed with me half an hour later, assuredly none of us would have slept if Chelsea was home.

Nonetheless and allthemore, my baby mama says she's feeling better now.

Unfortunately, as Adela said this morning with a slight chuckle of fear and resignation, "I guess we're next..."

Ugh.

Friday, April 26, 2013

Ep 28: Strangers on a train (To know a man, is to like the man)


“Did you mean what you said Baracky?”*

Friday, April 26

Being super-conscious of my surroundings I am constantly berating myself for how immediately judgmental I can be. 

To a certain extent, in the writer mode, I am merely observing and drawing conclusions based on both what I perceive as universal and extraordinary human behavior. 

However, sometimes I feel that there is a fine line between generalizing for literary sake and judging a book by its cover.

Being judgmental, to me, essentially  means that I see a stranger and immediately draw a conclusion about them based solely on a mere glance at their looks, words or behavior and, what I believe to be, a glean into their character.

The problem with these conclusions is that I know very well that the little puzzles I put together are assembled with the tenuous glue of prejudice and a whole lot of missing pieces.

For example, a couple of women boarded the train this morning and sat in the aisle across from me. Both were obese, had big black wet-looking hair, were wearing jeans and black tops, and began to chat loudly with each other as soon as they sat down, even though they had to sit a row apart. My immediate thoughts were "working class," thoughts that were admittedly tainted with a tint of disdain. 

The truth is I know a lot of great blue collar folk that I love and adore, including a lot of my family. My father is a working class man who came to this country almost fifty years ago with little in his pocket but an earnest drive to earn a living. As many successful second generation people will tell you, this is what endowed us with our own great work ethic, humility and integrity. More importantly, it is our parents' blood, sweat and toil at menial jobs that provided us with the opportunities and resources to succeed as professionals. 

Thus, I know that simply because you wear a white collar to work and you likely have paid a lot of money to be "educated" beyond high school, that this not inherently make you a better person by any means.

In fact, one might argue the opposite.

Much of the time what makes you a good and interesting person is not what you do for a living, but rather how you interact and are perceived by others. This cannot be inferred through looks alone. 

Recently, I had the opportunity to attend a discussion with Jamie Moyer, the oldest player in the major leagues, who is also the pitcher with the most wins, losses, and strikeouts of any active pitcher today. During the Q&A he was asked about the three guys he admires most. He immediately answered Andre Dawson, Nolan Ryan, and Cal Ripken, explaining that all of them consistently presented admirable character both on and off the field. 

In particular, he said that Andre Dawson, was both a driven player and a great man, whose character is solid as a rock, “Good day, bad day, you could never tell the difference with Andre. One day we were at Wrigley Field and I witnessed Andre take his fan mail. A lot of guys wouldn’t bother, but Andre made the time and if he took a bag of mail with him overnight, he would bring it back all signed the next day.” 

“Nolan Ryan was a true professional. Although he was a player who made unbelievable history that we may never see again, he treated you like he was just like he was just another Joe. ‘You want to go have a steak?’ he would ask me, even though I was just a rookie. And even if he was angry on the field, when he came off he was always a true gentleman.”

“When Cal Ripken was playing he had demands on him that went through the roof. Nonetheless, he would sign every autograph. He would stay at the stadium until 1 or 2 am; even when he was the guy who was in the middle of a streak. He is simply a super-super human being. Regardless of his accomplishments, he showed that he was as human as anyone else and made the effort to connect with people at every level.” 

Similarly, I was recently impressed by how stately and nonjudgmental both Presidents Clinton and Obama were, when they made remarks summing up GW at the dedication of his presidential library yesterday. 

Despite the pervasive liberal-minded inclination to poke fun of President George W. Bush's public ramblings and collectible guffaws, they praised him based on the many of the good qualities he exhibited outside his role as commander-in -chief. 

One might easily argue, “Of course, they were only doing their job and it is only right to give thanks and praise.” True dat. But, I was impressed and inspired nonetheless. 

“We know President Bush the man,” Mr. Obama said. “To know the man is to like the man. Because he’s comfortable in his own skin. He knows who he is. He doesn’t put on any pretenses. He takes his job seriously, but he doesn’t take himself too seriously. He is a good man.”

That’s why it is important to not make judgments of people so readily. To make a true assessment, you’ve got to get to know them first, otherwise they should simply remain strangers on a train. 

*Photo Source: USA Today