August 12, 2006

That First Crush…

The subject of “first crushes” came up in recently, which reminded me that I’ve been meaning to blog about this subject for a long time.

 

Oh… and as a forewarning — this is a really, really, really, ridiculously long blog.

Ah, the story of my first crush, way back in the days before electricity. *laughs* Just kidding — I’m not that old… but anyway, it’s a fairly cute story that has a strange twist at the end. After thinking about it for a while, I realized that it laid the groundwork of a path that most of my relationships took from that point forward, to a degree. Not sure what to make of that fact… but I also realized that, in retrospect, this little girl had been the basis for comparison in all my relationships thereafter, as far as looks are concerned.

Please feel free to share your insights into this matter, in the comments section… I’m curious if people generally base their life-long, superficial-level likes and dislikes on that first person who stole our hearts, or if I’m as strange as I think I am, alone in this perception.

I’ve changed all the names to protect people’s privacy… so we’ll call her Alice¹.

The year was 1977… we had all just spent the previous year celebrating the Bicentennial of our country, and President Jimmy Carter was ushering in a new era of peace and environmental awareness. Disco was starting to wane in popularity, Led Zeppelin and the Sex Pistols were on the radio, ABBA was appearing on every TV show you could imagine, and shows like M*A*S*H and Johnny Carson’s Tonight Show were required viewing on TV.

 

A young boy’s world was all about playing baseball, riding bikes outfitted with banana seats, “Chopper” handlebars and “Sissy” Bars, playing with Tonka trucks… it was about cutting grass and delivering newspapers for enough money to collect baseball cards… it was about watching “The Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Show” and “Speed Buggy” cartoons, followed by “American Bandstand” every Saturday morning. It was about playing in the creek at Grandma and Grandpa’s house, listening to rock and roll on a little black transistor radio (that was, of course, strapped to the handlebars of your bike), building clubhouses and playing Capture the Flag.

 

The rules of thumb were that you didn’t leave the neighborhood, and you were back in the yard before the street lights came on. (Many an evening was spent pedaling my bike as fast as my little legs would carry me… one eye on the road, the other on the street lights passing overhead, praying that they wouldn’t start flickering to life before I could make it to the driveway.)

 

It was so much simpler then… there was no such thing as a home computer, the Internet, or anything like that — I mean, PONG was just becoming available on exorbitantly priced home consoles. We wore Chuck Taylor’s and hand-me-downs until they were falling apart, played hard, dreamed of becoming an astronaut, and used our imaginations and cardboard boxes to make up better games than anything they have come up with on any computer.

 

In my recollection, boys at that time didn’t typically start noticing girls until they were around 6th or 7th grade… well, at least they didn’t admit to it, that I can remember. I was apparently the exception to that rule, because by the 4th grade, I had started noticing that girls were something more than a target to throw rocks at, ride my bike dangerously close to for the resulting scream, or to tease mercilessly on the playground. There was something different, dangerous and amazing about them… and when Alice moved to town, I was caught hook, line, and sinker for the first time in my life.

 

I attended a Catholic school as a child. We all went to church in the morning, and then attended classes for the remainder of the day, with two recesses interspersed. On one particular day, we had come back from church, filed into the classroom, and everyone was getting their textbooks and paper from inside the flip-top desks of that time. There was the usual commotion of the morning… kids asking one another if they had the answer to question 4 on the math homework, Sister Sara shushing the class, someone looking for a pen or where the scissors were… typical classroom banter. I was sitting in the second row in from the side blackboard, third seat from the back — and as I dug through my desk to find a single pencil that didn’t already have a broken lead tip, I remember hearing some commotion near the front of the class… I looked up over the lifted lid of my desk, and I saw someone in the front row that I had never seen before. The lid to my desk slowly lowered further and further… and although all I could see was the back of her head, I was entranced.

 

Sister Sara was finally able to quiet our boisterous group, and after standing up to recite the Pledge of Allegiance and a prayer or two, the class sat back down… but my eyes were transfixed on the front row the entire time. This new person had jet black hair, just like me… but it was a cascading river of riotous curls that hung down past her shoulders. I found myself absently tucking my shirt in a little better in the back, straightening my belt, and fidgeting slightly from one foot to the other, trying to see past her hair and shoulder. “Trevor, please sit down” I heard Sister Sara say, through a slight haze. I snapped to, and quickly slid into my seat, flustered that I had been called out.

 

Sister Sara started the day the same way she always did. “Good morning class.” she would cheerfully say… and in unified response, we would all give the sing-songy response of “Gooood moooorning Sissssster Sarrrraaa!”. “Thank you, class.” she would always say. “Before we start, I have an announcement to make. We have a new student joining us today. Alice, stand up and say hello to the class.” The object of my gaze timidly slid out from behind her desk and stood up, her eyes toward the floor… she adjusted her uniform nervously, turned toward the class, and raised her head.

 

The rest of the day was a blur to me, from that point forward… I remember her skin being a pure, porcelain white that I had never seen before, and her eyes were so bright and blue.. they were even more sparkly and blue than my Mom’s eyes. She had a slightly lopsided smile, and it appeared to be more of a well-intentioned smirk than anything else.

 

All I knew was that, for the first time in my very short life, I was smitten. Alice was beautiful in every possible essence of the word that I could comprehend. For a kid who had been watching way too much “Love Boat” recently, there were sparkly lights around her head, music was playing, and her voice sounded exactly like what I thought angels must sound like, at that age. She was nothing short of love and beauty, personified.

 

From that day forward, I made many, many feeble attempts to not be clumsy or awkward around her (which usually backfired in horrific displays of emasculation), to be nice to her, and to talk to her at any given opportunity, for any reason. I would intentionally break the lead on my pencil, just so I could walk up the aisle past her desk, and smile at her as I sharpened my pencil. She was a complete and total distraction to my young world, and I could think of nothing else but her. I couldn’t focus on homework at home, I wasn’t paying attention at school (which resulted in more than a few whacks with a ruler from Sister Sara). At that tender of an age, I had no idea what I wanted to do with her, or why I was so attracted to her… but I knew if I could just get her to feel the same way about me, it would surely involve a lot of holding hands, and telling people we were “going steady.”

 

On one particular weekend, I remember going to the gas station with my Dad. While we were waiting in line to pay for the gas, the man in front of us bought a Lottery ticket… but it wasn’t like anything I had seen people buy before. There was a new technology in Lottery games – the scratch card. Once you purchased one of these cards, you simply used the edge of a coin to scratch off this grey colored “gunk” to see what the prize was underneath. I watched the man intently, thinking it was one of the coolest thing I had ever seen… and suddenly, a light bulb popped on above my head. That’s how I will get her attention!” I thought… and I couldn’t wait to get home.

 

Once back at the house, I ran to the closet and found a couple small pieces of paper, Crayons, and a magic marker. I grabbed a nickel off my Dad’s night-stand, then ran out to the porch for some privacy, dropped everything on the ground, and set to the task. I was in mad scientist mode, and nothing could stop me now.

 

I grabbed a black magic marker, and drew a stick figure on the paper. Then I pulled open my box of Crayons, and found the silver one. I knew that Crayon wax could be almost totally scratched off of paper, because I had tried it before, to remove errant coloring from outside the lines of a drawing once.

 

I started scribbling over the top of the drawing, until it was completely covered. Tipping the coin on it’s side, I gently started to scrape the Crayon off, like I had seen the man at the gas station do. It took a couple of tries with different weights of construction paper and using different ends of the crayon… but I finally figured out that with the right amount of pressure in using the crayon, it would come almost all the way off, to reveal the image underneath. I was ecstatic.

 

So I grabbed another piece of construction paper, and very carefully and gently, I drew:

 

YOU!

I used the silver crayon to once again cover over the image, until nothing but a border edge of the construction paper was showing. And very carefully, along the edge, I wrote “Scratch this off to see a surprise.”

 

I couldn’t possibly have been more proud of myself for thinking this up – it was cool, it was fun, and she would surely know my feelings at that point. I carefully stuck the home-made scratch card in one of my schoolbooks, and waited anxiously for Monday to arrive.

 

Once at school on Monday, the day couldn’t pass by fast enough. I kept waiting and watching the clock, knowing that once we went to recess, I could slip back inside the school building, get the note out of my book, and put it in her desk.

 

Finally we went to the cafeteria for lunch, and I quickly wolfed down my food. I carried my tray back up to the counter, then nearly ran to get in line to go back outside for recess.

 

I was a kid on a mission.

 

We were finally told to go outside… and as everyone ran out onto the playground to get the best swings or teeter-totter seats, I casually walked over to the basement entrance to the school. I reached for the door handle, and I heard a voice behind me.

 

“Trevor, what are you doing?” Rats — the playground monitor. “Um… I need to use the bathroom. Bad. Really bad!” She gave me a sideways glance, then said “Well, hurry up. You should have gone when you were in the cafeteria.”

 

I nodded in agreement, then opened the door… once the door closed behind me, I ran up the stairs as fast as I could, rounded the corner, and ran down the empty hall to my classroom. I flung the door open, and half ran, half-slid to my desk. Carefully opening the cover of the book, I pulled the scratch card note out, then walked back up the aisle to her desk. I slid into her chair and lifted the lid… I immediately noticed how clean the inside of her desk was… her pens and pencils all nicely arranged, her books stacked neatly in two separate piles — this was a stark contrast to the shambles of crumpled papers and mountains of pencil shavings that were inside my desk – I was pretty sure there was a gremlin or two happily living in there somewhere.

 

And as I started to place the note on top of the stacks of those neatly arranged books, perfectly balanced in the middle so that it could not be missed, I imagined how she would react. Would she scratch off the Crayon in class, or wait until she got home? Would she know it was me? Of course she would… she couldn’t possibly have mistaken my feelings for her.

 

And as I thought this, the lid to the desk suddenly started to swing down on top of me.

 

I quickly pulled my hands up and backward, as the bang of wood slamming against metal reverberated in the room. I was momentarily sure that I had lost a hand in the makeshift guillotine. As my senses were trying to wrap around exactly what had just happened, and I was trying to stop blinking from the surprise… I saw the old, weathered hand of Sister Sara, planted firmly in the middle of the lid.

 

My eyes raised slowly to see her face, with an angry expression I had never seen before.

 

“Just what do you think you are doing, young man?” Sister Sara bellowed. She leaned over the desk, closer to my face, her hand still firmly holding down the middle of Alice’s desktop.

 

I stammered, trying to figure out how she had entered the room without me hearing her. My heart was racing, and my eyes shifted back and forth, trying to process what was happening. Her eyes raised slightly above my head… and it was then that I realized, in horror, that my hands were still up in the air like an arrested convict… and that I was still holding the note.

 

Sister Sara’s voice raised an octave. “What is that? What did you take out of her desk? You know that stealing is a sin!” I stammered “not mine…”, “giving her…”, and “not a sin…” were the only things that could come out. I was terrified.

 

She pulled the paper out of my trembling hand, and looked at it, front and back, as her brow furled. “What is this?” she demanded. I couldn’t make my mouth work… I just kept making monosyllabic sounds that were incomprehensible.

 

Her other hand lifted off the desk, and she leaned back. Her arm slowly raised, and she pointed to the door of the classroom. “Get outside, with the rest of your class. I will speak to your mother about this, when she comes to pick you up.”

 

I maintained my composure until I got out of the room. Tears ran down my face as I ran for the boy’s bathroom, trying to hide from anyone that might see me. My Mom would kill me. I was one dead kid. If Sister Sara figures out to scratch the Crayo… oh no… I put instructions on the card to scratch the crayon off!!

 

I went into 9-year-old hysterics.

 

I started to wonder if my brothers would keep my stuff, or sell it once I was dead. Well, sure, they would keep my bike, but they hated my new Pulsar action figure. They’d probably throw him away.

 

With the thought that my brothers would trash my favorite new toy, I knew I had to face the music. I wiped my face off and went back outside. I wandered around the playground aimlessly until the bell rang, and we lined up to go back in the building. As I walked into the classroom with everyone, I glanced at Sister Sara’s desk, and saw what appeared to be Crayon shavings.

 

She gave me a stern look, and my heart sank.

 

After school, Sister Sara told my Mom (in front of me, no less — because punishment wasn’t punishment in those days, without a serious dose of mortal embarrassment). I got a huge tag-team lecture from the two of them, about being too young to be in love, paying more attention to my schoolwork and less attention to girls, and so forth.

 

But that was the easy part.

 

The hard part was when word somehow filtered around the school, and people found out not only about what had happened, but also what the letter said, and who it was to.

 

Alice never really talked to me again after that day… I’m not sure if it was because she never had felt the same about me, or if it was from sheer embarrassment and being teased. I never really got the chance to find out, either. It wasn’t long before her Dad got transferred again, and she moved out of our small town. She went on with her life, and I went on with mine.

 

Many years later, when I was in High School, she came back to town to visit with some friends or family. I only saw her briefly… and of all places, it was in the parking lot of that same school and church. She looked exactly the same, and I had the same gut-butterfly reaction, even after all those years.

 

When she caught my eye across the swing-set area, she smiled softly, waved and mouthed “Hi” to me – I guess she had found it in her heart to forgive the transgressions of 9 year old puppy love.

 

Today, I have no idea what ever became of Alice. It’s been over 20 years since I last saw her, that day in the parking lot. I’m sure she went on to college, probably got married and has a family, and is probably successful doing something out there in the world.

 

But I can’t help to occasionally think about the amazing, beautiful black-haired girl that first caught my heart, all those years ago… and how there has been a surprising amount of repetitive correlations between that experience, and the many more that were to follow, as well as my preference in looks being directly attributed to her.

 

 

Turning the time machine of my life forward, to present day… coincidence seems to be playing out in a bizarre “more-strange-than-life-will-allow” twist to this story:

 

The Colorado Lottery has recently started running a series of television commercials, all of them featuring new scratch games that they have released. At the very end of the commercial, they show a beautiful woman facing the camera that has long black hair, and beautiful, crystal-blue eyes… she holds a scratch card up and blows the shavings off at the camera, and gives a coy, slightly lopsided little grin.

 

I kid you not, people — she is the spitting image of Alice… or at least what I imagine Alice would look like today.

 

Who knows… life really is funny sometimes.

 

Be well, and take care of one another.

 

Ciao,

 

Trev

 

———-

¹ Alice - Those of you that knew me way back when may realize/remember who “Alice” is… if you do, I would appreciate you respecting her anonymity, in regards to any comments or thoughts you may post.

August 10, 2006

Soccer and Diapers…

So last evening, I was given the opportunity (via winning tickets – go me!) to take in a Colorado Rapids soccer game. This was my first live professional soccer game, and — as odd as this may sound — my first trip to Mile High Stadium.¹

Now, I’m not going to spend a lot of time going through some kind of play-by-play (especially since we got spanked by Salt Lake)… but here is a broad synopsis of the overall experience:

The game was excellent. Even though Americans haven’t quite gotten a handle on how to attend and enjoy a soccer game, it was cool. Given change to a couple common courtesy items I will mention below, I would consider getting season tickets, if I could afford them.

No matter how well you think you know soccer… please, for frog’s sake, don’t talk loudly throughout the entire game in some futile attempt to give directions to the player’s — especially using just their first names — as if they could possibly hear you, or could care less what you have to say. It’s just obnoxious to everyone around you, and an embarrassment to the people who came to the game with you. If the stadium wanted to have a commentator, the announcer would talk 1/10th as much as you. If the coach needed your advice, you would be getting paid to sit on the sidelines, not up in the cheap seats. Yell, scream, shout, do the “Corner Kick Stomp” as required… but really… shut up. Please.

If you are going to be in a place where you are sitting shoulder-to-shoulder, knee-to-knee with a couple thousand strangers… I beg of you, please take a shower before the game. Wash your pits and butt. Throw on some cologne. Something. I don’t know who it was… but there was a person sitting within wind-drift proximity of us, and they had B.O. that would make an elephant’s knees buckle. Every time the wind shifted, my eyes started to uncontrollably water.

I can appreciate people bringing their kids to a game. I have kids of my own, and I love them dearly. Soccer is pretty big with most kids today – hell, the stadium was probably 50% or more kids. But… if you bring your kids to a game, they are your responsibility to take care of, and watch after. If they are crying, take care of them, or go out to a common area with them. Ignoring them while they clamour around and disturb other people is not O.K. Don’t let them wander around by themselves, or hike up and down the stairs alone. You were responsible enough to bring children into this world… now it’s time to be responsible for them, take care of them, and teach them — by word and example — how to act in public.

They really need to have a “kid-free” zone/area/section at the game. Call it the “Hooligan Corner” or “Hellraiser Alley,” serve hard booze so only 21+ can enter with an ID… something. Again, as I said before – I love kids, and I especially love my children… but when you go out with adults to have a good time in an adult fashion at a professional sporting event, you want to let loose a little… and it’s incredibly hard to do so, when surrounded by people who’s ages are in single digits and heads are crotch-height, and they are incessantly crying/screaming/crawling around/saying “mom… mom… hey mom… mom… mom…” — I felt like I was at an outdoor Disney premiere, as opposed to a soccer game. MLS is not going to become a cash cow franchise like the NFL or MLB or NBA until they can figure out how to make the game (as odd as this sounds) a little less family-friendly. If they want it to be as jam-packed and exciting as a game in England, they are going to have to do something to separate the masses a little. That way if I want to take the kids, I should be able to sit in the family zone and chill with the other families… and if I want to raise a little hell, and occasionally suggest to a couple opposing players that their parents were quite possibly never married, I should be able to do so as well.

They need to put on a better show throughout the stadium, and make it more “amped up.” The pre-game music and show was excellent (lots of Prodigy – kudos, guys)… but then they quickly lost the momentum of it, and in turn, they lost the crowd. When the players took the field, they should have had the typical “gauntlet” type of thing, with the players running out to an announcement and such… it just seemed kind of semi-professional, and lacking the punch that most pro games have. Maybe this is because there is only one break in the game, or maybe the players have asked that they not get too crazy with the sound effects and such during the game… but if we are going to American-ize the sport (as we do with everything we touch, damn us *laughs*), the “show” that surrounds the game needs a little more of somethin’.

That huge-ass cannon that fires off, whenever the Rapids score? Damn. I think about 50 or so grandparents wet their Depends when that happened. I know it made me jump… it took the medic a good 30 minutes to remove the straw from my nose.

Overall, a good time was had by almost all, minus the disruptions and distractions. With all the afore-mentioned issues, though, I would probably be happier over at a friends house, yelling at the TV, being able to smoke, not be required to take out a small loan for snacks and a pop, and not having to constantly watch my mouth around all the little ones.

OK, I gotta run. Be well, and take care of one another.

Ciao,

Trev

———-

¹ Mile High Stadium – I absolutely refuse to call this building “Invesco Field” for two reasons: 1) because Invesco went belly up a while back, which means that they should have immediately lost any and all rights to the naming convention once they were defunct, and B) because any stadium where the Broncos play in Denver will be, forever and always, Mile High Stadium… I don’t care what sponsor plunks down a couple million for naming rights. And don’t even get me started on Fiddler’s Green…

August 6, 2006

Playing Catch-Up…

OK, so it’s been a long time since I have written. Work has been utterly insane, and life has been nothing sort of strange lately… but I guess that’s par for the course. I’ve got a fresh Kahula and cream in hand, and I’ll take you on the whirlwind tour of life inside my skull lately, since I last wrote. I’ll try to keep it in order, and keep it brief.

BB Meeting

Had another meeting with the crew of Bachelor Banzai – it was our first meeting since the smoking ban was enacted in Colorado… not surprisingly (and in total opposition to what the “Smoke-Free Colorado” Nannies want you to believe), in contrast to the large crowd that was present during our previous meeting, the bar was quite empty, except for our group (maybe 2 or 3 couples) — all of us that smoke in the BB group were pretty annoyed that we had to keep going outside. It’s a shame that this place doesn’t have a patio… seems that BB may be moving the meetings to a different location with a patio, so we don’t have to keep interrupting the conversations, and looking for people who’ve had to go outside.

The Old Irish Guy

While having a smoke during the BB meeting, I was approached by a slightly hunched over, elderly gentleman passing by — he was hard to understand, due to his thick Irish accent… but it was amazing to listen to him. I’m not sure if he was homeless, or just passing by, or who he was, really… but I stood out there on the sidewalk, mezmerized, as told me a series of short stories of his childhood, about how Denver used to be in ‘the ol’ days,” places we both loved to visit in St. Louis, and places he had seen and been in his life – it was really interesting.

 

Some people came by and gave him a dirty look (and, in turn, something resembling a symathetic look to me, for whatever reason)… and one passing guy went so far as to tell him to “stop bothering people”… I was apalled.

 

At what point in our lives to we develop such an utter lack of concern for a fellow human being, who just wanted someone to talk to, and someone who would take a minute to simply listen to him? It just reinforces my belief that people have an amazing propensity for being assholes, for the most part – I mean, how hard is it to show a little compassion and concern for a stranger?

 

I just don’t understand how people can think they are so above it all, and so much better than anyone else. He is a good man, and has seen more in his lifetime than I can imagine, at this stage in my life… and I was more than happy to give this eldery man a mere 20 minutes out of my day, just so he could share some amazing thoughts and stories. I highly encourage all of you that read this to do the same.

 

The wealth of information and ideas that our elders carry are worth their weight in gold – listen and learn, people. It doesn’t take any effort, and you just might learn something, or gain a new perspective.

 

“Ass-Hat of the Week” Award: Denver Parking Meters

While in downtown Denver one evening, I got a parking ticket.

 

In big red letters on the main face of the meter, it said “Parking Fee Enforced 8AM – 8PM” — seeing as it was 7:30 or so when I pulled into the space, I put enough money in to cover myself well past 8 PM.

 

When I returned to my car at 11 or so, I found a parking ticket on my car. I was a little confused by this, so I grabbed the ticket out from under the wiper, and went back over to the meter, to try and understand what happened… and after scouring the entire meter (with the help of my lighter, no less, since it was that hard to see)… in barely discernible text, near the bottom of the back of the meter, it said “Tue & Thur: Parking Fees required from 6AM – 10 PM.”

 

Unbelievable, you parking bastards.

 

I don’t mind getting (and paying) a ticket if I blatantly disregard the law, or fail to pay the meter, or even go so far as to sit there and feed a meter repeatedly to keep a great space… but when you pull sneak tactics of random pay time shifts, and make it known by using italicized sub-titled text in a really obscure location compared to the rest of the meter information, on a meter that’s located on a dark street no less… damn.

 

I don’t like to think the worst of people, but it would appear that the City of Denver does it on purpose to get extra parking violation fees out of people. They must rake in hand over fist on those nights.

Saying “Hi” to the Parental Units

My parents came out to Colorado to visit, and it was great to see them again. It’s been far too long, and we had a good time getting to catch up, eating far too much, getting too much sun, and generally having fun. It was really nice… I can’t wait to see my brothers and their families again soon as well.

“So, What Have You Been Up To?”

This is a question I get on a semi-daily basis… and the sad thing? The answer is always the same… “Oh, you know, work and stuff.”

 

Work… it seems to be all I am about anymore. I work at the office for well under what I am supposed to be making, and I tend to work rediculous hours (for many reasons that I can’t get into here)… then I come home, and I try to keep my little sole proprietor business afloat.

 

It’s just too much — I am really, really tired. I desperately need some down-time. I am just utterly exhausted to the bone… and unless I have some more income, I can’t slack off on either of them. I feel really trapped right now, in many ways… it is really wearing on me.

To Blog, or Not to Blog… or Just Close It to Outsiders?

I found out that a couple people are reading my blog that I didn’t think would have any reason or interest. The way I found out was that a subject I had written about recently came up in a conversation… the long and short of it being that I’m not sure how I feel about this.

 

My initial reaction was to completely kill my blog, or to hide it except for those that subscribe (and to figure out how to put it behind a subscription service).

 

Not sure what will become of all of it… but if you are not a subscriber or a friend, and suddenly notice that you can no longer access my blog for some reason, you will know why. Consider yourself warned, I guess. *shrugs*

 

There’s something cathartic about writing in a semi-diary format, knowing full well that strangers are reading it, for the most part… but it’s another thing when people start bringing your blog up in face-to-face conversations with you, especially if they are personal in nature. A bit of a double-edged sword, I guess.

Clerks II

I found some time this weekend to run out and see “Clerks II” (sorry it took me so long, Kevin). Another great Kevin Smith flick, guys – excellent dick and fart jokes, and the movie really taps into 30-something apathy and that feeling you get, somewhere along the line, when you say to yourself, “Just what the hell is it that I’m doing here?” — Excellent commentary on relationships and friendships as well — I highly recommend it. (not to mention the fact that my name is in the credits – woo hoo!)

Rotating Stock

Ok, does anyone else do this, or am I just so far over the edge of anal-retentive, that there is no hope for me?

 

When I do laundry (as I am right now – multi-tasking, oh joy!) and fold my towels, I put the freshly-washed towels at the bottom of the stack of towels. I also do this with undershirts, underwear, etc. — I always put the newly-washed items at the bottom of the stack, for fear that I would just keep wearing, washing and folding the same three items over and over again until they were threadbare, and never use the ones below it.

 

Is this odd, or does everyone do this? I mean… I learned the whole ’stock rotation’ thing from my brother, when he was working in a grocery store eons ago (fresh stuff goes in the back, older product moves to the front)… I may have taken it to the extreme with towels and clothes, though. If I am being weird, feel free to tell me.

 

Be well, and take care of one another.

 

Ciao,

 

Trev

July 30, 2006

Twelve Questions…

I haven’t had time to blog folks, and I’m really sorry about that — I have tons to talk about, and many stories to tell of my recent adventures… so for right now, a cheesy survey will have to tide you over until later.

12 candid questions, 12 candid answers

1. What is the one thing people misunderstand about you?

Some people have said that I come off as being aloof and rude when they meet me in person – the reality is that I used to be painfully shy, and I’m trying to get better about being social, and opening my mouth once in a while… it’s difficult, because I’m a very private person.

2. Who’s your “Top Five” celebrity fantasies?

a. Aishwarya Rai

b. Sophie Marceau

c. Angelina Jolie

d. Sarah Lancaster

e. Demi Moore

3. Name your “Top Five” things that are a must for you on the opposite sex.

a. A very specific look

b. A compatible intelligence and sense of humor

c. Between 50 to 100 percent Italian

d. A fellow single parent (or extremely kid-friendly, by my standards)

e. Atheist/Humanist (being Agnostic (i.e., “sitting on the fence”) doesn’t count)

4. How is your love life now?

Um… did you read ..3?!? *laughs*

This person I’ve concocted in my head doesn’t exist.

5. Do you have friends who’d jump your bones at the 1st opportunity?

If they have those thoughts, they haven’t let on (or I am too dense to see it, which is also quite possible). Either that, or they are married… and as a very strict rule, I don’t cross that bridge.

6. Are you friends with someone who you’d jump at the 1st opportunity?

Hello, I’m a guy! *laughs* Yeah, I have a small truckload of friends that would be awfully fun to fool around with.

7. What is your definition of success?

(in order)

a. Being the best Dad that I can be.

b. Being a good person and helping others.

c. Being the best at what I do professionally.

8. Best and worst pickup lines you’ve heard and used.

I’ve never picked up on a girl with a line… Honestly.

However, this was actually used on me once:

Me: “Hi there… care to play some pool?”

Her: “How about we go back to your place and fool around instead?”

Me: (raising hand towards the bar) “Check please!”

(We laughed, then actually ended up sitting in the parking lot for close to 4 hours, talking – nothing ever happened, but we had a great conversation. I never even knew her name.)

9. To you, what’s good music for sex?

Personally, I like to hire a five-piece blindfolded string ensemble, but they are hard to come by on short notice. *laughs* Good grief, really? Urgh. Some classics like Barry White, Marvin Gaye, Otis Redding, Bing Crosby, Dean Martin or Frank Sinatra will get a laugh or two, and loosen the mood up a little. Hrmn… pretty much any trance music works well (the less lyrics the better). Something ambient that doesn’t get in the way, or become too distracting.

10. What is the one thing you claim to have figured out about the opposite sex?

Women are incredibly self-critical, self-conscious and insecure… and usually with no good reason whatsoever.

11. Have you tried to use the Internet for dating or other purposes?

A couple times, right after I got divorced, and all of them turned out horribly. (I was really surprised at the number of married women that were on dating sites, looking for a quick hook-up… honestly shocked me.)

12. If someone from the opposite sex was interested in you, why would that be?

Hrmn… I’ve been told I’m not terribly hard on the eyes, and have a good sense of humor. Oh… that, and I am wicked good in bed. *falls on the floor laughing*

OK, that’s all you get for now, folks. Sorry it’s just a cheesy survey, but that’s all I have energy for right now. Yes, I know I suck. :-P

Be well, and take care of one another.

Ciao,

Trev

July 12, 2006

A Traitor Amongst Us…

Something interesting just happened to me.

Yesterday, I posted a schpiel about some random thoughts going through my head… two of them being about the same person (e.g., missing her, having a crush on her, yadda yadda yadda.)

In a case of cosmic balance, karma, coincidence, ying-yang, the Macarena — whatever you want to call it, depending on your belief system (or lack thereof) — said person just sent me an e-mail, out of the clear blue sky.

Now none of you could possibly know this… but I bring it to your attention, that the person I referred to has not contacted me since… oh, say, mid-April?

Said person was going on a vacation, and told me that I would be contacted upon her return… which never happened. As the weeks went by with no contact, I presumed it to be a lost friendship/”thing”/whatever… I dealt with the loss to a degree, and then proceeded to think of her, multiple times, on a daily basis. As you do in situations like this. *laughs*

Now don’t get me wrong… I mean, I didn’t get to the scary “ride my bike past her house 40 times a day”¹ or “Something About Mary” kind of level… but the lady I am talking about is a really, really amazing person. (Have I said that 5,000,000 times now?) She’s not the type of person that one could ever forget, much less easily forget.

Anyway, back to the topic at hand… I find it highly ironic that less than 24 hours after posting the absolute first mention I have made of this situation (outside of my own head)… she suddenly resurfaces on the face of the planet.

Odd.

“Captain, methinks we have a traitor amongst us!” – memorable Pirate quote

You know… if it weren’t for being stupid-happy to even get a three line message from this person, I’d suss you out and make you walk the plank for this, my dear invisible blog reader who knows her — and I know that some of you do know her. *grins*

Pardon me… I need to go wipe this silly grin off my face. It’s starting to freak people out. ;-)

Be well, and take care of one another.

Ciao,

Trev

———-

¹ - “ride my bike past her house 40 times a day” is a reference to the iconic 80’s movie, “Pretty In Pink.” I was pretty similar to Duckie in my younger days. This movie also started my long-time crush on actress Annie Potts as well. *laughs* As a bit of trivia… the character Duckie was played by Jon Cryer, of current “Two and a Half Men” TV fame.

July 11, 2006

Delayed Reactions…

Last night at about 10:00 pm, I was preparing to put up a post that would show people how to end world hunger, solve global reliance on oil, and pretty much answered the questions to Life, the Universe and Everything… it also included a paltry dissertation on which chemical combinations would make McDonald’s french fries a health food… but then a thunderstorm came through, and I had to shut down, make myself a good stiff drink, and go outside to watch.

Sorry everyone.

Just kidding.

 

OK, the thunderstorm was real – it was very loud, and was hitting extremely close to the house, so I thought it best to shut down last night. (For those of you that know me, getting me to unplug takes some serious effort, such as bribery with sex or food, and/or good ol’ Mother Nature’s Electric Light Show). And yes, I did go stand out on the driveway (sans metal umbrella, since I couldn’t find one in the garage, dammit), watching the sky crisscrossed with electricity, and the earth-shaking thunder it produced. It was one of those thunderstorms where your instincts feel a slight bit of panic, wondering if you are going to be swept up by the wind, or fried by a stray lightening bolt. The electricity in the air is amazing, and you can feel it energize your body down to the bone. It’s storms like this one that can only reinforce just how small you are on this green and blue glob of dirt and water we call home.

Nature can be so cool sometimes – it was absolutely amazing.

I recently posted on Digg about how Colorado has been hit with little to no rain lately… and of course, I no more than do that, and we get hit with three days straight of rain – well, some would call it rain… it was more like standing in the fresh food section of the grocery store, for 72 hours worth of vegetable misting.

Ew. I feel moistened. *laughs*

Unfortunately, we are soaring back up into the mid 90’s for the next 5 days… so any benefit from the rain will be lost very quickly here.

Trev’s random tidbits for today:

I miss you M., and I think about you all the time. (Which is, in and of itself, quite maddening.) Not sure where you ran off to, or why… but I miss you. Italian food and conversation with you is like nothing else. Just let me know you are OK and doing well, please.

Why a man my age would ever possibly have a “crush” on someone is silly, juvenile, ridiculous, and just strange… but I can’t help it. My stupid feet don’t seem to touch the ground when I think of you. You make me feel 15 again, and it’s utterly frustrating. I’m not sure if I should be mad at you, try to forget you, or thank you… take it for what it’s worth.

No matter how much you would like to argue the point… “LOVE” will always be a four-letter word.

The Lucksmiths are one of the most under-rated bands I have ever heard. If you haven’t heard them, go buy all their CDs… you will be happy you did. (Thanks for turning me on to them, Jules – you rock.) Abdication!

Captain Jack Sparrow is my hero, and I love pirates.

I need about $25,000 post-taxes, to take care of some incredibly important things – anyone care to donate to the cause? The Lottery isn’t working out the way I had hoped, and time is slipping through my fingers faster than I care to think about.

I need a night on the town with Rick again. I miss you, man — it’s been far too long.

I desperately need a vacation, but have too much work to do, and not enough money to go anywhere.

I’m gonna miss you, Jack. I’m happy for you, and I don’t think either of us could have anticipated, when you came out here from Chi-town, how things were going to turn out… but we’re all really going to miss you – kick ass and take names in Cali, OK? And you have to wear the Lucha mask to work the first day, and take pictures!

That’s all I’ve got, folks… it’s time for a smoke break.

Be well, and take care of one another.

 

Ciao,

 

Trev

July 6, 2006

2,000 and Beyond…

By the time you are reading this, my blog counter will have rolled over the 2,000 mark. Not too shabby, in just a matter of a couple months. (It would be nice if the blog tracker showed how many times specific topics or blogs were hit… but I think that is asking a bit much, so I will just continue to kvetch¹ on my own time.)

Current topics:

My Cell (also known as “The Suck-Ass Phone From A Suck-Ass Company That Rhymes With Snicket”):

I have been having more phone problems, and haven’t been able to retrieve messages, receive phone calls or return phone calls until just recently… and from an email I just received, apparently it’s still not fixed all the way. I’m trying to get caught up, folks, I promise… but in the mean time, accept this as an apology, please. My myriad of e-mail accounts are the most reliable way to get ahold of me these days. If you have tried to call me and/or have left a message for me within the past week or so, there is a really good chance I haven’t gotten it. (I’m not the type to ignore people, honest.)

Holiday Weekend:

Professional fireworks displays are one of my all-time favorite things to see — ah, the years gone by of laying flat on my back along the Mississippi River, during the VP Fair²… my feet in the water, and my eyes fixed on a sky ablaze with light. I remember one year of watching fireworks here in Colorado, with one of my brothers lying next to me in the grass… about 10 minutes into the show, my (completely sober) brother said “Um, Trev… this is freaking me out.” I (also sober) said “What is?” – He said “I feel like the fireworks are burning through my eyes, and into the back of my skull.” I laughed and said “Yeah, me too”… and neither one of us budged an inch. We just kept saying “whoa…” – It was awesome.

This extended weekend, however, wasn’t much of a holiday for me this time around — I had a small truckload of things I needed to get done, and also needed to show some clients from Belgium around the local area… so a lot of time was spent playing tour guide (in the rain, no less). I didn’t get anything done that I wanted to, and I’m beyond aggravated with myself for letting things get in the way of what I really, really needed to do. I had such high hopes for this short span of time off — I was so depressed by it all, that by the evening of Independence Day I didn’t even go to see any fireworks. It sucked. (On the up-side, I gained a very interesting “outsiders” perspective on an American holiday from my Belgian friends.) Pascale and Laurent, you guys are awesome – thanks for the fun times, and I can’t wait to go visit you in Brussels. Sorry if I seemed preoccupied.

** Holiday Weekend – Sidebar:

Why do people keep referring to Independence Day as “The Fourth of July?” Do people call X-Mas “December 25th?” Do they call Election Day “The Tuesday Following the First Monday of November?” Do we call Valentine’s Day “February 14th,” or Halloween “October 31st?” It just seems incredibly strange to me, and I refuse to call it “The Fourth of July”. I would like to ask that you refuse, as well… I fear the day has already lost it’s meaning in vats of beer and hot dog relish as it is.

Smoking Nannies are at it again:

Colorado went indoor smoke-free as of July 1st. (And you thought I was pissed off before? Jesus-H-on-a-popsicle-stick, you should see me now.) And to top it off… just when you thought it couldn’t get worse… my Belgian friends used combinations of 4-letter words (in reference to this asinine ban) that I had never even thought of using before. Hell, I wrote a couple of them down for future reference. The more people that get pissed off, the more we will all step into action, and stop this insane perpetuation of myths and half-truths that was started over 10 years ago by the EPA. You may or may not smoke… but either way, you should be outraged at being perpetually lied to by the Surgeon General, the EPA and the media.

Cunning Linguistics: *grins*

I was watching an episode of Penn & Teller’s “Bullshit!” on Showtime recently, which was talking about profanity, and how far the FCC has stepped around (and all over) the First Amendment – and the fact that we actually pay for this continual overstepping of our freedoms with our tax dollars.

 

During the show, they would show a string of 6 or 8 different learned people, who would each say the same “profane” word, between segments. As they went through the group each time, the group said all the words in George Carlin’s infamous “Seven Words You Can’t Say on TV” ³ list, without a hitch… well, except for number 3 – the “C-bomb” (if you don’t know what it is, I’m not going to type it here… but it rhymes with “bunt”).

 

It amazes me that this one word seems to be taking over the spot of the f-bomb as the most notorious of profanities – this word will cause an overhearing female stranger to haul off and slap you, without a second’s thought, at it’s utterance – it will even cause fairly vulgar-mouthed people to give you a raised eyebrow and say “Hey, that’s going a bit far” — the word has taken on a life of it’s own… and it was even evident in this show.

 

Each of the aforementioned people had absolutely no problem with any of the words, until it came to “The C-bomb” — one guy, a “shock-jock” radio DJ said “Nah, I can’t say that one – my wife will kill me.” And a Linguistics professor, who had just previously stated how words such as the f-bomb are just simple compilations of mouth movements and sounds, suddenly stammered and hesitated when it came his turn to drop the C-bomb — he finally said it, then burst out in embarrassed laughter, and covered his face with his hands.

 

I just found it funny that a man that had just stated that words are nothing more than sounds and grunts we make, was suddenly taken aback by this particular grouping of grunts and sounds that few dare make in public. It would seem that no matter what we know about the simplistic origin of something… societal influence and norms will still make us cringe at it.

 

Well, that’s all I’ve got for today, folks. Try to get a hickey from someone, ’cause… well, they are utterly childish, and a heck of a lot of fun. *laughs*

 

Be well, and take care of one another.

 

Ciao,

 

Trev

———-

¹ Kvetch – (Yiddish) to complain, or to be a complainer.

² VP Fair – The VP stands for “Veiled Prophet”… well, it did, up until two years ago, when the name was changed from “VP Fair” to “Fair St. Louis” (please, don’t ask – I have no idea why). The Fair has been held on Independence Day weekend, along the bank of the Mississippi River in St. Louis, for the past 25 years. The Veiled Prophet Parade (which precedes the fair each year) stretches back in St. Louis history nearly 130 years, and has become the nation’s largest Independence Day parade and celebration. To learn more about this really cool tradition and it’s history, click here. To learn how politics, budgets cuts and extremely poor planning have nearly decimated this wonderful 129 year-old tradition, click here.

³ George Carlin’s “Seven Words You Can’t Say on TV” is from the 1970’s — when this album was released (and a DJ was ballsy enough to actually play it on the air), it caused no ends of trouble for Carlin and the New York radio station that played it. Some attribute the FCC’s creation by the government to this one particular instance, although others would argue that it was a compilation of many things that caused the FCC to be formed.

June 28, 2006

I Suck…

Well, I woke up two hours later than I had anticipated today, so there was no chance of me being able to bike in to work.

 

Part of me felt a sense of guilt for driving in while all those other people were riding their bikes alongside me… however, in a self-serving sense of happiness, traffic was minimal, at best, and I got to work quicker than I ever have before. (Of course, cranking ZZ Top’s “Tube Snake Boogie” didn’t hurt – how can anyone drive the speed limit listening to latter-day ZZ Top music? It’s impossible, I’m afraid. *laughs*)

 

I have just some random thoughts to throw out there today:

 

• Drivers are idiots. I saw two people on bikes this morning almost get hit by a car, due to driver carelessness and talking on a cell phone.

 

• The drums in “Tube Snake Boogie” are amazing.

 

• “Hot Blue and Righteous” is one of ZZ Top’s most under-rated songs, in my opinion.

 

• The news is utterly depressing, and I am tired of being lied to by the media and our government – people wonder why I am so pessimistic and jaded.

 

• Jon Stewart is one of the funniest men on the face of the planet… or at least his writers are

 

• Seeing as both sets of my grandparents have passed away, I have decided to adopt James Randi as a grandparent, because… well, he rocks, and he just looks so grand-fatherly. I will have to write to him, and tell him the good news. I’m sure he’s been wanting to be adopted for a long time now. :-)

 

• A small glass of Kahlua and Cream before bed makes your tummy hum softly to you as you fall asleep.

 

• There are 3.2 billion women on earth. Of them, 9 million are Italian. Of those, 4 million are smokers, and 600,000 are non-theists. Less than 25 percent of them are in the USA, leaving 150,000 possible candidates. There are approximately 1,500 in the Metro area, and only 300 of them are currently available. Of those, there are 3 within my local vicinity… and they all think I am a dork.

 

• I love my Macintosh

 

• I find it ironic that MySpace automatically lists my “sign,” even though I don’t believe in astrology. (However, I do like the fact that people immediately raise an eyebrow and grin knowingly, when they see or hear “Scorpio” – that’s quite funny, and I play it for all it’s worth.)

 

OK, that’s it for now, I guess. Don’t take anything at face value.

 

Be well, and take care of one another.

 

Ciao,

 

Trev

June 27, 2006

Bike to Work Day…

OK, so this is a short one, since I have to get some decent sleep tonite.

Tomorrow (the 28th) is National Bike to Work Day – and for some strange reason, I’ve irrationally decided to go along with this insanity, and ride the “Purple Prairie Dog Eater”¹ the 10 miles it will take to get to work.

This may not seem like a long ride to most… but for a guy who has just recently gotten back on two wheels, and the amount of steep inclines between point A and B… well, for me it’s about the same as riding from here to… oh, say… Hawaii? *laughs*

Just thought I would post a quick blog tonite, to say hi to everyone… and if you happen to see a heavy-set Italian guy laying along side one of the roads around Boulder tomorrow morning… well, just toss a pack of Kamel Red Lights and a 6-pack of Mountain Dew at him… he should come around eventually. :-)

Be well, and take care of one another.

Ciao,

Trev

———-

¹ The “Purple Prairie Dog Eater” — this is the nickname for my bike – it’s a nice old-school mountain bike, and (as you probably guessed) it’s purple. Yeah, I said purple. In fact, it’s really purple… like “Prince” purple. Anyway… it seemed only fitting to nickname my bike as such, since every time I get on it, I am very nearly accosted by a squadron of the little four-legged plague-ridden buggers as soon as I pull out of the driveway. (Remind me to tell you about the time when my family (from the Midwest) came to Colorado to visit, and I was trying to show them the beauty of the Fourteeners from an amazing vantage point… and when I realized that none of them were looking at what I was describing, I turned to find all of them looking at the field next to us, making “oooh’ing” sounds. “Um… what are you people doing?” I asked. “Look… what are those cute little things making that chirping noise?” My stomach convulsed. “You mean those mangy brown overgrown rodents that carry the Black Plague? Those are called Prairie Dogs. And no, they aren’t chirping… they are actually calling for reinforcements, so gnawing on your ankles and face will be easier when done en masse.”

Er… nevermind… I just told you the story anyway. Jeesh. And as a tip-of-the-hat caveat for all you tree-hugger Prairie Dog loving PETA types… no, Prairie Dogs won’t gang up on you. (yes they will) They don’t attack humans walking in the park. (They just wait until you are asleep.) And, by all means, they do carry the Black Plague. (That last part is actually serious — please be careful, especially if you have pets, when outdoors in Colorado.)

I just love it when my footnote is 10x longer than my actual post. *laughs* I am such a dork.

June 26, 2006

Raising the White Flag…

Many of you, I’m sure, are familiar with the song “White Flag” by Dido (from the album “Life for Rent”).

 

It’s a song that hits extremely close to my vulnerable little home (shock, surprise and amazement, huh *laughs*) — It’s an amazing tale about being in love, sung from the perspective of a person who has been in an all-encompassing, amazing relationship that has since fallen to ruin… it delves into how the singer is not dealing with the situation very well, the internal fear of seeing the other person again, and the feelings that this causes — that sense of trying to show the person that you have moved on, even though your heart never got over the loss, and quite possibly never will.

I have been a fan of Dido for quite some time – I have purchased all of her albums, and I don’t think there are too many songs by her that I don’t like.

However, there was an American TV show on a while back (that was blatantly ripped off from British TV, yet again), called “Hit Me Baby One More Time” – the premise was that they would have one-hit wonder types of musicians that were past their “glory days” come on, and the performer would sing their big chart-topping hit from days gone by, and then sing a more current hit that was originally penned by someone else.

The show was kind of fun in a way, but mostly I felt bad for the artists — most of them no longer had the vocal range they once did, or couldn’t quite capture that feeling that was originally there in their song.

I felt that the one exception to this, however, was Howard Jones. (Many of you know him from hit 80’s songs like “What is Love?”, “Things Can Only Get Better” and “No One Is To Blame”, amongst many others.) Howard performed his original songs amazingly well — this should come as no surprise, since he has never stopped recording albums, touring, or performing — But then he sang Dido’s “White Flag”… and my jaw absolutely hit the floor.

There was something so much more soulful, introspective and powerful in his rendition of it — I’m not sure if it was the fact that there was only a piano and acoustic guitar as accompaniment, or if it was his voice, or maybe he had experienced this emotion and feeling much more recently than Dido had when she penned the lyrics… but the song suddenly took on a whole new meaning for me, and it continues to resonate inside my head. I recently read the lyrics over again, and continue to listen to both versions of the song in a whole new light.

White Flag

written by Dido

I know you think that

I shouldn’t still love you, or tell you that.

But if I didn’t say it, well… I’d still have felt it -

where’s the sense in that?

I promise I’m not trying to make your life harder,

or return to where we were…

(Chorus)

I will go down with this ship,

and I won’t put my hands up and surrender

There will be no white flag above my door,

because I’m in love… and always will be

I know I left too much mess and destruction

to come back again,

and I caused nothing but trouble

I understand if you can’t talk to me again,

and if you live by the rules of ‘It’s over’

I’m sure that that makes sense…

(Chorus)

And when we meet, as I’m sure we will,

all that was then will be there still…

I’ll let it pass, and hold my tongue…

and you will think that I’ve moved on

(Chorus)

———-

You can find a million different versions of Dido performing “White Flag” all over YouTube.

However… if you go to Howard Jones’ web site , there is a link to the videos of both his UK television and USA television versions, performing this song live for an audience.

Curious if you get the same reaction I did, in comparing the two. Feel free to leave comments on your thoughts.

Be well, and take care of one another.

Ciao,

Trev