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November 2009

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Jun. 8th, 2008

Drunk

42

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42 is, according to Douglas Adams, the answer to life, the universe and everything. It is also the new number that appears next to “Age:” on the gazillion profiles I have scattered around the Internet.

casablanca-dvdcover.jpgAs is usual for one of my birthdays, it was a low-key event; the highlight was a Moroccan dinner with Mommies 1 and 2 and Kris. A really good cabernet and a rather impressive syrah were involved, as were a couple belly dancers, hundreds of pillows, and one really short table.

[If you don't want to hear dirt about my personal life, stop here.]

Interestingly, I waited all day for a “Happy Birthday” from Kris, but never got one. He’s never been one for observing occasions (though he’ll be the first to complain if I don’t give him something on Mother’s Day), but totally ignoring a birthday was new. Probably even more interestingly, I’m having a hard time being upset about it. I can’t help thinking something is fundamentally broken in our relationship if he can’t even make the slightest effort to acknowledge my birthday, and it may be an even worse sign that I can’t work up a decent amount of disappointment over it.

[/angst off]

The day wasn’t a total loss, though. In addition the dinner at Menara, I had a very small private party thrown for me in Second Life to kick off my birthday. While it may have been completely virtual, the amount of effort that went into it really made me feel appreciated, and that more than made up for anything I didn’t get from Kris today.

All in all, actually, it was a really good day. Sure, it wasn’t perfect, but I’m full, slightly buzzed, and loved. What more could I ask for?

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

Jul. 19th, 2007

Drunk

Happy Birthday, Greg!

A little something I sent to my brother yesterday on his birthday. It’s probably a lot less amusing to the large chunk of the world-at-large with no knowledge of my family history, but it amused me:

Once upon a time, in a faraway land known as Cerritos, there lived two young brothers, Pat and Greg. They lived with their sister, Chrissy, their parents Mom and Dad, and the occasional dog, cat, hamster, lizard, or other small animal.

They were growing boys who had to eat, and because of this they found themselves one day at the McDonald’s near their home. They loved McDonald’s: Pat’s favorite was the Big Mac, while Greg preferred the Quarter Pounder with Cheese. On this particular day, though, something was different. Instead of the usual signs describing the latest Happy Meal prize, hanging over the counter was a bicycle.

This was not just any bicycle. It was a shiny, silver Nishiki 10-speed with a Shimano derailleur and comfort handlebar grips. A banner over this wonder of modern engineering proclaimed that this bicycle would be the prize for whoever raised the most money in pledges during that year’s Bike-a-Thon against muscular dystrophy.

Pat and Greg were enthralled by the bicycle. It almost seemed to have a glow of its own, and if they listened very closely they could hear a faint chorus of angels emanating from somewhere deep within its aluminum frame. It was, quite possibly, the most beautiful thing either of them had ever seen, and they signed up for the Bike-a-Thon on the spot.

It would be a few weeks before the ride, and they spent that time going door-to-door getting neighbors to pledge some amount of money per mile that they would ride. They also got their father to bring the pledge sheet into work – which, in hindsight, was brilliant. What employee is going to tell the President of the company “No, sir, I’d rather not promise a dime for each mile your brats ride”?

When the day of the ride came, the two boys were excited. Waving goodbye to their parents, they mounted their bicycles and rode toward the Hawaiian Gardens McDonald’s where they would start the Bike-a-Thon. It was a beautiful day. It was sunny and bright out, but not hot; a perfect day for a bike ride.

They rode all day. Surprising themselves with their own endurance, they managed to ride all the way out to Knott’s Berry Farm and back more than once, stopping only occasional for a free burger, fries, or a Coke from one of the McDonald’s on their route. After a while, however, it became clear that Pat had an advantage over Greg. Pat’s chocolate-brown three-speed was a much better bike for long-distance riding, and he spent most of the day in third gear, pedaling at a slow but steady pace. Greg, on the other hand, had a little blue motocross bike. While it may hay have been cooler-looking than Pat’s dorky three-speed, it was meant for short distances. For every time Pat had to turn his pedals, Greg had to do it three times. In addition, Greg had skinny little legs that probably would have been more useful as toothpicks than pedal-pushers. While he made a valiant effort to keep up with his brother, by late afternoon what little strength he had was fading fast.

As they began approaching their starting point, Pat was ready to keep going, but his smaller, weaker brother was ready to give up. Greg knew he couldn’t keep up with brother, whose endurance seemed to have no end, so he offered a deal. If Pat would agree to stop at the next checkpoint and go home, and Greg would later win the bike, Pat could have it. It seemed like a fair deal. Obviously, if Pat let Greg stop, and continued alone as he wanted to, he would have more miles than Greg. Because of this, though he had less per mile pledged to him than Greg did, he would have a higher total in the end. Greg, however, was Pat’s younger brother, and Pat didn’t feel right letting him go home all by his underweight, defenseless self, and because he was a good and caring big brother, he agreed to the deal.

In the following weeks, the boys gathered their pledges and submitted them to McDonald’s. They never really expected to win the bike – after all, they were only two small boys, and many of the riders had been adults. Surely there was no way they could win, especially after Greg had wimped out and left the ride early. Still in the following weeks the waiting to find out if they had won was excruciating. Pat spent that time daydreaming not so much about the bike, but how much fun it would be to share with his younger brother. He thought about how they could share it, or how he would let Greg ride the handlebars while Pat did all the work of pedaling. He’d take Greg to the Gemco, and the TG&Y… maybe even all the way the the Cerritos Mall. Oh, the fun they would have together.

Then, one day, the letter came. It was unbelievable… they had actually won the bike! Well, “they” hadn’t won the bike; Pat had. After all, a deal is a deal, right?

Wrong.

In a fit of selfishness and dishonesty, Greg refused to give up the bike. While he had no rightful claim, he insisted the bike was his, and that Pat had no right to it. He had obviously lost his mind.

Seeing no other solution to the problem, Pat appealed to their mother. He explained the situation, and that Greg was refusing to give him his bike. Pat knew he’d need the voice of a rational, ethical adult to explain the situation to his younger brother.

To Pat’s horror, it was not to be. In a moment, everything Pat had ever learned about honesty, integrity, and keeping promises was dashed to a million jagged, heart-rending pieces. “I think Greg should keep the bike,” she said.

This was insanity. Pat began to worry for the mental health of his mother, who had always tried to teach them right from wrong. How could she not see that this was wrong? Pat worried that aliens had abducted his mother and replaced her with an evil replica, who was first going to destroy his family’s morals, then later, possibly, the world’s. Maybe Greg had drugged her. He didn’t know what had happened, but in that moment his childhood was shattered, as he realized that the people he had grown up with, and loved, and trusted, had somehow changed. They had given themselves over to all that was evil and wrong, and Pat felt very alone and scared.

Shortly after that (whether it was that day, weeks or months later, nobody recalls today), Pat felt a need to get away. Greg had left the 10-speed in the garage, and Pat saw his chance to get away from the wrecked shell of the family he thought had loved him. He rode and rode, and didn’t stop until he got to the Alpha Beta.

Some have said Pat had only ridden there to get a candy bar and a Coke, but those who know the real story know that his heart was broken, and that he needed some time alone to think. Contemplating how his life had come crashing down around him after his mother’s betrayal, he withdrew from the world, hardly noticing what was going on around him. Then, during his moment of weakness, a thief snuck up and stole the bike.

Having nowhere else to go, Pat walked home, dejected. When he arrived without the bike, Greg was furious, and demanded his bike back. It was all Pat could do to hold back a sad little tear, not so much because of what had happened but from the pain of seeing how far into greed and possessiveness his brother had fallen.

But that would not be the last insult. Greg went to his mother, and she emerged from the house and explained that Pat should pay to replace the bike.

The betrayal of both his brother and his mother took Pat many, many years to get over, but he did. One day he woke up and realized that he needed to forgive and forget, and that even though he had lived through watching his family corrupted by greed, or insanity, or whatever had caused their downfall, he needed to rise above that – and that the only way to do that was to be the better person. He would show Greg and his mom that, although they might wallow in the deepest pits of evil and avarice, he was better than that. Someone needed to be the beacon of goodness and light that all of the Morrises had once been, and Pat was determined to be that beacon.

So, Greg, on this, your fortieth birthday, I give you back the bicycle that claimed your soul, and that of our mother. One of us needs to be the better man, or we will never put this bitter feud behind us. It also occurs to me that you now have two young sons of your own – sons who, perhaps, may look upon this bike as we once looked upon the Nishiki, hanging like a beacon over the McDonald’s counter. And if they do, I leave it to you to decide which of your two sons you will favor by allowing him to ride it.

Choose carefully. It would sadden me to see you destroy the life of one of your own children with a bicycle, the same way it once happened to me.

Happy Birthday.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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May. 5th, 2007

Drunk

The Interview

The interview with the AASK social worker started at 3:00pm yesterday, and lasted two hours. It was even more thorough than I’d expected: she asked about everything from felony convictions, to what kind of child we’d be interested in, to what our own childhoods were like.

I think it went fairly well. Other than my pager going nuts halfway through (which I quickly switched from vibrate to off so I wouldn’t be distracted by it — I figured one of the other guys could handle the storage outage that it was telling me was happening), the whole thing was relatively relaxed, at least as much as someone grilling you about every detail of your personal life and history can be.

We have, however, reached our first official snag in the process. It’s an issue Kris needs to deal with before things can go forward, and I’d rather not talk about it any more detail than that since it’s Kris’s thing and not mine. I’ll just say it’s something of some importance that he’s been putting off for a very long time, and that I will be constantly reminding him to take care of it until it’s handled.

A few things that we were afraid might turn out to be problems turned out not to be, though, which was good news. So now, assuming I can get Kris’s butt in gear and get this thing resolved, we should be ready to go on to the next step. That step would probably be a parental training session that’s coming up in July; we should know more about the specifics of that when the social worker calls us back next week after the team there has gone over our interview notes and, with luck, doesn’t deem us completely unfit to be parents.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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Dec. 25th, 2006

Drunk

Christmas Embarrasment #2

Be careful what you open, and who’s watching. When you know you have friends who like to give you gifts like a man-shaped pen holder that moans when you put a ball-point in his ass, don’t open it up in front of the small children who will insist on playing with it.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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Dec. 24th, 2006

Drunk

Christmas Embarrassment #1

I’m demoralized. My two little nieces have managed to soundly whip my ass at everything I’ve put on the game consoles, including the ones I thought I was good at. I suck.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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Nov. 19th, 2006

Drunk

The What’s in the Who?

When I was a kid, every year around this time my mom would pull the platter out of some out-of-the-way cabinet, blow off the dust, and polish it up in preparation for Thanksgiving. It was a big, ugly, plasticy thing, with autumn leaves and a huge turkey printed on it. Around the edges were the words “When the frost is on the punkin, and the fodder’s in the shock…

I don’t know the origin of the phrase, much less what it means. That’s always bothered me a bit, English officianado that I am.

It’s time to break out that platter again, and that means a whole lot of other annual traditions are just around the corner. It’s already started somewhat with Halloween, that harbinger of much bigger holiday happenings just around the corner. I’m convinced the real reason for Halloween is that it’s an excuse to stockpile enough candy in the house to keep a good sugar buzz going under after New Year’s.

Next week we’ll be running head-first into Thanksgiving. That’s the day the platter is officially re-unveiled, to be covered with sliced turkey very soon thereafter. I really enjoy Thanksgiving. It’s a good excuse to get together with family and have an amazing dinner (I was blessed with a pair of parent who can each cook a holiday dinner right up there with the best of ‘em), without all the extra stress of things like gifts, heavy religious observances, or countless Peanuts specials. It’s also a four-day weekend, which makes it a pretty decent holiday in my book.

The downside to Thanksgiving is that it’s the first real warning that I’ve got to get my ass in gear and start getting ready for Christmas. However, since Thanksgiving hasn’t arrived yet, I’m not willing to talk about that particular topic. Don’t get me wrong — I can be festive as hell, and my holiday goodwill knows no bounds, but it’s a hard and fast rule with me. Until the frosty pumpkin and shocked fodder go into the dishwasher, Christmas doesn’t exist.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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Oct. 12th, 2006

Drunk

The Local Fauna

I’m a big animal lover. My house is a small zoo: three dogs (Vegas, Chin Chin and Maya) run around underfoot, there’s a room dedicated to the five parrots (Godzilla, Samba, Dino, Bella and Rhinna), and there’s a pond full of koi and goldfish in the backyard.

As a general rule, I like animals a lot more than I do people. A lot of the reason for that boils down to honesty. When Vegas wants something, for example, he’ll come up and ask for it. If he wants food, he won’t try to get on your good side first. He won’t remind you of a favor he did for you years ago. He won’t lay a guilt trip on you for the time you accidentally closed the back door on his head. He’ll just walk up to you and give you the look that means his bowl’s empty.

My animals won’t pretend they like me to get ahead of the other pets. They don’t do politics. They’re genuinely happy to see me when I get home from work, and that’ll all there is to it. There are no ulterior motives, and no mind games.

They’re also, in their own way, a lot smarter than a lot of people, and they don’t hold grudges. They don’t tell me who I should vote for. They don’t drive 45 in the fast lane in front of me when I’m late for work. They don’t leave empty milk cartons in the refrigerator. They don’t want me to fix their computers. They don’t pour out all their personal problems on me every time I see them. They won’t elect idiots to public office. They don’t ask me for money, or bum cigarettes off me.

My point? I’m not sure I have one. They also don’t mind when I ramble pointlessly. I love them for that.

Published at blog.Adonis.net. You can comment here or there.

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