Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Big Papa Koontz


I'm still working on reading every book ever published by Dean Koontz. As a writer he is an inspiration. I wasn't crazy about his last book, "Your Heart Belongs To Me". It wasn't bad, but it seemed like he'd been intrigued enough by an idea to write the book, but not enough to get truly invested into it.

But the book I'm reading now, "Breathless", is amazing. I love how he sprinkles these gem-like paragraphs into his books. Anyone who still wants to wrongfully classify him as a horror writer should read the following and tell me he doesn't have profound wisdom to offer:

"Each man or woman was a mansion in a condition between grandness and disrepair, and even in a grand palace, sometimes a room existed in which no one but the resident would ever be welcome. Cammy's heart contained more than one forbidden room, contained an entire wing of doors locked with bolts of guilt or grief, or both. Grady sensed that she denied ever herself the power to open them, to let in the light."


Friday, December 11, 2009

The Inner Mountain Man

I've always had a small, deep-seated insecurity that my wife might like me better as a clean-cut, suit-wearing kind of guy. You know, someone who exudes power, success and confidence. A guy who drives a dark, luxury car and only does so while wearing leather gloves. Someone with an interest in fashion and art. Someone who owns a scarf. Someone who would never be caught dead eating with his fingers like some kind of animal. I have no genuine interest in power or monetary success so I knew an image like that would be a stretch for me. Plus, I really hate to iron.

During the last week, you may or may not have read about the steak and eggs incident. Actually those were two isolated incidents, but I don't think you can write about steak and eggs separately when both are on the figurative plate - they're just too irresistible.

The other day we were walking through Wal-Mart past the little heating island of rotisserie chickens and Jenny said, "You should just take a whole chicken to work for lunch and eat it with your fingers!"

I can't even describe how happy that advice made me.

To give you a little background, I used to be into hunting and guns. I think most young boys go through a phase of shooting birds and indulging in their morbid curiosity by pouring salt on snails. I think I was about 13 or 14 when I started to grow out of the phase. The appeal of hunting has left me almost entirely. A crucial transition was reached, and I was suddenly much more fascinated with the beauty of living birds in flight -- I no longer pictured them as moving targets.

That trend has continued, and as the years pass I find that my trigger finger becomes more somber by the day. On Friday, I realized how far I've come from that relatively bloodthirsty 9-year-old. I got out of the elevator on the 4th floor of our office and was surprised to find a large black spider crossing the elevator lobby. I almost felt like I was "supposed" to smash it, but I was so intrigued by its journey that I just watched it for a minute. It finished the long trek across the tile and disappeared into a crack.

I haven't gone vegan nor do I feel the urge to embrace a tree. I do, however, have a newfound respect for life and no longer want to do harm.

Then again...

There does seem to be something primal lurking within me. For example, when I went on the weekend "Man-venture" with Todd, Josh and Spencer, I crossed my fingers that someone would hit a rabbit while driving. I know it's horrible to wish for the death of a cute little bunny, but honestly I did. I wanted to skin it and roast it on the fire. I wanted to tear meat from the bones. I wanted to eat with my hands. I wanted blood to trickle down my chin. I wanted to be covered in dirt and soot. I wanted to blacken the underside of my fingernails. I wanted to push down trees and shoot the moon suspicious glares.

I could practically feel my beard growing.

That tiny mountain man within has gotten a lot quieter throughout the years... but he's still there. Last week Jenny again gave me the wonderful gift of acceptance when she told me that she is well aware of that side of me. In fact, she told me that the Grizzly Adams gene does NOT turn her off.

She actually kind of likes it.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

... in a cubicle-shaped corporate nutshell


(This picture has little to do with my post, but it makes me smile and gives me hope.)

I was asked to write an article about myself for the department newsletter. Like most editors, they hacked it to pieces. Here it is, in its virgin form:

Dan Workman is not coordinated. Most of his athletic ventures were awkward at best, until Jr. High when Dan discovered contact sports. Being bigger than most of the kids, Dan fit right in as an offensive lineman and defensive linebacker. In High School, Dan made the shift into rugby and hockey. A broken ankle took him out of rugby mid-season. At the end of hockey season, Dan was given the “Team Assassin” award and also held the season record for the most time in the penalty box. Not being the strongest skater or puck handler, the coaches instead gave Dan a list of jersey numbers at the beginning of each game and, like a 9-year-old in an unattended junk yard with a hammer, set him loose.

His juvenile affinity for hitting now subsided, Dan spends his free time painting tiny toenails and having tea parties. He has been married for 5 years to a gorgeous woman and they have two young daughters, Emma (4) and Abbi (2). They are currently working with Abbi, trying to teach her not to hit.

Dan has been with Fidelity since March, 2008, except for a month-long exodus to Wyoming to take a job writing for a newspaper. The scenery was almost as beautiful as the pay was poor. Dan returned to Fidelity and his family has moved to warmer climates by transferring from Salt Lake to Westlake in October. Now Dan’s only big life dilemma is deciding whether to side with the Aggies or the Longhorns.




Tuesday, December 8, 2009

"Protein, go for it" (John Cusack, The Sure Thing - 1985)

I’ve been getting a lot of shit today about what/how I eat. I’ve dropped some weight lately, but I’m still in the 230 range, so the apple I grabbed on the way to work was not enough breakfast for me.

When I don’t have the time and/or foresight to make myself breakfast I usually go down the cafeteria at work. There are two employees working the grill; a guy and a girl. I’ve run into the girl a few times. The first time I ordered six scrambled eggs she said, “Six?” to make sure she heard me right, but went ahead and filled my order without another word.

This morning, I ordered my six eggs and the guy practically shouted, “You want six eggs?!”

“Yes. Yes I do. I want six eggs.”

He shook his head and mumbled, “six eggs” as he wrote it on the Styrofoam container. The girl walked past him and said, “It’s not the first time.” They both chuckled and shot each other a little glance.

“I’m standing right here!” I want to shout at them. Is that really weird? Does eating half-a-dozen eggs in one sitting really merit this type of reaction? Seriously, I want to know. I mean, I can understand a backward glance or two if I’d walked into Krispy Kreme and demanded two dozen donuts for myself.

At this point in my mental tirade, I’m standing on counter and screaming, “It’s the most important meal of the day!!”

And then, as I turn to the crowd I say, “Don’t you judge me.” (For some reason, in my mind that line always comes out with a southern accent.) After a short pause another slightly overweight man begins the slow clap which is followed by a musical montage.

Anyway, I’m working 13-hour shifts lately, so I have to grab three meals on my way out the door. Along with the apple I found half of a leftover steak and a Tupperware container of mashed potatoes. The steak was Todd’s or Becky’s, but they know my stance on old leftovers. If I am fairly certain that not eating something means it will get thrown away, I consider it fair game. In fact, the other day I stopped Jenny from tossing something in the garbage and Becky said, “You know you can’t clean out the fridge while Dan is around!”

I feel like a damned scavenger raccoon.

The new setting is my desk, Westlake Texas, around 4 PM… Central time.

I am cursing under my breath as the tines break off of my plastic fork, one at a time. As I saw away at the old, tough steak I feel like I might as well be trying to cut my way out of jail with the blade from a pencil sharpener.

Exasperated, muttering something along the lines of “Screw it” I grab the steak from the container and just rip off a chunk before throwing it back in.

I haven’t chewed twice before a voice behind me says, “What the…?”

“Did you just eat that steak with your fingers? What, are you camping?!”

Another voice says, "What's going on?"

I can hear the word and laughter beginning to spread that Dan is eating steak with his fingers so I just put my headphones back on, turn up my music and keep going till every scrap of that thing was gone.

I wish I was camping.


Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Snow


One of the nice things about getting bigger is that this XXXL fleece jacket that Jenny bought me a few years ago now fits perfectly. It is thick, cozy, and probably the only jacket I have with a surplus of sleeve - the rest of them land about 3 inches shy of my wrist. It worked out well today because we got SNOW in Texas this morning!!!

Granted, it was only about half an inch and was gone by 10 AM, but still, snow.

(Later that day)

I'm sprawled on the floor of one of the conference rooms in our building with a beige telephone receiver to my ear. (I remembered my jacket today but forgot my cell phone again.) With my free hand I'm swinging the cord and imagining nun chucks. I feel like a teenager, lying on the floor and talking to a girl on a corded phone. Not sure what the opposite would be of cordless - cordful? cordy? corder?

The girl on the other end of the phone happens to be my 2-year-old daughter, Abbi. She is telling me about playing Play-Doh and, honestly, it makes me a little hungry. My grandma used to make edible Play-Doh out of peanut butter and flour.

I can hear Emma in the background saying that she doesn't really feel like talking to me right now, but she changes her mind before I hang up with Jenny.

"Are you mad at me?" I ask her when she gets on the phone.

"No," she says.

"Oh, I thought maybe you were upset with me and that's why you didn't feel like talking to me."

"Well, I am a little upset with you because you're at work."

And then, after a slight pause she says, "But sometimes I do like it when you go to work because you bring me treats."

So, here I am, close to the end of my shift wrapping fun-size bags of Teddy Grahams in the Foreign Bonds section of my free copy of The Wall Street Journal. Being a Stock Broker is really starting to pay off.

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

It's Not You, It's Me


A few weeks ago I wrote a blog in the form of a letter -- a semi-serious apology, alluding to my history with Utah as a rocky, complicated relationship. During the last year I have learned so much about myself, most importantly - how to feel whole and okay with who I really am; finding the line between complacency and dissatisfaction; trying to trust my intuition while at the same time constantly reminding myself how much I have left to learn and how little I really know.

I'd hoped that coming to terms with my own ignorance would make me a more accepting and open individual. I have tried to embrace the occasions when someone else can teach me something new and admit when I'm wrong - though I'm not sure how well I've accomplished that task.

In many aspects of my life, this has worked very well. I do feel that I have learned to be more accepting and gregarious than ever. I've tried to stand my ground when I feel strongly about something while at the same time keeping both sides of an argument in mind.

But, during the last year I have also been called "opinionated, manipulative," and (sarcastically) "always right." That last one was actually written in marker on my back during a party... another story.

I'm sure there was some truth to those statements, as much as I hate the idea of being that guy. I've enjoyed some very engaging discussions with friends and family during the last year. I really want to thank them for that. Probably because of more fault of mine than anyone else’s, many of those have turned into debates or even heated arguments.

Much of the pain of our separation from Mormonism has subsided. The book I wrote about the process has collected dust for months and I haven't thought much about it. It has actually felt very good to move on.

However, today I've been going through my blog and reading many of the posts from the last year. Last night my wonderful cousin Melissa told me that I was "Irreverently and inappropriately funny." I considered it a compliment because I think she meant it that way, but at the same time it carried a small sting because it made me wonder if I've been offending other people. I figure the chances are pretty high.

While reading my blogs in chronological order I can see that my writing has become noticeably more jaded and outspoken. I'm worried that I've gone too far and lost any sliver of respect my Mormon family and friends may have still had for me. If that is the case, I want to sincerely apologize.

Getting out the "bubble" has been a journey. I've loved learning so much about the way other people live, love and worship. I've tried so hard to understand the cultures, lifestyles and religions outside of the Utah I grew up in. The world out there really is so different; it's easy to notice with even just a glimpse.

Throughout this process I have worked hard to give more respect to other belief systems. I've made an effort to extend a tolerance I didn't allow myself before. In doing so, however, I feel that I've become MORE intolerant of Mormonism within Utah. That isn't right or fair.

I don't know if I will ever again be able to experience certainty in spiritual matters. In the movie "Doubt" I heard a line from Phillip Seymour Hoffman that hit me like Catholic bible to the head, "Even if you feel certainty, it is an emotion, not a fact."

That is something that rings true to me but you might not feel the same, and I respect that. I applaud your obedience and faithfulness, even if I've decided to try adopting a more Buddhist or Secular Humanist approach to morality. I could be wrong.

So, even though I will strive to be honest in my writing and speak my mind regardless of the audience, I may still need help from loved ones - keeping me in check to help minimize the number of them that I offend. I think everyone needs to find that line, right? I sure could learn a lesson or two about erring on the side of caution.

I love you guys. I'm sorry if I've said or written anything that has left you feeling personally attacked. I promise that wasn't my intention.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Fantastic Weekend = Bloated Monday Morning


I don't remember the last time I rented 4 movies at once, but I did on Saturday. I picked one for everybody:

Funny People - Me (best choice, by the way)
G.I. Joe - Todd
Four Christmases - Becky

And I'm completely drawing a blank on the fourth one but it was the new cancer movie with Cameron Diaz, because sometimes I sort of want Jenny to cry without it being my fault.

I am a real fan of lounge weekends. I've been reading this delightfully sacrilegious book called "Lamb" by Christopher Moore. It is about the resurrection of Christ's childhood friend Biff. Biff is asked to write a more complete "gospel" about the early years with the messiah (who is named Josh in the story because Jesus is a Greek translation of Yeshua, which is Joshua). My wonderful Mormon friends and family would probably not get as much of a kick out of the book because, at 15, Jesus discovers coffee and goes on a healing frenzy, almost getting beat up after aggressively casting a demon from some guy's wife.

I think it's a great story and surprisingly endearing.

I laid on the couch in front of the window, wrapped in a thick fleece blanket and just read and dozed. On more than one occasion I woke up to see Abbi's smiling face about 2 inches from mine. I loved it.

We ate countless plates of nachos and played hours of pointless facebook games; cooking fake food, arranging non-existent jungle jewels, tending virtual farms. And yet, I did feel a small pang of guilt when I realized that I was neglecting my electronic fish. Poor Shiteater - sick from a lack of pixelated food and a dangerously high level of binary algae.

We stayed up late and let the girls climb into our bed first thing in the morning to watch hours of cartoons before actually getting started for the day. It never felt busy or rushed. Pure bliss.

It was the kind of weekend that leaves you in need of a strong laxative tea and at least an extra hour in the gym.

To top it all off, Jenny wrote me the sweetest blog entry I've ever read. As someone who is prone to public, written expressions of love... it hit me right in the sweet spot and left me with a lump in the throat. She was speaking my language, which I'm learning is such an important key in a relationship. The "treat others the way you would like to be treated" rule also works in reverse. How many times have I sent Jenny a naughty text message to express my fondness of her when doing the laundry would have been so much more effective? Oh well, we are constantly learning more about each other and using that knowledge to improve our marriage. It really is incredible to be in a Give-Give relationship.

Sadly, most of this world is filled with Give-Take relationships. You won't ever see a Taker with another Taker - it's too easy for them to spot each other. But a Taker will latch onto a Giver with ease, and the relationship works well... for a while. Both parties are having their needs met. But, it really is only a matter of time before the Giver gets emotionally/sexually/financially/(take your pick, really) exhausted.

I don't mean to group the earth's population into two groups, and I realize that a broad spectrum lies beneath this generalization, but if you're a Giver you probably know exactly what I'm talking about. I'm sure I've written about this before - in fact I've toyed around with the idea of a book titled "Surviving as a Giver in a Taker's World" except I have absolutely no real credentials to speak of. I just know what it's like to feel like a prisoner in a relationship. And now, thanks to Jenny, I know how beautiful it can be when two people get together who are trying to "out give" each other.

The magic question to find out if you are the Giver in a Give-Take relationship is: "What would happen if I said 'no' to them?"

If you are terrified that they won't want anything to do with you and your usefulness will abruptly expire, I'm sorry, but you are.

Not quite sure how I ended up down this path, especially since I selected the action figures bagging a squirrel photo for this entry. But, hell, it's my blog and if I decide to soapbox midstream then eff it, I'm going to.

I've seen a lot of Give-Take relationships end, and it's usually a very messy ordeal. Sadly, it's almost inevitable - a matter of time - a clicking timebomb. It normally takes a Giver a long time to put their foot down. By that time many of them are so fed up that when they finally do, it comes down with a lot of noise.

Unfortunately, to add true fufillment to this type of relationship a genuine change has to take place within the Taker. The situation can't turn around without it. Hopefully we all know how futile it is to put our lives on hold while we wait for someone else to change.

Anyway, enough of that for now.

So, yeah, it was a great weekend. I guess the sensations of bloated and contemplative aren't mutually exclusive. Perhaps that's why so much of mankind's best thinking is done on the toilet.

Friday, November 27, 2009

Black Friday


Today, on the day after Thanksgiving, I am not shopping. Instead, I am sitting at my desk, eating free popcorn and feeling some residual gratitude. I am thankful that my office provides free popcorn. I am even more grateful that they selected the "Butter Lovers" variety.


It is a "Jeans Day" at work and I am thankful that I don't have to wear dress slacks. No dress slacks also means no tucking in, which is a huge bonus. I don't think tucking your shirt in is ever really justified unless you're a groom or a beekeeper.


I am grateful that "The Men Who Stare At Goats" is finally online.


I am thankful that the especially vivid car chase/gun fight dream I had last night WAS just a dream. I was very pleased to find the family minivan sitting unharmed in the driveway this morning.


I am thankful for my cute wife who, with a giant grin on her face, surprised me and our two young daughters this morning by saying, "Come have pie for breakfast!!" We all squealed with delight and raced to the table. I won.


I am thankful that there is not anything really wrong with my brain or hearing, because I could swear I heard birds all morning. It turns out that the cap on my 2-Liter of "Diet Wild Cherry Pepsi" was just a little loose. The thin stream of CO2 escaping was responsible for the whistling sound.


I am grateful for this cool place we currently live and the sightseeing it allows. On my way to work I drove within 50 yards of a hawk, a coyote, a peregrine falcon, and a camel. No lie.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

No Pain, No Gain


I'm sitting in my cubicle and trying to type without letting my forearms touch the desk - a nearly impossible task. It feels like the radius and ulna bones of both arms have grown thousands of jagged little spikes. I'm beginning to wonder where the pain from tendonitis ends and the agony of compound fractures begins.

This weightlifting "hobby" has had some surprising results. I find myself reading more Men's Health and Muscle magazine articles. The last thing I want to do is become a gym-rat meathead, but adding a few extra pounds of upper body strength seems like a good idea on a number of different levels.

A couple of weeks ago I learned about doing "negatives" while benchpressing. You can do negatives by having spotters help you lower the weight slowly and then lifting it back up for you, or you can continuously increase the length of your extension while decreasing the weight.

You start by setting the bar about 12 inches below your full extension. You are strongest at the very top of your reach. By the time you finish, the rack is set low enough that you start with the bar practically on your chest.

Today I manged to lift 425 pounds at the top of my extension. Not a full benchpress, just one foot off the rack. But, still, I feel like that is a lot of weight and wanted to brag about it. To give that some perspective, I decided to convert it.

425 pounds equals:

213 Beto's breakfast burritos
1 Female Bengal Tiger
22.36 of those Indonesian 19-pound babies
5 supermodels
1,360 cans of tuna
850 Carl's Jr. Six Dollar Burgers
1/5 of a classic Volkswagen Beetle




Friday, November 20, 2009

GLad it wasn’t mUTTON



You know how they always say Texas does things bigger? Well, it really is true. I just walked through the biggest hotel I’ve ever seen. You first enter the atrium after pushing your way through elephant-sized revolving doors. There are fountains, rivers, waterfalls and a massive man-made canyon running through the enormous courtyard. The 7 stories of hotel rooms surrounding the atrium give it the feel of an indoor football arena.

We made our way along the river to the Riverwalk Café, passing one koi pond after another. The area surrounding the café is designed to look like the famous river walk in San Antonio.

I’ve been to Vegas, Mesquite, Wendover, and Empire Buffet in Layton, Utah. I am no stranger to all-you-can eat.

The Riverwalk Café, however, offers king crab, jumbo shrimp, filet mignon, prime rib, salmon in red pepper sauce, New York strip steaks, raspberry cheesecake, fresh watermelon water, a fajita bar, and much, much more.

I was three plates in before I even considered slowing down. I’d been warned that the food was good and to go hungry – very hungry. I filled up my fourth plate with desert and took an apple for the road. It was incredible.

I ate blindly, like a goldfish whose toddler owner has an over-zealous feeding hand. As I left the building, I called Jenny to rant and rave about how delicious the food was. But, during our conversation I realized that my breathing was strained. My stomach pushed uncomfortably against my belt.

By the time I reached the car, I was reminded of the Brian Regan bit about hospitals: “I feel like everything on my inside wants to be on my outside.”

I pulled out of the parking lot and made it about three blocks before I had to turn into another parking lot – this one belonging to a closed hunting supply shop. I yanked the emergency brake as soon I was behind the building. I jumped out of the car and made to the bushes behind the dumpster before all of that food made its escape.

Every directional aspect of the event was backwards. Incoming ports became outgoing ports. I tasted the meal in reverse, beginning with that delicious chocolate cake and ending with appetizers. The cilantro hummus WAS delicious when it was on its way in. I enjoyed it less on its way out my nose.

The odor of vomit clings to the nostril walls. The gag reflex feels sensitive and your awareness of it is surprisingly high, like a tooth with a new filling. Oncoming burps threaten, the way farts do during a bout of the runs.

Do I feel miserable? Yes. Do I think it was worth it? Yes. Would I do it again? In a heartbeat.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Annoying Habits


“I think you might have sleep apnea” Jenny tells me after I wake up this morning. “You hold your breath for like 2 minutes straight and just make this really weird high-pitched noise. I nudged your leg and you started breathing again.”

I broke a molar on a Skittle a couple of weeks ago (I guess that’s what I get for interrupting my 2-month streak without sugar). I don’t have money for dental co pays right now, let alone cash to spend on special machines for people who can’t manage to multi-task well enough to sleep and breathe at the same time.

I don’t know why I’m thinking about these things while straining to keep two 100-pound dumbbells from falling on my face, but I am. Lifting weights has become my little escape from work. The weird thing is; I don’t even feel like lifting today. I’d rather go sit by the lake and relax.

“Anthem for the Underdog” is being pumped into my ears. I think I like this song so much because it reminds me of the day Jenny and I interviewed Red. 12 Stones played that song for their sound check while we were visiting with bassist Randy Armstrong. It’s pretty damn catchy, too.

A little drop of spit flies out of my mouth as I exhale for the 6th rep. I really don’t feel like lifting right now. My form gets weak on number 8 so I drop both weights. They hit the floor with two exaggerated thuds.

I sit up and look into the mirror. I’m sweating and wearing a dress shirt. Bad combination.

There are dark bags under my eyes. I smile a little because the beard stubble, sweat, and tired eyes make me look pretty sick. I’m wondering if I look bad enough to get sent home if I tell my manager, “I think feel the pig aids coming on.”

I’m walking out of the gym and the girl at the front desk says, “See you at six, Dan!”

That’s a little odd, I think. How could she know when my next break is?

But then I realize that I, Dan Workman, for the first time in my life, have developed a routine.

When I got transferred to the Texas office I was so excited to have a gym in the building. My goal was (and still is, unrealistic as it might be) to give Jenny a six-pack for Christmas. I’d been reading the Men’s Health and Fitness articles and many of them indicated that if I used more weight with less reps, I could maximize the overall impact of my workout. It is also a well-known fact that more muscle burns more calories throughout the day.

So, I made it my goal to go to the gym on every break. That is three times a day for a total of one hour. It’s been surprisingly effective. I’ve dropped about 5 pounds but I’m pretty sure I’ve added on muscle. In fact, in one month I’ve increased my max bench weight from 240 to 325. That’s 85 pounds in a month. I think that’s pretty good considering the hormones in cheap milk are the closest thing I have to steroids.

The strange part, however, was developing a habit without meaning to. The moment my break starts, I walk down to the gym. Even if I don’t want to, it’s like my legs are on autopilot.

So I'm starting to wonder if there’s something to this routine thing. What would happen if I immediately went jogging first thing in the morning for a month, or automatically picked up a book every time I felt like watching TV, or instinctively drank a glass of water every time I felt like having an Ultra-Violet Diet Mt. Dew?

Who knows, really? It’s all probably voodoo anyway. Plus, I really like TV.

Thursday, November 5, 2009

So I Bought You Socks Instead

(For Jenny)

I awoke today in an excellent mood.
You were standing there smiling and holding food.

A plate of eggs, and coffee too.
Through my morning breath I utter, “Dang, I love you!”

I finish eating, and exit the room
So very happy you made me your groom

“Thanks, babe! That sure was delicious!”
“Not only that,” you say, “but also nutritious!”
With that ever-so-kissable sweet but sly grin,
You ask, “Did you notice the broccoli I decided to throw in?”

I knew right then and there that I wanted to do something special today,
Something unexpected and extraordinary to show that I love you in every way.

What would I do? What could I buy?
My dilemma was complex, too difficult to rhyme.

So, I axed the poem format and decided to just brainstorm possible gift ideas. Just like working through a bag of peanut butter M&M’s, it was a process of elimination.

At first, I thought about lingerie. I could buy you something scantly and silky, weighing approximately as much as a sparrow’s fart. But then I thought, no, that’s really not a gift for her.

I thought about that dog you rescued today, and how sweet you are with animals, so I thought about getting you a puppy. But then I thought, no, she’s already doing potty training right now with Abbi. That would be too many potty watches to keep dry.

So, I thought maybe I’d get you a new chick-flick DVD, maybe something with a quirky lead female character and a devilishly handsome male “friend” who gives her a lot of crap but secretly understands her. And maybe he helps her land the guy she’s wanted for years, but once she has him, she realizes that he’s kind of an ass to waiters/kids/animals/cab drivers and suddenly realizes that she misses the guy who drove her insane 45 minutes earlier in the film. So she goes to visit him but happens to walk in just when he’s being passionately kissed by her secretly evil best friend/bridesmaid/sister/roommate/mother and decides to run away. He’s forced to chase her by acquiring a stolen horse/car/golf cart/child’s bike and just happens to make it in time to see her leaving on her boat/plane/train/bus and, out of breath, curses and looks really broken-hearted. But then, just when all seems lost he finds her at a crowded party/wedding/bat-mitzva/corporate meeting and proceeds to confess his undying love to her in front of everyone. They kiss, and we presume that the rest of their lives together are free of problems. I was going to buy you one of those movies, but then I realized I just written one.

I thought about buying you a bar of that symphony chocolate with toffee that you like, but I know that you would say something about all of the leftover Halloween candy we already have.

I thought about buying you a gift certificate to get your nails done, but I know how those drive you crazy after a while.

And then, after all of those ideas, I thought about the way you smile when I wrap you up in your favorite blanket. I thought about the way you love to feel secure and warm. So, I took my lingerie/puppy/chick-flick/chocolate/free nails money and got online to buy you…


…10 pairs of super comfy socks.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

The "Douchebag Ex-Boyfriend" Prose - Letter of Apology


So, I wasn’t really sure how to tell you this, but I’ve been feeling like I owed you an apology. I was kind of a dick there at the end, you know, bad mouthing you and all. I made fun of you in front of your friends and even pointed out some of your flaws. That wasn’t cool. I shouldn’t have done that.

I mean, don’t get me wrong, we go way back. You’ll always be a part of my life. I guess I was just getting bored of the relationship. We’ve had good times and bad times, and I let myself focus on the bad. I’ll admit it, I still think about you sometimes.

I’ll be the first to say that you are absolutely smoking hot in the summer. I love it. Spring and Autumn are just fine, too. But you were always such a bitch in the winter; I couldn’t help but get a little distant. You put on that winter weight and get all frigid. I have to be honest, when you have that time of the year, I’m just not that attracted to you.

Like I said though, I shouldn’t have been trashing you in front of everyone. We really have had some great times, Utah. I loved getting up into your peaks whenever I could – and don’t even get me started about the times I went south! Good times. Good times.

I know we had that little falling out last year, when I started dating your roommate, Wyoming. But, Wyoming was a lot of fun, I won’t deny it. She was laid back and uncomplicated. I loved to just run my fingers through her air while we were driving - it smelled amazing. And don’t even get me started on her stars!

But, Wyoming was just a fling. You took me back and things were… well, they were okay I guess. I just don’t think we were ever the same after that.

And I talked a lot of shit, I shouldn’t have done that. But then, out of nowhere, this big steamy blonde walks in and I can’t take my eyes off her! You remember Texas, right? You used to be neighbors. Well, we had a great week together and she showed me an incredible time. I was love-struck. I got all wound up on barbeque and margaritas and before I knew it, she was asking me to move in. What was I supposed to say, Utah?! Huh? You tell me! The roughest year of our relationship and you decide to rain all June? Didn’t score yourself any big points there. Air quality warnings all winter?! I don’t mean to be a jerk, but if you aren’t letting me go outside I’m bound to start looking for it somewhere else. In the words of Stephen T. Colbert: “It’s a hungry dog that turns over the trash.”

Things are good here with Texas. You know, there’ve been some problems, normal new relationship stuff. She’s got this annoying habit of making simple things harder than they need to be. Hell, her roads make even your roads look good! But, between you and me, she’s been around a time or two! Some days I think she’ll let just anybody in.

One of my friends put up a blog post about their fall activities. And, well, there they were – your mountains in the background. You had on that sexy, flashy little fall number – you know the one. I’d be lying if I said I didn’t look twice! Never really did get tired of staring at those mountains. Truth be told, I actually feel a little disoriented without them.

Anyways, I’m not sure why I decided to write you. I guess I just feel a little guilty for being so hard on you. I was kind of an ass. I’m not saying I’m ready to get back together just now. I just wanted you to know I was thinking about you. We’ll talk again when you’re done with your winter cycle.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Texan in Training


“Yeah, but you’re gonna hate the humidity,” they’d say.


“You’re not really serious about Texas, are you?” some would ask.


“You know you’re gonna be back, right? It’s just gonna be another Wyoming!” one especially delightful individual predicted.


And my favorite reaction was from an older coworker, who stopped me mid-sentence by simply screaming, “TEXAS?!”


Maybe they have some of the same misconceptions about Texas that I had. I’ll admit; I was expecting to find dusty little towns riddled with tumbleweeds, rattlers, stains from spitting tobacco, and skittering armadillos. I expected the nightlife to be non-existent unless you were willing to scoot and/or boogie your boots – and owned said pair of boots.


I knew that Texans were proud of their state. I knew that pride extended into most aspects of Texas, including the state’s unique shape. I assumed I’d see some Texas-shaped refrigerator magnets, clocks, maybe even a chicken-fried steak cut out to look like the state.


To my surprise, the first display of this shape-oriented pride was found in a tattoo on the back of some guy’s neck. He was covered in tattoos, and looked like someone you’d mosh with at the Warped Tour – not your “average” Texan. But, there he was in the DFW airport, full sleeves on both arms and the outline of Texas centered on the back of his neck.


We got outside and I immediately felt the humidity. It was hot, don’t get me wrong, but it wasn’t unbearable. In fact, we were all astonished when the thermometer in the car registered 103.


“I doesn’t feel that hot!!” we all kept saying. We continued to marvel at how much “softer” the heat in Texas is.


I tried to describe it several times, but couldn’t. I continued to reach by saying things like, “It’s sort of like the heat is wrapping you up instead of beating down on you.”


The truth is, I loved having some extra moisture with my heat. The doctor who did my laser eye surgery told me I had clogged tear ducts. I go though artificial tears like crazy and ALWAYS have red eyes. They seem to burn constantly. But by day two in Texas, I still hadn’t used any drops. I don’t know if it was the moisture, the air quality, or both, but I immediately noticed a huge improvement. By day four you could actually see the whites of my eyes! I was so excited. Imagine my disappointment when arriving back in Utah and feeling them burn on the way back from the airport.


On a side note, while we were driving my sister in law (who had come to pick us up) asked, “So, did you have any tornados down there?”


Without missing a beat, Jenny let her too-rarely-used smartass flag fly and said, “No. Did you have any earthquakes up here?” It was fantastic. I friggin’ love that woman.


Anyway, back to the trip itself, we’d gone down with several objectives. We wanted to feel the heat. We wanted to walk around in the city and drive the phallic interstates (look at a map of the roads between Dallas and Fort Worth and you’ll get that one). We wanted to eat the food. And, more than anything, we wanted to meet the people.


You always hear about how friendly they are in Texas. I was curious. Growing up in Utah, I’d spent my entire life around plenty of people acting the way a nice person would. We’d gotten a real taste of some genuine, down-to-earth people in Florida, Indiana and especially Wyoming. Texas had its work cut out for it.


On the first night, the girl at the checkout counter smiled and said, “Have a real great night, Y’all.” It was wonderful. She really meant it! It wasn’t like the way I normally say it – generic and bland. She actually wanted us to have a great night! Side note: this was not a redneck, “hick” girl. She had a cool little grunge, hippy look going. Nevertheless, the “Y’all” still sounded as natural as could be.


In the restaurants, they smiled at us and asked us to take our time. We never felt rushed. They were genuinely grateful for their tips and nearly all of them treated us like we’d been invited to eat in their home. Amazingly hospitable people.


While walking in the Stockyards (an actual “western” touristy section just outside of Fort Worth) we really put the “friendly” claim to test.


I was pushing Emma in her stroller. We were walking past a biker bar and three guys were standing outside on the sidewalk, sipping beer and shootin’ the shit. I have no stereotype against “bikers” but I think they pride themselves on being a somewhat rowdy bunch. They have never stricken me as “mean” or “violent” by nature. Then again, these guys were big (like three, three-fitty kinda BIG) and I wasn’t about to try to push my way through. The curb was steep so going around was going to be a chore.


One of the guys leaning against the building noticed us and smiled at Emma. His hand shot out, grasping a fistful of the other guy’s shirt. He yanked him off of the sidewalk and bellowed, “Get out the way and let this beautiful little princess pass!”


They smiled at us and waved at her. The one who’d been in the way looked at her and said, “Yup! I spect she’d run me right over!”


Here are three rough-n-tumble bikers talking to my daughter like southern women on their way home from church. I loved it. I couldn’t get enough of it.


We made friends everywhere we went. We chatted with people in the stores, at the burger joints, on the way to the Titans-Cowboys game, during the game, and on the way home from the game. We were hooked in no time.


Utah has some great things to offer. More than anything it’s home to most of our favorite people. We really do wish we could take you all with us. If you decide to stay in the beehive state – as they say in Texas – “Yawn yoan!” But, hey, who knows, maybe with enough time we’ll be able to talk you into visiting. If you do, you might also fall in love and want to just turn your vacation into a staycation.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Giving Birth to a Criminal Mastermind


It’s a dark day when your toddler first outsmarts you. Emma has always been extremely bright for her age. She was speaking in full, concise sentences by 14 months. She knew all of her shapes, colors, and even letters by a year and a half. She could point out and recite the entire alphabet by age two. At the age of three she wrote her own name.

Where did we go wrong?

I didn’t expect to be asking myself that as a parent until her teenage years. I mean, sure, I figured I’d ruin the first kid somewhere down the line but I thought I’d at least wait until she got to school. That way I’d be able to shuffle blame toward “that slutty little friend of hers” or even a “broken education system.”

How wrong I was.

At the age of four, Emma already seems to be directing her efforts to evil. Beneath that heavenly sweet and adorable façade lurks the churning think-tank of a criminal mastermind. She appears to already have an aptitude for manipulation and deceit. She’s working the system. She’s finding the loopholes without effort. She’s messing with my head. She’s a loose cannon.

She must be stopped.

The other night, Jenny and I were enjoying a few minutes to ourselves after putting the girls to bed. Jenny was nibbling on the Symphony bar I’d bagged for her with my incredible hunter/gatherer skills. We were nestled together on the couch, watching Californication on the laptop.

“Thump, thump, thump,” echoes the small, quick, methodical footfalls from upstairs.

Jenny pauses the show. David Duchovny was frozen on screen, either in the middle of having sex, smoking a cigarette, making a witty remark, or all three – I don’t remember.

I crane my head toward the hallway just in time to see a flash of pink and purple at the top of the stairs.

“Emma?” we both shout.

Silence.

“Emma! We know you’re up there!”

As sweet as can be, she inches into view, smiling like she knows she’s not in trouble.

“You’re supposed to be in bed, kiddo. Why aren’t you?” I ask.

A sly smile creases the corners of her mouth and she begins to descend the stairs with confidence.

“I just wanted to give you both loves,” she says, running to give Jenny a hug.

“Ooooohhhhhhhhh! How sweet!!” Jenny says.

Hugging my wife, Emma turns to shoot me a look of pure maniacal glee. You’ve seen those movies, the ones where the guy pretending to be crippled uses his lie to get away with putting his hands all over the protagonist’s girl? You know that look he gives him while playing grab ass with the woman he loves?

That’s the look my four-year-old is giving me.

I still take her in for a hug before sitting her on my lap. The confrontation is eminent. She knows what she’s doing. I know what she’s doing. Time to shut it down.

“That was pretty sneaky, Emma!” I say, giving her props but also letting her know it’s not okay.

She smiles, nods, and chuckles.

“I’m on to you, you know!” I say. “You think you’re gonna have me wrapped around your finger by the time you’re 12, don’t you?”

That same sly smile begins pulling her face into a knowing grin. She pauses for dramatic effect before looking me directly in the eyes and saying…

“Or 10.”

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Perspective


I’ve been thinking a lot about perspective lately. Working in the financial industry, I spend a lot of time listening to people bitch about their money. Today, for example, I had a chat session with a “Premium” client. He had over 6 million dollars in his account. He came into the chat guns-a-blazing over a miscalculation of his margin balance. In my world of “Electronic Response” blazing guns means typing in all caps!

So, here I am, running numbers for Scrooge McDuck to find out where his “missing” money was. Guess how much he complained he was missing… 3 bucks.

How many times have we fantasized about having money?

“Oh, babe, if we just had a million dollars! We could practically live off of the interest!”

Do you know what I’m beginning to realize? Rich people are some of the most miserable people on earth! I’m serious. They always have something to be “furious” about. They talk to me about how they can’t “handle” the stress of their late order of free checks. The throw tantrums and have meltdowns. They send emails from some cottage in Italy, ranting about the execution they got on their trade.

I’m always tempted to say, “You’re in Italy! On vacation!!! Stop counting your fuggin’ money and enjoy it!!”

But they can’t. The wealth consumes them. Everything else – joy, family, relaxation… even common human decency – seems to fly out the window.

Do I like the idea of having that kind of money? Sure. Do I need it? Not in the slightest.

I sit on my ass in a climate controlled building and get paid $20 an hour for very little work. Do you know that I have gotten paid to watch hundreds, if not thousands of hours of television and movies? Let’s see… True Blood, Dexter, Smallville, Weeds, Californication, are the series I can think of off the top of my head that I’ve watched in FULL while on the clock! Did you know that I wrote the majority of my first book while getting paid? Oh yeah, and they just gave me a raise for my performance.

The bulk of the world lives in poverty on less than $2 a day. That’s less than $800 a year.

“Oh, darling, can you imagine living in America? We could make $10,000 a year and live like kings!”

So there’s the finances. Moving on.

I hate jogging. I feel like I’m always too tired to go for a run. Sometimes I wake up with a sore back. From time to time I’ll stand in front of the mirror before getting into the shower, looking like a naked, shaved gorilla, and wish I had my abs back. I’ll wish the veins in my arms stood out a little more. I’ll wish my hair was a little darker and thicker. I’ll wish I could sprint a little faster, jump a little higher, maybe even look like the ripped black dude on True Blood or do all the cool maneuvers those mercenary guys on Die Hard 4 could do. I’ll wish I could skate or BMX like the guys on the X-Games can.

I can run. I am totally capable of running. If I wasn’t lazy about it, I have the potential to be anything I physically want.

“I’m too lazy to run,” is a statement most of us would make if we were being honest. If we’re really willing to say something like that, shouldn’t we be willing to say it in front of someone in a wheelchair? Shouldn’t we be willing to gripe about our lack of arm definition in front of someone who suffers from cerebral palsy? Shouldn’t we bitch and moan about how hard it is to exercise in front of the population of individuals whose bodies have failed them in some form or another?

“Sure, I’m perfectly whole physically, but running is hard.”

I think the wheelchair guy would be perfectly justified (not to mention aligned) to give me a good, solid punch in the crotch.

“I hate this mole!” you say to the Elephant Man.

“This music is too loud!” you say to the deaf woman.

“The sun is too bright!” you whine to the blind man.

“My eight-hour shift was exhausting! I really need to lie down!” you complain to the bed-ridden child battling leukemia.

So there’s the physical. Moving on.

“These kids are driving me crazy!!” you say to the couple that can’t have children.

“My husband (of 12 years who you desperately love and who returns your affection) never puts the toilet seat down!!” you shout to the lonely coworker who is still searching for love.

“My best friend is being such a jerk!” you vent to the socially awkward autistic individual.

“School is so much work. I have to read all these books!” you tell the Down Syndrome kid from up the street.

“This meatloaf is kinda dry!” you say to the 12-year-old Ethiopian who has never experienced the sensation of a full stomach.

“I’m not even getting my bonus this year!” you tell the factory worker who just got laid off.

“Our tap water tastes funny!” you whine to the Australian family whose house just burned down.

“Obama’s gonna raise my taxes by 3%!” you yell at the orphan in Rwanda who lost her entire family and village to genocide.

“Life is really hard!” you complain to the teenager who just got struck and killed by a bus.

“You’re a big, fat, spoiled, brat,” you confess to yourself in the mirror.

I had $1,000 stolen from me today. That sucked. I wrote this mostly for myself, to remind me that I live like a king. I really hope you take it as the reminder we could ALL use from time to time.

I’m not sure if you’ve seen it or not, but this brings to mind the airplane bit by comedian Louis C.K. Here it is if you haven’t seen it yet. It’s fantastic…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-LkusicUL2s

Think about it. With the right perspective, wouldn’t another sunrise bring tears of joy to our eyes? Can you imagine being filled with wonder and gratitude by the mere act of getting out of bed and standing on your own feet? Wouldn’t you dance all the way to the breakfast table? Gawk at the walls and ceiling that keep you dry and safe! Blubber like child at the sight of your own? Kiss your loved ones like it was both the first and last time?

We get comfortable. We get callused. We get greedy. We get forgetful.

Perspective is everything. It doesn’t matter how shitty you think things are. Somebody would love your life.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Stinky Hippie Vs. The Skinwalkers


I don’t remember whether or not she wore a bra. Considering her nickname, Stinky Hippie, I want to say no. But who knows. She had long dark hair and I think her first name was similar to “Candle” but I know it wasn’t “Candie.” Candie is a great stripper name but gains no respect within the hippie society.

One time she showed us pictures of her friend’s ankle after a nasty rock climbing fall. I remember trying to look away but not being able to. You could see the bones, ligaments and muscle. Apparently the foot had gotten lodged in the rocks during the fall and ripped almost all the way off. In the picture it clung to the rest of the leg by a small strip of skin.

Little Edmonton was dating the Stinky Hippie at the time. I was a virgin at the time so I was often both intrigued and embarrassed by the moaning noises that emanated from the bedroom while they were in there alone. Honestly though, they were probably just putting on a show to mess with us roommates.

At the time we were doing industrial roofing down by Four Corners. We spent half of the summer bouncing around Monticello and the rest of the time in Montezuma Creek. There’s a Taco Bell right off the highway at the base of a big red cliff. One time we were driving to the elementary school we were working on and we saw Indians from the reservation doing a dance out in the open, just a few miles away from the Taco Bell and off the side of the same highway.

The sky was totally clear that day. I mean clear—like blazing sun, fried corneas, 130-degrees on the roof clear. There were plateaus in the distance to the north and south. We were dousing our heads with our water bottles, trying desperately to ward off heat stroke, when the supervisor pointed to clouds hanging over the plateaus in the distance.

“I hope they make it this way,” he’d said before returning to work.

Like a vengeful answer to an unintentional prayer, the clouds in the north swelled and began racing toward us. We noticed clouds growing to the south as well. It was as though the plateaus themselves were giant smoke machines, cranked up to full capacity and sending billows of thick gray thunderheads toward us.

“Do you think we should get off the roof?” someone had asked nervously.

In awe we watched the clouds race at each other. I do not choose that word “race” lightly. None of us had ever seen clouds move that fast. The barreled toward each other like meteorological muscle cars in a game of chicken.

We had started gathering up our tools without as much as another word. I don’t think anyone felt like we had time to discuss what was taking place. None of us had grown up in hurricane or tornado-ridden places and had rarely seen weather change this quickly.

With morbid curiosity we stopped what we were doing when the tidal waves of cloud met immediately over our heads. They glanced off of each other and began to swirl at the point of impact.

“Shit!”

“Move your ass!”

“Son of a BITCH!”

“Get off the roof!!”

“Hustle, dude!!”

I don’t remember the exact expletives and warnings we shouted but there was plenty of yelling when a cold wind kicked up as soon as the two sides of the storm started to meld. I don’t know how hard the wind was blowing in term of gust speed, but have you ever seen those garbage can holders made out of quarter-inch metal bars and encased in a layer of concrete? The probably weigh at least 300 pounds. Well, the wind was strong enough to push those around the parking lot.

The lightning and instant thunder started booming as the first torrent of fat drops started cascading from the sky. Within seconds each of us looked the same way we did when we jumped into the San Juan River after work to cool off and rinse the Xylene out of our clothes.

When you spend time in the desert, it can get difficult to imagine drowning in the same ravines and washes you normally pick as camping spots. I don’t think any of us will ever scoff at flash flood warnings after that day. We watched a raging river appear, within seconds, and wash over the road as we drove away from the school.

The highway we’d driven dozens of times that summer without seeing more than a car or two was suddenly congested as people pulled over to honk and cheer at the Indians we’d seen dancing earlier that morning. We finally made it passed, nobody speaking but everybody thinking the words, “Rain Dance.”

The San Juan was probably two feet higher than it had been that morning. We drove across the bridge and gawked at the enormous red waterfalls cascading over the red cliffs behind the Taco Bell. I think the whole ordeal only increased our love and awe for Southern Utah.

So, when The Stinky Hippie invited us to Moab during one of our weekends, we gladly accepted. Packing little more than a pair of shorts each, we piled into her Jeep Cherokee and hit the road.

The details of that drive down are fuzzy, but if I remember correctly, Little Edmonton’s older brother (aptly named Big Edmonton for the purpose of this story) took advantage of the scenery to drop some education on us. He was/is by far the smartest guy most of us will ever know, a scientist by trade and a blazing rationalist. Big Ed never seemed to get hyped up by much of anything. His voice was calm even as he recounted stories of cannibalistic, devil worshiping Indians called Skinwalkers. He told us about his cousin’s, buddy’s uncle’s basketball coach (I don’t remember the degrees of separation so I’m erring on the side of caution) whom had been tormented during his Mormon mission by these superhuman menaces.

We sat riveted during the 4-hour drive, hearing about pale white Indians who could jump clean up onto the roof of a house, run alongside cars, turn into Coyotes, crawl along walls and bounce, flatfooted, back and forth over a missionary’s bed... all just for the hell of it.

Big Ed may have just been messing with us. I’m open to the idea but I doubt it. Who knows, maybe they were all just messing with me because I was (and am) notoriously gullible. Then again, given more than a few minutes to evaluate and digest, I usually have a pretty good bullshit detector. Big Ed never set it off once. In my recollection he was fully convinced of everything he told us.

We got into Moab and, as far as I remember, immediately set to rafting the Colorado River. I can’t tell you how many days/nights we stayed down there or how we spent them in detail. I do remember tying the raft to my lifejacket, diving in during the unbearably mellow sections of the trip, and earning the nickname “River Steed” while towing the boat. I also remember Little Ed taking advantage of my precarious position, tethered to the boat, by whipping me with willow reeds.

“Onward River Steed!!” he would shout. I’m guessing it worked and I pulled harder.

I also remember cliffjumping from an insanely beautiful spot on the outskirts of town. On the way in there was the most beautiful piece of graffiti I’ve ever seen during my days in Utah. It showed a menacing block if city buildings, skewed and evil looking. The word “Death” was written in their midst. I’ve always agreed with that sentiment—not just because of my claustrophobia among tall buildings.

We were winding down to a campsite along a steep road of narrow switchbacks. It was getting dark. The beam of the headlights reached another sharp curve and then stretched out endlessly into the empty air in front of us as we made the turn. Our collective breath caught as the blue-tinged glow washed over a coyote, seated in the center of the road. The normally skittish creature disobeyed its natural characteristics by not darting into the obscurity. Instead, it remained in place, staring at us as we wound around it.

“Creepy.” Little Ed said.

We all muttered in agreement.

We found the campsite shortly after reaching the bottom of the canyon. To our surprise, the Cherokee was the only car in the parking lot. We pulled up far enough to read the sign and map in the headlights. This particular campground featured seven different sites. We were stationed at its only entrance.

After a bit of contemplation we settled on campsite 7 because it was the last on the map. If other campers arrived we didn’t want them to be trekking past us after we’d settled in.

We hauled our minimal gear past six empty sites. As we walked we peered into the six fire pits. None of them had been used. The entire campground looked as though it had been deserted, unused, or recently cleaned.

I think all of our nerves were still shaken at that point, but we walked in silence, not giving voice to any of our fears. The flashlight looked like a glowing sword in the night as our shoes kicked up the fine, dry dust.

The lucky number 7 campsite was nestled at the base of a mesquite tree. We spread our sleeping bags under it, a few yards away from a thicket of scrub oak. I built a small fire but we were quick to get into our sleeping bags to rest for the next day.

As I write this, I’m realizing that all of this took place almost 8 years ago. Some of the images are seared into my memory and I know I won’t forget them. To be honest, however, some of the events may have been flipped in my mind—not to say they didn’t happen, but I can’t claim 100% accuracy regarding the order of events. For example, I don’t remember if the chanting or lightning happened first. Don’t worry; I’ll get to it…

That thicket of scrub oak really stands out in my mind. It was between us and the rock wall of the canyon. I remember hearing the snapping of twigs coming from it while I built the fire. We hurled chunks of sandstone into it a few times, hoping to scare out the rabbit or whatever else was hiding in it. I even collected and kept a small stack of stones next to my sleeping bag once I was ready to lie down. When your ears collect the sound of a snapping twig, your mind immediately goes to work… especially when you can’t visually confirm how the snapping took place. Your mind first registers the sound with surprise, and then, like dominoes, the questions begin to flip over in your head:

How loud was that?
Was the sound enhanced by the echo of the canyon?
How thick would the twig need to be to make that much noise?
How heavy would the paw, foot, scaled appendage, etc. need to be to snap that twig?
What type of creature could I expect living in a place like this?
If I shout and throw rocks at it, will it run away?
If I shout and throw rocks at it, will it make me feel better?
At what age is it no longer allowable to be afraid of the dark?

Don’t think about the coyote. Don’t think about the coyote. Don’t think about the coyote.

“WHAT THE F-- DID YOU SEE THAT??!!”

That was what I’m sure a few of us screamed when we saw it. It was the first and, I’m sure, ONLY time any of us will ever see lightning like that.

I know you can’t close your eyes while reading, but maybe take a moment to do so after this next paragraph.

You are on your back. You can feel the soft sand give under your weight as you shift to get more comfortable. In your vision, the sneer of a narrow canyon runs left to right. If you look up you can see the wall behind you. If you look down you can see the opposite wall just past your feet. The red on the rocks gives way to purple in the starlight. You look up at the thin strip of star-speckled sky. Imagine you are holding a volleyball. You close one eye and reach out as far as you can with the ball. With this perspective, the ball is easily large enough to get lodged between the canyon walls. Now, imagine a bolt of lightning shoots HORIZONTALLY along the mouth of the canyon. It is so thick that it easily fills one third or even one half of your view, perhaps the size of baseball.

You cringe and hold your breath, waiting for the boom of thunder you’re sure will rattle loose the fillings in your teeth. It never comes. Once again your brain starts flipping through the index of knowledge in search of an answer.

What kind of lightning shoots sideways and causes no thunder?

Nothing.

I think at that point somebody suggested packing it up. We should have listened.

Instead, we stayed put. We were slightly reassured by the voices echoing into the canyon. We assumed that more campers had arrived. Their words were not discernable, partly because the sound was reaching us after multiple “bank shots” from the canyon walls but mostly because they were not spoken in English. We’d met a woman from Germany just hours earlier so the concept of a multilingual campground did not throw up any red flags. Still, we strained our ears to see if we could at least figure out what language it was. No luck.

“Are they singing?” Big Ed asked.

“No,” said The Stinky Hippie. “I don’t think so.”

We tried to go back to sleep. I was having a hard time descending completely into the warm bath of slumber, but the hours I’d spent towing the boat were pulling me pretty hard.

I felt something on my chest. My mind instantly flashed to the cabin in Montana. My dad had built it with a buddy from medical school. Our families would go up there for a few weeks during the summer. Initially, we went to help strip the trees and build it. Later, to lounge on its porch and get away from the city. In fact, we got so far from the city that the night sky was not marred by any sort of city glow. Seeing the stars that clearly means also becoming intimate with nature. In my case, that meant sleeping on the ground floor of the cabin and having mice run back and forth over my sleeping bag during the night.

I could feel the weight of it on my chest. Still half asleep, I reached up to pluck it off. Expecting my fingers to find soft mammal fur I was jerked instantly awake when they made contact with something very different.

It twitched when I touched it. Its body was covered in joints and a course hair. Again, my mind selected mental images from my memory rolodex. I saw talk show hosts shrieking and being tormented by animal “experts” who laughed and said, “Don’t worry! This kind doesn’t bite!” I saw a coiled whip flicked nonchalantly by Indiana Jones. I saw an equally less-than-brilliant criminal scream in horror after receiving a similar surprise on the face in “Home Alone” from the younger, saner, Macaulay Culkin.

Unable to decide how best to grab the tarantula, I simply snatched it in my palm and threw it as fast and hard as I could. It was so big, I still remember the audible “thud” it made hitting the sand.

I could still hear the faint murmur of voices. But this time, the echoes were wrong. They were hitting my right ear. In my lying position, the opening of the canyon was on my left. I was pretty certain the canyon closed up completely a few hundred yards to my right, hence the seventh and final campground.

I drew slow deep breaths. Sound waves do funny things and, as far as I knew, tarantulas aren’t any more poisonous than the mice at the cabin. I told myself to stop being such a baby.

“Snap!”

I spun and started hurling my rocks into the thicket.

Nothing.

I dropped heavily back down onto my sleeping bag. “Relax. Stop being such a baby.”

I continued that mantra until I was asleep again. Then, I felt something on my chest again. I shouted some unintelligible obscenity and smacked it off with the back of my hand. I tried to hit it hard enough to brush it far away and kill it at the same time.

“What the hell?!” the Stinky Hippie said.

It had been her hand. Apparently, she’d rolled the wrong direction and placed a hand on my chest instead of Little Ed’s.

“Are you guys awake?” Big Ed said. His voice was more strained and weak than I’d ever heard it.

“Yeah,” we each said.

“Can we leave?” he asked. He sounded like he had been crying.

We packed in a hurry. Nobody spoke. We didn’t put out our smoldering fire or double check to make sure we’d gathered everything. We just left. We could barely keep from running to the Jeep.

Just as during our entrance, we shone the flashlight on each fire pit on our way out. Nobody had been here. There were no other campers. The Jeep was still the only vehicle in the parking area. We’d all heard the voices, nobody doubted that. I can’t speak for anyone else, but knowing that whoever those voices belonged to had come into that canyon on foot instantly wrapped me in gooseflesh.

That sensation was not about to subside anytime soon.

Under the dome light of the Jeep I could see that Big Ed looked pale. He really might have been crying.

We drove away in silence. We were probably halfway back up the switchbacks before Little Ed finally asked the question we’d all be thinking. Turning to Big Ed he asked, “What the hell happened?”

Big Ed seemed reluctant to speak. He spun in his seat to peer again out the back window, as if to verify that we were not being followed.

“There were two of them,” he said, shakily.

“What do you mean?” I asked.

“Just standing over me,” he said, his eyes to the floor. “I woke up because I could hear them like… chanting, or singing or something. I didn’t dare move. I opened my eyes just a tiny bit – just enough to see the two silhouettes. They were just standing next to me, looking down at me… chanting.”

“You’re shitting us,” Little Ed said in a voice completely void of humor.

“I wish,” Big Ed said with a shudder. “They were going to kill me. I was sure of it. All of us. I just pulled the blanket over my face and waited. Then when I heard Dan I decided to look again, thinking they’d gotten him first, and they were gone. I really didn’t think we’d make it out of there.”

He turned again to look out the back window.

We made it back into town and pulled into a church parking lot to spend the morning. We bathed in the sprinklers as best we could and the Moab trip was over.

About a month ago I was in Moab with my wife and daughters and we pulled up to the same campsite. 8 years later the sight of the sign still gave me the chills. Hell, even driving the switchbacks made my skin crawl. Had it been a dream? Was it simply the result of overactive imaginations run wild? I can’t really say. What I do know is that, for me personally, the memory of that trip will always carry with it an eerie aftertaste.

Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Hell's (Atheist's) Commandments

So, I'm almost done with my second reading of "The God Delusion" by world-renowned Atheist, Richard Dawkins. I won't lie, it's become one of my favorite books. Regardless of your stance with religion, I highly recommend it. It's actually a very funny and educational read. Dawkins does not devote overwhelming focus to any one belief system or branch of Christianity. He doesn't pull any punches, either. If your faith and conviction in the Old Testament God, Intelligent Design, and literal truth of the bible can withstand this book, they can probably withstand anything.

During my initial struggles with Mormonism and organized religion as a whole, I felt as though my conviction in the existence of God was untouchable. That conviction hasn't necessarily dissolved but has fallen into more realistic perspective. I've described myself on several occasions as a "Hopeful Ignostic" and I'd like to clarify that here.

"Agnostic" is a term used by those who simply "don't know" whether or not God exists and don't feel that it's a question we can answer with the information presently available. I agree with this to an extent. Dawkins describes Atheism on degrees of Agnosticism, stating that Level 1 would constitute a firm conviction in the belief of God whereas a Level 7 would constitute the opposite: a firm conviction that God does NOT exist. Dawkins, quite possibly the "Poster Child" for Atheists across the globe only considers himself a Level 6. He considers the existence of God as unlikely as the existence of pink unicorns, but admits that he has no concrete proof.

"Ignostic" is a less common attribution but I claim it myself because I find it more ecumenical. In my book I've described the revelation that claiming certainty in my version of God would consequently demonstrate a certainty in the falsehood of the Deity of every "opposing" believer. Ignosticism simply states that before we can debate the existence of God we must first understand who/what "God" is--obviously a feat we are far from achieving as a species.

I add the adjective "Hopeful" because I would still very much like to believe that there is more to our existence than our 72 earthly years. I am still filled with a sense of peace when I read through my description of God in the letter I wrote to my family to break the news of our departure from Mormonism. Does this sense of personal peace add to the truthfulness of my description? Of course not. Does it make a difference for me in my life? Yes.

As the months have passed, however, I've realized that having a "conviction" in this personal version of God would not significantly improve my life. In fact, it could very well be detrimental to my progress. When we give God credit for everything in our lives don't we also eliminate our sense of personal responsibility? I want you to really think about this for a moment. I understand that right now it may feel good to tell yourself on a regular basis that God is behind everything that happens. He's listening to your prayers, spying on you in the bathroom, helping you find your keys, giving your fantasy football quarterback that final boost of speed to run in the game-winning touchdown... all while working in His "mysterious" ways to decide whether or not to make that tumor malignant or benign.

I don't use the above example to try to belittle anyone's individual relationship with their God. This is how some people feel and it could very well be true. Nevertheless, I was once one of those single-minded "Christians" who pitied Atheists for their "pointless" view of existence.

"How sad," I would mutter to myself, "that these lost and Godless souls should spend their lives thinking that all they get is a measly 70 years."

Lately I've looked at the question a little more closely. Adopting the majority's view of God, you will consider this earthly life relatively short and, aside from your duty to obey, inconsequential. The real fun begins after you die, right?

I've watched a few interviews with Dawkins and he seems to be consistently assaulted with the same indignant question, "What if you're wrong?!"

He always seems to chuckle before replying, "What if YOU'RE wrong?!"

In a South Park episode a "strict and devout Protestant" as well as a "practicing Jehovah's Witness" find themselves in hell and demand an explanation. The "Hell Director" states matter-of-factly, "I'm afraid it was the Mormons. Yes, the Mormons were the correct answer."

They actually played this scene for us at a missionary conference while I was on my mission. Everybody cheered. Sadly, it took me half a decade after applauding for that idea to realize how truly awful it is.

Do we really want to let our personal/regional/familial views of God drive a wedge of elitism between us and those who disagree? What if you're wrong? What if you're both wrong? What if we're all wrong?

Do we really want to tell ourselves that God will declare "winners" in the theological debate? Will God slap a certain congregation on the shoulder while pointing victoriously at the rest and jeer, "You've just been schooled, Suckers!!"

The Old Testament God, perhaps. The narcissistic, baby-killing God. Of all the options out there, though, that's not MY God.

If you want to post a list of commandments in front of a courthouse, why not take a look at these, written by a "Godless" Atheist? Even without the additional five I think you'll be surprised when you see what kind of room you can free up when you remove a petty, jealous God. Number 14 is my favorite:

1. Do not do to others what you would not want them to do to you.

2. In all things, strive to cause no harm.

3. Treat your fellow human beings, your fellow living things, and the world in general with love, honesty, faithfulness and respect.

4. Do not overlook evil or shrink from administering justice, but always be ready to forgive wrongdoing freely admitted and honestly regretted.

5. Live life with a sense of joy and wonder.

6. Always seek to be learning something new.

7. Test all things; always check your ideas against the facts, and be ready to discard even a cherished belief if it does not conform to them.

8. Never seek to censor or cut yourself off from dissent; always respect the right of others to disagree with you.

9. Form independent opinions on the basis of your own reason and experience; do not allow yourself to be led blindly by others.

10. Question everything.

11. Always devise your rules as if you didn’t know whether you were going be at the top or the bottom of the pecking order.

12. Enjoy your own sex life (so long as it damages nobody else) and leave others to enjoy theirs in private whatever their inclinations, which are none of your business.

13. Do not discriminate or oppress on the basis of sex, race or (as far as possible) species.

14. Do not indoctrinate your children. Teach them how to think for themselves, how to evaluate evidence, and how to disagree with you.

15. Value the future on a timescale longer than your own.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Soak It Up

Let's start things off with a P.J. O'Rourke quote to make this picture even more applicable:

“It's easy to understand why the cat has eclipsed the dog as modern America's favorite pet. People like pets to possess the same qualities they do. Cats are irresponsible and recognize no authority, yet are completely dependent on others for their material needs. Cats cannot be made to do anything useful. Cats are mean for the fun of it.”

I'll try not make anyone uncomfortable by making an quasi-sexual references to the sun in this post. I don't have much new to say about it, I only mean to reiterate that it's crazy awesome. Seriously, go outside. Unless you're on your laptop basking in the sun at this very moment or stuck inside at work, get your ass outside and enjoy the warmth. That is all.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Pouting


I woke up in a terrible mood this morning. By some sixth sense I knew that it was going to be gray, ugly and cold outside when I opened my eyes. This is not the time of year to be reluctant to meet the day. But, like an emerging spelunker, my awareness slowly ascended from slumber to slide open the hatch of my eyelids. He must've snuck a peek and realized that this April 1st was a dismal, pathetic representation of Spring. You've made a "fool" out of all of us. Give me your showers, April, but leave snow for your ugly stepsister months like January and February. Don't murder May's flowers with this bullshit below-40-degree weather. You're stealing the rejuvenating power of Spring from those of us who desperately need it. Cut it out.

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Brace yourself Spring of aught 9… I've only just begun making you my b**ch!


I'm sitting here after the first weekend of spring in pain; grinning widely, as it's a delectably thorough and satisfying pain.

My head throbs with the residual verberation of last night's unbelievably entertaining Red concert. The best live set of music I've ever heard also contributed my sleep-deprived and bloodshot eyes, the consistent mosquito-hum ringing in my ears, and my hoarse throat, raw from singing and cheering. My calves, quads and forearms ache from hours of being trounced on the tennis court by Todd. My receding hairline provided no obstacle to the hours spent reacquainting ourselves with the sun as our hemisphere gradually rolls to greet her. This annual reunion has left my forehead red and delightfully tender to the touch. I can already feel the rest of my scalp getting jealous. The remaining hair feels heavier than ever. Don't worry, clippers, as soon as Jenny isn't watching we'll have our chance.

Ahhhh, the first sunburn of the year, I friggin love it! As John Cougar Mellencamp stated so eloquently back in '82, "Hurts so good!"

I love the sun. Rest assured, Jenny, our nearest star is the closest thing to a mistress I'll ever have. While most cultures try to attribute male pronouns to the quintessential heat source of our existence, I disagree. I consider the chaotic and unpredictable (yet also life-giving) power of our solar matron to be very feminine. And as such, I also consider our complicated relationship to be a very sensual one.

Every unprotected rendezvous with her caress is addicting and intoxicating. In her embrace, minutes quickly become hours until, inevitably, the stinging on your shoulders reminds you how quickly this seemingly monogamous dance can become a threesome with melanoma. I hate you melanoma, you sticky, ghoulish little creep. Like an STD, you sulk in shadows, breathing heavily out of your mouth and eagerly awaiting your window.

Like the preventative measures of safe sex, SPF 45 becomes the condom of "Safe Sun." Sure, the feel may not be exactly the same, but with an experienced partner such as the sun, the pleasure can be nearly as enjoyable.

I suppose it's a note more self-directed than to anyone else. Between now and the time these new budding leaves begin to redden and fall, you may find yourself standing on the grass with your face pointed to the east. You may close your eyes, breathe deep, and listen as the birds sing their pre-dawn praises to the new day. And as the first rays of morning splash over the mountain peaks, you might even whisper, "Come on baby, make it hurt so good." Even when you feel invincible, like "Riding Bareback" as some might say, take the time to slip on some protection. For, as Icarus (a fellow sun-lover) said, "Tis better safe, than sorry."

Give yourself, your skin, another day to play.

Monday, March 2, 2009

Move over fear, acknowledgment needs that spot.


The heart rate monitor to your left stutters its already syncopated beeps. The valleys between the peaks of the green electronic mountains stretch longer. You barely hear the "pfffst" sound of oxygen as periodic injections are made through the tubes in each nostril. The noise becomes less noticeable as the "lub-dub" thump in your chest echoes like the last few straggler fireworks during the Grand Finale of the 4th of July display. As your senses fade, the TV mounted to the wall on the far side of the room sneers and says, "Now, don't you wish you'd watched more of me?"

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The large mason jar in the crook of his left arm is brimming. He concerns himself not with the limited space. Those captured will soon die and loose their appeal. He is instead obsessed with the thrill of the chase--mesmerized by the "Swoop!" of his net as it slices through the air, capturing another beautiful specimen.

The veins in his eyes stand out red from the strain. Sweat drips into them. He wipes the beads away urgently, eager to examine the new prize. Like the others, the markings on the left wing resemble the letters "S" and "T" while the body has a distinctive "U" shape. The right wing features what can only be interpreted as a pair of "F" markings.

"Almost complete," he says with a tremble in his voice. But then another, more beautiful, rarer specimen flutters past before he can spend any more time admiring the latest catch. He quickly removes the lid, crushing past collections as he forces the recent one in. The lid is replaced by touch alone because his eyes still follow the bigger, better conquest. He does not notice the shadow as it falls over him.

"Swooosh!!"

The net still hangs at his side. The draft from this new, foreign motion chills the slick sweat on the back of his neck. The day that once felt so warm now feels uncomfortably cold. Dark fabric billows in the corner of his eye. He never has a chance to turn for further investigation of the figure.

"Swooosh!!"

The wound sickle comes back down. The mason jar shatters as it hits the ground. The collector becomes the collected.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

She wakes. Her eyes scan the blackness of the room. The window is a deep shade of purple--a faint square, barely distinguishable from the rest of the room. Morning birds have already taken to singing their pre-dawn songs.

Did that wake her? No.

In the bathroom, a fat water droplet loses its hold of the faucet rim and crashes into the porcelain below with a "Pwwooup!"

Did that wake her? No.

Blocks away, trash clatters into the collection bin of a garbage truck. The engine revs as the hydraulic arms return the emptied can to the ground.

Did that wake her? No.

"hiisssssss"

The sound is hardly audible. Compared to this susurration, her breathing crashes through her head like a marching band. Barely a notch above silence, the noise still bears a relentless quality.

Did that wake her? Yes.

She sits up, isolating the whisper. She turns and stands on the bed. Suddenly, she's overcome with the need to locate the source. She presses an ear to the large piece of artwork hung above the headboard.

Here. It's coming from right here.

The glass shatters as the frame collides with the wall on the other side of the room. Only the floral pattern of the wallpaper hides behind the picture.

Hair falls into her face as she claws at the wall. Frenzied, she tears the paper away with all the energy of a young child on Christmas morning.

"hisssssssssssssss"

The plaster of the sheetrock packs into her fingernails. She rakes at the wall like a wild, caged animal. Blood runs, unnoticed, down the length of her arm and drips from her elbows onto her pillowcase. Unfazed, she continues to treat the tips of her fingers like the blades of small shovels.

"hisssssssssssssssssssssssssss"

The plaster begins to fall in chunks, spotted with blood, as she works an opening into the wall. She rips open the brittle wall board and yanks insulation from the hole.

And there it is.

"hiissssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss"

Falling sand crashes into fallen sand. The collision of each dropping grain multiplies in an orchestra of passing time. Hidden deep within the wall is an ancient hourglass. Etched in the glass at the top of the upper half is the number 40,867,092. The number is mysterious, yet significant. The remaining sand sits alarmingly lower than this mark.

Initially, she is mortified by the pile of sand at the bottom of the hourglass. She jerks it from the wall, spinning it 180 degrees as she does.

"hisssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss"

Disobedient. Unaffected. Unwavering. Unrelenting. The sand does not reverse direction as gravity dictates. It pours upwards at the same pace, not slowing the descent of a single grain.

She returns the hourglass to the wall, rotating it right-side-up again. She breathes deeply, no longer feeling threatened by the sound of passing time. The thin cascade of sand sings a song that, although it cannot be ignored, is still more of an incantation of beauty than menace.

The dawn breaks and light fills the room. She pulls her eyes from the mound of piled sand in the bottom of the glass and lifts them to the reservoir of sand at the top. Gratitude flushes out her angst. The pooled sand is ever-dwindling, ever-diminishing, ever-escaping, but still hers. She cannot cease the flow, but is astonished to discover that she no longer wants to. The finite amount remaining, the counted grains... they add value. They are hers.