Monday, February 28, 2022

The Many Forms of Love's Arrival

 
(c) wisefamousquotes.com


As I often say right here in this space, I am not in the business of telling people what anyone should read.  I love reading and believe therefore - undoubtedly with the inherent bias of a true believer - being well-read makes it more difficult for a person to be ignorant than he or she might otherwise be.   Unless of course their ignorance is a path well-worn by deliberate design.  For that kind of ignorance, there is no readily apparent cure.  

This weekend I read a rather extraordinary book, written by a sportswriter whose work on his chosen beat of college football I have read and have appreciated for as long as I can remember.  Notwithstanding my long-held appreciation for Ivan Maisel and his way with words, he has not written anything as memorable or as brave as I Keep Trying to Catch His Eye:  A Memoir of Loss, Grief, and Love.   




Ivan Maisel and his wife, Meg, raised three children.  In February 2015, shortly after his twenty-first birthday, their middle child and only son, Max, committed suicide.   The book he has written tells a story that is both profoundly intimate, as we learn much about Max and the Maisel family, and universally relatable, as any of us who has ever buried a loved one (regardless of the circumstances of his or her death) will recognize ourselves and steps we ourselves have walked in the days, weeks, months, and years since in those the Maisel family has walked since Max's death.  We recognize, too, what Ivan Maisel recognizes and expresses so brilliantly, which is that ours is now a journey whose end shall be reached only at the end of our own life.  


-AK 





Sunday, February 27, 2022

Let Language Be Not A Barrier

I am hardly fluent in English (my native tongue) and barely conversational in French (four years of it in high school), and the Rosetta Stone’s promise of easily learning a new language notwithstanding, I am far too old a dog to learn that particular new trick.   

My longwinded way of saying I speak no Ukrainian and therefore do not know the Ukrainian word for hero. However I have followed the events of the past week closely enough to appreciate just how perfectly Raymond Chandler nailed it.  




The people of Ukraine have demonstrated this week not only are they the best of us in this world but that any world, anywhere, would be honored to have them.   


-AK

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Twice As Old As She Was Yesterday

Today, Rylan who is the fourth of my five grandchildren and the tail gunner of Suzanne and Ryan’s trio celebrates her birthday.  When asked, she will tell you she is five.  She is not.  Not yet.  

She is, however, twice as old today as she was yesterday.  Maybe that explains her preference for napping in Pop Pop’s chair…


Toddling is tiring work.  


-AK 

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Don’t Call It A Throwback

Instead let us just refer to it as the way it started…


Start of 2022 Manasquan 
Mid-Winter Beach Run



…and the way it ended.



Finish line:  2022 Manasquan
Mid-Winter Beach Run


I must admit that at this stage of my life I never feel older than I do when I see pictures of myself running.  I did hoof it across the line in under twenty minutes, of  which it felt as if I had spent at least a third of that time completing the quarter-mile beach portion of the race. 

At least I finished a race that I started.  As we know, with me that is not always the case.

-AK 


Wednesday, February 23, 2022

The Gentleman from Ohio


 


I am more than a bit embarrassed to admit that I did not realize until I finished Jeff Shesol’s quite excellent book, Mercury Rising, on Monday night that this past Sunday was the sixtieth anniversary of John Glenn’s flight in Friendship 7.   John Glenn was an American hero; simply by virtue of the way he went about his business.  Prior to being selected as one of NASA’s first astronauts, he served this nation as a United States Marine.  He flew combat missions in Korea, often times with Ted Williams as his wingman.  

While once again employing the disclaimer that unlike Oprah, I neither run a book club nor foist my taste in books on anyone else, I recommend reading Shesol’s book.  It not only pays deserved tribute to John Glenn but paints in colorfully vivid strokes the picture of what the world looked like in the Cold War 1950s and 1960s.  For those entranced by recent developments in geopolitics, it might be useful to remember or to learn just how much of history is echo and reverb.  





-AK

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

A Reason For Hope

… And Mary Lou, she found out how to cope
She rides to heaven on a gyroscope
The Daily News asks her for the dope
She said, "Man, the dope's that there's still hope"
"Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street?"
Bruce Springsteen


Should you have woken up this morning in need for something - anything really - to help get you through this Tuesday in February, may I offer this?

Today, Tuesday, February 22, is February's final Tuesday.  This time next week it shall be March.  The Vernal Equinox shall be less than three weeks away.  

Mary Lou was right, ladies and gentlemen.   There is still hope.  

It springs eternal, after all. 


(c) Parade Magazine 


-AK 


Monday, February 21, 2022

Winning Just By Showing Up

 


I am old enough to remember when February was a month in which the birthday of Abraham Lincoln and the birthday of George Washington were celebrated separately and on each man's actual birthday, which are February 12 and February 22 respectively.  Somewhere along the line, those two days fell off the calendar in favor of Presidents' Day, which is celebrated annually on February's third Monday, and which is, "now popularly viewed as a day to celebrate all U.S. Presidents, past and present." 

The next time you or someone you now goes off on a jag ripping children for receiving a "Participation Trophy", remember that today is nothing less than the adult equivalent of one.  We the people no longer celebrate those who have held the office who actually made a positive difference in the lives of this nation's citizens.  We simply celebrate each person's attainment of the office irrespective of the damage he inflicted on us while he occupied it.  




Someone start rounding up chisels and hammers.  Apparently, Mount Rushmore needs to be made a whole hell of a lot bigger. 

-AK 



Sunday, February 20, 2022

True to Her Own Self



 You can invest your time. 
You can invest your finances. 
Or you can invest your time.  
Doesn't matter which.
We just have to keep investing in each other.
Let your heart lead you all the way.


True confession:  I am a fan of Andrew Whitworth.  This time last week, he tacked on the coda of "Super Bowl Champion" to his title of "All-Pro left tackle and oldest player in the NFL."   At forty, he is an old man, at least in the relative terms of his chosen profession, and his beard game (significantly more salt than pepper) is spectacularly strong.  Given our size disparity (he is 6' 7" and 330 pounds), however, I am far more likely to be mistaken for something he has defecated than for his twin. 

On the field before kickoff, he was formally announced as the winner of the NFL's Walter Payton Man of the Year Award, given annually to one player for his "outstanding community service off the field, as well as his excellence on it".   Before you complete that eye roll into which you just launched upon reading that sentence, I recommend that you acquaint yourself with Whitworth's "The Big Whit Foundation".  I also recommend that you watch his Man of the Year speech, which you can access by clicking the link at the top of the piece.  

Fairly early in last Sunday's Super Bowl, NBC's cameras focused on Melissa Whitworth and the couple's kids in stands watching Dad do his thing.  The youngest of the four Whitworth kids, seven-year-old Katherine, attained internet immortality when NBC showed her on TV appearing to be reading a book rather than watching the game.  Spoiler alert:  the "book" she was reading was, in fact, the Super Bowl Program.  

When he appeared on NBC's Today Show this week, Andrew Whitworth was of course asked about Katherine and her now-famous love of reading.  What he said, for my money, was nothing short of extraordinary: 




The oldest of my five grandchildren, Maggie, is five years old this year.  Every now and again, when I call her by something other her name, such as "Light Fingers Louie", she responds by saying, "Pop Pop, I'm not Light Fingers Louie, I'm Maggie.  I'm always Maggie."  I, of course, agree with her, usually while thinking to myself that I hope she forever maintains and retains that sense of self.  

Children teach us the most amazing things every day, whether seven-year-old Katherine Whitworth or not-quite-five-year-old Maggie Aldrich.  "To thine own self be true " is a tale perhaps not as old as time but at least as old as Hamlet.  Yet is a maxim violated consciously and unconsciously by far too many (myself included) far too often.   

We are lucky to have children in our lives to remind us to do better by it and by ourselves.  


-AK 

Saturday, February 19, 2022

A Step In The Right Direction

In 2021, COVID-19 forced one of my favorite annual events to not live up to its name.  Last year's iteration of the Manasquan Mid-Winter Beach Run was not permitted to go forward until mid-April.  Moreover, on race day, instead of hundreds of souls of varying degress of hardiness lining up shoulder to shoulder near Leggett's together, start times were staggered so that significantly smaller groups of runners were on the course in twenty-minute intervals.  

It was better than nothing.  It was something.  It simply was not the real thing. 

Oh, what a difference a year (or ten months) makes. 




This morning, the Mid-Winter Beach Run returns to its appointed place on the calendar, which is the Saturday of Presidents' Day Weekend.  As of yesterday morning at 5 am, which is when I wrote this (spoiler alert!), 827 people had signed up for it.  For me, happiness is having that which it is I love to do in its appointed, proper place.  In the case of this event, its proper place is mid-February and not mid-April.  

Order has been restored to the universe.  Well, to my universe anyway.  

Whether I am as excited about restoration after the wind chaps my ass while running on the beach this morning remains to be seen.  Actually, it does not.  I shall be.  

Trust me.  

-AK 

 

Friday, February 18, 2022

The Great Escape

If you earn your living in the practice of law, have ever endured extended bouts of insomnia, and/or have earned your living in the former while battling with the latter, then you know quite well what it is Charles Bukowski is talking about…




Everything,  by the way is fine.  Thank you for asking.  


-AK

Thursday, February 17, 2022

The Heart is a Wild Hunter

Or words to that effect...




I would say "Be careful out there" but that seems ironic at least and, well, inappropriate at worst in the face of today's prevailing theme.  

-AK 


Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Farewell, Mr. O'Rourke




America suffered a terrible loss yesterday.  P.J. O'Rourke died.  He was a political satirist, journalist, wit, and cynic of the highest order.  If you are at all familiar with him, then it shall surprise you not at all that he was the H.L. Mencken Research Fellow at the Cato Institute...unless of course you are not only unfamiliar with Mr. O'Rourke but, tragically, with Mr. Mencken too.  






If you are open to a friendly suggestion, then might I direct you to anything he wrote. I truly do not believe you can go wrong.  





-AK 
 



Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Warm Thoughts for a February Day


On a cold February day here in the State of Concrete Gardens (albeit the first day of the month’s back half), the mere mention of July brings a smile to this old man’s face.   

Be careful out there.  

-AK 

Monday, February 14, 2022

The Real Deal

Today is Valentine's Day.  A day full of over-the-top expressions of love and affection at addresses worldwide.  Well, with the possible exception of 2122 North Clark Street in the Lincoln Park neighborhood on the North Side of Chicago.  

As one who has never been a fan of the grand gesture nor the flowery verbiage of sentimentality,  I take a far more subdued approach to this date's annual appearance on the calendar.  An approach expressed far better by Mr. Fitzgerald than I, myself, ever could express it.  




For at day's end, whether the day is the 14th of February, the 3rd of July, or the 7th Sunday of Never, it is that which is most important.    


-AK 


Sunday, February 13, 2022

The Rooney Rule

Seeing as today is Super Bowl Sunday, it seemed like an appropriate topic for today's piece...




Well, I am glad that is settled.  Enjoy the game.  

-AK 


Saturday, February 12, 2022

A Casualty of War



Far too many families I have been fortunate to know over the course of my life have been impacted by suicide.  Irrespective of the age of the loved one each family has lost, the loss is immeasurable and the hole left in the hearts of those forced to say goodbye too soon never truly closes completely.

Earlier this week, I saw the story in the New York Post reporting the death of Jeremy Giambi, younger brother of perennial All-Star Jason Giambi who, himself, had played for several years in the big leagues.  Yesterday, I saw the follow-up story, which disclosed that his cause of death was a self-inflicted gunshot wound.  

I never met Jeremy Giambi.  I know not what he had endured that pushed him to the point where dying apparently appeared to be more appealing to him than living.  I know simply that I am sorry for him and I am sorry for those he loved and those he loved most of all that it did.




-AK 


Friday, February 11, 2022

Same As It Ever Was

Today is a new day.  Yet, the same choice presents itself to us today that presented itself to each of us yesterday.  It is the same one that will present itself to each of us tomorrow.   




Choose wisely.  Life is a one-time-only offer at all. 

-AK 


Thursday, February 10, 2022

It's Easy If You Try

The great Arthur Miller providing a bit of inspiration on a mid-February Thursday...




Well said, Mr. Miller.  

-AK 


Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Tuesday, February 8, 2022

A Tidbit for Tuesday

Victor Hugo speaking words of wisdom for a Tuesday in early February...




-AK 





Monday, February 7, 2022

Life Inside the Net of Wonder



At the end of last summer, the Missus and I did something that was almost impossibly hard for us to do.  We sold our little Paradise by the Sea in Lake Como.   Our love for it did not wane during the seven years we owned it.  If anything, it only grew.  Our long-range plan envisions us living out our golden years, full-time, at the beach.  As much as we loved our Lake Como home, it does not have - and could not have (through no fault of its own) - all that we shall need to be a full-time, year-round home.  

So, with the market at the Shore completely insane, we sold it.  In the months since, as the market has calmed down a bit,  we have looked at quite a few houses that may fit our needs.  While some came closer than others, none of them was quite right.  
 



Until now.  

This afternoon the Missus and I shall accompany the gentleman we have hired as he performs the home inspection on a home that, presuming he gives it a clean bill of health, we shall buy.  If all goes according to Hoyle, by the time Memorial Day Weekend 2022 arrives, this sign, which Jess and Rob gave us for Christmas in 2014, shall be hanging inside its new home.

And hopefully, its final one.  




-AK 

Sunday, February 6, 2022

In Three Words

Wishing a happy 55th birthday to my old friend - and best man (as I was in his wedding) Dave.   Enjoy it, my fellow old man.  




It does indeed.  Happy Birthday, Dave.  Enjoy it.  Enjoy every one of them.  

-AK

Saturday, February 5, 2022

Today Makes Thirteen

 


It was on this day thirteen years ago that Stuart Solomon died.  Presuming the truth of what is written above, Stu lives for as long as he is remembered.  I have every intention of doing my small part to preserve his immortality for as long as I am able.  

-AK 



Friday, February 5, 2021

Twelve Years After

Twelve years ago today, the planet lost a legitimately good, gentle soul.  May those of us who knew the gentle giant who was Stuart Solomon never forget him. May we keep his memory alive - as we keep alive the memory of all those we loved who left us far too soon.  What follows here is something I wrote to mark this sad anniversary in years past.  

Feel free to add a comment(s) sharing your favorite Stu memory...

Turned Up to Eleven


Image result for living remember the dead

If imitation is indeed the sincerest form of flattery, then what follows here today just might be the single-most sincere thing I have ever done or written.  I wrote this on this very sad anniversary last year, which was the tenth anniversary of the tragic death of the gentle giant, Stuart Solomon. 



Em and Stu
(1985 Tempora et Mores)



"Einstein's Theory of Relativity.  
Grab hold of a hot pan, 
second can seem like an hour.
Put your hands on a hot woman, 
an hour can seem like a second.
It's all relative." 
- Preacher (LL Cool J)
"Deep Blue Sea"

If a sentiment expressed by a fictional character in a scene from a twenty-year-old homage to/ripoff of Jaws offends your sensibilities - and seeing as we live in the era of Faux Outrage it just might, then consider it this way.  It was ten years ago today that Stuart Solomon, forty-one-years young, died.  Whether for you this past decade passed in an eye blink or in an eternity, one truth remains inviolate.  Stu died before these past ten years happened. He did not experience a single moment of it.  Not one.  
I had just begun what proved to be an ill-considered and (mercifully) brief adventure plying my trade somewhere other than the Firm when Bowinkle called me to tell me the terribly sad news about Stu.  It was a Thursday morning.  Mark and I have been friends for as long as I can remember - and likely longer than he wishes he could remember - during which time we have conducted a total of a couple of hundred phone conversations in an aggregate time of less than ten minutes.  Our conversation that morning might have been the longest one we have ever had - not because of what we said to one another but because of the prolonged silences that filled the void between the staccato bursts of conversation.  

As a kid, certainly through high school and most likely through college, I believed fervently in my own immortality.  Survive a single-car accident with nary an injury (no broken bones, no lost limbs, and no cuts that required stitches) in which the car you are/were/had been driving bounces nose-first into a drainage ditch, rolls over (side-to-side) two times, and comes to rest upside down on the side of a deserted country road at shortly after midnight and tell me just how high you would crank your "I AM BULLETPROOF"dial.  To a lesser degree, albeit only slightly lesser, I believed in the immortality of my friends too.  We were too young to die, a rule whose exception was proven tragically by Brian Clare, a gentle soul to whom the world - if it operated on the premise of fundamental fairness - owed a significantly better fate than that which he received.  

Being an anti-sentimentalist, when people who had spent five-plus days a week together for anywhere from four to ten years outgrew the sobriquet "Classmates", I reasonably anticipated that growth for each of us would be both upward and outward and that the farther removed we were from our status as the "Class of '85", so too would we be farther and farther removed from each other. Speaking for myself that is indeed what happened.  With a couple of notable exceptions, I had little contact with any of my high school classmates once high school was in the rear-view mirror.  

Stu was one of the notable exceptions, at least through college and a year or two thereafter.  Once I started dating Margaret in June, 1991, and thereafter started law school in September, 1991, my life's trajectory had reoriented itself in a very specific and particular way.  I wrote those words just now with the same amount of regret I felt when I lived through those days almost thirty years ago, which is to say none at all.  Life is a forward-moving exercise.  

I cannot recall when I had last seen Stu but I do remember where it was I last saw him.  He and his father, Roger, had opened a sports bar, neither the name of which nor the location of which I ever committed to my memory.  On its opening weekend, I joined Mark and several of Stu's long-time friends there to wish Stu luck on his new venture, about which he was justifiably excited.  Leaving that night, I remember telling him that I would be back.

I never made a second visit.

Not too terribly long after it opened, the bar was gutted in a fire that raged through the strip mall in which it was located, a fire that started in one of the strip mall's other tenants.  To my knowledge, Stu and his dad never attempted to reopen it, either in its original location or elsewhere. 

Forty-one is too damn young to die.  Yet, it was at precisely that age that Stu died.  Proof again of the inherently inequitable nature of Life.  Proof, also, of the fact that time neither flies nor crawls.  It simply marches on, grinding its way through its day-to-day.  Through ours as well. Reminding us that immortality is a child's dream, the gossamer-like nature of which is revealed to each of us in the stark light of adulthood...

...but in which there is no harm in visiting upon every now and again if for no reason other than to remind us how to dream.  Perhaps, to remind us also that it is OK to do so.  

-AK  

Friday, February 4, 2022

Hair of the Dog

Once upon a lifetime ago, I was this guy…




…and these days I smile at the memory of those days and the fact that I survived them.

Of course, I still have a little whiskey left.  

-AK

Thursday, February 3, 2022

In The Blood




Five years ago, on this very day, Mom and I had our last "Happy Birthday!" phone call.  It was a twice-a-year tradition from the time Margaret and I got married.  Every year, first in February and then again in June, we would spend somewhere between forty-seven and fifty-nine seconds on the phone, during which conversation one of us would wish the other "Happy Birthday", we would check in on one another, and we would remind each other how much we loved each other.  Mom could do all that - from the heart and with meaning - in less than a minute.  

On this very day five years ago, I attained a milestone (or millstone if you prefer).  I turned fifty.  I am the youngest of six siblings so when Mom called me that evening - as Margaret and I were sitting at a bar at Bar A in Lake Como having a cocktail - I asked her if she felt any differently now that her youngest - her "baby" - had reached fifty.  She laughed, a bit nervously as I remember, before she answered, telling me that while I would always be her youngest, life had made me grow up pretty quickly and pretty early, which she had always remembered, and that she had not thought of me as her "baby" for a very, very long time; since Dad's death thirty-five-plus years earlier.  

No sooner had the words left her mouth and entered my ear than she regained her composure, repeated her birthday wishes, reiterated her love for me, for Margaret, and for our kids, said good-bye, and hung up.  I sat at the bar with the phone up to my ear for a second or two longer, smiling at the memory of what she had said.  

Four months later - to the day - Mom died.  Ten days short of her birthday.  Fifty-six months ago today.  "How much of my mother has my mother left in me?" is a question I ask myself every day.  Some days, admittedly, more than others. 




Today is such a day.  

-AK    


Wednesday, February 2, 2022

A Long, Cold Winter

'Cause this winter looks like
Its gonna be another bad one
But Spring'll soon be here,
Oh God, I hope it's not late.
"The Roof is Leaking"
-Genesis


Dear Phil: 

I understand that today is your big day, especially (one might say frighteningly) so in Punxsutawney, Pennsylvania.  This year, however, we need you to sit this one out.  We cannot risk you popping your head out of your hole, seeing your own shadow, and inflicting six more weeks of winter upon us.  We simply cannot.

Here is the thing.  This request has nothing at all to do with this past weekend's weather.  Not a damn thing.  Around here, we have an expression for weather like that which we experienced last weekend.  That expression?  "January in Jersey".  

Instead, it has everything to do with the fact that this winter has been far too long already.  The toll it has exacted to date has been far too high.  Yet, today, it shall take a great deal more.  For today, 5th Avenue in Manhattan outside of St. Patrick's Cathedral shall once again be a sea of love, adorned in blue.  Today, Police Officer Wilbert Mora, partner of slain Police Officer (now Detective) Jason Rivera, shall be honored, remembered, and laid to rest as his partner from the 32nd Precinct was this past Friday.  




Let us not prolong this hard winter a minute longer than we must, Phil.  Provide Officer Mora's family, those he loved, and those who loved him most of all, including his brothers and sisters in blue, with a bit of hope in these darkest of days.  Provide them with the promise of Spring and its inherent warmth.  Provide it to them as quickly as possible. 

And I hope it is not too late.   

-AK 


Tuesday, February 1, 2022

And Away We Go…

New month.  Short month.  No better time to get after it if you have not yet started.