Sunday, September 21, 2008


Friday night was our church's Daddy/Daughter activity. The theme was a Western Hoe-down. My youngest daughter is the only one left at home young enough to go (it was only for girls ages 3 to 11 inclusive). We dressed up in hats and boots, tied our scarfs and headed out.

Games! Toys! Prizes! Food! It was a lot of fun getting there and seeing friends, and playing. She climbed right up on the horse and knew what to do!

But disaster struck! After getting our food (fruit salad, tortilla chips, and chili), we made our way to a table to eat, and oh no! She spilled chili all over her beautiful white shirt. A quick trip to the kitchen and vigorous scrubbing with cold water didn't help much. There was a huge orange stain down her front. It even made her tummy orange underneath! But, I thought to myself, what would my wife do? Look really close at that last picture, where she has her hand on her hip. Click it to zoom in. Then, click one of the other two pictures. Can you see it? Different shirts!

From a previous reconnoitering of the neighborhood with my aforementioned wife, I knew about the Village Economy Store three blocks South of our church. We hoofed it to the car, made it through a green light, quickly scanned the girls sections. We both agreed it should be white like the chilified shirt, and modest. One shirt was rejected because it was too short. We found one that looked good, she changed quickly in the dressing room (I don't know what the reviewer in the above-linked page means about no dressing rooms), agreed it fit, and scooted to the register. She turned around so the cashier could take price and remove the tag. Cool, it was even half off today!




Back to the dance in less than ten minutes. Just in time for cake and dancing!

Monday, September 15, 2008

~My (Your Affectionate Sobriquet of Choice) Takes the Morning Train...~

When we moved from Forest Hill to Aberdeen, one of the aspects of the move that I was most excited about was that I would have the chance to take the train to work. For the first several months, I couldn't, because I was still driving our middle son back to Forest Hill for Seminary every day so he could finish out the school year at North Harford. Theirs was the choral program that took him to China this last Spring, so it was worth the sacrifice. He has had angst since over his new school's program, saying there are only a handful of boys even in the chorus.

Then, a week after school ended, our oldest was commuting with me on her way to NASA. So, still had to drive.

But starting August 22, I've been taking the MARC train nearly every day to work.

The very non-intuitive trip planner at MTA's web-site doesn't know about my walk through the woods at the BWI end of my train ride. I hustle the two oldest boys out the door at 5:30am, drop them off for seminary, and hurry down to the station to catch the 5:48 southbound. It's too dark to see much until I get south of Baltimore, but I've seen some lovely sunrises.

And once I disembark at the BWI Amtrak station, I have a lovely walk through the woods. There is an 1/2-mile long iron bridge, maybe 25-30 feet off the ground, from the Station to MDOT headquarters that goes over a pleasant little creek. Originally, headquarters was supposed to be closer, but there was apparently a bog fern that needed to be protected along the creek. So it got protected with this super-awesome bridge instead! The rusty look of it is intended, a new-old modern technique I guess.

MY absolute favorite part about commuting via train is the walk home. You might wonder, since I walk over a creek/bog/swamp whether or not I have to battle mosquitoes; Nope! I think the bridge is so far off the ground (and so rarely used), that mosquitoes never find it. But other wildlife do occasionally.

And the bridge over the creek is idyllic. I stop there everyday and count turtles. Twice, I have seen an enormous snapping turtle floating in the water, like some kind of reptilian nuclear submarine. I like to count how many turtles are sunning themsleves on a tree that has fallen into the creek.

It's fun to feel like I am saving the planet, saving money, enjoying nature, all at the same time. So if I ever phone you between 4:45pm and 6pm on a weeknight, and it sounds like I'm calling from a busy restaurant, that's just me multi-tasking, taking advantage of the hands-free ride home on the train.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Happy Birthday!


My youngest son turned 10 two weeks ago. For his birthday, my parents sent us to Hershey Park! Thanks for having a birthday, son!

How cool are we in our matching shirts?  Easy to look for us in a crowd!Hershey Park has this new thing; I noticed the music they have piped is locale- and ride-specific. “Riding the Storm Out,” “Born to Run” playing in the queue for Storm Runner, “Candyman” “Sugar, Sugar” and “Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch” playing at the entrance to Chocolate World. I wish I’d noticed earlier in the day, so I could have paid attention to the theme music on The Great Bear. ~Ah put a chain around my neck, lead me anywhere. Oh let me be your Teddy Bear.~


Then, the day after his birthday, Grandpa took him go-carting! He's wanted to drive a go-cart ever since he saw one of his older brothers flip one at his Uncle's house last year. So driving on this closed track seemed like a safer "first" time.

It is great to be his Dad, and not just for the chance to go to amusement parks and ride go-carts with him. His happy smile, incredible curiosity, strong testimony, make him a joy. Thanks for being in my family!

Saturday, August 23, 2008

She's Gone

The brilliant graduate contemplates a future where her doofy Dad doesn't take ambush photos of her
Number one daughter has flown the coop, gone to college yesterday. My parents are driving her out at a leisurely place. The last time I drove her across the country, it was me driving all six kids, plus one cousin, and we went in solid 4 to 5 hour blocks, not stopping, no dawdling, let's hurry up and get there fashion. I hope she is having a nice trip.

Advice to new college freshmen;

Be brave. Introduce yourself to everyone you meet. They don't know anyone either.

Invite people to go with you whenever you go anywhere. Never go anywhere alone, unless alone-time is your goal. They probably don't know anything about campus either, and will welcome the chance to explore with someone who is brave.

Be careful. The world is full of idiots and meanies. So, give folks a chance to prove themselves , but don't give them a chance to use or hurt you.

If you ever need anything, call me or your Mom, and we will tell you how you can get along without it (stolen directly from Coach Slutsky's excellent speech).

Find things you love, and make them a part of your days. The spot where you can see the sunset, or hear a brook, or nap under a tree, or listen to the orchestra practice, or observe new art installations, or smell donuts. The world is beautiful, and there are rare and wonderful things everywhere. Find those things that move you, and make sure you have the chance to be moved.

When I was dating her Mom, we would take the elevator to the top of the Kimball Tower, and then walk up the stairs to eat on the landing at the very top of the stairwell.  Once, a maintenance guy cam by, was amused at our effort to find a quiet corner, and let us on the roof to see the view.Find ways to have peace. Most of the day, you will be surrounded by humanity, which is great, but you need to have time revel in the stillness, too. There's surely a spot you can hike to, a classroom that is empty, a balcony that's rarely trod.

Write. In a journal, email, blog. Write it down. You will never regret having made a record of what you saw today, will see tomorrow.

Don't ever let guilt be a motivator. If someone tries to make you feel guilty to get you to do something, they are dysfunctional, run away from them! Guilt should motivate you to do one thing; repent. So, if the thing you are being urged to do out of guilt is not repentance, trust me, you're better off without.

Ask good questions. I know I taught you how to do this. People love to answer good questions.

Be aggressive. Say no, especially if you are not sure what the answer is.

Be curious. Discover things. Find the nooks and crannies.

Remember how much you are loved, how beautiful you are.

Be deliberate. If you like to snack, then buy snacks in the big bag and take them with you. Don't be one of those dumb college kids who spends $10 a day at vending machines. That money is much better spent on video games or something...

Find who you want to be, and try to be that person everyday.

I love you, sweetie.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Motorcycles and Freedom

My father has three brothers. Had. His youngest, my Uncle Michael, was killed about 17 years ago. He was 33.

I work as a policy analyst for a State agency. For four months every year, a big portion of my job is reviewing proposals for new laws, made by the legislature while they are in session. So every time some elected official starts humming, “I am a Bill, I am only a Bill…” and submits something in a committee, dozens, sometimes hundreds, of staffers like me have to read it. We forecast the effect, if any, the changes proposed by the law-to-be would have on how our agency functions. Most of the proposals have no affect whatsoever.

But I am amused, every year, to consider the blizzard of effort that must be expended on every. Single. One. Of these proposals. First, an email is sent to me, and all of the people in positions like mine in all of the departments in my agency, that lists all of the proposals made thus far. The legislative services staff for my agency tries to flag those proposals that would be of particular concern to each department, and solicits our attention as to the proposal’s impact.

So, last year, when a Delegate (or one of his constituents) was offended by the rubber testicles someone suspended from the back of a pick-up truck, he proposed a law that would prohibit the display of anatomically correct body parts. Seriously. And we had to read it and comment on how expensive it would be to enforce. 2007 HB 1163. Go look it up.

Anyway, a few times during the legislative session, all of the staff legislative analysts meet together and spend as long as it takes (these are called “marathon sessions” for a reason) to go through every last bill, making sure the Legislative Services office knows which bills concern us. If there ARE issues of note, (whether the issues lead us to recommend support or), someone is directed to draft a position paper, summarizing the Agency’s or Department’s concerns and interests. If the issues addressed are substantial enough, someone will be tasked with monitoring the bill’s progress, and personally appearing at any hearings where it is discussed, to testify in favor or against it.

There is one this year that reduces the requirement that all motorcyclists wear helmets. It would allow those motorcyclists who have remained accident-free for a set number of years, to not wear helmets anymore. Being allowed to (or being barred from) ride helmet-free is a great big huge deal to motorcyclists. Bikers in Maryland are all required to wear helmets since the first of October, 1991. It is unfortunate that I know that date.

Anyway, so maybe that’s pretty friendly, you know, to let the safe bikers have the option? The fact that they’ve never wrecked, might mean there’s a better chance they won’t wreck in the future. But public safety policy aside, it’s grossly impractical; how is a police officer supposed to tell by looking at a motorcyclist whether or a not a helmetless rider meets the standard? We get a lot of laws like that, proposing some relief or change that might sound attractive (even if sometimes it only sounds good to single legislator, or a legislator’s single constituent), but would be either impossible or horrendously expensive to implement.

So, back to the marathon; the motorcycle helmet law provoked some jokes.

We should amend the proposal, so that if a motorcyclist gets killed without a helmet, they are automatically an organ donor. See, that’s funny, because when someone gets killed on a motorcycle without wearing a helmet, you know, it’s usually from the head trauma, so there are lots of perfectly good organs left over. So yeah, motorcyclists are just donors-on-wheels, right?

There are profound experiences that come to us over and over. We fall in love with our spouse again, mourn the loss of a parent again, cry at someone’s graveside long after, even decades after their funeral. Every time I hug one of my kids, I feel the kinesthetic echo of when the nurse first handed me the infant, wrapped in a hospital blanket, years and years ago. Strong emotional experiences ripple out over time caressing us over and over again with their brushing-by. Like a rock dropped in a calm lake, the waves move away, bounce, return, creating patterns of interference and reinforcement.

When the motorcycle helmet joke was uttered, I remembered everything that ever happened with my Uncle Mike, concentrated and flashing by in heartbeat.

He was . . . I don’t know, I guess maybe the black sheep. He seemed kind of a free spirit, kind of a ne’er-do-well.

Uncle Mike smiling at me (I'm the infant, hee)He was not many years older than me, closer as a peer than distant as an adult. So I never had a clear perspective of how self-destructive his behavior was. His nonchalance looked cool to me. But admittedly, I couldn’t conceive its consequence, how his marriage failed, his life faltered, stalled. When I was in High School, he worked, sort of, as a contractor for the cable company. I know at some point before that he had been in the army (I got his hand-me-down olive army jacket, which I wore when I walked our dog).

I remember his being AWOL for a while when I was much younger. He left Fort Carson, Colorado, and basically vanished. His car was found a few weeks after he disappeared, out in the desert of New Mexico, all shot up. There were whispers of a drug deal maybe going bad, him being on the lam perhaps. He re-surfaced months later, on the other side of the country, working a shrimp boat in New Orleans. Now I chuckle, imagining him swinging shrimp nets for the Bubba Gump Company.

Uncle Mike always seemed to be just a few steps away from having some kind of exotic adventure. But he never seemed to move much, never took those steps. A lifetime of potential energy. A match never struck, never lit.

He drifted in and out. Was in some family photos, and not others. He was mythic to me. Seemed taller than everyone else. Not around enough to become any kind of a hero-figure, but around. When I was a teenager, old enough to drive by myself, I bumped into him one time at a 7-11, him leaving as I arrived. He was driving some kind of souped-up muscle car I hadn’t seen him in before. Knowing that he didn’t live the lifestyle of the idle rich (a car like that had to be worked on for years, or bought outright; Mike didn’t do long-term souping-up of things, and he couldn’t afford to be buying such indulgences), I asked my Dad what had happened. Apparently, Uncle Mike got hit by a car while riding his motorcycle (breaking his wrists. Plural), an injury case Dad helped settle. Mike blew the settlement buying a street rod. Cool. Not responsible, like I’ve said, but cool. You’d think having experienced such a wreck once, he’d have learned. But it was hallmark of Uncle Mike’s life; learning from experience seemed to be something he never quite got the hang of.

He very obviously was comfortable with his recreational drug use. I remember a t-shirt he had with an enormous graphic on the front with a prescription for Quaaludes on it; I asked my Mom how to pronounce it.

Heh, Mom is so imperturbable. “Quay-loods.” Even said matter-of-factly, it still amuses me to remember her answering that question.

Uncle Michael was killed after being hit while riding his motorcycle helmetless, when a car turned left in front of him. He went through the car’s windshield, suffering a basal skull fracture, and not much else by way of hurt. Maryland had just that year passed a law requiring motorcyclists to wear helmets, but it didn’t go into effect until a few months after Mike’s wreck. He apparently looked just fine; it must have been awful to have him so young, so terminally hurt, and still appearing to be so ready to roll out of bed, ready for the next thing.

But that kind of injury, he was dead, it was just a matter of how soon. He was without a spouse, so his brother, my Father, acted as his guardian, making the decision to turn off the machines and allow his organs to go to donors. His liver had to go to someone who had Hepatitis–C (this diagnosis is another piece in the mountain of evidence that he hadn’t really spent his life very responsibly). He was one of the first donors to have a Hep-positive organ donated that way, it was a new program in 1991.

I remember playing pool with him at a family dinner. He was so tall, and I wanted him to think I was cool. I was mean to my sister, goaded by my desire to seem tough. Something I am sorry about now.

The 70s were just too awesome.  Mike in the army uniform, me standing if front of my Dad, Grandpa, Steve, and Chris in front of his Dad Ron.  The four brothers.I remember going to his wedding. Actually, I’ve seen the pictures, so maybe I am just remembering the pictures. He had his dress army uniform on. My Dad had the most excellent moustache, I was wearing a dark blue suit and a spectacle of an orange and blue shirt. I’ll bet it was polyester...

Mike’s marriage didn’t last. He had one daughter, and his ex-wife left for California, taking Audrey with her.

When Mike died, I was young, married with small children, debts, going to school thousands of miles away. I couldn’t afford to come back home to the funeral. I should have made the effort anyway. Mike lived his life with so little affixing him to other people, to places. That’s what it means to be responsible, doesn’t it? To do things anticipating the consequence, the permanent effects? I look back at Mike, and it seems so obvious to me now that nothing he did was ever calculated to be lasting; he just did whatever he felt like doing next.

>whoosh< It all went through my head with the wise-crack about helmetless motorcyclists.

He was 33 when he died, a few weeks shy of his 34th birthday. That’s eight years younger than I am now. He was ten years older than me, but that was 17 years ago; I have lapped him, out-lived him and then some. How have I done with my years of advantage?

Now I am a Dad, an Uncle myself. It delights me to think that my kids have their own Uncle Michael (a fact that makes my youngest son wrinkle his brow in thought, and then laugh).

The bill I told you about, the helmet one? It never made it out of committee. The MVA has a strong fiscal argument based the impracticality of enforcement. But MVA is keeping that paper, for the next time another brilliant legislator decides to propose it again.

It occurs to me, thinking about Mike, that we learn things in one of two ways. We certainly learn by direct experience. Experience is, as they say, the great teacher. The enticement of wantonness, the lure of the exotic; what resonates in our heart is the unknown. The same thing that makes them attractive is what makes them dangerous; we cannot know what will happen, so we either avoid them (which is safe, though boring) or we pursue them (which is thrilling, if hazardous).

Why is that so few of us spend those precious extra seconds to flip through the card catalog of our memory and think about *other* people who faced those choices, and then forecast the results in terms of ourselves? You know; vicariously? Experience I can glean from looking at the choices someone else made is just as educational as the experience I can get by trying the same experiment. Some experiments yield consequences, that are just so . . .

Permanent.

Yes, sometimes it’s boring to live a regular predictable life instead of one of unbridled freedom and chaos. Do free, unbridled, chaotic people bounce grandchildren on their knees? Perhaps, some of them survive, that’s just statistics; there will always be someone who survives the stupidest of chances. So that's the thing I guess. All of us have an economist that lives in our hearts that weighs the possibility of catastrophe before every choice.

Be sure you haven't gagged yours in the pursuit of variety.

Tuesday, January 02, 2007

A Broken Heart

My son, he breaks my heart. This is a hard thing to describe, but I know it is important, so bear with me while I digress. I want so very badly to get this just right.

What does “a broken heart” mean? I know it’s a phrase used when describing how you feel after a romance ends. That connotes the disappointment, I suppose? It is the way of every loving relationship to be disappointed, though, not just relationships that hinge on “romance”. You can only have your heart broken by those you love. Our parents will always eventually let us down and break our hearts. Our friends, lovers, too.

Our children, in a different way. They come to us as unblemished as anything in the world ever does. When we fall in love, there is always a little bit of the overlooking of faults, an idealizing. From infatuation, or maybe denial. Perhaps it’s the genetic imperative to mate that allows us to label eccentricities as charming rather than annoying. So with kids, they are the ideal, and in love, the illusion of the same.

Paul says hope is a kind of love; I think it is the best of his three to describe the traditional “falling in love” love. The thrill of romance resides in the hope that it will stay good, get better, succeed, and satisfy. With our kids, they start out with no faults. We are filled with hope for them, and fear of what the world will do. But we inhabit a mortal world, and their growing means their making mistakes, so our hearts are broken, over and over.

But the scriptures also talk about a broken heart, and a contrite spirit. In the Psalms, it calls that the offering to the Lord. “The sacrifices of God are … a broken and a contrite heart,” (Psalms 51:17). I don’t think that speaks to the disappointment kind of heartbreak, but to being humble. Curbing one’s pride, and bowing your knee to God’s will. Offering your heart to God, rather than keeping it stony in arrogance. The hard heart can bear or hear no guidance, but the broken one will heed the still, small voice.

My son is singing in the Maryland State Boychoir. A “Boy’s Choir” is one comprised only of boys (duh), but spans the age-range from the very young to the very mature, such that it can fill all four parts of any harmony. It’s still the alto part when a boy sings it, but when a boy sings the soprano part, they call that the “treble” instead. A good Boychoir sounds great, and this one sounds amazing.

At least, I’d suspected they do. Prior to last Sunday, I’d never actually heard them perform. Our harrowing schedule made it barely possible for us to truck him back and forth to rehearsals and concerts; in the months since he’s joined, we’ve never been able to actually schedule free time for us to attend anything. So my opinion was based on the soaring phrases I’d heard coming from their practice room, and the brief snippets they have on their web-site.

Finally, last week I got to attend a concert. They were doing the Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols. It is a structured performance that features speakers reading from the Scriptures, and the Boychoir singing carols or hymns with the audience.

The church was beautiful, and completely packed. I felt terribly lucky to have tickets for seats only six rows back. I had never attended one of these services, and so was unprepared for the clever way they started it. They choir entered the chapel from the back, singing as they walked. “Once in Royal David’s City”, the first verse sung only by the treble choir, so the piercing, pure, and simple melody was alone, and instantly hushed the crowd.

It might be a simple theatric strategy, to surprise an audience by the performance coming at them unseen, but boy it worked. As those three lines were sung, I could feel emotion welling in my throat. Max wasn’t singing yet, but I knew he would be on one of the coming choruses.

It was a song about a mother and her son, about the son’s potential. All the tender, break-your-heart reality of the parent/child dynamic swooped through me during that verse. I thought of my son, singing in this magnificent church, with this amazing choir. My son, who sometimes disappoints me, but far more often amazes me, for whom I want nothing but joy in life. I thought of all the things I had ever done wrong with him, the misspoken over-reactions, the times I was angry when I should have been sensitive, when I talked and should have listened. I was consumed with the fervent hope that I would be good for him, that my faults wouldn’t get in the way of his happy life. My love for him filled me until it felt like my heart was straining to contain it.

And then, the full choir began to sing the second verse with all the timber of their full range. “He came down to earth from heaven!” Their volume and the rich, rich mixing of their amazing voices felt like a physical presence, a breeze stirring the air of the church. Tears, brimming at the corners of my eyes, ran down my cheeks.

Life is a glorious, painful, beautiful labor. I turned slightly to see if I could see Max coming down the aisle. He moved slowly by, eyebrows furrowed slightly from the attention he was paying to walking, singing, not making mistakes. I don’t think he saw me. Maybe he saw me, but was solemnly not waving hello to his audience.

And my straining heart broke. My son, singing in this choir with his fervent concentration, exercising a talent of such capacity I cannot quite grasp how good he really is. He is my son, come from me. But here, this day, he has made me, made of my heart, an offering to the Lord.

I thought how so much more our relationships with our children end up being fraternal than paternal. Our children consume our lives and years, which is as it should be, but in the end they are not “ours”, we do not earn the right to “keep” them. We love them, and are made better by their successes and increase, but we know they will go on to belong to their own families and children.

Thank you my son for letting me be a part of this wonderful opportunity of yours.

You can listen to some more of their music here.

Friday, December 15, 2006

Inheritances

A new chapter. An embarking. Where did this begin? Many places, so I will just pick one, and perhaps eventually get them all.

It began in 1999 or so with an early Saturday morning drive down to Northeast Baltimore. Our goal was to make a dent in the task of cleaning out Lillian Zahradka's rowhome. Ah, but that leads me to an earlier beginning.

My father got a phone call a few years earlier from a high school buddy; a friend needed some lawerly help. The friend, Lillian was a widow these 30 or more years, and wanted to arrange her estate. She, wanted to put her estate in order so that when she passed, there would be no troubles. Lillian had one daughter, a middle-aged woman who was also named Lillian; I think that might have been more common a generation ago. Or maybe just in Czechoslovakia.

Dad got to know them preparing the estate. He got a phone call a year later, "Lillian has died." Well at least she had her affairs in order.

"No, the daughter." Lillian's daughter had died single and childless. Having been single for her entire life, the daughter had kept much of her stuff in Lillian's house.

Lillian was wholly unprepared to lose her daughter also. Lillian's husband and daughter, judging from their stuff, were two of a kind. Both had lots of hobbies which involved acquiring lots of stuff. The husband liked to work on things, and never met a tool he didn't need to buy three of. The daughter liked to travel, paint, listen to music, and collected books, albums, and supplies sufficient to stock a store for each. As a result of both losses, the house was choked with the stuff of two lives, and poor Lillian made her way in the little spaces that remained. And enough time had passed, Lillian was ready to get rid of some of it.

And boy, how much of "it" there was. Our goal today was to clear out the basement. We spent hours trucking box after box of moldy books, clothes, suitcases, grimy coffee cans of old engine parts, empty bottles up the back stairs and into the alley. Most people will do this more than once over the course of their life. The sifting that comes after death. It can be the heart-wrenching cleaning of a child's room, or the vaguely reverent straightening up after a deceased tenant. I have nothing new to observe on that process. It is a mournful task, but infused with the curious "what's this?" of an archaeological dig. With the added bonus here of being incredibly filthy. We wore masks.

Here, then, is the beginning I mentioned earlier. The daughter had a *massive* vinyl collection. Now, on first seeing the wall of shelves, holding nothing but row after row of L.P.s, my thought was shamefully avaricious. I had heard of discoveries of old albums worth a fortune. Black gold. Texas . . . wax. Surely there were nuggets of it in this mountain of music.

Alas, the reality of collectibles is thus; just because something is old, doesn't mean it's worth any more. Rarities are so valuable because they are rare. As in, not many people collect them in the first place. The daughter's collection, if eclectic and vast, was very pedestrian. Lots of K-tel "best of" albums. Hundreds (I am not exaggerating; more than 200) of records, unopened and still in their original plastic, with the K-mart $1.98 price tag on them. It seemed likely the purchaser was a little compulsive in her collecting. Compulsive + non-discriminating = clutter.

I was no music expert, but I could tell there was nothing in the way of "value" to these records. Maybe he had some cachet in the day, but who would actually pay anything for a Ravi Shankar record now?

Throwing someone else's stuff away is hard work. It has all the metaphysical guilt of getting rid of something that still has value (it works!), without the psychological triumph of overcoming your own packrat tendencies. What a shame any of this stuff was ever bought, when it never got used.

As we carried stacks of records to the alley, I saw albums I recognized. Alice's Restaurant (was that album before the movie? because this one had a picture of Arlo from the movie on the cover). American Pie. Aqualung. Maybe she sorted that shelf alphabetically...

So I started setting a few aside. I guess that, then, was the real beginning. I had seen trailers for "High Fidelity". I knew an easy way to make a movie character look *really* cool was to give him a record collection, and make sure he was seeking that one good vinyl album. I guess I bought into that notion.

There were some Jazz albums. Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis. Hey, if I'm going to fall victim to a media myth, why not go all the way? Some '20s stuff. Count Basie, ha! Paul Williams, Bob Dylan, Joe Jackson, John Denver. The soundtrack to "Shaft".

Now, please understand, this was not me taking advantage of Lillian. She was old, and tired, and alone, and had probably not been in the basement in a decade, let alone the time since her daughter had passed. Throwing this stuff away was a kindness. It was interesting in a sociological way how the neighbors were starting to pour over the pile of detritus in the alley. There was so much of it, we actually had to bribe the city garbage truck that came by to take it. After they muttered about a maximum load, Dad slipped them a $20 as a "dumping" fee.

So I honestly felt I was not in the wrong to save a few out for myself. Months earlier, actually, Lillian had invited my wife and I to go through the collection of art books and supplies, and insisted we take anything we want.

"It is all just worthless to me." I showed Lillian the pile, and she patted my arm. "Good for you" sounds so cute with a thick Czech accent. So out to the van went my stack of albums. Back to my Real Estate Office, on the floor next to my desk. They were *way* too dirty to take home.

There they sat, until the Real Estate Office closed. They consolidated offices to a new location. Dad owned the building, so I left the pile albums there with the old furniture.

When he re-leased the office, I moved them upstairs into a corner of my sister's apartment.

When she married and moved out, I finally brought them to my house. The shuffling around had wiped some of the dust off. They went into a box, and sat on the shelf.

Lillian got older, sicker, and moved into a hospice facility. I went with my Dad once, and sat with her. She was no longer talking, didn't open her eyes any more. When Dad would hold her hand, and softly stroke her fingers, she would smile.

Once in a while, I would notice the pile of records, usually when we were moving things on the shelf around. I would feel anthropomorphic guilt for treating them so poorly. They were stacked flat, on their side, which I know isn't good for them. But I would remind myself I was not crazy, and albums had no feelings.

Once, to test out an old turn table someone gave us, I pulled out Alice's Restaurant. The turntable worked. But the album I had only contained the short version of "I Don't Want a Pickle", bummer. Growing up, a buddy of mine had the loonnngggg version on a reel-to-reel tape I'd heard once.

Otherwise, they sat there. Every couple of years, I'd pull out a couple that I thought might be worth some money, and check eBay to see if it'd be worth selling them off. I could get maybe $5 for "Crossings"! But I'd have to describe the condition of the album. Which means, morally, I would need to play it. Ah, never mind, I didn't have time.

Lillian passed away. Dad did the estate. After bills were paid and assets liquidated, there was a second cousin, or perhaps a grand-nephew, in Europe who was finally determined to be the nearest living relative.

There was a period of time I toyed with the notion of ripping them all to .mp3s. Check out super-bad John, and his vinyl-to-mp3 collection! Who was I kidding? No time.

We cleaned our basement, and threw away the stereo with the record player. Well, moved it into the garage, out of the way, staged to be really, truly thrown away later.

I moved the stack of records to my office. Again. I mean, different office, but, you know. If I worked up the urge for the final break up, out they'd go.

And a month ago, on a whim, I brought the stereo/record player to work. This morning, I finally brought the speakers in. Set it up (kind of hidden by my desk; the speakers were the big cabinet-sized ones from the '80s. In my daughter's room long enough to go native, they had been painted with butterflies and ladybugs). And pulled an album out.

Mrs. Zahradka, I am going to listen to every one of these, at least once. The ones I really don't want, I'm sorry, they're just going to get thrown away. But I spend most of my days at work just typing in the silence, and so listening to these records, even just the once to make them not completely useless, will in no way burden me.

First up, Cat Stevens, "Teaser and the Firecat".