Author: kjbeadling

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About kjbeadling

mission-driven entrepreneur, dad, husband, little league coach, teacher, happy warrior, dukie, bay swimmer, composter/recycler, former lawyer, blogger-maybe not in that order.

Blood and Gore to the Rescue.

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Everett’s first-ever travel baseball tournament game starts in 30 minutes. He’s been to this particular complex in Sunnyvale a couple dozen times. All as a spectator. Watching his big brother, who lives to be watched.

Everett does not live to be watched. He’s happiest when the spotlight is on someone else.

On the car ride down here this morning, he offered up an out-of-the blue observation about the merits of low expectations. If this were my older son, Max, I may have launched into a tirade, possibly laced with expletives, and likely including ample references to data points like the 5:50am wakeup call, the $50 “baseball bag” with neoprene bat sleeves purchased just yesterday, and the fact that I got along just fine with cut-off long underwear when I played and didn’t need high end “sliding shorts.”

But Ev isn’t Max, as I’m learning still, so I had to follow a different approach altogether. And it’s not one that comes naturally. Not to me, at least.

I paused for a beat or two, checked again the distance until our exit off 101 according to Waze, and rolled the dice, keenly aware that if I blew this, Ev would refuse to get out of the car when we pulled into the parking lot.

“Well, if we all settled for low expectations, think of all the things that would never have been accomplished. No one would have invented cars. There would be no Internet. No Olympic Games. No man on the moon. So it’s actually good to have high expectations, to challenge yourself, because that’s how you grow, how you learn what you’re made of, how you find the best in yourself, and maybe you’ll find that you can do things you didn’t think you could do.”

Pretty good, right? And I think this is basically verbatim. As if I pulled the “Low Expectations Talk” index card out of the Fatherly Advice packet and read from it after clearing my throat (and of course without lowering the quality of my freeway driving).

And from the backseat? Crickets. Nothing. I half-expected a gasp, maybe a gasp plus applause and a “Bravo!” shouted by my red-faced and profoundly inspired 8 year-old.

Um, yeah. No.

I soldiered on, kept my legs moving, shucked and jived. Instead of high-minded inspiration about the evolution of mankind, I went for something more visceral.

I suspected (correctly) that Ev was perseverating about getting plunked on the back at last night’s practice by an errant throw from catcher to first base while Ev was running to 1st base himself. No doubt the bruise on his right shoulder blade still smarted, pressed as he was into the backseat. I needed a strong visual to capture Everett’s attention, snap him out of this pre-game funk, pull him back from dangling over the precipice by his fingertips.

Enter Tony C.

I pulled up the famously grotesque Tony Conigliaro Sports Illustrated cover. Then I handed my iPhone and Tony’s bulging, purple eye socket over my shoulder to Everett.

“Woah, look at that black eye! Wow!”

Mission Accomplished.

Everett was now recalibrated and ready to go. His memory banks wiped clean. Not a care in the world. All it took was a little blood and gore. Whatever works.

Thanks for reading.

Who forgot to pay the Gravity Bill?

photo-1From the backseat the other afternoon whilst shooting towards the Golden Gate Bridge on the 101 South:

Ev:  “Dad, I wish there was such a thing as a ‘Gravity Bill.'”

Me:  [Pausing to digest this tidbit, searching my distracted brain, half-panicked trying not to reveal how much more intelligent my 8 year-old is than I.] “Oh?  Why?”

Ev:  “Because I wouldn’t pay the bill.” 

Me: [Realizing immediately that the jig is up, once again.  I haven’t the slightest idea where he is going with this, and our intellectual chain of command is so fragile.  Creaking loudly and about to snap altogether.]  “Oh? Why not?”

Ev:  “Because I want to float around, not be stuck with gravity.”

Me: [At once both proud of my 3rd grader’s flexible mind and disappointed in the fact that this line of thinking has never occurred to me.  I whisper, hopefully not audibly, “Damnit!!”] “Yeah, that would be cool, huh?” [Then I try to regain my footing, to catch up with him, to show that I am a worthy brainiac companion.] “Although, whom would we pay?  The city?  The County of San Francisco?  Planet Earth?”

And then the moment was gone.  Everett has paused long enough to give me a glimpse of his mind’s inner workings.  Just to let me know that his being quiet back there does not mean he’s contemplating the right moment to pick his nose undetected.  Some deep thoughts going on back there.  Far deeper than the thoughts going on in the driver’s seat.  At least when I’m the one doing the driving.

These exchanges — infrequent and brief, but powerful — remind me how woefully unequipped I am to provide my children with a fertile environment in which to exercise their minds.  By the way, as if to underscore this point, I first typed “inequipped” in that previous sentence, before being scolded by the dotted red underline for my grammatical ineptitude.  (At least I got “ineptitude” right all by myself.) 

We are all four together pretty much only at dinnertime.  By then, I’m tired.  Beat from juggling consulting work with a number of interesting clients.  Truly interesting work, stimulating, and with neat companies.  But it sometimes feels like I’m jamming a week’s worth of work into a few hours of intense hammering away.  Somewhere in there I will have managed to walk the dog a few times.  Maybe even a longer walk in the Presidio, say, where it feels like she might actually be getting the run she needs.  And usually I will have managed to break a sweat of my own, hopping on the lightly-rusted spin bike, slipping into the Bay, or going for a short run on rickety legs.  Some element of carpooling, to-practice driving, or bus stop pickup will come into play.  And then I have learned to really enjoy prepping dinner.  I have a very limited array of dinner options I know how to make, but it’s my array, and I’ve become fairly dependable within my own, narrow culinary parameters.  And I’ve also somehow gotten very interested in the table setting stuff — table runners, chargers, cool little napkin rings, the whole sh-bang.  Dunno how I fell into that, but fall I have. 

Net net, by the time I lower my 46 year-old carcass into my dining table chair, I’m pretty much spent.  Done. Functioning on only the barest of brain functions.  Relying on my autonomic nervous system to keep taking air into my lungs.  Not exactly prime time, then, for being the fantastic, engaging Dad I fancy myself.  Particularly in this age of omnipresent digital screens, dinner time time is supposed to be the time.  The best time.  For engaging in true face-to-face conversation.  The tribe reconnecting over the fire at the end of the day to share stories and continue an ancient oral tradition. 

If we were a tribe, and if I were sitting near the fire, I would smell something burning, realizing 30 seconds too late that my heel is scorched and blistered.  And probably grossed out that I had been thinking “hmm, something smells good, did I cook that?” only moments earlier. 

So like I said, tired.  And once again, probably guilty of setting unrealistic expectations, too.  Guilty of that, for sure.

Fortunately, I’m wide awake and reasonably alert at 8am, which is when I write.  Blog, I mean.  And sitting here now, clear-headed (sort of), it occurs to me that the opportunities to noodle over the pluses and minuses of gravity are all around us.  Happening all the time.  They can’t be curated or conjured up on demand.  They just happen.  And that’s the fun of it.

Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to find that damned Gravity Bill.  I have a nagging suspicion it hasn’t been paid this month, and all hell will break loose.

Thanks for reading.

Nerf Gun-Nut

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Hi, my name is Keir.

Hi, Keir.

Thanks.  I guess I’m here because, well, uhm, it’s just that.  I don’t know how it started or when it started. But, uhm….

Come on, Keir, you can do it.

OK, well.  Here it is: I’m a Nerf Gun-Nut.

[Gasp]

There, I said it. What a relief.

As I’ve written before (on the topic of paintball), despite my best efforts to the contrary, I can’t help but be trigger-happy once my forefinger locks around a trigger.  For a variety of presumably obvious reasons, I despise guns.  Let me say that in a more accurate way:  I despise real guns.  And I have long thought that any kind of pretend gunplay around the house on the part of my kids could lead to nothing but dire consequences.  In the short-term, you’ll shoot your eye out.  In the long-term, you’ll become a gun-toting militia leader hunted down by the ATF, your final moments broadcast on CNN via grainy chopper footage.

Granted, I’ve been given to a bit of catastrophizing here.  But I have rationalized it away by telling myself that anything gun-related is so inherently evil that no amount of catastrophizing is too catastrophic. 

So imagine my chagrin when I found myself cruising Amazon the other morning in search of the perfect Nerf gun with which I planned to massacre my kids. And it was all I could do to resist the urge to have my weapon of choice delivered to my doorstep ASAP,  the shipping expense outstripping the price of the Nerf N Strike Elite Strong Arm itself.  But I’ve read the delayed gratification marshmallow studies, and so I decided I could wait a couple extra days before showing my boys who’s boss. 

Once my Elite Strong Arm arrived, I ripped into the box with abandon, selfishly and loudly proclaiming, “This is Daddy’s gun, do not touch it under any circumstances!” as I clutched the barrel and grip overhead, making crazy-eyed eye contact with each of my sons, for emphasis.  They have been raised appropriately with respect to this whole gun topic.  So they were understandably vexed by this scene.  They likely figured this was some sort of elaborate trap on my part, set to determine the strength of their jelly-headed grasp on our family’s stance regarding guns.

That’s precisely the state of confusion, uncertainty, disruption, lack of structure, that I had hoped for. 

For the next couple days, we all partook in Nerf gun battles royale.  The boys built massive forts out of foot stools, couch cushions, and afghan blankets.  They horded styrofoam Nerf gun bullets into a massive cache.  They peered at me and their mother–both of us armed, of course–from between pillows and around corners.  They peppered our ribs and backs with unexpected attacks from all corners of the house.  And Hilary and I gave as good as we got, triangulating on our targets, using unintelligible hand gestures we’d seen in one or another of the Rambo movies, storming the bastion. 

It went on like this for days.  One long series of spontaneous skirmishes.  We only eased up when Max smashed his foot into the base of the couch at a full sprint into the living room, trying desperately to avoid the sniper (me) lying in wait.  And when the dog, thoroughly confused, would bark, jump and snap at my Elite Strong Arm fired when out of ammo.  Something about the unproductive “pfft! pfft!” sound that drove her into a maddened state. 

And I think this is probably the whole point; the reason why I have been able to get past my general disgust for all things guns when it comes to Nerf.  I’ve been reading and thinking a lot lately about unstructured play.  How important it is for kids’ developing brains.  A powerful ally for parents as an antidote for all the over-scheduling, Zombie-like screen-staring, and generally mind-numbing existence to which we’re all subscribing our children.  I figure for every between-the-white-lines, managed by whistle-blowing referees game my boys play, they and we deserve an equal amount of time to cut loose with reckless abandon in a hail of styrofoam bullets.

Anyhow, I’ve got to run.  I have a few dozen foam darts to scavenge and sock away in preparation for my next after-school battle.

Thanks for reading.

Mosquito Lancelot

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Chivalry is not dead. 

It lives on in post-10pm, darkened bedrooms all over the Marina District this time of year.  For this is the season of the dreaded backyard mosquito.  The one that slips undetected through the sliding doors, lying in wait until evening time. Clinging unnoticed to the ceiling or high on the wall.  Holding its little breath so as not to attract attention due to a heaving little chest or premature vibrating of its proboscis.  Slowly rubbing its little prickly feet together.  Grinning.  Plotting each step of its imminent assault in the dark. 

“When the light switch clicks off, that’s when we’ll get down to business,” whispers the sneaky bastard to his fellow Culicidae co-conspirators. 

But there is no such business to be had this evening.  Not in My Ladyship’s castle.  Not while My Lady sleeps.

Nay. 

For M’Lady’s Champion roams the halls of this particular castle.  I am Lancelot.  Knight of the Round Table.  Killer of Mosquitoes.

At the first audible “wheeeee” I spring from my chamber bed, deftly drawing my sword Tanlladwyr — which looks very much like a modern-day hand towel. 

En gard, you sonsabitches!

Over the next 90 seconds, I lunge, quarte (covering my upper left torso), octarv (swooping over my lower right torso and leg), sixte (for the upper right torso and sword arm), then riposte when one of the midge-like flies buzzes my ear.  Now i seize the moment.  The world nearly stops, and I see everything in slow motion and in 360-degrees.  As in The Matrix.  I deploy a ballestra then flèche — my best move.  Stamping then darting aggressively towards my attackers, arm extended.  Sprinting past them so as to avoid a blood-sucking in the event that my attack does not meet its target. I scream like a banshee, just for effect.  “Aaaayeeeeeeeeeheeee!!”

And then it is over. 

I haven’t even begun to break a sweat.  M’Lady groggily lifts a pillow off her dainty head and looks at me with one squinty eye.  I slip Tanlladwyr back into its scabbard, and retake my position next to M’Lady.  The assault on the castle has been quashed.  The attackers dispatched.  Faint red streaks on the chamber walls the only indication of the bloody battle that has just transpired.  I can feel M’Lady staring at me in wonderment.  Scarcely able to comprehend the sublime perfection to which she alone has borne witness only moments earlier. 

But M’Lady needn’t utter a word of gratitude.  The battle’s euphoric aftermath is repayment enough.  Her Champion drifts off to sleep.  Victorious.  

In actuality, I don’t think I managed to kill a single one of them.  But I’m polishing up my armor for tonight.

Thanks for reading.

 

Home Waters

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It’s interesting to realize how much our lives revolve around water.  By “our” I mean my family’s, but presumably “our” could cover all of us — humans, now and before, probably all living things, now and before, on this planet.  Ever. 

But that’s a little too high-minded for a Friday morning.  So let me just stick with my family.

We’re fresh back from our annual east coast summer vacation.  The first half we spent on Lake Otsego outside Cooperstown for our elder son’s travel baseball tournament.  (I could digress here, and give in to an equally interesting — to me — observation about how our lives revolve around baseball.  But I won’t digress, other than to share the below photo taken during a memorable Giants game the boys and I attended yesterday afternoon.)

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So back to Lake Otsego  Although I grew up only about 90 minutes away, I had never heard of this place.  We rented a very cool but 70% likely to be haunted old home on Otsego’s shores.  We spent as much time in that lake as we possibly could — hunting for crayfish, paddling in $2.99 inflatables from the local Topps Market, fishing (not “catching”), deploying dark ops after the kids hit the sack, and making my cranky right shoulder sore with some open water swimming.  The point is, our reptilian brains were positively drawn to the water; we had a helluva time breaking our grip when it was time to move on.  Not easy to leave this behind —

IMG_4082But leave it behind we did.  On our way to the next phase of our trip on Cape Cod, we toured a boarding school for our soon-to-be-high schooler to gather some data points.  The place was literally on the ocean, and the ocean and being on and in the ocean is a huge part of the curriculum and the entire experience there.  They even have a 1914 schooner on which the students crew and sail to far off places. 

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Whether Max will end up spending 4 years of his life there, I don’t know.  But sitting and typing now, I can’t help but wrinkle my brow over, once again, the central theme of water.  Running through everything in our lives.

We spent a week on the Cape, and it goes without saying that we were in, on, or around the water — fresh, estuarian and sea — nearly every waking moment.

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It was a remarkable trip.  Always is.  It’s hard to leave and come back home to San Francisco every year.  This year a bit more so due to Sunday’s major earthquake.  A reminder of our fragile existence out here.  But then once we get back home, we see this —

IMG_4303Our kids’ playground.  From the Atlantic now into the Pacific (technically, a mix of the Pacific and fresh water run-off).  I hope we’re managing to instill in them our own love of the water. Judging by their faces, I think we’re doing OK in that department.

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Thanks for reading.

Jumping Off Curbs

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When I was a kid, I never stepped over curbs.  That was something boring, tired adults did (I am NOT, of course, referring to my own parents).  I seized these horizontal rectangles of functional architecture as opportunities to jump and catch flight.  They transformed hot, expansive Memphis parking lots into virtual playgrounds.

Now, as an adult, when I do step over a curb (there are so few parking lots in San Francisco, this is an unusual experience), I occasionally remember my 8 year old pledge to myself never to become the kind of adult who steps over the curb.  Always jump.

Well . . . I may not be fulfilling that pledge in parking lots, but it hit me today that I’m definitely doing that with my company ZEGO.  Just the founding of the company itself–with a dual mission of embracing food sensitive consumers (who most companies avoid) and funding my…

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The Second Half.

photoToday my grandmother would have celebrated her 91st birthday.  But she did make it to 90.  And aside from the rather sudden end, it didn’t seem to anyone that she was struggling, not living life, or not enjoying herself.  Ninety.  I’d happily sign up for that. I just turned 46 the other day.  A little more than half-way to the full life my grandmother lived.  So now I’m officially in the Second Half.  At least I’d like to think so.

I have learned a lot in the First Half.  Some of the bigger lessons —

  1. Get comfortable in your own skin as soon as possible.  I wish I hadn’t worried about how others perceived me when I was younger.  Everyone is different.  Everyone is an individual.  This should be a cause for celebration.  Do not spend years trying to rub down your rough edges.  The rough edges are what make us, well, us.
  2. Some people will appreciate and even embrace your own skin, your edges, your individuality.  Some will not. Life is not a popularity contest.  And if you live your life as if it were a popularity contest, you won’t win.  It’s impossible. Instead, hold on to the people that hold on to you.  They’re the only ones you’ll need.
  3. And you will need.  For some reason, I’ve always been extremely reluctant to rely upon anyone for anything.  I’ve even viewed this as some sort of badge of honor.  It’s not a badge.  It’s fear.  Fear of relying on someone else for something, and having that person fail or not come through.  Or worse yet, proving me a fool for relying upon them in the first place. Relying on someone, making yourself vulnerable, depending upon them, is part of being human. In candor, I think I’m still working on this Number 3.  I’ll try to fix it in the Second Half.
  4. Find something to be passionate about.  That thing will most likely change over the course of time.  That’s OK.  But it’s important to find something for which your belly burns.  Something that stretches you.  Something that will bring out things in yourself that you didn’t know existed or thought impossible.  The corollary here is that you’re capable of much more than you think you are.  More suffering.  More happiness.  More empathy.  Whatever.  You have more in you than you think.
  5. Stay positive.  Look for opportunities in every problem.  They are there.  It is easy to be negative, to criticize, to see a glass half-full wherever you look.  Anyone can do that.  The hard part is the opposite.  Take that approach.
  6. Never give up.  This one I have preached for years to the Little League teams I’ve coached.  The odds are very low that the kids have a clue as to what I’m trying to say.  This is a big one, and worth the repetition.  I honestly believe that if you don’t quit, if you don’t actually give up, if you refuse to lay prone and silent on the canvas, you never truly “lose.”  I’m not sure that winning and losing is as binary as people think.  A light switch turned on or turned off.  We have been trained to believe there is always a victor and always the vanquished. I’m not so sure that’s the case, in real life.  Nothing is more frightening to an overwhelming favorite than the little guy who simply keeps getting back up.  And nothing is more inspiring to the rest of us than witnessing the little guy who refuses to quit.  Never quit. Never allow yourself to quit.

It’s a bit ridiculous to attempt to sum up lessons learned over the course of 45 years.  But I think these ones above are reasonably important.  I wish it didn’t take me so long to learn some of them.  I wish that I had perfected all of them.  But I suspect that part of the deal is exactly that — figuring it out as you go.  No one really has a plan, it only appears that way. A mystery.

Like the wave breaking in the distance then rolling towards the boys in the photo at the top of this post, what the Second Half holds for me remains a bit of a mystery.  I’m going to try to settle in and enjoy the ride.

Thanks for reading.

Hello, Old Friend.

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I have maintained a love affair for more than 20 years now, and my wife of 17 years is totally cool with it.

In fact, my wife facilitated this relationship. Introduced it into my life long ago. Perhaps more accurately, if I am being honest, the object of my desire is not mine alone. My entire family is in love. We all swoon smitten at this time of year, every year.

We’ve just begun our 22nd or 23rd summer stint in Chatham, Massachusetts. Albeit this one abbreviated. Cut in-half due to a Cooperstown baseball tournament last week. So we’ll be jamming 2 weeks-worth of our traditional must-see and and must-do activities into a single week.

The jamming has already begun, though we’ve been in Chatham for only about 15 hours.

Within one hour of pulling into the driveway, we shot off to Schoolhouse Pond. A quick dip before dinner. The pond is typically empty at 6pm. The charmingly inattentive lifeguards have abandoned their high chair. Multi-generational families that gathered earlier around beach umbrellas with their feet dug into the sand have, by now, departed for dinner.

So we had the place essentially to ourselves. The turtle. The sunken row boat. The small small-mouthed bass. The epic snake versus frog battles. The world’s best skimboard runway. The most perfect SUP spot. All of it.

But most of that checklist will have to wait. Simply not do-able in a five-minute visit.

My sons both fairly sprinted into the slightly chilly water, their older cousin a little more reluctant because, well, she is older. Their manic dip is brief.

The humongous snapping turtle refused to make an appearance. Presumably he was fatigued from a typical, full day of harassment at the hands of reasonably well-meaning pre-teens. Some day he’ll take a finger or big toe, I’m sure of it. But it won’t be one of ours, at least not on this day.

I take a short swim myself, just beyond the buoys that mark the area of the town’s legal liability. I glance off towards the opposite shore. I know the rowboat is out there. Submerged maybe 15 feet under. Waiting for me and one particular nephew to zero in on its always elusive location, then dive down through the blackness, tapping its bow before scrambling back to the surface and gasping for air. But I won’t renew that particular tradition today, either.

Time to get back.

And so, before it really even gets started, I reeled them back in. I’m the responsible adult, after all, and it’s time to get back for dinner.

But not before one last photo capturing my youngest. Trailing behind his brother and cousin. Not wanting to leave Schoolhouse Pond, but knowing we’ll be back. And back. And back.

After all, we’ve got two weeks to jam into one.

Thanks for reading.

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The Dark Art of Dark Ops.

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This is the daytime view from the dock at our rental house on Lake Otsego. It’s beautiful and all, for sure. Fish jumping off in the distance. Mallard ducks paddling around in groups of 6 or 8. An occasional speedboat passing by pulling a child giggling wildly on an inner tube.

Don’t get me wrong. I love all this stuff. Really. I do.

But the better time is when the sun has gone back down. The ducks have gone in for the night. The powerboats have long since docked for the day. The fish are no longer on the prowl for gangly flies suspended by the water’s surface tension.

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But it’s not about the gorgeous, nearly-full moon.

It’s about my brothers and I channeling our inner Seal Team Sixes in calculated, patient attempts to scare the bejesus out of one another. And these are no ordinary jump-scares. No. Creativity is applauded. Encouraged. A game in which the running score is kept over the course of years. Decades, even.

Example: One night this past week, I scrambled under our steep set of deck stairs, disappearing into the pitch black. I sat in wet moss and mud. Spitting cobwebs out of my mouth. Breathing quietly, to the point of light-headedness. Confident that my spot could not be revealed by the approaching beam of a flashlight, on account of the angle of the steps above my head. When my brother stepped cautiously down the stairs back to the dock, no amount of scanning about with his flashlight would help him. In fact, hearing nothing and seeing nothing in the the throw of his light might even inspire a false sense of security. A dangerous state of mind in this game. I happily endured the moss-soaked seat and spider bites on my arm, savoring the imminent shock I would soon deliver. Brilliant. Best scare in a long time.

Only it never came to fruition. I had sat motionless for 30 minutes in my little spider hole, maybe longer, when my self-satisfaction began to dissolve. It suddenly dawned on me that too much time had elapsed. Something did not feel right. I came to grips with the fact that I was not going to grab out of the darkness an unsuspecting ankle scampering giddily down the stairs.

With a dry mouth, I recognized that the predator had just become the prey.

I made the mistake of assuming my brother’s only route back down to the lake was the staircase. My staircase. The one I now shared with the moss and spiders.

Wrong.

Instead, as I sat soaked but euphoric with visions of my best scare in a long time, my brother “went dark.”

I later learned that he had tip-toed down the street above, snuck down a different set of long deck stairs, stripped down to his skivvies, and slithered into the shallows. He slowly made his way to my twenty from a click down-lake, wading neck-deep and completely assassin-silent. The near-hypothermia that came later was, I’m sure, totally worth it.

He popped up out of the black water Chuck Norrisian, and grabbed my nephew’s ankle, thereby delivering the bejesus moment.

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(Yes, it was my nephew’s ankle. Not mine. I was still under the stairs with the spiders.) My nephew screamed and I jumped where I sat, startled, banging my spider-webbed head on the underside of one of the steps. Half-concussed.

And defeated.

Out Seal Team-Sixed by my brother. My youngest brother, no less. It’s true. My depression was made worse by an indepent scare later from my other brother, launching goofy-faced out of the bushes at me.

It took a few hours for the adrenaline to wear off.

Thankfully, there will be other dark nights. More dark ops. And I’ve already begun to plan….

Thanks for reading.

Mr. Monkey Is In Charge.

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“I want to sleep in the car. If I can’t sleep in the car, I want to go home. Right now. Home!”

These were Everett’s plaintive words within 10 minutes of arriving at our Cooperstown house rental. Hilary and I kept catching eachother’s eyes after making a loop through one or another maze of ornately-decorated rooms. Making sure we were both still “in.” We had come a long way–physically, emotionally and financially–to cross this particular threshold. Short of turning a squeaky doorknob and discovering a recently-murdered person, there would be no turning back.

Every room revealed something intricate, in a lovely but faintly frightening way. The dining room chandelier looked like something out of a Vincent Price classic from my youth. The “House of Wax,” maybe.

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The main staircase is straight out of the Munsters’ mansion; I am still surprised the stairs haven’t raised up for a caretaker to toss Eddie’s pet dragon, “Spot” a whole Thanksgiving turkey for dinner; the animal spewing fire.

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I’m 35% certain that my family and are are meant to be fattened up and eaten by our unseen host à la the husband pig and wife duck in the children’s book, “Mystery of Eatum Hall.”

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But all these terrors are minor compared to Mr. Monkey. I opened a door off the bathroom. It looked like a door that was kept closed for a reason. I fumbled for a light switch, clicked it up, and saw him: Mr. Monkey. His eyes seemed to trail me across the room. Quietly asserting his position in this particular movie. He is clearly in charge, clearly pulling all the strings and deciding what will transpire. I backed away slowly, maintaining eye contact with Mr. Monkey. And I’ve spent the last 2 days trying to forget the encounter. Unsuccessfully. Wish us luck.

Thanks for reading.