Once a Coffee-Junkie, Always a Coffee-Junkie
I may no longer need 3 pots of coffee a day to keep me going, but I still love the stuff... and it still gets my brain running in circles.
Consider this the dumping ground for all the random thoughts, opinions, and rants that would otherwise clutter my cranium.
You're welcome!

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Look! It's Me! (Or Don't Look... It's Still Me)


I turned 48 one month ago, and I've been posting a selfie every day since. It wasn't something I planned ahead of time, it's not something I've vowed to continue for any specific period of time, and it isn't something I've talked about. It started on a whim (if you go back, you'll see that Day 1 isn't even titled as such) and will only continue as long as I feel like doing it. But there IS a purpose behind it...

Even though I'm posting these dailies on Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter, I'm not doing it to get likes, comments, or even views. It doesn't matter to me if anyone out there thinks I look good, thinks I look stupid, or thinks I have too much time on my hands. What motivates me is a desire to be mindful... of me.

I've noticed (as I'm sure we all do) that, as I get older, time seems to slip away faster and faster. Fewer and fewer momentous or memorable occasions mark the calendar of my life, and the time between them becomes a blur of work, evening sitcoms, and begrudgingly executed chores (aka "being an adult"). Where summer break as a kid seemed to last forever, it now feels like I go from pulling out the lawn mower to putting on my winter tires in the blink of an eye. I remember a time when I proudly declared being "9-and-a-half years old". Now I have to check the year and do the math to know how old I am, because those numbers just keep changing so damn quickly.

So, these one-a-day pictures are a way of forcing myself to slow down, take notice, and create a memory for myself. It doesn't need to be anything major. It doesn't need to be life-changing. It just needs to be something that I put some conscious thought into. Something that made me stop, look around, and say, "THIS is what I'll choose to remember about today."

And that's it. I'm sorry if you get tired of seeing my mug on your phone or computer screen. Until I get tired of it, those selfies are gonna keep on comin'.

Sunday, February 10, 2019

It's All About Me


The most difficult part about social media, for me, is finding the motivation to keep going. I think that's because my motivation is directly tied to feedback, of which I get very little.

When I started this blog, way back in 2003, there were a lot of other bloggers out there. You could spend quite a bit of time reading great material from great writers. At the same time, your own words were hitting more eyeballs and comments were common. I'm not going to lie and say that I had amazing interaction back then either, but I certainly had a lot more than I do now. I get it... Social media has evolved away from the long format of a blog, and towards whatever you'd call the visual equivalent of soundbites (sight bites?). If you try to communicate with the mere written word today, you've got about 1 minute to do it before your audience moves on to something easier to consume.

As we moved into the Facebook / Twitter / Google+ era, I tried to adapt. I shared links to things I thought were interesting, but no one else seemed to think they were. I crafted short, witty, often off-the-wall comments, but my sense of humor didn't seem to translate well. I asked what I perceived to be thought-provoking questions, only to receive silence in return. If I'm honest, it was quite demoralizing. There I was, swimming in a sea of social media where people were getting 10 and 20 comments per post, lots of back and forth with their readers, while seeing nothing but "No Comments" on my own shares.

Note: This is NOT a "Poor me!" post... Allow me to continue.

I rolled with these punches and transitioned from "creator" to "consumer". I stopped trying to garner attention for myself, and focused more on how entertaining or informative those around me were. Google+ was especially good for this. As I've mentioned before (and countless others have stated elsewhere), it was a place where interests came first and relationships were a by-product (as opposed to Facebook, which does it the other way around). For this reason, I didn't need to have existing relationships with others in order to enjoy the topics they were sharing. All I had to do was scroll, click, read, and repeat. Occasionally, I'd throw in a comment or two, but I never felt like I needed to, nor did I obsess over whether or not anyone read those comments. Sure, maybe I was missing the "social" aspect of social media, but I was content to participate this way for the better part of 5 years.

Then came the end of Google+ and, with it, my decision to resuscitate this blog.

I'm now tasking myself with taking up the mantle of "creator" once again, knowing full-well that it will be a harder slog than ever before. There are no longer a lot of other bloggers out there, attention spans are shorter than they have ever been, and there are so many more places for people to find entertainment these days. The chances that my words will even be read by another person are slim. The chances I'll get any sort of engagement is all but laughable.

Still, I'm going to do it... but not for the sake of social media. I'm going to do it for me. I'm going to do it because I love to get my thoughts out in an intelligent and creative way. I'm going to do it because I love to look back, sometimes years later, on what I've written to remember who I was or what I was going through. I'm going to do it because I love it. Period.

This means that I won't be holding myself to any other standard than my own satisfaction. I'm not going to try to pump out posts on a regular basis... they'll come when they come. I'm not going to get discouraged by the words "No Comments"... if they happen, they happen. If not, that's fine, too. Again, I see the irony in eliminating "social" from my social media experience, but my inner happiness is more important to me than conforming to whatever "rules" we're expected to live by in this digital age. If anyone reads my words and gets anything out of them... anything... that's merely a bonus now.

It's "me" time.

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Boring Childhood Stories: Crushing Defeat


When I was 4 years old, my family lived on the 3rd floor of a 3-story walk-up apartment. Our family was still quite small back then... just my Mom and Dad, me, and my baby brother. Dad worked, Mom stayed home, and my brother... well... he was only a year old, so he didn't do much.

I, on the other hand, did lots. I played outside with my toy crane, using it's magnet to "discover" coins in the dirt. I let my imagination transform abandoned shopping carts into race cars, dump trucks, and rocket ships. Sometimes, I went to the corner store with my worldly-wise 6-year-old friends. And I stole drinks of water from the hose tap on the neighbor's house.

Sometimes, though, I'd have to play indoors. On those occasions, I'd really have to use my imagination to amuse myself. Sure, I had toys, but those got boring very fast. I needed more than what I could get from Fisher Price or Mattel. Besides, I had a little shadow that wanted to play, too, and the only game he was good at was "Will it Flush?" (not Mom's favorite). So, that's why I came up "Hands Out, Hands In" one fateful afternoon.

My brother and I were knelt side-by-side on my bed, facing the bedroom window. It was one of those old sash windows, the kind you lift to open and it stays open by magic (I'm guessing). Its wooden frame was coated with countless layers of kid-friendly lead-based paint, and there was no screen. It was only open enough for a small child to fit through, mind you, so nothing to worry about. Besides, Mom was always close by... usually in the kitchen, drinking coffee, smoking cigarettes, and talking on the phone to one of her friends. You know, basic 1970's parenting.

The "how to's" of my new little game were fairly straightforward... I'd say, "Hands Out!", and we'd stick our hands out the window. Then, with a "Hands In!", we'd yank them back in again. What the objective of the game was, I couldn't tell you, aside from just having fun. At 4 years old, it isn't about winning or losing.

Or so I thought.

The first couple of "Hands Out!" and "Hands In!" saw 4 little hands thrust out into the open air and jerked back inside, accompanied by my brother's laughter. The third or fourth time, however, only 2 hands burst into the sunshine: Mine. I brought them back in, reminded my brother of the very complex rules of our game, and tried again.

"Hands Out!"

Nothing. He suddenly had zero interest putting his chubby little fingers anywhere near the window, regardless of my coaxing.

"There's nothing to be scared of," I chided him. "See?" And with that, I stuck my hands out one more time... only to have the magic give out and the window come crashing down.

There was no scream of pain.

Don't get me wrong... there was pain. Plenty of it. All 8 of my fingers were crushed awkwardly between the window and the sill, and I had no way to free them. But there was no scream. Had there been, I know my Mom would have come to see what sort of torture I was subjecting my brother to. She was always profiling like that (not necessarily without cause).

I finally managed to yell, "MOM!"

"Come here if you want to talk to me!" she yelled back from the kitchen.

"I CAN'T!!!"

Something in my voice must have registered, because that brought her running. She saw my plight, scrambled onto my bed, and tried to force the window back open. It wouldn't budge. No matter how hard she tried, that thing just wasn't going to let me go.

By now, there were definitely tears. Panic had joined the pain, and I thought I might be stuck like that forever. Or worse... maybe I was going to die! Not taken out with a razor blade in an apple, or kidnapped by a hobo, or any of the other likely ways for a kid to go in the 70's...

No. Death by window.

The next few minutes were unbearable, as my Mom had to go find help. I don't remember if it was the building superintendent or someone else, but after what seemed like hours, they were finally able to pry the window back open and release my battered hands. If I had thought I was in pain before, boy, was I in for a surprise!

The blood rushing back into my fingers felt like molten lava. The excruciating heat spread through each digit, every nerve screaming with the voices of a thousand tormented souls. I was bathed in pure, unrelenting agony.

Mercifully, a black hole exists in my memories between release from the window and the time that our family doctor arrived at the house. That's right... he came to our house. No long walk to his office. No waiting for Dad to come home and take me to a hospital. Just a call from Mom and there was a doctor on our doorstep.

It was a different time.

Somehow, I didn't break a single bone. There was a lot of swelling, though (soft tissue damage?), and the doctor's remedy for that was almost as bad as the injury itself. I'm told it only lasted an hour or so, and certainly not without a respite here and there, but it felt like eternity to me. In fact, it gave me the most vivid and enduring memory of the entire experience...

As I sat at the kitchen table, sobbing, with hands that were both burning and freezing thrust into a bag of ice cubes, I watched my Dad's flip-style digital clock count the minutes until this particular hell was over. Burned into my brain are those bright white, bisected digits on a field of black, held in place by a tiny metal tab... a tab that retracted at a glacial pace until, at long last, the much-anticipated "flip" revealed the next number. Again, and again, and again.

For those of you keeping track...

Final Score: Baby Brother: 1, Me: 0


Saturday, February 2, 2019

It Was Fun While It Lasted...

Where the Blair Witch Goes for Fun

I'm of an age now where I can look around and see how different the world is from when I was a kid. So many things that my young mind perceived as eternal have become abandoned relics. Some have passed from the collective memory entirely.

Every now and then, I catch a glimpse of the way things used to be. Sometimes I find an old photo, taken with a "real camera", or a treasured toy that has lived at the bottom of a box for decades. Occasionally, YouTube will show me Saturday morning commercials that someone uploaded from an old VHS recording. Always I feel a certain sense of sadness that I can't quite explain. Maybe it's a longing for simpler times. Perhaps it's because I'm reminded of how much time has passed and how fast it continues to pass. Or something else entirely that would require professional help to uncover...

Let's move on.

The other day, when I saw the dreaded Yellow Banner on Google+, decrying the End Times, I felt that sadness again. This time, however, I know why.

I'm really going to miss the only social network that felt like it "fit". Finally, a place had come along where I could find interesting people with interesting opinions on a wide variety of interesting topics. Unlike Facebook (my only previous social networking experience), Google+ offered relationships based on interests, not interests based on relationships. I was given the opportunity to expand my views, to learn things I didn't know I didn't know, and to do it all in a place where I felt equal to everyone around me.

Though "The Plus" changed in many ways over the course of its 7 years (some good, many not so good), it remained a place I returned to time and again. I can't say that I'm one of those people who founded strong friendships on the platform (I was always more of a lurker than a creator), but I did grow to respect a good many of its inhabitants, and I always looked forward to seeing what new things had piqued their interests. It's the thought of losing this, coupled with a desire to return to the exciting early years of G+ that brings me sadness.

Time does march on, though, and things change. We can get stuck pining for the past, or we can forge a new future. Many of us are returning to blogging and Twitter. It may seem like a step backwards, but I suspect we'll take what we learned from Google's social experiment and make these things into something fresh and new.

It's what I hope for, anyway.