Leaf Blowers Suck November 26, 2007
Posted by wes285 in Family, Holidays.Tags: Garden State, Home, Raking Leaves, Thanksgiving, Union
add a comment
You know that point in your life when you realize that the house that you grew up in isn’t really your home anymore? All of the sudden even though you have some place where you can put your stuff that idea of home is gone. You’ll see when you move out it just sort of happens one day one day and it’s just gone. And you can never get it back. It’s like you get homesick for a place that doesn’t exist. I mean it’s like this rite of passage, you know. You won’t have this feeling again until you create a new idea of home for yourself, you know, for your kids, for the family you start, it’s like a cycle or something. I miss the idea of it. Maybe that’s all family really is. A group of people who miss the same imaginary place.
-Garden State
I’ve talked and felt this idea before, but it never really hit me full force until this Thanksgiving. I slept in the basement the entire weekend. This isn’t out of the ordinary when I sleep in my parent’s house. I usually pass out in front of the TV. But, this time I didn’t have the option of sleeping in my bedroom. We had family staying at our house and they stayed in my room. Funny thing is, we have a guest room with two beds in it. This isn’t to say that I don’t enjoy going home. I almost always do. But it really isn’t home anymore. D.C. is home now.
Moving along, Thanksgiving was a good time as always. The Turducken was fantastic. I suggest your family try one out next year. And of course, everyone who has graduated high school from Churchill, Wootton, Whitman and B-CC over the last 10 years was out in Bethesda on Wednesday night. It’s a little nauseating to have to wait in line at a bar in Bethesda at 10pm. But you do it because you want to see people you haven’t seen in a year and make banal smalltalk with them. Hey, it’s Thanksgiving, you’re happy to see everyone.
Saturday I got suckered into raking the yard with the rest of my family. I guess I shouldn’t say suckered, because it’s probably the most fun I’ve had doing anything in a while. My sister can’t pack the leaves down into a bag to save space for the life of her. My brother had a complete career progression as a leaf raker. He started out as an illegal Mexican, then a union leaf raker, to management and finally retirement. He kept clamoring about getting his union required break. Two problems (1) you have to work 4 hours before you get a union sanctioned break and (2) in order to be a union, you need more than one member. I’m sure you all don’t have the faintest idea what I’m talking about or why it’s funny. But I suppose this is what happens when family gets together. I guess you had to be there.
Anyway, to end this completely disjointed post, all I have to say is leafblowers suck. It takes longer using that thing than actually raking the leaves. Now that’s a little ass backwards, don’t you think?
Giving Thanks for Will Thomas, Wine and My Mom November 21, 2007
Posted by wes285 in Drinking, Family, Food.Tags: Cancer, Cheese, Fox 5 News, Mom, Vinoteca, Will Thomas, Wine
add a comment
This has nothing to do with anything else in this post, but my roommates and I stopped by Vinoteca last night for some wine and cheese. It’s a winebar that just opened up a few weeks ago. I highly recommend it. Good wine that is moderately priced. You don’t need to be a wine connoisseir to go there and the wait staff is incredibly helpful and seemingly knowledgeable about the varieties of wines and cheeses that they serve. Also, we saw Will Thomas from Fox 5 news there sipping wine with a couple other men (if you were at the housing protest you will remember him as the gay reporter who had to take at least 4 shots at his piece on us before he got it right).
Anyway, onto the main purpose of this post. About four years ago, I wrote this piece in a creative writing class. I started posting it every Thanksgiving and Mother’s Day. My mom’s birthday also falls right around Thanksgiving every year. For whatever reason I didn’t post on either of the past two dates, but it’s back for this Thanksgiving. Enjoy.
Why Don’t You Take Me to the Park Anymore?
1.
“Why don’t you take me to the park anymore?” I asked as I stormed into my mom’s room. She was resting from another round of chemotherapy, body gaunt like a starved and malnourished child. Her face was bloated, the rest of her body withering like a flower that hadn’t been watered in a week. My grandmother quickly pulled me out of the room and scolded me in Cantonese for disturbing my mom while she was napping. If my mom was going to get better, she needed her rest. It seemed like she was always resting, which was quite a departure from my mom’s always active and spirited personality. She always had the energy to take me to the park or to read a book with me. But not on this day. On this day, her body lay in disrepair from the poison they shot into her to kill the poison that was killing her.
I was only eight at the time. Not quite old enough to fully grasp the significance of the situation, but old enough to realize something was very wrong. I remember the moment perfectly: I was in my parents’ bedroom lying on their bed, waiting for my mom to take me to the park. The phone rang and my mom answered the phone with her usual cheerful hello. It’s one of the hellos that is always the same. She could have been furious at my dad or reading with me and she would have given the same cheerful hello. The kind of greeting you get from a receptionist when calling to make a doctor’s appointment. But this wasn’t just another phone call. My mom paused for a moment to let the caller identify herself and then asked what her test results were. Her back was to me, but I noticed her shoulders slump instantly. She hung up the phone and turned towards me, eyes starting to water, and gave me a hug. Getting a hug from my mom for no apparent reason was not so out of the ordinary. But this hug was different. It was as if she wanted to hold onto me forever, almost like this was the last hug she would ever give me. Finally, she let go and called my dad and tried to tell him, while choking back tears, that she had cancer.
I don’t remember whether or not we ended up going to the park that day. Knowing my mom, she probably took me anyway. But it doesn’t matter. All I remember was my dad being home from work earlier than usual and then all my relatives coming over one by one, hugging my mom, telling her everything would be alright, trying to mask their shock and sadness for the benefit of me and my younger brother and sister. But I knew better. I had heard the word cancer before. I didn’t know exactly what it meant, but I knew that it meant my mom was very sick.
2.
My mom went into surgery soon after that phone call. The casseroles began to roll in and pile up in the freezer. For a week or two my mom was in the hospital recovering from surgery. My dad would go to her side immediately after work. At dinner time my grandmother, one of my aunts, or whoever was there that night to eat dinner with us would heat up a casserole and feed us. Then, it was homework, a little TV, and then bed. If we were lucky, my dad would be home early enough to tuck us into bed with his usual prayer: wisdom for your mind, strength for your body, and courage and compassion for your heart…Amen. Finally, my mom came home from the hospital looking tired and worn out. The surgery had gone well, and if everything went as planned, my dad said, she would be alright in a few months. But at that moment I didn’t care about a few months down the road; I was just glad that my mom was home and sitting at the dinner table with us.
Soon after, my mom started chemotherapy. I remember lying in her bed and noticing tufts of hair strewn about her pillow. She was very weak and usually needed someone to help her get to the bathroom. Soccer season was starting soon, and I wanted to show my mom how good I had become. I was afraid, though, that my mom wouldn’t be able to make it to any of my games. If she couldn’t even make it down the stairs on her own, how was she going to make it into the car and onto the sidelines of the soccer field? But, sure enough, she made it to every one of my games. There was a large hill leading down to field where I played my games that spring. If she was too weak on that day to make it all the way down to the field, she would sit at the top of the hill in a lawn chair, blanket wrapped around her legs to keep them warm, hand in hand with my dad. Cancer had stripped her of the ability to do a lot of things, but one thing it could not stop her from was showing up at my various weekend sporting events. While I’m sure she was suffering unimaginable pain and combating depression, she sat at the top of the hill, bandana around her head, cheering for me silently with a big smile on her face. She was doing one of her favorite things: watching me play soccer, watching me have fun.
3.
“Okay, time for lunch,” Mrs. Fried said after the daily math lesson we had. I didn’t pay too much attention during those math lessons. The material was so easy. But as soon as it was lunch time, I would jump out of my chair, grab my lunch from my cubby, and head straight to the cafeteria with my best friend Ben. Like any other second grader, lunch and recess were my favorite parts of the school day. As soon as I got to the cafeteria and sat down, I’d unvelcro my bag and take all my food out. As I pulled out my lunch on this day, I thought to myself, not again. Peanut butter sandwich, apple not quite cut the right way, bag of chips, and a juice box. My mom hadn’t made me lunch today, again. It’s not that I disliked peanut butter sandwiches. They were, and still are, my favorite. But this was the fifth time this week I had peanut butter. My lunch, and come to think of it, my whole morning routine, just wasn’t the same without my mom. She’d wake me up at about 8 and while I brushed my teeth and washed my face she would throw something together for breakfast. Sometimes it would be an egg sandwich or cereal or eggs and toast. As me and my brother and sister ate breakfast my mom would make our lunch. She’d take the bread out and then ask each of us what we wanted. Peanut butter, ham, turkey, roast beef. Whatever we wanted we got. Next we’d get some sort of fruit. If it was an apple or pear, my mom had a special different way of cutting it. Instead of cutting it down the middle twice and cutting the core out, she’d peel the apple and then slice four pieces off the sides so that there would always be two big round pieces and two thin smaller pieces. Then she’d fill up small water bottles with the juice of our choice and throw in a bag of chips and I’d have a good lunch to look forward to.
* * *
Now, fourteen years later, my mom’s cancer is in full remission. They say once your cancer has been in remission for ten years, the chances of you getting cancer again falls back down to the normal rate. So basically, my mom is cured, thank God. In the past, if you had asked me what it was exactly that made me miss my mom so much, I wouldn’t have been able to give you any sort of tangible answer. I probably would have come up with something typical like I never got to see my mom or I was afraid she was going to die. Trite as it seems, it holds some truth. The one thing I am most scared of is not death or rejection or a needle. The one thing I fear the most is my mom dying. But that fear wasn’t what made me miss her. Looking back, it was all the little things that my mom did. Shuttling me back and forth to sports practices, taking me to the park, kissing me goodnight. They don’t seem like very important things. But, all these little things add up to something so much bigger. As they say, the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. With my mom’s cancer, for about a year I was robbed of the simple little things that really meant so much more to me. I guess I just needed my apple to be cut a certain way.
Ray LaMontagne Made Me Go to Church November 18, 2007
Posted by wes285 in Music, Observations, Religion.Tags: Church, Elliott Smith, Norah Jones, Ray LaMontagne, Shrine of the Immaculate Conception
add a comment
Usually when I’m in a strange mood like I have been the past week, I like to sit in my room and just listen to music. Music has a certain intangible quality to it that just relaxes me. Let’s me drift away from the real world for a little bit and not have anything running through my head. A couple weeks back my roommate Meagan rediscovered my Ray LaMontagne Trouble disc on our way back from a winetasting. Well, actually, my friend Jeremy let me borrow it a year and a half ago as collateral while he searched for my Elliott Smith CD, which I still haven’t gotten back (If you don’t know who Ray LaMontagne is, think a little quicker paced male Norah Jones with a raspy voice, only better because, you know, he’s a man. I kid, I kid. But he is better). I listened to it for a month straight when I first got it, then went onto the next album and forgot that I had it until couple weeks ago. I highly suggest you give Ray a listen. But I digress…
As incredible as music can be. Locking myself in my room doesn’t always work. You can only drift away so far before you come falling back to everything going on around you. Also, I’m a fidgety person. Thumb twiddler. Can’t sit through a movie without changing my sitting position at least 10 times. I needed a change of scenery.
Catholic University is a five minute drive from my house. The Shrine of the Immaculate Conception is right next to Catholic University (the Catholic church’s answer to the Episcopalian National Cathedral?). It isn’t nearly as impressive and awe inspiring as the National Cathedral, but it is a beautiful piece of architecture. Plus, there aren’t nearly the number of tourists on a Saturday afternoon (read: it is much quieter). I sat in the near empty sanctuary for almost an hour clearing my head and not thinking about a single thing.
I’m not Catholic and I gave up going to church some time ago. I make it to church on Christmas, but I don’t think I’ve even been to Easter services the last couple years. Sitting in a church by myself is not something I do. Actually, I don’t think I’ve ever done it before. I’m not sure what compelled me to even go. But there was something about sitting in that sanctuary that put me at peace, even if just for an hour. I don’t think just any church sanctuary would have done the trick. There was just something about this one. I can’t recall a single thing that happened in that one hour other than sitting there staring at, I don’t even know what. The world just kinded of passed me by. All of a sudden I noticed a grandmother kneeling down a few rows in front of me to say a prayer. It was time for me to go.
Maybe this was just a one time thing. Maybe it will become some sort of a semi-regular thing. Who knows. But for an hour everything was okay.
Warheads (the candy, not bombs) November 12, 2007
Posted by wes285 in Observations, Sports.Tags: Baseball, Bitter, Growing Up, Ice Hockey, Little League, Steve Buckhantz, Sweet, Warheads
1 comment so far

When I was a kid, my favorite candy was Warheads. Nobody remembers the Warhead for the sweet lemony flavor. You ate a Warhead because, for some twisted reason, you enjoyed subjecting yourself to the facial contortions the sour taste would cause.
Why is it that that bitter taste in your mouth always overpowers the sweet, savory flavors? This isn’t anything groundbreaking. I’m sure cavemen had the same feelings. This is true for food, relationships, just about everything. I have some very vivid memories of good times. But, the most vivid are always of something bad. Something painful. I can recount with incredible detail when my mom was diagnosed with cancer. But I couldn’t tell you when or how I realized my mom didn’t have cancer anymore. Why is that bitter taste so much stronger than the sweet one?
I went to the Caps game on Saturday. If you’ve ever been to an NHL game, during at least one of the intermissions they let mites or squirts from a local club play for 5-10 minutes. This is the ultimate thrill for a 7 year-old kid. Playing on the same surface as your idols with the entire arena cheering you on. That’s as close as it gets to the scene played over and over again in driveways and basements. Less than 10 seconds to go in overtime, Wesley intercepts the puck at center ice. Five seconds. Splits the defense and is in all alone. 3 seconds. Dekes the goalie out of his pads. He shoots! He SCORES! And the crowd goes wild HAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! CAPS WIN! CAPS WIN THE CUP!
Seeing those tykes got me all nostalgic about playing sports when I was a kid. I played just about every sport growing up. Soccer, baseball, basketball, ice hockey. And I can’t remember being on a single losing team. Those were good times. But then, as I thought about it more I realized that, despite all the fondness, the memories most burned into my mind are of losing.
Throughout elementary school my little league team was one of the better teams in our district. We were constantly hitting the 5 run per inning limits and making other kids quit baseball. There were always two other teams that would actually give us a game. One year we won the championship, but I can’t tell you a single thing about that game other than what is in the local newspaper article that is still tacked up on my cork board in my bedroom at my parent’s house. What I can remember is the year after when we lost to that same team. I remember the last play of the game. Bottom of the 6th, I had just scored on a pop fly to make it a two run game. We had runners on 2nd and 3rd. Line drive right beyond the shortstop. Guy on third scores easily. Play over. We need one more run. Then all of a sudden Danny, who was on second comes screaming around 3rd completely ignoring the 3rd base coach’s signal to stop. The left fielder gets to the ball and throws a bull to the catcher. Out at home by a mile, game over.
I can’t remember a single detail of the win the year before, but that moment is crystal clear in my mind. We were Carolina blue that year and we all got a kick out of wearing Carolina blue eye black. And we lost.
My favorite sport has always been ice hockey. It was my best sport growing up and I wish I was still playing. I was never the best player on my team, but always one of the best. Always second or third in goals and assists. In high school the game I remember most was against my home high school senior year. I went to a magnet school on the other side of the county. We had never beaten them and the friends that I had on that team never let me forget it.
This game, we played close the whole way through. We were down 4-3 late in the game and there was a mad scramble in front of our net. Graham, our goalie, tried to cover the puck up to get a whistle, but it somehow squirted out. I was right there and tried to shovel it ever so delicately back into his glove. Just as the puck would have slid under is glove, he picked it up and the puck slid into the net. DAGGER (thanks Steve Buckhantz). 5-3. It didn’t matter that I scored my second goal of the game minutes after that to make it 5-4 and then almost tied it 2 minutes later as the horn sounded. See, if I hadn’t scored on my own goal, we never would have to to try to tie it as the game ended.
That last year was my best year individually, but I can still see myself shoveling that own goal in.
Don’t get me wrong, I have plenty of great sports memories as a kid. But for some reason, the painful ones are clearer. Why does that bitter taste overpower the sweet taste? And more importantly, how do you get rid of the bitter taste?
The Big Bang Theory (Or How a Turducken is Made) November 7, 2007
Posted by wes285 in Family, Holidays, Plain Strange, School, Television.Tags: A Beautiful Mind, Genius, John Nash, Kaley Cuoco, Thanksgiving, The Big Bang Theory, Turducken
6 comments
No, not the cosmological model of the universe whose primary assertion is that the universe has expanded into its current state from a primordial condition of enormous density and temperature (isn’t wikipedia great?). I’m talking about the TV show. My new favorite pastime is watching TV shows online and after I got caught up on How I Met Your Mother, I explored over onto The Big Bang Theory. It’s about two socially inept science prodigies and their smoking hot neighbor from across the hall. It’s certainly not a show for everyone, but I find it incredibly funny. Partly because I have a bit of inner dork in me, but mostly because I went to school with kids like these from 4th grade until high school graduation. There’s something about seeing the social retardedness that me and my friends in high school could only imagine. Oh yeah, Kaley Cuoco is also a lot of fun to look at.

See, told you so.
I went through the majority of grade school around kids like these. I don’t know if they were quite geniuses, but its the closest I’ve ever been to a group of prodigies. As much as we like to joke and make fun of nerds, I have always been just a little bit envious of these kids and the ease at which they grasp incredibly difficult math and physics concepts. My SAT score was on par with these kids and my grades weren’t much worse. But they did it with such ease.
I finished AP Calculus half way through junior year and got a 5 on the exam. But, I had to bust my ass throughout that class. It would take me an hour and 5 tries to solve an integral that would take them 10 minutes. If I remember correctly, the AP Calc exam had four 50 minute sections. I finished each section with maybe 5 minutes to spare. The kid sitting next to me, he would put his head down after about 20 minutes, completely done. If you haven’t a clue what I’m talking about, just imagine John Nash in A Beautiful Mind when he wasn’t hallucinating. These people see patterns as obvious that many of us would never see no matter how hard we tried.
No, I don’t want to be these people. I’m quite content with my social skills and intelligence level. But for a day or two, I wouldn’t mind trading social skills just to see what it’s like to be a genius and actually understand a Fourier series, not just be told why it works and how to use it.
Speaking of a big bang, my family wants one of these for Thanksgiving. Yes, my brother tells me we’re having turducken. That’s chicken stuffed inside duck stuffed inside turkey. So instead of having the usual 2 birds that we can never finish we’re going to have 3. Oh, and if you’re really hungry, you can lay strips of bacon on top or stuff the chicken with sausage. YUM! Talk about gluttony.
But, why stop at just 3? How about the 7 fowl turduckencorpheail. Or why not just go ALL THE WAY with the 17 species of the bustergophechiduckneaealcockidgeoverwingailusharkolanbler. I swear to God, I’m not making any of this up. Wikipedia said it’s true, so it must be.