I really am sorry for the title but it was all I could come up with. I know we had it relatively light compared to many friends and loved ones but what a week this was. This is the 2nd time in I've lived in a FEMA national disaster area and this one was much easier to live through (the other was a flood and I'll take no power over no water any day). That doesn't mean it was fun though. I dare anyone to keep their sanity after waking up in a home that is 55 degrees, no power, no phone, no internet, and a bored two-year-old. Who am I kidding the bored 2-year old was by far the worst part. We went without power until Wednesday night. We lost it again Thursday morning but not for long. It's crazy that we have power because all 3 subdivisions around us do not have power but somehow our street does. We got TV back on Thursday and phone/internet back today. We have a bunch of friends without power still but mostly everyone we know is safe. Here are some photos around the house after I couldn't take Noah bouncing off the walls anymore and got out.





New toy
I'm typing this on my new iPhone. It's hard to believe Jenna and I own 4 Macs and we're just now getting iPhone's. Jenna has come reliant on her iPod touch so much I had to take it to her the other morning when she forgot it. Not to mention my Blackberry hasn't told the correct time since November. I almost jumped on the bandwagon when mint.com released an iPhone app. I really wanted to get one when Skyscape not only released their medical reference software but allowed me to transfer my existing subscriptions from my BB
Still I held out, but the final straw was the business scheduling/management app I use 6 hours a day has a new iPhone companion. So we now have 2 iPhone's make ourselves even nerdier than we already were. The only reason I'm telling you this is the engine behind the blog is WordPress and guess who happens to have an app that allows a person to post to their blog from their über fancy new phone.
Still I held out, but the final straw was the business scheduling/management app I use 6 hours a day has a new iPhone companion. So we now have 2 iPhone's make ourselves even nerdier than we already were. The only reason I'm telling you this is the engine behind the blog is WordPress and guess who happens to have an app that allows a person to post to their blog from their über fancy new phone.
Been awhile
The past few weeks have been a whirlwind. Traveling for Christmas, moving my office, New Year's, etc. I have about 4 posts saved in 'Drafts' but they have photos I wanted to attach. I left my card reader in ElDorado so I just now can do that but then I've been swamped. I'll post them as soon as I can and you can check out Noah's Christmas.
Hope everyone had a great holiday.
Chad
Hope everyone had a great holiday.
Chad
Phew!!!...do I have some knowledge.
I feel like someone poured a quart of motor oil into my ear. I seriously don't think I can absorb any more new knowledge into the ol' cranium. After 2 days of classes I feel like I have a pretty good understanding of how this whole thing operates. More importantly, I know where it can be screwed up. Honestly I learned just as much in the lobby between classes and at night. Talking to the large number of other attendees was eye opening in its own right. There were so many affiliates there not just attending my race training class but there were classes for committee and board members in everything from Strategic Planning to Grant Review. I spent the majority of my time with my roommate and another board member from Baton Rouge, Kentucky, Spokane, Portland, North Mississippi, and a couple of national Komen employees. Just sharing the different ways affiliates plan, conduct, honor survivors, and memorialize those who didn't.
I have a lot of good ideas for the race but the training showed me a glaring personality defect of mine that I have to fix pronto. Sitting in training, I was taking notes on how I think we could solve the things they were talking about. For one example, I was writing notes and sketching a spreadsheet on how to track the information when it occurred to me-"There's a committee of 3 people who do this at the Ozark affiliate. Perhaps I should save myself some work by seeing how we currently do this and see if it's working just fine without my big head getting involved."
When you work for yourself for so long you kind of lose the ability to delegate things and let others do their jobs. It's a skill I need to cultivate in a hurry.
I have a lot of good ideas for the race but the training showed me a glaring personality defect of mine that I have to fix pronto. Sitting in training, I was taking notes on how I think we could solve the things they were talking about. For one example, I was writing notes and sketching a spreadsheet on how to track the information when it occurred to me-"There's a committee of 3 people who do this at the Ozark affiliate. Perhaps I should save myself some work by seeing how we currently do this and see if it's working just fine without my big head getting involved."
When you work for yourself for so long you kind of lose the ability to delegate things and let others do their jobs. It's a skill I need to cultivate in a hurry.
It's a small world...
About a week ago I got a phone call from Komen's corporate headquarters saying they'd underestimated rooms at the Embassy Suites and would I either mind sharing a suite with someone or being shuttled to a different hotel. I, of course, told them I'd share a room. I'm not here for a vacation after all.
First, the room(s) are bigger than my first 2 apartments-combined.
Second, looking at the roster and seeing people from all over the country, imagine my surprise when the guy I'm sharing a room with a) is from Baton Rouge b) graduated from NLU (my alma mater) c) we overlapped 2 years there d) we both love Sal's Saloon and e) we both loved Craig Heyward (if you weren't a New Orleans Saints fan in the 90s you won't understand).
He's on the Baton Rouge-Komen board so we aren't here for the same trainings. His mom is a recent survivor and he volunteered at last year's race. Within a year he's their board director. We both feel like we stepped on the fasttrack in the Komen world and have no idea what we're doing so our expectations are high. We had a good laugh when after awhile he was spewing out these ideas and I told him he was trying to improve his Komen affiliate and I'm trying not to screw mine up. We have a lot in common except he's an LSU fan but nobody's perfect.
First, the room(s) are bigger than my first 2 apartments-combined.
Second, looking at the roster and seeing people from all over the country, imagine my surprise when the guy I'm sharing a room with a) is from Baton Rouge b) graduated from NLU (my alma mater) c) we overlapped 2 years there d) we both love Sal's Saloon and e) we both loved Craig Heyward (if you weren't a New Orleans Saints fan in the 90s you won't understand).
He's on the Baton Rouge-Komen board so we aren't here for the same trainings. His mom is a recent survivor and he volunteered at last year's race. Within a year he's their board director. We both feel like we stepped on the fasttrack in the Komen world and have no idea what we're doing so our expectations are high. We had a good laugh when after awhile he was spewing out these ideas and I told him he was trying to improve his Komen affiliate and I'm trying not to screw mine up. We have a lot in common except he's an LSU fan but nobody's perfect.
Komen training in Dallas
I'm finally here in Dallas for a 2-day training on the admin side of Race for the Cure. Ever since I agreed to chair the 2010 race I've been in a whirl. At the meetings, I feel involved, but in the month between them I don't feel like I'm pulling my weight. Everytime I've mentioned this I've been told to "Wait until Dallas and you'll have a handle on things." So my expectations are high. Jenna thought I'd be bummed about driving to Dallas late at night by myself after just spending so many days on the road away from home, but honestly I've been looking forward to this for a couple of months. I'd like to get a handle on things :)
First real haircut
After 2+ years of Momma trimming the hair out of his eyes, Noah was taken to the barber shop for his first "do." Jenna cried before and after. She did tell the guy to please not cut off the curls because she wasn't ready for a 'big-boy cut' yet but I don't think he heard her. It's still curly but it's more of a wave than a pig's tail.
Noah did great, we practiced "Freeze-Unfreeze" the entire drive over and he sat more still than we dreamed he would. I got my hair cut right beside him and he was more intent on seeing me than what was happening to him. Over Thanksgiving, everyone seemed to love the cut but he does look like a big-boy now. I'll let you judge for yourself.
Noah did great, we practiced "Freeze-Unfreeze" the entire drive over and he sat more still than we dreamed he would. I got my hair cut right beside him and he was more intent on seeing me than what was happening to him. Over Thanksgiving, everyone seemed to love the cut but he does look like a big-boy now. I'll let you judge for yourself.
I'd like to make a motion that I'm a moron...
Have you ever had one of those moments where something happens to remind you what an arrogant know-it-all you were as a teenager? How you had your whole life in front of you and you could see the starting line, the road, the finish line, and everything in between. Then today, you realize how naive you really were and the people trying to help you weren't that 'stupid' after all. This is my (long) story.
In high school, Brown and I did everything we could to get a day out of school. We joined each club not to put it on our college entrance applications but because most clubs had at least one day you got out of school. I was the president of the science club because we went to Louisiana Tech twice a year to the planetarium. I was on the yearbook staff for 4 years because I loved getting out of school to sell ads door to door at businesses. FBLA had a day out of school for a competition. I did not take one business class in high school unless typing was classified as such. By the by, I won the typing award that year with my robust 76 words/minute. Back to the story, we were not going to be future business leaders of America but we had to find a niche to get out of school.
We had two best friends in high school that were girls. Jill and Denise were kind of our "at school" best friends. We didn't really hang out much outside of school. Their boyfriends weren't good friends and my girlfriend was in college and it's really hard to be friends with attractive girls outside of school when your girlfriend isn't there and you've been elected "Biggest Flirt" in Who's Who of Junction City High. That's a round about way of saying after school liaisons were discouraged by said girlfriend. At school the four of us were never far apart probably because we seemed to have every class together our last 2 years of high school. Some classes were pretty small-our journalism class had only 4 other people in there with us. Wait, is journalism a business class? Surely not.
I'm pretty sure it was their idea to do the Parliamentary Procedure team and somehow the FBLA sponsor allowed us to not only do it but to independently study for the competition. It was a 4 person team and we were given a room and some books on PP and an hour a week to 'study.' Do you know what happens when you put 4 best friends in a room away from classes that actually give grades? Strawberry Shortcake cartoons would have held our attention longer.
A few months later we went to the competition. It was a written test. I didn't read 10% of the questions. I had no idea what they were asking and I was out of school, ergo I really didn't care. I think I turned my test in after 15 minutes or so. Brown came out about 2 minutes later. Jill and Denise came out about an hour later. At the awards ceremony, imagine our astonishment when we placed third. God sometimes has a crazy sense of humor.
Unbelievably we got to go to the state competition in Little Rock. Not only did we get out of school but we got out TWO DAYS and we stayed at the Excelsior all on the school's dime. With our new opportunity to make the school proud, Brown and I spent the night before our competition drinking a smuggled case of beer on our balcony. The next day we showed up for the competition where we drew a number. Come to find out, the state competition is not a written test but an exhibition where we were to hold a meeting with the judges who had given us a lovely packet of minutes, new business, old business, etc.
If the story to now hasn't made it clear yet----we had no idea how to hold a meeting. We truly didn't know what we were doing. We had never even seen a meeting with PP rules, all we had was a book we were supposed to learn from. We were like 4 deer caught in the headlights of a truck fleet. As group after group had their turns before us we were in serious debate over how to handle the situation. Eventually Brown and I won the argument and we walked out. That's right. We just left. The sponsors weren't there. We obviously wouldn't place so we went back to our main group and told them we weren't that good and doubt we won anything.
Well, to try to keep this story to under 30 minutes, the results were listed and instead of listing just the winners they gave scores to everyone except the nice "Did not compete" beside the Junction City team. Of course, Brown and I did the right thing and took the full blame for us leaving. We pleaded our case that we had no idea what we were doing. The other teams were in suits for goodness sake, how could we compete against that? We weren't in any real trouble since we didn't really break any rules and we didn't have any business classes or anything for them to take anything out on us.
However, I still remember the conversation with the teacher/sponsor, Mrs. Roland. The conversation in question was a version of the classic teacher to student- why do you not take anything seriously and going through life like things are a game blah blah blah etc. etc. etc. I remember sitting through the whole thing and then saying in a respectful way-the truth. I told her I didn't care about this and I only did it to get out of school. She then gave me the classic teacher to student-I'm so disappointed in you blah, blah, blah, etc. etc. etc. When she saw that line of talking was getting her nowhere, she pulled the teacher's final standby talk-This is important. Someday the things you learn here will blah, blah, blah, etc. etc. etc. I really was not the best teenager when it came to respecting authority.
Since all the conversation was cliched I pulled out the old student standby-"I will never use this stuff in my life....EVER!" I think I said something else about stuffy old rules and how the little bit I did learn just showed me how silly this stuff was and nobody really uses this stuff in real life. I'm making it sound like it was a yelling match or something. It wasn't. It was a teacher trying to help a know-it-all teenager who needed a good smack upside the head. I really thought I was so much smarter than her and all the rest of my teachers (In my defense, time has proven that I was smarter than a couple of them :) ). She was trying to help me see past my own nose and I didn't buy any of it. We got along famously before and after this 'incident.' She lives in NW Arkansas now and I've seen and spoken to her several times so I know there were never any hard feelings. She's remarried and I can't remember her new name or I'd say it here.
All of this recently went through my mind like a flood as I sat in a Komen steering committee meeting. As I lowered my hand after seconding a motion to approve the minutes from last month's meeting, all these events came back and I haven't been able to stop thinking about it.
Life as a road is an overused analogy but it's true in so many respects. We place our foot on a path that leads to our desired destination, but we can't predict the twists, turns, forks, and roadblocks we'll have along the way. I would have bet my left arm what I said to Mrs. Roland that day would be true. I don't think there was a thing in the world she could have said or done (short of a crystal ball) to change my mind. Life's lessons sometimes are slow in the learning and I can be as slow as anyone out there, but 17 years later I finally got this one.
In high school, Brown and I did everything we could to get a day out of school. We joined each club not to put it on our college entrance applications but because most clubs had at least one day you got out of school. I was the president of the science club because we went to Louisiana Tech twice a year to the planetarium. I was on the yearbook staff for 4 years because I loved getting out of school to sell ads door to door at businesses. FBLA had a day out of school for a competition. I did not take one business class in high school unless typing was classified as such. By the by, I won the typing award that year with my robust 76 words/minute. Back to the story, we were not going to be future business leaders of America but we had to find a niche to get out of school.
We had two best friends in high school that were girls. Jill and Denise were kind of our "at school" best friends. We didn't really hang out much outside of school. Their boyfriends weren't good friends and my girlfriend was in college and it's really hard to be friends with attractive girls outside of school when your girlfriend isn't there and you've been elected "Biggest Flirt" in Who's Who of Junction City High. That's a round about way of saying after school liaisons were discouraged by said girlfriend. At school the four of us were never far apart probably because we seemed to have every class together our last 2 years of high school. Some classes were pretty small-our journalism class had only 4 other people in there with us. Wait, is journalism a business class? Surely not.
I'm pretty sure it was their idea to do the Parliamentary Procedure team and somehow the FBLA sponsor allowed us to not only do it but to independently study for the competition. It was a 4 person team and we were given a room and some books on PP and an hour a week to 'study.' Do you know what happens when you put 4 best friends in a room away from classes that actually give grades? Strawberry Shortcake cartoons would have held our attention longer.
A few months later we went to the competition. It was a written test. I didn't read 10% of the questions. I had no idea what they were asking and I was out of school, ergo I really didn't care. I think I turned my test in after 15 minutes or so. Brown came out about 2 minutes later. Jill and Denise came out about an hour later. At the awards ceremony, imagine our astonishment when we placed third. God sometimes has a crazy sense of humor.
Unbelievably we got to go to the state competition in Little Rock. Not only did we get out of school but we got out TWO DAYS and we stayed at the Excelsior all on the school's dime. With our new opportunity to make the school proud, Brown and I spent the night before our competition drinking a smuggled case of beer on our balcony.
If the story to now hasn't made it clear yet----we had no idea how to hold a meeting. We truly didn't know what we were doing. We had never even seen a meeting with PP rules, all we had was a book we were supposed to learn from. We were like 4 deer caught in the headlights of a truck fleet. As group after group had their turns before us we were in serious debate over how to handle the situation. Eventually Brown and I won the argument and we walked out. That's right. We just left. The sponsors weren't there. We obviously wouldn't place so we went back to our main group and told them we weren't that good and doubt we won anything.
Well, to try to keep this story to under 30 minutes, the results were listed and instead of listing just the winners they gave scores to everyone except the nice "Did not compete" beside the Junction City team. Of course, Brown and I did the right thing and took the full blame for us leaving. We pleaded our case that we had no idea what we were doing. The other teams were in suits for goodness sake, how could we compete against that? We weren't in any real trouble since we didn't really break any rules and we didn't have any business classes or anything for them to take anything out on us.
However, I still remember the conversation with the teacher/sponsor, Mrs. Roland. The conversation in question was a version of the classic teacher to student- why do you not take anything seriously and going through life like things are a game blah blah blah etc. etc. etc. I remember sitting through the whole thing and then saying in a respectful way-the truth. I told her I didn't care about this and I only did it to get out of school. She then gave me the classic teacher to student-I'm so disappointed in you blah, blah, blah, etc. etc. etc. When she saw that line of talking was getting her nowhere, she pulled the teacher's final standby talk-This is important. Someday the things you learn here will blah, blah, blah, etc. etc. etc. I really was not the best teenager when it came to respecting authority.
Since all the conversation was cliched I pulled out the old student standby-"I will never use this stuff in my life....EVER!" I think I said something else about stuffy old rules and how the little bit I did learn just showed me how silly this stuff was and nobody really uses this stuff in real life. I'm making it sound like it was a yelling match or something. It wasn't. It was a teacher trying to help a know-it-all teenager who needed a good smack upside the head. I really thought I was so much smarter than her and all the rest of my teachers (In my defense, time has proven that I was smarter than a couple of them :) ). She was trying to help me see past my own nose and I didn't buy any of it. We got along famously before and after this 'incident.' She lives in NW Arkansas now and I've seen and spoken to her several times so I know there were never any hard feelings. She's remarried and I can't remember her new name or I'd say it here.
All of this recently went through my mind like a flood as I sat in a Komen steering committee meeting. As I lowered my hand after seconding a motion to approve the minutes from last month's meeting, all these events came back and I haven't been able to stop thinking about it.
Life as a road is an overused analogy but it's true in so many respects. We place our foot on a path that leads to our desired destination, but we can't predict the twists, turns, forks, and roadblocks we'll have along the way. I would have bet my left arm what I said to Mrs. Roland that day would be true. I don't think there was a thing in the world she could have said or done (short of a crystal ball) to change my mind. Life's lessons sometimes are slow in the learning and I can be as slow as anyone out there, but 17 years later I finally got this one.
Holly met her goal!!!!
Thanks everybody for pitching in the past few days and helping Holly raise over $3100!!!! Team Jenna went to Phoenix tonight and will start their journey tomorrow. I'm so proud of her and can't wait to hear all about it on Sunday.
Please help Holly to the finish line
As I've posted before, my sister Holly is participating in the Phoenix, AZ 3-Day walk for Susan G. Komen for the Cure. She is really close to her $3000 goal. If you haven't given yet and are able please help her out. The 3-Day event is an amazing adventure. I dare you to go to the site and watch the videos and try not to cry. I triple dog dare ya.
Here's a link to her page.
http://www.the3day.org/site/TR/Walk/ArizonaEvent?px=1697589&pg=personal&fr_id=1180&et=hc48-5wAnRWj9aVXf2IXzw..&s_tafId=1322
Here's a link to her page.
http://www.the3day.org/site/TR/Walk/ArizonaEvent?px=1697589&pg=personal&fr_id=1180&et=hc48-5wAnRWj9aVXf2IXzw..&s_tafId=1322
Spudnuts!?!
The other night Mom told me some people at her work were talking about a message board for fans of Spuduts. I kind of forgot about it until today. As many of you know I've had a lot of complications from my wisdom teeth extraction. I'm dreaming of eating 'real' food after a week of soft food and no telling how much longer since I have an inch of exposed bone in my mouth which has to heal on its own :(
Also for back story, Spudnuts are the single greatest breakfast food of all time. There is a shop in ElDorado and in Magnolia. As I've lived all over Louisiana and Arkansas when I meet someone from ElDorado, within 5 minutes we are talking about Spudnuts. A Spudnut, for the uninformed, is a doughnut made with potato flour. It is sweet and delectable and melts in your mouth. Some people try to compare them to a hot Krispy Kreme, but although Krispy Kreme is a quality food it is no Spudnut.
I read the forums and there are actually 35 Spudnut shops still up and running with most of them in California. It was an actual chain from mid 20th century and these guys are left over from that era. There is even a Spudnut museum in Indiana (I'm not joking).
Here's a link: http://spudnutshop.com/
I found a post by a lady in ElDorado that said there was a dispute with Yahoo! Answers over the "First" Spudnut shop. The simple thought of some Yahoo! software engineers arguing over the Spudnut origin cracks me up and has made me smile at a time that it hurts to smile-literally ;)
Also for back story, Spudnuts are the single greatest breakfast food of all time. There is a shop in ElDorado and in Magnolia. As I've lived all over Louisiana and Arkansas when I meet someone from ElDorado, within 5 minutes we are talking about Spudnuts. A Spudnut, for the uninformed, is a doughnut made with potato flour. It is sweet and delectable and melts in your mouth. Some people try to compare them to a hot Krispy Kreme, but although Krispy Kreme is a quality food it is no Spudnut.
I read the forums and there are actually 35 Spudnut shops still up and running with most of them in California. It was an actual chain from mid 20th century and these guys are left over from that era. There is even a Spudnut museum in Indiana (I'm not joking).
Here's a link: http://spudnutshop.com/
I found a post by a lady in ElDorado that said there was a dispute with Yahoo! Answers over the "First" Spudnut shop. The simple thought of some Yahoo! software engineers arguing over the Spudnut origin cracks me up and has made me smile at a time that it hurts to smile-literally ;)
Candy Obsession
"I want canee!" This is what we have heard since Halloween ended-morning, noon, and night. The Green's came over to trick or treat with us and we had to train the boys on what to do. It took a few houses and then Noah got it down perfectly. The evening was followed by a four day sugar high! This week I finally had to show Noah that the bowl was empty. Chad has been under the weather since he had his wisdom teeth taken out on the 30th. He was only able to partially participate.
Since then his mouth has not gotten better. He finally went back to the dentist because of the pain. Turns out his bone on his jaw line was poking through. They had to cut it open again, shave down the bone, and stitch him back. Then he promptly popped a stitch and had to go back again. This morning, he is still complaining and is on his way to this dentist again. When he opens his mouth, I can see the bone along with white spots and ulcers all in throat. He has been using spray for his throat to numb it. Hopefully they can fix him up this morning. Oh and did I mention his appt. is at 9:30 to be followed by a speaking engagement at 11 with the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution. Hopefully, his tongue will not be too thick. The moral of the story is: get your wisdom teeth out when your in your teens and early twenties and not when your thirty five.
Also, asking for prayers for my friend Kristen's mother. She was diagnosed with breast cancer last week in both breasts. She is undergoing a double mastectomy next week. Her name is Sherry Earney.
Love to all!
Since then his mouth has not gotten better. He finally went back to the dentist because of the pain. Turns out his bone on his jaw line was poking through. They had to cut it open again, shave down the bone, and stitch him back. Then he promptly popped a stitch and had to go back again. This morning, he is still complaining and is on his way to this dentist again. When he opens his mouth, I can see the bone along with white spots and ulcers all in throat. He has been using spray for his throat to numb it. Hopefully they can fix him up this morning. Oh and did I mention his appt. is at 9:30 to be followed by a speaking engagement at 11 with the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution. Hopefully, his tongue will not be too thick. The moral of the story is: get your wisdom teeth out when your in your teens and early twenties and not when your thirty five.
Also, asking for prayers for my friend Kristen's mother. She was diagnosed with breast cancer last week in both breasts. She is undergoing a double mastectomy next week. Her name is Sherry Earney.
Love to all!
Aunt Hawee the Pirate
We are going to shop for Noah's Halloween costume today. I've been lobbying for a pirate because a) he says 'Argh' really cute, b)he's always holding stuff to his eye and pretending he's a pirate so I think he'll actually keep the costume on, and c) the costume store has an entire wall of pirate stuff so he won't be a generic pirate from the big-box stores.
Well, Jenna in her psychologist brain has been explaining Halloween to him. We are about to start getting ready for the day and she suddenly asked Noah, "What do you want to be for Halloween?" Noah didn't reply. I offered "Do you want to be a pirate?" and he yelled "Yeah!" I got the 'look' from Jenna for supplying the answer (she should have been a lawyer) and then she asked him more openly "Noah, you can be anybody you want for Halloween. Who do you want to be?" He got real solemn, walked over to her, and said "Aunt Hawee!!!" She asked, "You want to be Aunt Holly for Halloween?" He yelled "Yeah!!!!" and started dancing. I want him to be happy but I can only imagine the hundreds of dollars of therapy I'll be paying for if I let him dress in drag at the age of 2.
(sidebar: during Holly's stay last weekend she graduated from Aunt Hoeee to Aunt Hawee)
Well, Jenna in her psychologist brain has been explaining Halloween to him. We are about to start getting ready for the day and she suddenly asked Noah, "What do you want to be for Halloween?" Noah didn't reply. I offered "Do you want to be a pirate?" and he yelled "Yeah!" I got the 'look' from Jenna for supplying the answer (she should have been a lawyer) and then she asked him more openly "Noah, you can be anybody you want for Halloween. Who do you want to be?" He got real solemn, walked over to her, and said "Aunt Hawee!!!" She asked, "You want to be Aunt Holly for Halloween?" He yelled "Yeah!!!!" and started dancing. I want him to be happy but I can only imagine the hundreds of dollars of therapy I'll be paying for if I let him dress in drag at the age of 2.
(sidebar: during Holly's stay last weekend she graduated from Aunt Hoeee to Aunt Hawee)
First Razorback Game!!!
Yesterday Noah and Jana had their first Razorback game. Melissa, Jay, and Jana came up from ElDorado and Holly and Mark came in from AZ. Initially we had a babysitter for Noah but Jana cried when she found out Noah wasn't going to the game. When the game was set for 11:30 we figured it was doable so we found the boy a ticket. He sat almost the entire game with Jana (and crew) but we sat above him and could see him the entire game. He had so much fun its not even funny. When the game was over he said "No bye-bye Daddy, no bye-bye!" The highlight of the day was right before kickoff when Jenna yelled "Noah's on the Jumbotron!" I looked up and luckily had my camera in hand and caught the second half of it. The best part is you can read his lips perfectly saying "Go Hogs" while pumping his arm. He and Jana were on again in the 2nd half but I didn't capture it on film.
After the game Nick said "I've been to every game here since they installed that scoreboard and I've never been on it. Your kid sits down and within 3 minutes is plastered all over it." Of course, Nick knows he's nowhere near as cute as my kid :) The 2nd time they were on it they had lapfuls of food. Noah was wolfin down a corn dog and Jana was munchin on chicken strips. Anther friend of mine, Janice ran into us on our way out of the stadium and said, "Do cameras just follow your kid everywhere?" It was great.
Here'e a streaming link to watch in your webbrowser.
Here is a download link to the full size video-25MB.


After the game Nick said "I've been to every game here since they installed that scoreboard and I've never been on it. Your kid sits down and within 3 minutes is plastered all over it." Of course, Nick knows he's nowhere near as cute as my kid :) The 2nd time they were on it they had lapfuls of food. Noah was wolfin down a corn dog and Jana was munchin on chicken strips. Anther friend of mine, Janice ran into us on our way out of the stadium and said, "Do cameras just follow your kid everywhere?" It was great.
Here'e a streaming link to watch in your webbrowser.
Here is a download link to the full size video-25MB.


Noah on billboard in Texarkana
Today a friend called Jenna and said she saw Noah on a billboard advertising next month's Race for the Cure. Later, Pops sent me a pic to my inbox and of course I have to share :)
Pink Trash Ball aftermath
I thought you guys would enjoy this pic from the pink trash ball.
"Let's-Go-Yank-ees!"
Well as most of you know I'm a Yankees fan. It seems since Noah came along, I've been less of a fan but not really. I think he has just helped put things in perspective for me. I love baseball. It is my favorite sport measured on a bar that nothing else even registers upon. I like football. I keep up with basketball but they don't even get notches on the yardstick to measure against baseball. Tonight Melissa called me and asked what I was doing. I said 'You're kidding right.' I guess the whole world didn't know Yankee Stadium hosted its last game ever tonight. When I told her the first thing she said was "I'm so sorry for calling. Call me tomorrow." She didn't know it was closing tonight but she knows what a big deal it was for me because she meant it and there was nothing but sincerity in her apology. I talked to her anyways and I told her about the pre-game ceremonies and how nice they were. It made me want to write a post about it. She also asked me if I cried any and I of course would never admit to the answer. I know the majority of you guys really don't care to hear me talk about the Yankees and that's okay but this is the only voice I have at times and I'm going to write it anyways. If you don't want to read the post then skip the rest of this. I really don't mind. However, I know Jeff and Nick will read this so I'm going to write it for at least them. In fact, I'm kind of addressing it to them for reasons I'll flush out later.
The YES (Yankees Entertainment and Sports) channel have had so many documentaries on Yankee Stadium this year I can't even count them-and yes the Yankees have their own 24-hr channel, it's on 622 on DirecTV. They haven't been very good though, because they were produced by a channel owned by the Yankees. Not exactly unbiased reporting. That's what made the entire day on ESPN so good. Those documentaries are unbiased and it really demonstrated how much Yankee Stadium is a part of American history. It's not as important as most things, but it is part of the fabric of this country. The Babe, Joe D, Yogi, and the Mick are American icons not just baseball icons.
The pre-game coverage on YES showed all of the ceremonies before the game and I know most-if not all- of you guys didn't see them. The 2 highlights were Bobby Murcer's family and Bernie Baseball. They introduced all of the living Yankees that aren't currently playing somewhere else or otherwise committed. Before you ask, Mattingly was not there. I guess he thought his coaching position with the Dodgers was more important. The man lacks priorities :) Bobby Murcer died a few months ago and he is one of the most beloved figures around the organization. He was a fine player but he covered the Yankees for many years as a broadcaster and you could just tell he was a good guy listening to him. Kind of the anti-thesis of Michael Kay who I like but I don't know if I'd buy a used car from him. Anyways, they had dozens of players on the field at their positions and they introduced Bobby's wife, son, and daughter. The Stadium chanted "Bobb-y" for about 3 minutes while his widow and teenage kids waved to the fans. The wife was sobbing and it was a great moment. Not quite as good as Bernie coming home. In case you guys didn't know, Bernie hasn't been back to the stadium since the Yank's didn't renew his contract. I give him credit for retiring like Mattingly did instead of putting on another uniform. I just couldn't imagine him in anything other than pinstripes. When he was introduced the place almost came down. You know those playoff images where a player hits a home run and the place is so loud the camera shakes (Think the Jeter walk-off HR the night after Bush threw out the first pitch after 9/11 ). It was like that. The cameras were literally shaking the place was so loud. He was the last one introduced and noboby-not Yogi, Paul O'Neil, David Wells, Dave Winfield, Reggie Jackson, etc-came close to the ovation he got. It was awesome.
I enjoyed the telecast. Joe Morgan and Jon Miller had a lot of guests in the booth throughout the game and the Yankees won so it was good. It's hilarious that with all the storied moments and tradition, Jose Molina hit the final HR in Yankee stadium. I was really pulling for Jeter in the 7th when he batted with the bases loaded. I know Jeter doesn't need anything more to cement his legacy in Yankee lore but it would have been amazing if he'd connected. Instead he took strike 3, but I don't feel bad for him. I'm sure he'll have plenty of supermodels willing to cheer him up.
I hope you guys didn't miss Jeter speak after the game. He addressed the fans over the PA and he spoke really well. He had a great line, "...we'd still have the moments but without the fans it wouldn't mean anything at all."
I got a little sad tonight too. Not because the stadium closed down, but because I could hear Randy Lyons' voice griping about closing the stadium. We had a yearly talk about a week before the season would start and talk about the Yankees. I know the Razorbacks were his first love but he loved the Yankees too. The past few opening days just haven't been the same since he's been gone. I know he would liked the game tonight but I also know (don't ask me how) he would have been against the whole new stadium thing and I swear I know what he would have said and I could literally hear our 'conversation' in my head. In the end we would have agreed to disagree-well I would have agreed to that-he would have just conceded I was wrong :) I miss that man.
I guess the night was perfect. After the game players from Baltimore were scooping dirt into jars from the field. The Yankee players walked around the stadium waving. Flashbulbs were going off everywhere. Strangely I'm glad the Yankees aren't going to the playoffs this year. With so many players-Mattingly, Bernie, Paulie to name a few-we didn't know which game was going to be the 'last' so there was no '...for the last time.' If the Yankee's had gone to the playoffs, unless they went to a Game 7 in the World Series, we would have never known which night would have been the last game until afterwards. So we get closure and a lot of smiles and even a few admitted tears.
The YES (Yankees Entertainment and Sports) channel have had so many documentaries on Yankee Stadium this year I can't even count them-and yes the Yankees have their own 24-hr channel, it's on 622 on DirecTV. They haven't been very good though, because they were produced by a channel owned by the Yankees. Not exactly unbiased reporting. That's what made the entire day on ESPN so good. Those documentaries are unbiased and it really demonstrated how much Yankee Stadium is a part of American history. It's not as important as most things, but it is part of the fabric of this country. The Babe, Joe D, Yogi, and the Mick are American icons not just baseball icons.
The pre-game coverage on YES showed all of the ceremonies before the game and I know most-if not all- of you guys didn't see them. The 2 highlights were Bobby Murcer's family and Bernie Baseball. They introduced all of the living Yankees that aren't currently playing somewhere else or otherwise committed. Before you ask, Mattingly was not there. I guess he thought his coaching position with the Dodgers was more important. The man lacks priorities :) Bobby Murcer died a few months ago and he is one of the most beloved figures around the organization. He was a fine player but he covered the Yankees for many years as a broadcaster and you could just tell he was a good guy listening to him. Kind of the anti-thesis of Michael Kay who I like but I don't know if I'd buy a used car from him. Anyways, they had dozens of players on the field at their positions and they introduced Bobby's wife, son, and daughter. The Stadium chanted "Bobb-y" for about 3 minutes while his widow and teenage kids waved to the fans. The wife was sobbing and it was a great moment. Not quite as good as Bernie coming home. In case you guys didn't know, Bernie hasn't been back to the stadium since the Yank's didn't renew his contract. I give him credit for retiring like Mattingly did instead of putting on another uniform. I just couldn't imagine him in anything other than pinstripes. When he was introduced the place almost came down. You know those playoff images where a player hits a home run and the place is so loud the camera shakes (Think the Jeter walk-off HR the night after Bush threw out the first pitch after 9/11 ). It was like that. The cameras were literally shaking the place was so loud. He was the last one introduced and noboby-not Yogi, Paul O'Neil, David Wells, Dave Winfield, Reggie Jackson, etc-came close to the ovation he got. It was awesome.
I enjoyed the telecast. Joe Morgan and Jon Miller had a lot of guests in the booth throughout the game and the Yankees won so it was good. It's hilarious that with all the storied moments and tradition, Jose Molina hit the final HR in Yankee stadium. I was really pulling for Jeter in the 7th when he batted with the bases loaded. I know Jeter doesn't need anything more to cement his legacy in Yankee lore but it would have been amazing if he'd connected. Instead he took strike 3, but I don't feel bad for him. I'm sure he'll have plenty of supermodels willing to cheer him up.
I hope you guys didn't miss Jeter speak after the game. He addressed the fans over the PA and he spoke really well. He had a great line, "...we'd still have the moments but without the fans it wouldn't mean anything at all."
I got a little sad tonight too. Not because the stadium closed down, but because I could hear Randy Lyons' voice griping about closing the stadium. We had a yearly talk about a week before the season would start and talk about the Yankees. I know the Razorbacks were his first love but he loved the Yankees too. The past few opening days just haven't been the same since he's been gone. I know he would liked the game tonight but I also know (don't ask me how) he would have been against the whole new stadium thing and I swear I know what he would have said and I could literally hear our 'conversation' in my head. In the end we would have agreed to disagree-well I would have agreed to that-he would have just conceded I was wrong :) I miss that man.
I guess the night was perfect. After the game players from Baltimore were scooping dirt into jars from the field. The Yankee players walked around the stadium waving. Flashbulbs were going off everywhere. Strangely I'm glad the Yankees aren't going to the playoffs this year. With so many players-Mattingly, Bernie, Paulie to name a few-we didn't know which game was going to be the 'last' so there was no '...for the last time.' If the Yankee's had gone to the playoffs, unless they went to a Game 7 in the World Series, we would have never known which night would have been the last game until afterwards. So we get closure and a lot of smiles and even a few admitted tears.
Pink Trash Ball
Just a reminder for everyone-tomorrow night is the Pink Trash Ball at George's. It starts at 9 but doors open at 8. It costs $25 with proceeds going to Komen for the Cure and a good time will be had. So come out and lets party. Dress in pink trashy duds if you want to but come either way. I'll personally let anyone who comes up to me and tells me they read this here, buy me a beer. That's the kind of selfless guy I am :)
What about me?
Jenna asked me if I was going to post about last Friday and I didn't know what to tell her. I guess I want to tell friends and family but I know other people read this and I don't want to toot my own horn. In fact its just hard to right about yourself at all. I just want everyone to share in our joy that is Noah and keep you guys up on Jenna. But me? Me? It feels weird but here goes.
Last Friday was the kickoff for the Cure. Basically a luncheon for last years sponsors of the Ozark Race for the Cure and an event to announce the chair, vice-chair, and honorary chairs. Since Jenna's broken the news here, you know I'm the vice-chair for the 09 race. I was asked to say something at the event. Well I haven't had to speak in public...I'VE NEVER SPOKEN IN PUBLIC. I didn't even take speech in college I'm not a nervous person but I had a little anxiety leading up to the day.
I think it went well. They laughed at my joke and I think I conveyed the message I was asked to convey. I was sandwiched right between the chair and the mayor of Rogers. When I saw the schedule and saw I spoke before a mayor, I thought I was out of my league, but I did okay. I was asked to tell 'our story' to give a personal touch to the day instead of it just being a press conference. So I started thinking about what to say and I made an outline. Closer to the day I was asked what I'd say and then was told to just be 'brief.' How do you tell your story and be brief? As you know brevity has never been a strength of mine. So I went back and started marking out parts of the outline. Then the day before my speech I got an itinerary by email and I saw I was given 10 minutes so I had to go back and put everything I took out back in.
I was a little nervous the morning of the speech but I was interviewed for TV about 30 minutes before the thing started and that calmed me down. Jenna showed up and after 3 days of terrible weather we had a gorgeous afternoon. The day was truly a success as we added 2 new sponsors to the fold and I got my first public speaking behind me.
Last Friday was the kickoff for the Cure. Basically a luncheon for last years sponsors of the Ozark Race for the Cure and an event to announce the chair, vice-chair, and honorary chairs. Since Jenna's broken the news here, you know I'm the vice-chair for the 09 race. I was asked to say something at the event. Well I haven't had to speak in public...I'VE NEVER SPOKEN IN PUBLIC. I didn't even take speech in college I'm not a nervous person but I had a little anxiety leading up to the day.
I think it went well. They laughed at my joke and I think I conveyed the message I was asked to convey. I was sandwiched right between the chair and the mayor of Rogers. When I saw the schedule and saw I spoke before a mayor, I thought I was out of my league, but I did okay. I was asked to tell 'our story' to give a personal touch to the day instead of it just being a press conference. So I started thinking about what to say and I made an outline. Closer to the day I was asked what I'd say and then was told to just be 'brief.' How do you tell your story and be brief? As you know brevity has never been a strength of mine. So I went back and started marking out parts of the outline. Then the day before my speech I got an itinerary by email and I saw I was given 10 minutes so I had to go back and put everything I took out back in.
I was a little nervous the morning of the speech but I was interviewed for TV about 30 minutes before the thing started and that calmed me down. Jenna showed up and after 3 days of terrible weather we had a gorgeous afternoon. The day was truly a success as we added 2 new sponsors to the fold and I got my first public speaking behind me.
MY NAME IS DAD!!!
Noah's Mamaw and Papaw have been here all week and it's been really nice. They are great grandparents. They really just adapt to Noah's world and agenda and he has a blast. However...that was a big however...he has picked up a terrible habit from them. You see Noah is at that wonderful age where he repeats everything. He actually does a decent "Whoa Nelly" in a good Keith Jackson voice. Somewhere in the past few days he realized they call me "Chad." I'm sure you can guess where this is going. Suddenly, I've become 'Chad' to him instead of 'Dad.' "I want juice Chad" "I want outside Chad" "I hide from Mamma Chad" Each time we correct him and he'll say 'Dad' back but then its right back to 'Chad.' I guess Jenna and I just don't call each other by name hardly ever. I won't be alone in this though. I vow he will know "Jenna" before the end of the weekend only because she finds this sooooo funny :)