Old & Busted- NFL Draft. New Hotness- Life.

For the last 15 years or so, NFL draft weekend was a big deal.  I’d stay in front of a TV for virtually the whole draft, taking breaks for meals and such with XM Radio tuned into the draft in my car.  I knew quite a bit about most of the players who would end up getting picked in the first two rounds, as well as a ton about VT players and those of the teams they had played the past few seasons.  But not this year.

This year, I didn’t even remember the draft was this weekend until late Saturday afternoon when I asked Jason about it on the golf course.  Even after that, I didn’t bother to watch any of it.  Just a few minutes ago this morning, I went to ESPN.com and looked at the results.  I recognized the name of maybe one of every ten players picked.  It appears only one Hokie was drafted.  Oh.  As a side note, this was also the weekend of the Virginia Tech spring game.  I had already lost interest in that a couple years ago, except for the tailgating aspect.  

On one hand, I could look at this as lack of interest in an activity I used to enjoy, which would be a sign of depression.  However, that would require me to accept ’sitting and watching a bunch of suits select players on TV for 6 straight hours, for two consecutive days’ as an activity, which is oxymoronic in nature.

In place of watching the draft and the spring game, I enjoyed a gorgeous weekend of weather, I went to the farmers’ market, I planted some vegetables in our garden with Janice, I bought a chest freezer for the garage, I played golf with Jason, I went shopping for some interview clothes for Janice, I watched some golf on TV, I installed a shelf in the garage, and I grilled some catfish.  That’s a substitution for the NFL draft that I would pick #1 overall any year!

I feel like this is a significant change in me, going from sitting and watching the world move on without me to participating in it in a fulfilling manner.  This, to me, is breaking out of the rut I had so often lamented being stuck in previously.  It’s why I left Blacksburg, it’s why I moved south, and it’s why I changed jobs.

It was a longer winter than I had anticipated, but it’s over now, and I couldn’t be happer!

This weekend is the Quail Hollow Championship, formerly the Wachovia Championship.  It’s Charlotte’s PGA Tour stop, and I’ve been going every year for about five years.  I have weekly passes again, and will be attending on Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and possibly Sunday.  It’s one of the best weeks of the year for me.  Should be a great time as usual!  The weather looks solid.  Not sunny, but also not steady rain.

Oh weekend, how I missed thee

This has been a long, crappy week.  Weather aside (which has remained sub-par), there’s been health issues, terrible family news, and my predictably ill-suited reactions to them.  Now’s a great time for a sunny commitment-free weekend.  Farmer’s market, gardening, grilling, driving range, come on down!  You’re the next contestants on The Weekend Is Right!

BTW, yesterday was the 2nd anniversary of the Virginia Tech Massacre, but I didn’t really have anything insightful to share here.  I have completely disconnected myself from Blacksburg now, and I really don’t know what to make of it.  I have no bonds with and very few memories of that place at this time.  I wonder how long it will last.

Noah’s Lark

With the typical extended weekend of NCAA Tournament debauchery over as of Sunday morning, I noticed that it is 40 days until the Wachovia nee Quail Hollow Championship begins here in Charlotte.  Since that’s a nice round number with a significance of biblical proportions, I dedided to go on a 40-days-and-40-nights prohibition from the sauce.  So until Friday, May 1, I’m going dry!  I already had to cut down drastically on intake at bars due to the financial situation, but now I’m just cutting it all out.  The weather’s getting nicer, and there’s really nothing between now and then worth drinking to.  Wish me luck…I’ve done these kinds of things before, sometimes to easy success and sometimes not.

In other news, I finally have some relief on my own personal mortgage crisis!  The realtor I’d been using to try to sell my place in Blacksburg got a signed lease by 2 VT students which begins on June 1.  So that’s a huge financial burden lifted!  Hooray!

I’m in 2nd place in my NCAA pool thus far.  Pretty happy with that.  We’ll see what happens…

Valentine’s roundup…but wait, there’s more!

Monday afternoon, I received an email from my mom containing this:

Hi!  Just thought I’d pop in and see how you are doing.  I’m sure this past weekend was abit rough for you, esp. Friday…

What’s funny (and awesome) about this is that I actually had to stop and think about why she would say that.  Oh yeah, that’s right, Friday was the one year anniversary of the day my ex-wife left me!  (Yes, the day before Valentine’s Day, how apropos.)  That was easily the darkest time in my life.  It may not seem like it now, seeing that it triggered such a grand rebirth in me, but I was a blobbering, depressed mess that day.

Think about it, though: It was an extremely easy date to remember, and since I have a new Valentine, I certainly had enough reminders of the holiday in the weeks and days beforehand.  But not once did I think about last year’s events until a couple days later when my mom emailed me.  I think that’s pretty great!

Valentine’s Day itself was a great time!  First we had Laney’s obedience class, where she had her best session ever.  We stayed in with dinner and wine and played games on the Wii (I got crushed in Bowling but came back to win in Tennis) and watched some of our Anthony Bourdain’s No Reservations on DVD.  Janice got me some clothes (I love having someone with good taste to pick things out for me) and a dog devotional book (which is hilarious) and I got her one of those hot new Electrolux mini-vacuums (do NOT disparage me for giving this gift; she demanded it!) and a bluetooth earpiece for her cell phone.

ergorapido

Yes, ladies, I got her a vacuum for V-Day!

 

In other news, the weather has turned to utter crap this week after 10 days or so of warm, sunny days in the first half of February.  Today it’s dark and pouring rain.  But Janice and I are going to the Bobcats game tonight, so that should be fun!   The 10 day outlook doesn’t appear to be that great, but with the historical average high around 60 and rising quickly, it’s only a matter of time until outdoor activities become feasible again.

One last note: Welcome to Charlotte, Keith!  He’s pretty much the last one of ‘us’ (former Blacksburg and Christiansburg residents who harbored a desire to get the hell out of there and move to Charlotte), but he did eventually get here.  Our migration is complete!

What’s a ‘hometown’?

As noted in the 25 ‘random’ things about me post, I have lived in 3 places in my 33 years on this earth:

  • Zuni, VA – from birth to leaving for college, in the same house (18.5 years)
  • Blacksburg, VA – from college to 6 months ago (14 years)
  • Charlotte, NC – the past 6 months

So which of these is my hometown?  

I have a feeling most people would say Zuni, since that’s where I grew up.  But I don’t feel any connection to that place.  Other than my parents and a couple of recent Facebook friends, I don’t keep up with anyone from there.  The few times I visit, I don’t do anything but hang around at my parents’ house.  So I don’t know if that’s my hometown.

Blacksburg, on the other hand, is somewhere I spent many years in, living in many apartments, townhouses, and a house, and still have many connections to.  I still visit and keep up with friends there, and obviously the connection is stronger with my alma mater, Virginia Tech, being located there.  But I don’t know if that makes it my hometown.

The dark horse here is Charlotte, my new home and my favorite of the three.  Is it my hometown simply because it’s where I live now?  No one is really from Charlotte, anyway!

To summarize the candidates:

  • Zuni: where I was born and raised
  • Blacksburg: where I most identify with
  • Charlotte: where I live now

What say you?

25 ‘random’ things about me

A bunch of people seem to be doing this ‘25 things about me’ stuff on Facebook, so I thought I would do it here as a post and then just import it.  So here it is:

  1. I do 5 crossword puzzles each day: Los Angeles Times, Washington Post, USA Today, Newsday, and Thinks.com.  I generally finish most of them without cheating, at least until Thursday or Friday.
  2. In the past 6 months, I’ve gone from hating coffee to drinking 2 cups of black coffee each morning.
  3. Throughout life, almost all of my role models, favorite authors, athletes and entertainers have been non-caucasian, even though my skin is as white as the driven snow.
  4. I checked myself into a hospital for depression a year ago and it was the best move I ever made.
  5. I’ve broken every finger on both hands at some point, excluding both thumbs.
  6. I am enjoying the happiest period in my life (so far) right now.
  7. I’ve appeared in a full page spread in the National Enquirer.
  8. I hate talking on the telephone.
  9. In 33 years, I have lived in 3 places: Zuni, VA, Blacksburg, VA, and Charlotte, NC.
  10. In June, I will be without a car payment for the first time since I turned 16.
  11. The smell of root beer makes me physically sick.
  12. I have Seasonal Affective Disorder, which causes me to despise cloudy winter days.
  13. I’ve had one cold and two headaches in the last 3 years.
  14. I never drink soda unless it’s mixed with alcohol.
  15. I cut my own hair (with clippers) and have for almost a decade.
  16. I went over 8 years without being clean shaven until this past year.
  17. I shattered a bone in my foot two years ago trying to jump and click my heels like a leprechaun.
  18. For the first time since high school, there isn’t anyone in my day-to-day life that I absolutely loathe.
  19. I’ve seen hundreds of human corpses in my life (I used to deliver for a florist).
  20. Unlike most people, I prefer raw tomatoes to prepared versions, such as ketchup and red sauces.
  21. If eating fast food, I eat all my fries first, because they’re terrible when they get cold.
  22. I have weighed as little as 180 and as much as 265 lbs in adulthood (around 230 at the moment).
  23. Twice in my life, I have been chased full speed by a cow.
  24. The less important something is, the more likely I am to remember it.
  25. I don’t understand what the big deal is with Sudoku.  Either I’m really good at it or I’m missing the point.

Link to Part II

Link to Part III

The Great Charlotte Freeze of 09

So the city is nearing panic mode over this weekend’s frigid temperatures.  According to the Charlotte Observer, it’s the coldest air to come into the area in 4 years, bringing with it possible ultra-rare highs below freezing!

This kind of makes me laugh, because these things happen in Blacksburg for what seems like weeks at a time every year.  In fact, let’s compare the two right now!  Janice, you may want to stop reading, or prepare to roll your eyes:

Charlotte

  • Today: Sunny. Highs around 40. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph. Lows around 14.
  • Friday: Sunny. Highs around 30. North winds 5 to 10 mph. Cold with lows around 10 above.

Sounds pretty cold, eh?  Well it should, it’s the coldest here since Dubya was re-elected!  But wait, let’s check out my old stomping grounds:

Blacksburg

  • Today: Partly sunny with isolated snow showers. Highs in the upper 20s. Northwest winds 15 to 20 mph with gusts up to 35 mph. Chance of snow 20 percent. Wind chill values as low as 4 above.  Cold with lows around 8 above. Wind chill values as low as 4 below.
  • Friday: Sunny. Highs around 18. Northwest winds 10 to 15 mph. Wind chill values as low as 9 below in the morning. Cold with lows around 4 above. West winds around 10 mph. Wind chill values as low as 5 below.

 

Ha-ha!

Ha-ha! You live in Blacksburg!

The best part about the weather here isn’t how much warmer it is (which is pretty awesome), it’s how little wind there is.  Oh yeah, and the fact that it starts warming up rapidly at the beginning of February, not the middle of May.

 

2008 Year in Review

Well, 2008 pretty much has to go down as the most eventful year or my life.  While there were both terrible and wonderful things that happened, the bad all came before the good, which brings some terrific momentum into 2009.  Here’s a recap of 2008:

January: Entered year depressed, living in a place I hated, enduring weather I couldn’t stand, working at a job I hated, with wife having affair in my face (Self-esteem Rating: 3/10)

February: Wife moves out of house, I begin treatment for depression (Self-esteem Rating: 1/10)

March: Treatment continues (Self-esteem Rating: 2/10)

April: Treatment continues, weather slowly improves along with my depression (Self-esteem Rating: 3/10)

May: Treatment continues, play some golf (Self-esteem Rating: 3/10)

June: Attend Jason’s Myrtle Beach bachelor party, decide marriage is over, begin dating (Self-esteem Rating: 4/10)

July: Begin interviewing in Charlotte, stand as groomsman in Jason & Steph’s wedding, find new job, quit old job (Self-esteem Rating: 5/10)

August: Move to Charlotte, meet Janice, file for and finalize divorce, begin new job (Self-esteem Rating: 7/10)

September: Adopt Laney, establish myself in Charlotte, football season begins (Self-esteem Rating: 8/10)

October: Attend Cory & Emily’s wedding in Jersey with Janice, relaunch dontfirealgroh.com (Self-esteem Rating: 9/10)

November: Visit parents for Thanksgiving with Janice (Self-esteem Rating: 9/10)

December: Accept permanent position at work, visit parents for Christmas with both brothers (Self-esteem Rating: 9/10)

Aint we cute?

Ain't we cute?

If that was a company’s growth chart, I’d say I’m doing a hell of a lot better than the rest of the economy!  If I can continue that kind of life improvement into 2009, I’ll be thrilled!  My goals include losing 20lbs by the end of May, putting me at 210 (that’s only about 1lb a week), eating and living healthier, reading and cooking more, finally taking a real vacation, and finding a new hobby.  I’m thinking of getting a planted freshwater aquarium.

Looking back on the list above, it’s hard to believe the difference a year makes.  By the way, it’s December 29 and the temperature here is in the 60s.

Hooray for the end of Daylight Saving Time!

Before I joined the normal working world, I hated Eastern Standard Time.  I never woke up before dawn anyway, and I always wanted as much daylight as possible after work.  Nobody likes driving home from work in the dark.  Well, I still hate that part, but now I am thrilled that Daylight Saving Time is gone.

I wake up at 6am now.  Rather, I’ve been trying to.  It was almost impossible when it was 90 minutes before daybreak, though.  This morning was much, much easier.  And it was a beautiful 53 degrees outside when I took Laney for her morning constitutional!  It was overcast, so not much sunlight, but hey, still pretty good!  

It also really helps that I really like my job.  Here it is on a Monday morning in November, and I actually wasn’t dreading going to work!

 Janice and I had a good weekend, driving around to look at kids in their Halloween costumes, going on a hike at the Whitewater Center, watching football with my friends, taking Laney on numerous walks and runs, and enjoying some really nice meals.  Since Saturday was the 3 month mark since I moved to Charlotte, this seems like a good time to reflect on what’s happened since then:

  • I moved here from Bleaksburg
  • I started a new job which I still love
  • I met Janice and we’ve had a wonderful first 3 months
  • I furnished my townhouse almost from scratch without going into debt
  • I adopted Laney
  • I lost 5 lbs (without trying!)
  • I learned to wake up early and have started to find some discipline from within myself
  • I traveled to New Jersey to be in my brother’s wedding
  • I dress like an adult at work (including shaving!)
  • I re-launched dontfirealgroh.com to more good reviews
  • I started writing semi-professionally for a sports-comedy web site
  • I lost all bitterness toward life and my outlook is as positive as ever

I think that is a pretty good list, especially considering that it’s longer and more accomplished than a list from the past 7 years combined would have been!  The best part is that winter is coming up, and I have no dread or fear of it.  In Blacksburg, this would be the time where I would begin to resign myself to 6 months of dark, windy, bonechilling hell.  Not here, though.  Not only will the weather be warmer (usually by 10 degrees, sometimes 20 or more), but there are myriad activities to do.  Here’s to looking forward to the previously despised season!

Adapting to solitude / Order in nature

Until this past February, I had never lived alone in my 32 years on this planet.  I went from living with my parents to a dorm with a roommate to living with friends to the now-defunct marriage.  Being by myself wasn’t even part of my life.

It was a rough adjustment.  I hated being by myself in the mornings and evenings.  A social creature and entertainer in my adulthood, I just didn’t find any value or entertainment in solitude.  Some of it was originally attributable to suddenly being by myself in a house I bought with my then-future-ex-wife.  It was painful and miserable to have to wake up and come home to what I then viewed as an epicenter of failure.  I avoided it as much as possible, and numbed myself when not.

I figured I’d adjust to being alone better once I got out of Blacksburg and out of that house.  But it didn’t work immediately, as I still found myself uncomfortable being alone in my new townhouse here in Charlotte, even with Laney.

In comes help in the form of Mr. Coffee.  I bought a coffee machine a couple of weeks ago so I can wake up earlier.  I have started a routine where I walk Laney first thing in the morning with mug in hand.  I find a spot for her to walk around, and I stand there and finish the coffee.  This standing around, instead of marching her to and fro hurriedly before heading back inside, has surprisingly given birth to some moments of quiet contemplation.  It’s proven rewarding to me and has shown me the benefits of some alone time.  Instead of rushing to get all of my morning tasks done so I can get to where more people are as quickly as possible, I get a lot of reflecting done in just a small amount of downtime.

This morning’s contemplation was inspired by an encounter with nature.  Yesterday at lunch, I was walking Laney by a creek next to my townhouse, and I saw a Great Blue Heron fishing away.  He let me take some pictures of him from pretty close range:

I wondered where his nest might be, if he is indeed a new resident.  I saw a trail of droppings leading directly from where he had been fishing.  I extrapolated the line segment and can see a large nest I suspect might belong to my new feathered neighbor.  The lofty abode featured a great view of his food source.

That got me thinking this morning, as I passed by the same point with mug in hand and mutt in tow, about why I enjoy learning about nature, especially animals, so much.  You see, I never really grew out of the ‘why’ phase of childhood.  (Some would say I never grew out of childhood at all, but that is better saved for another day and another conversation with someone with multiple degrees on their wall.)

I have an insatiable desire to understand the reasoning behind the way things are.  If I am unable to learn or reason something out, I tend to either reject or pass on the subject all together.  A good example of this is religion.  I describe myself as an agnostic in the spirit of open-mindedness.  I can’t subscribe to a religion at this point, because there aren’t enough answers to all of my ‘why’s.  I still shudder when I think about my curiosity being stomped on in Sunday School as a kid.  Religion to me is man’s attempt to fill the void of what we have not yet reasoned out or solved.

(Just a quick note: This does not mean that I think people who have found religion are necessaily ‘wrong’.  It means no religion has found me, and so I am left to my own devices and logic to form my views.)

But with nature, everything has an answer.  Many of these answers are self-evident if you think about them long enough.  Why are some animals brightly colored?  Probably either to attract a mate, or to as a self-defense to warn predators of danger.  Why do some birds have long, sharp beaks?  To penetrate wood or stab into water for food.  Why does your dog misbehave?  Because you aren’t acting like a good pack leader with consistent authority and even demeanor.  Even if you don’t figure out something by yourself and you have to look it up, you’ll probably find that something exists — and evolved that way — for a perfectly logical reason.

Anyway, this contemplation time, and the fruit it bears, are my first positive experiences with being alone.  I still crave human interaction in the evenings, but at least now I see can adapt.  And if the Heron has indeed set up camp near me, I will name him and establish contact.  Dances With Birds.  No, not really.

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