Sunday, June 28, 2009

Mark Gives it a TRI

So what do you do when you decide you want to get into better shape? Join a gym? Call Jenny Craig? Start counting calories? These all sound like fine solutions to me but apparently not to Mark. Months ago Mark came home and announced his new radical plan for getting into better shape: He got online and registered for a triathlon.
For his very first Tri, he picked one in the lovely setting of Vernal Utah, population 7,714 and home of a serious plethora of what appears to be giant paper mache dinosaurs all in homage to the extinct beasts that once roamed its high desert valleys. As we make the drive, I begin to wonder if holding an endurance race in an area that's got such a harsh climate that it killed off formidable Jurassic creatures is really a smart idea.
As you can tell by the naive smile on Mark's face, this thought has eluded him. Here he is joyously filling out the paperwork the day before the race. No need for subtle foreshadowing about the events that you are about to read. You and I both know the grin in this photo will soon be diabolically sweated off his face...
And now for a few interesting complexities for those of you unfamiliar with triathlon racing...(this category would also include both of us.)

Because this is an event in which entails various outfits and footwear, racers get to enjoy a little permanent marker tattooing. Each arm gets your race number boldly printed on it while your calves get marked with the event you are racing on the left calf and your age on the right one. The letter stands for the event: "O" stands for "Olympic Triathlon" and the "S" stands for the "Sprint" race, which is half the distance in each event- Swimming, Cycling, and Running. It is interesting to see that this is the one time people are proud to be older and not younger. Mark admitted that several times during the race he would check to see the age of the racer he was passing and if said racer was younger he was sure to flash and flaunt his right calf at them so they'd know that just got passed by "an old guy". And yes, those are Mark's tale-tell legs pictured on the left.

The next interesting issue is what I call the "logistics race", this takes place the night before the actual race. When you enter a standard running race, my guess is that you lace up your shoes, put your number on and run. This Tri deal is a whole different scenario altogether. The evening before the race Mark and I were going through each part of the race blow by blow in order to get it all set up smoothly. It was a race in and of itself. The Tri starts with the swimming so you've got to set out your wetsuit, goggles, and swim cap. Then just up from the swim docks you need to bring your bike, helmet, water bottles, and then rubber band your riding shoes into an upright position locked onto your pedals and have them ready at station 2.
Then, hopefully you haven't forgotten anything for the cycle event before you drive off to set up station 3 where you set out your running shoes and sox and maybe some energy goo...oh yeah, and a baseball hat. Hopefully you'll remember where you set them out because once you've swam through a gauntlet of racers, deliriously crawled out of the water and make your way up the steep boat ramp to your bike, strip off your wet suit and ride your bike for 26 oh-so refreshing miles, you are not thinking too clearly as to where you set your shoes out for the running portion of the event at station 3.
Luckily for Mark, we all decided to make our own cheering section across from his running shoes so he was sure to find them right away. We camped out and waited for him to arrive. The kids spent their time working on posters and signs to hold up for him when he showed up.

Finally, Mark came though on his bike! I'm not sure how he found the energy to wave to the camera but he did it.

He hopped off the bike onto weak legs that were suffering from muscle confusion (are we swimming? biking? now you want me to run?). He hung up his bike and grabbed his running shoes and off he went...

We gathered up our signs and headed to the high school stadium where the finish line waited. Many racers from the shorter race were already coming though. We cheered as an 82-year old grandmother crossed the finish line, her first-ever sprint triathlon.

Finally, Mark rounded the corner and made his way onto the track. The kids were so excited and they ran out and ran him in. This is Chloe and niece Cailey running him towards the finish line.


And here's the Big Finish! That grin in the pictures several paragraphs ago, it was no where to be seen on his face. I think it sweated off during the first lap of the lake event.


Mark places SECOND in his age division.



Checking the times...and here with Mitchell who refused to make a sign out of his posterboard. Mitchell has to do everything in 3-D so he sat along the road, waited for his dad, and made a poster board trophy for him while he waited.


The last laugh was had by the kids. Vernal's Dino Tri is a family event, so while we all waited for the racers to come through they held a bunch of races for the kids.

Each child that raced got a metal just like the Triathletes! So much for the glory of the medal, Mark could have saved himself a lot of time and torture and run with the kids! Mark didn't want to talk about racing for the rest of the day but this morning, he was back online searching for another race...this time threatening to sign up the whole family! (I think I'd'rather hold a sign...stay tuned.)

Turning Nine...How Divine

True to fashion, we celebrated Chloe's ninth birthday..."Chloe Style" which is to say, is not "Stacy Style". My kinda birthday involves activities like sleeping in, lounging about, reading, and eating copious amounts of partially hydrogenated trans fats. A Chloe kinda birthday starts at the crack of dawn. Since the day she was born she has kept a regimented schedule fully living the mantra "early to bed early to rise", much to my night-owl chagrin. Each morning at precisely 6:30, Chloe is up and greeting the new day with song and smiles and by 8:30 each evening, she'll pronounce a "good night" and put herself to bed. This morning was no different. At 6:30am she threw open our bedroom door, announced it was her birthday, and said, "I'm ready to open my presents!" Five minutes later, amidst a swirl of colored tissue paper, the major portion of standard birthday rituals were finished, done, complete. All that was left was the cake and candles and it wasn't even breakfast!

Chloe was born totally bald (with little prospect for hair in the foreseen future) with two fingers in her mouth and one hand ready to slap you should you offend her in any way. Although she is small and delicate looking she has always been fully capable of defending herself from her three older siblings-each of whom have all experienced the pain and tragedy that comes from futile attempts at taking advantage of her. Chloe is focused, self-scheduled, and totally organized. She never forgets time, date, appointment, or even a passing promise.















Always the fashion-ista, Chloe is willing to offer advice and free consultations on fashion and the proper application of lipsmackers lipgloss. Here, she helps her cousin bring out her understated beauty. Through the magic of Chloe's make-up artistry, a brave Madi patiently undergoes a Tammy Faye Baker transformation.

Chloe's always had an unexplainable fondness for Gorillas and Monkeys. Two things I've always hated. She sleeps cuddled up with a giant gorilla that scares the heck out of most people, me included. Not your cute and cuddly kind of crush if you ask me. Frankly I'm a little worried she's gonna grow up and marry an unusually hairy man. yikes!

Chloe's also got a natural inclination for fun and danger. Once, after begging for a new pink motorcycle helmet, Chloe happened to roll her quad which resulted in the crushing of her existing blue helmet. The crash gave us quite a scare, but not Chloe, she quickly crawled out from under her quad, held up her split helmet and said, "Can I get a pink one now??". She's always the first one to try almost anything. She was the first (and only) child to volunteer to be the guinea pig for Mark's bungee jumping plot/fiasco when he asked the kids if they wanted to try a jump from the second story banister with some weird-fangled exercise band he found. After that debacle Chloe now asks a few more detailed questions before subjecting herself to her father's crazy ideas...which she'll usually try anyway!

It's been a fun nine years with this adventurous girl! Happy Birthday Chloe!

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Oh The Things They'll Do

Summer is officially here! Not so much in the weather department (its rained every darn day) but as for school, it has officially let out and we've declared our right to summer by wearing our shorts and flip flops no matter how much it rains!

Summer around our house used to be a mixed bag of tricks. Mostly days of carefree fun sprinkled with a little boredom and a titch of the mundane. We learned early on that summer smiles can quickly turn into torturous tedium which signals the start of the cantankerous crooning of those two dreaded words “I'M BORED!”. Luckily, at the Skillman house, this sentence is rarely heard anymore and, if by chance uttered, it’s done in a hushed whisper amongst siblings and never in the presence of a parent! How’s this done? It’s quite simple really. According to the Skillman’s Family Rules of Conduct: “Any child found uttering the dreadful words “I’m bored” has plenty of time on their hands in which to scrub a toilet!”

So on our first official day without school, I heard Connor and Chloe downstairs happily entertaining themselves. To avoid the dread of latex gloves and comet, they have learned to make fun where it doesn’t exist. After an hour of giggles, they bound up the stairs looking like this...
They've decided the cat might need an outfit too, I'll keep you posted on that frightening situation. As for why we’ve got neon duct tape around the house, that is another blog in itself...

Friday, June 12, 2009

He Admits Defeat

Some of our favorite family adventures occur in a giant sandbox called The Dunes. We'd never even noticed this part of the Oregon Coast before our friends the Sharps lured us there six years ago, and we've been hooked ever since. Over Memorial Day weekend, we loaded up the trailer and headed out to meet up with our friends for a weekend of fun. Little did we know, we would witness a rarely seen event...the amusing defeat of a Dune Master.

From start to finish, going to the dunes is always an entertaining mix of thrills, spills, and deflated wheels. Towing heavy trailers on windy coastal roads and narrow bridges is always an adventure, but doesn't even come close to the ultimate challenge of towing what's basically a portable garage out into a precariously sandy camp site. To do this you've got to purge the vessel of it's contents, let most of the air out of the tires (Yes, that's right, purposely deflate your tires!) and with full-throttle, hit the sand like you're running from the law (in this case it would be the law of gravity). Although we had a nice wide open campsite, as you see deceptively pictured here, it was anything but easy to get into. In fact, the last time we camped here a few years back, Grampa Bear had a side-view mirror ripped off by a tree, Ken Guerra had his trailer smashed up, and Mark, as always, had to be towed in by Mont Sharp. Damage to your truck or trailer or even both are considered badges of honor out at the Dunes but no one likes to be in the awkward position of needing to be towed at the dunes, it is a great scandal among men, considered to be the ultimate dune disgrace! But, in a miraculous turn of events, this time Mark and the trailer made it through the gauntlet of sand, trees, and steep slopes unscathed and all on his own. Shockingly, it was Mont, a.k.a "The Dune Master" who got stuck. To witness such a spectacle, I must admit, was an awkward but delightful surprise. The great Mont Sharp, the Dune Master himself, the man who is always getting the Skillmans out of trouble, now in need of a tow! We tried our hardest to appear grim-faced at his precarious predicament but inside we relished every bit of it!

Check out this very narrow passage that the trailers have to thread through to get out into the camp site. This is the same tree we now call "The Can Opener" because it peeled back part of the roof of Ken's trailer. If you look close you can see the mark on the tree.



Here's how close Mont came to smashing his poor trailer into this tree.






Luckily for Mont, his troubles only resulted in the loss of a vent cover you see here.It was scraped off by a tree on the other side. A little hot glue and it should be like new, right?




Despite the hardships Mont suffered getting into our campsite, and the miraculous ease at which the Skillmans enjoyed threading though, once we get settled into camp it's time to do what we came for...RIDE! We've got all kinds of rides: family rides, night rides, a ride for just the wives, the ride to the beach ride, and even an "adults ride the little kids quads and hurt themselves ride, but the fiercest of all them is what we call "The Boys Ride". These rides are strictly men-only for good reason. The pace at which they ride is for the mentally insane. When a new male comes to camp who's a first-time rider we warn them that this might not be the best introductory tour of dune riding and caution them against going for this ride. Most men can't summon the courage to suffer the humiliation of admitting their amateur riding status because it would require them to stay back at camp with a bunch of girls. Amidst the intoxicating delirium of testosterone, every new rider will suit up and head out for the boys ride keeping their inexperience to themselves. Unfortunately for them, their little secret isn't kept for long as they all too quickly show back up at camp having gotten lost, scared, or in need of stitches-and sometimes all three.

Sometime during the weekend a couples ride will take place. Here's Deanne and I all ready to go (and yes mom, we wear our helmets). We have become a bit weary about couples rides these days, they sound like a great time to take a leisurely ride out in the sand with your spouse, but this is NOT the case. Deanne and I were a little slow to discover the REAL truth behind the "couples ride". It is actually a conspiracy of the most diabolical kind. We wives mistakenly thought it was a sweet gesture by the husbands to go with their wives on a fun outing without the kids. This is not the case at all. Our discovery came after a particularly grueling ride that seemed treacherously fast and our having to stand on the pegs almost the entire time. When the boys finally let us stop for a little mid-ride breather, I was out of breath as if I'd been sprinting and when I finally caught my breath I said, "Man you guys are going really fast, I can barely keep up!" Out of the corner of my eye I see the husbands hiding devious grins. Deanne and I looked at them, then at each other and wondered what was going on. It was then they admitted the real truth behind their scheme. Apparently, according to Mont himself, the couples ride is designed to "increase the caliber of the wives riding skills". So much for the notion that they simply enjoyed our company!

Thank goodness for the family rides. They're a little less "testosterone induced" although each ride seems to increase in speed as the weekend progresses.




Some hill climbing.







In between rides we often find inventive ways to pass the time. Here's a game of sand baseball. A little caution here, as your glove will never be totally rid of sand once you play on this field, nor will your shoes or ears.



We also like to golf since you only need to bring your nine iron, since it's just one giant sand trap out there...






Next came barrel racing, a new sport brought to the dunes by a few bored racers amongst our group. Of course, you'll notice our version of barrel racing is done around flags and not barrels, but calling it "flag racing" apparently doesn't pass the "testosterone test".



Here's Chloe giving it a try...she actually made better time than her own mother. I'd like to think my eight year old out-raced me because her quad is a lot smaller than mine but I think the real reason is that her quad REALLY IS a lot smaller (it couldn't be that she was actually faster than me, could it?).


Mont gives it a try or two or three...four...five...six times, and still doesn't qualify for the best time! The Dune Master, already humbled by needing a tow now loses to a 16-year old kid. On his first attempt Mitchell came out the clear winner...that is until Mark, determined to outrace his son, repeatedly tried over and over until he made the best time (not bad for a forty-something year old guy on his 12th try).


Once the winner was declared, I captured this amazing footage of Mont the Dune Master (that's like a Jedi Knight of the Dunes)and his ultimate surrender. Be sure to play it over and over like we do, because this is rare footage.


As if things couldn't get more humiliating, Mont also had to be towed back out of the dunes. May I add, victoriously, that this is the first time the Skillmans didn't need a tow at all. (Que the video!)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

There's no ASAP at the DMV

Sunday…
As fate would have it, Mitchell’s 16th birthday happened to land on a Sunday. A Sunday! This is no good, especially for a teenage boy who’d rather be celebrating his momentous milestone by getting his license and not by sitting on a hard church pew contemplating hellfire and damnation.

Monday…
Bright and early, Mitchell and I arrive down at the Department of Motor Vehicles and are happy to find that we we're the first to arrive in the parking lot, ahhhh! No waiting in line! We park the car, skip excitedly to the door, and…it’s locked! What? How can this be? Mitchell had just waited 24 torturous hours with all the feigned patience and determination of a man on death row awaiting an 11th-hour pardon, only to find the door to his future would remain locked tight! Freedom denied! The sign read: “Mondays-Closed”. The DMV’s four-day workweek had shattered all hope. His car, like his dreams, would sit idle. Someone in President Obama’s administration should be alerted to the fact that the business hours of this particular branch of government has turned the campaigned promise of “HOPE” to “Nope”. Apparently “Yes We Can” only operates from 9-5pm Tuesday through Friday.

Tuesday…
Tuesday's tale is what your math teacher would call “a story problem”. Feel free to use the "new math" from my previous blog to see if you can solve it: The DMV stipulates that if you’re taking a written test you must be in line AND have your number called no less than one hour before closing, “No Exceptions”. Okay, so let’s do the math…hmmm…this means we can’t be called any later than 4pm and the line, if of average length, could take about 30 minutes should two service windows be hypothetically open and the lobby had less than say, five people in it. That means we’ve got to arrive no later than 3:30pm, but we must allow for the fact that school gets out at 3:45pm, 15 minutes past our time, plus it takes 10 minutes to pick him up and drive there at speeds no greater than 35mph (are you keeping up? I’m now reaching for my scientific calculator) therefore, we discover the total sum will require me to nab Mitchell out of the last bit of school and pick him up at about 3:20pm right? Wrong! Silly me, I forgot to factor in that it takes an additional 10 minutes to actually fill out the school’s paper work explaining why I am willfully retarding my son's education by taking him out of school mischievously early. So by the time I pen my way through the school's official forms declaring myself a derelict parent, you guessed it, we arrived 10 minutes too late to WAIT FOR for a test on Tuesday.

Wednesday…
Things are looking up. It’s “early out” at the high school and we’re ready to shake off the bad DMV vibes and try it again! This time, with the coordinated effort rivaling the tactics of General MacArthur, we set our watches, mapped our route into enemy territory, and set a rendezvous place and time to begin our DMV invasion. Like clockwork, everything went off as planned! We arrived 1 hour and 32 minutes before closing, took our number…and waited. Looking back, I should have been a little alarmed that the parking lot was packed full of cars, as was the waiting area, but I took comfort in the fact that there were three windows open and the line was moving right along. This could be our day! No sooner did we take our seats, the lady behind window #1 finishes up with her customer, shuts her window, and starts counting the money in her till! An hour-and-a-half before closing! She then turns and disappears behind a mysterious door where I assume secret closing rituals take place that must take precisely an hour and a half to orchestrate an official DMV shutdown. Now we were down to two open windows! I looked at Mitchell with widened eyes, and started fidgeting. “We’re gonna make it,” I reassured him timidly. Four minutes later the lady behind window #3 finishes with her customer and instead of calling the next number, she bends down and reaches for something…what could it be? Hurry lady…get your shoe-lace tied or pick up your dropped pen, or whatever it is and call the next number! Suddenly she stands back up, looks out at the packed waiting room, and shuts her window! Incredulously, she heads out into the lobby among the impatient masses holding a giant blue recycle bin! Thinking global (obviously not local) she proceeds to gather recyclables from all the lobby trash cans! I suddenly felt sick and needed to breathe in a paper bag(I wonder if she's got one in there?). We now had 10 minutes left before the DMV went to official "nope status". While she was saving the planet, I was trying to save my son-the room was swirling for the poor boy who was seeing his hopes and dreams getting refused, reused, and recycled! Tick-tock, tick-tock…we were glued to the clock on the wall. Then, like a dagger striking at our hearts, the big hand finally lurched to 4pm, our number was never called. At 4:05pm we left the DMV parking lot empty handed…again!

Thursday…
We’ve blocked Thursday’s events from our memory. Through a series of shock treatments we could probably begin to piece the shattered moments together but I’m not sure it'd be worth it. Whatever did happen, it clearly did not include the getting of any license.

Friday…
All is lost. There is no hope, only long lines.

Saturday...Sunday...Monday…
You guessed it…closed. closed. closed.

Tuesday…
A change of tactics. The gloves are off, there’s a score to settle. The plan: skip school, skip the written test, and go strait for the actual driving part. You have to have an appointment for that, won't that force them to take us? We’ll worry about taking the written part later! We arrive for our scheduled test early and to our overwhelming joy and satisfaction Mitchell's number was finally called! Late, but it was called! This was better than winning the lottery! Off he went, keys, car, proof of insurance, and DMV official test-giver. Twenty minutes later he was back with a huge smile and had passed the driving part. Yahoo! Then, we heard these melodious words, “Since you passed the driving part, would you just like to skip through the other line and take the written part right now?” They had surrendered. Victory was in sight! Mitchell strutted off to the test area to defeat the enemy that had forced him to drive with his mother for far too long.

Happily, he passed the written part and now it’s official, he’s licensed to hit the road. We’re fully taking advantage of the fresh excitement that takes hold of every new driver by sending him on all our monotonous errands before he uncovers the truth: that they’re really not that exciting to run and that’s why we’re not doing them ourselves. We figure we’ve got another two or three months before he catches on! Anyone need something from the store? He'll do anything but run to the DMV!

(Stay tuned for the crash blog. As we learned all to well with our first teen driver, it doesn't take long before we'll be inevitably blogging that impending disaster. This time we haven't abetted the situation by throwing a nice car into the mix, poor kid, that's what you get for being born second.)

Thursday, May 7, 2009

Confessions of a Baseball Fan

When Mark had to fly to San Francisco for a business meeting recently, we saw an opportunity to embed a little adventure into the trip. Since Connor has been playing spring Little League we thought it would be fun to take him to his first Major League baseball game. Impetuous as it was, our hatched little scheme was to sneak Connor out of town on a Thursday, call him in sick to school, and return him “healthy and recovered” on Monday morning. As if premeditated truancy was an act beyond his capacities, the excitement was altogether too much for Connor to keep safely locked up behind closed lips. By Wednesday the thrill of our impending escapade got the better of him and he revealed to everyone that he was skipping school to see a baseball game…including his teacher! This bit of news relieved me from committing one of the most dastardly parental crimes-falsifying an excuse note. The following Monday, I simply wrote: “Dear teacher, Connor skipped your classes on Thursday and Friday because he went to a baseball game instead.” So much for operation “Peanuts and Cracker Jacks”, Connor the mole had blown our cover.

Despite the scandals of skipping school, attending a Major League baseball game should be one of the foundations for educating a well-rounded American. In fact, I may be who I am today having been raised on ballpark franks with extra mustard. Then again, this may be the origin of my pernicious propensity to “steal” and wear tight pants. (okay, just kidding.)

As a native of Southern California, we baseball enthusiasts basically had two choices: you were either a fan of the Angels or a fan of the Dodgers. I was raised to be loyal to the former and an overzealous despiser of the latter. Clearly, but unknowingly at the time, I was really just a helpless child who was indoctrinated by my parents to bear false witness and foul prejudices towards any team that opposed the Angels. A lovely pastime I hope to pass along to my progeny.

In retrospect, from my adult point of view, it seems absurd that any fan of baseball, gifted with free will and in the market for a team to indulge their fanaticism upon, would arbitrarily choose to be an Angel fan. Admittedly, there’s the abysmal track record, which, would spurn the average fan’s basic need to align oneself to the most victorious side. But for me, the real heart of the matter is that Angels are benign winged wonders and not the sort of menacing baseball opponent that would strike fear into the heart of an adversary. Where’s the logic in that mascot? Smart teams name themselves after rebellious factions such as the Braves or Yankees or a freakish weather phenomenon like Tornados. Even the Brewers conjure up scandalous images of those law-less days of illicit rumrunners. All formidable sounding opponents don’t you think? So while my allegiance to Anaheim has never been called into question, it’s unconventional adoption of a peace-loving mascot has always troubled me. It’s hard to shake down a black and orange Giant fan when we show up for games in our velvety white shirts with halos and fairy wings embroidered on them. The biblical angel who slayed 185,000 Assyrians never really got a lot of publicity. You don’t see a lot of yard ornaments or dusty knick-knacks portraying this sort of cherub. People just don’t think of this terrifying version when they hear the word angel, but if that’s the kind of angel that Los Angeles meant to have as a mascot, the halo is certainly not getting the word out.

But the real truth of the matter is, for better or worse, you don’t choose a team, a team chooses you. It’s assigned by your family’s proximity to the nearest ballpark. The conventional question, when shopping for a home, is to inquire about the school district the prospective home resides in, what puzzles me is that no one ever poses the really important question which is “What professional sports teams will I be required to raise my children to blindly worship should I buy this house?.” Why does no one ever think to ask their realtor that? Kids will eventually grow up and move away. You can leave your school district but no matter where you move to, you will never rid yourself of the ingrained prejudicial fan lurking inside you.

The one lurking inside of me had developed an insatiable crush on Angel’s catcher Brian Downing, during his freakishly big glasses era no less. I was only seven or eight but I knew it was true love. And yes, I know, your asking yourself “Brian who?”, and to know this you would have to of been an Angel’s fan between 1978-1990 and quite possibly a freckle-faced girl fond of major league baseball players who wore unattractive eyewear. Brian was my lucky number 5 (sigh...). To this day that is my favorite sports number and each season I consider it my duty to try to coerce my baseball-playing son into picking that uniform number-with very limited success I might add.

Perhaps the only thing we Angels have in common with the pious breed of seraph is our patience. The all-capitals-kind-of-PATIENT. The kind that allows one to bear the stinging rebuke of relentless defeat, the kind a fan must summon in order to loyally wait until 2002 to win its first and only World Series. By then I was long gone from that sunny and gloriously warm womb of my childhood. I was a full-fledged Oregonian who could have easily hidden my true identity and changed teams in pursuit of an easy victory. But it was not to be, for the propaganda of my formative years had been so far-reaching that even shock therapy sessions could not have undone my deeply imbedded allegiance. For good or ill, it is my destiny to remain steadfast in my loyalty to the Angels-despite our pansy mascot and statistical carnage.

As with any sport, baseball fans take pleasure in the traditions and rituals that are unique to their game. I had to travel outside the country to understand that being a sports fan is like joining some sort of strange cult. You falsely believe everyone but your group is completely wacko. You never consider that your faction might be a bit peculiar until you witness the bizarre rites of someone else’s.

At a pub somewhere in northern England, I had an up close and personal encounter with an entirely different breed of sports fan, it was an eye-opening experience to be sure. I found myself mingling with a bunch of locals who were glued to the telly for an intense game of cricket (that is if cricket can be intense-I never caught on enough to know). For those of us living “across the pond”, it goes without saying that this is a highly confusing sport. Overcome by curiosity and emboldened with sheer stupidity, I plopped myself down, declared my American naiveté, and pronounced my desire to be educated! The pub-sters were more than happy to oblige my request and commenced launching information faster than I could absorb. Apparently educating a daft American is more intoxicating to a Brit than their lager, as I then spent the better part of a day marinating in a dizzying array of bizarre terminology and perplexing rules. I had officially entered the Twilight Zone.

As I attempted to gain an elementary understanding of this British sport (they like to complicate things with serious formalities), I found myself in the middle of an advanced course for which I had mistakenly not taken any of the pre-requisites (i.e. British Slang for Beginners) . These poor blokes will be disappointed to learn that the return on their investment was paltry, for the only thing I retained about cricket was this: The pitcher is called a bowler, the bat is still called a bat but doesn’t look like one. (It looks more like spanking paddle-minus the holes) and a strike is not what we consider a strike in baseball (I’m still trying to figure out what exactly it is). I struggle to recall that different hits in Cricket can be called a “slog”, a “snick”, and a “skier”-all which make as much sense to me as the terms “Nurdle”, “Grubber”, and “Googly” (these words even confuse my word processor and are currently highlighted in spellchecker red!). I realized this sport would never really make it to “the land of the free, the home of the brave” when I posed this question: “So, if the “bowler” pitches a ball and it accidentally hits the batter, does a fight ensue?” With the distain of a man who just stepped into something foul, the fellow scrunched up his face and replied, “Of course not, this is a gentleman’s sport!”

A gentleman’s sport indeed, and that is exactly what baseball is not, which leads me to conclude that cricket will forever defy an American’s attention span beyond a curious glossy-eyed gaze. But baseball, glorious baseball, now you’ve got something! A true American sport is one where verbally abusing the umpire is art form, scandalous and original insults are encouraged and at a premium. Baseball etiquette encourages fans to distract the pitcher by reminding him of the loose standards of his mother. Top the whole experience off with a few of those tasty ball park hot dogs that, if eaten anywhere else outside the stadium, would easily be discovered for food fraudulence…now you’ve got yourself a real sport!

Oh the splendor of a stadium! All these dubious traditions were the rites of my youth, and they gloriously awaited my son.

Inside the AT&T Park, a very focused Connor headed down near the dugout to watch the players warm up. He was dressed head-to-toe in his Giants uniform (yes, this stung a bit) and armed with a brand new ball, just in case. A dugout manager quickly spotted him in all his gleaming orange and black glory and called him over, the man then shouted something at Giants pitcher Tim “The Freak” Lincecum and motioned for him to come over. He handed him Connor’s ball and Lincecum signed it, gave Connor a high-five, and placed the ball back in his hands. In that horrific moment I was seized with terror, my son had officially become a fan of the wrong team!


The rest of the evening was filled with peanuts, hot dogs, high-fives with an occasional drunken stranger, and singing off-key to the organ. There’s something about crooning with 30,000 other shamelessly tone-deaf people that makes you feel like the world is flawless for a moment. At last, the Giants emerged victorious, which I didn’t mind one bit, perhaps due to the fact that they were not playing the Angels-not to mention for safety issues there remained the simple fact that I was covertly entrenched in the bleachers of enemy territory. I simply reminded myself that Giants would always remain the losers of the 2002 World Series against my beloved Angels.

As if the evening couldn’t get any better, Connor headed back down by the dugout one last time to gaze with boyhood wonder when suddenly, Giant’s catcher Bengie Molina emerged from the dugout and came back out onto the field. Like a surreal scene from a Hollywood movie, he tossed Connor a game ball followed by a hearty high five. A wide-eyed Connor walked back to the car that night with a baseball in each hand completely intoxicated with baseball.

The delirium of his baseball fever was still in full swing a few days later when Connor was called on to pitch during his own game. He had never pitched before in his life but you’d never know it by the way he strutted up to the mound. With the big leagues still fresh in his memory, he took his place on the hill, scratched at the dirt with his cleats, glared at the batter, then deceivingly wound up like he’d done it a million times and pitched the ball! His counterfeit enterprise struck the first two batters out! Lincecum's high-five must have passed on a little magic!

Perhaps my parents were right. A little inspiration (and indoctrination) never hurt a kid (look at me, I'm just fine!). I guess operation “Peanuts and Cracker Jacks” may have been successful after all.
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