Sunday, September 14, 2025

September 14th, 2025

 I want to step away from the political viewpoints of the major event from last week. I am not asking my Liberal Chalkheads or my Conservative Chalkheads to stand on a soapbox here.

Out of everything that happened, one thing stood out at me. A father turned his son in to authorities.
Let’s take Matt Robinson’s perspective.
I am a father.
That word once meant ballgames, scraped knees, fixing bikes, and waiting in the car after football practice, but now it means something I never imagined. It means looking at a grainy photo on the news, recognizing my own son’s face, and hearing him admit, with his head down, that yes, it is him. It means standing in a kitchen where the silence feels like a casket and realizing the boy I raised is now the man who took another man’s life.
I did what I had to do, but don’t think for a second it was easy. The world will say I chose courage over blood, and maybe that is true, but they don’t know how deep it cuts to hand your son over to the very people who will cage him, maybe even kill him. My duty as a father didn’t stop when I saw those photos, it widened. It became more about truth, about justice, about making sure more fathers didn’t get that midnight knock on the door.
Every parent prays their child won’t be the headline, won’t be the mugshot, won’t fall into the pit. We hope for the best and fear the worst, and one day the worst knocked on my door. I could have looked away, made excuses, clung to the belief that my boy was still good inside, but belief is not blindness.
I had to face what was in front of me and in that moment, I asked myself what God would have me do. What my faith teaches about truth and responsibility. Faith without work is dead. It wasn’t enough to pray in silence. I called in a pastor and leaned on my faith.
Because fatherhood isn’t only about protecting your own. It's about protecting everyone else as well.
Of course there were signs. A shadow here, a silence there, a drift into corners of anger that I didn’t fully understand.
Did I miss them?
Did I ignore them?
I’ll carry those questions forever.
Every father wonders if he should have listened harder, asked again, pushed more, fought more. For me it is too late to change that story, but maybe not for another dad out there. Now I live in the aftermath. I didn’t bury my son in a grave, but I buried him in another way...
...behind walls, behind chains, behind a justice system that will not give him back.
Parents who bury their children grieve with flowers on the grass. I will now grieve every morning with the knowledge that my son is alive but lost to me forever. Prison is another kind of coffin and I am the one who closed the lid.
So, what will my legacy be?
Some will say I did the right thing, that I was a “father of justice,” but what will my son say? What will he carry, knowing it was his own father who handed him over? I don’t know.
All I know is I could not let him run from the law, from the truth, from himself. They say the hardest thing a parent can do is bury their child, and maybe that is true, but I have done something just as impossible. I have buried my son alive into the cold earth of the state, knowing he may never come out. There is no prayer strong enough to soften that blow, no word that can carry the weight. There is only the hope that one day, because of what I did, another father will never have to face this choice.
That is it Chalkheads! I didn't look at this from a political viewpoint, but by a perspective that I could relate to... Fatherhood.
Let's shake away from today's lesson in life and reach for some gusto. It is Sunday Funday and we have some gridiron going on.
Grabber section tells you how much time you have to pick out a trick or treat costume. It also gives you the timeline to prepare for the turkey dinner debates.
Go out there today and measure how long your shadow is getting as Chicagoland sunsets are creeping for the last couple nights after seven o'clock!




Saturday, September 13, 2025

September 13th, 2025

    I was sitting on the balcony watching the sun drop behind the courtyard building across the street. The September heat finally loosening its grip as the sun waved bye-bye. The bourbon in my hand was cooling against a single ice chip, doing its job as much as I was letting it.

One by one, the Shepkids wandered out to check on their Oldman. Each with their own little request, each reminding me that even on quiet nights, fatherhood doesn’t punch a clock.
George poked his head out first. “You okay, Big Man? Can you make some popcorn for me?” That is George, checking in, steady as he goes, with a snack request that is as much ritual as his favorite snack is on a Friday night.
Hazel followed, asking if I could make her dinonuggies. The girl knows what she wants and sees no reason not to ask for it.
Then Fritz came out, not with food in mind but a shower. Typical middle child move... practical, reserved, and somehow the one that is stuck to be the glue of the family.
Fritz sat down a moment to shoot the shit.
I had shuffle running on Spotify, playing through my list of favorite tunes. Fritz paused, listened, then asked, “What are you listening to?” I told him it was the song I played every time his mom was giving birth to him, his brother, and his sister... Kate Bush’s “This Woman’s Work.”
It was my shorthand way of saying that this was the soundtrack to your arrival into my life. He blinked, then asked, “You actually listened to this song every time Mom had us?”
Truth is, the song played when I was asked to leave the delivery room while the epidural was happening.
Why ruin the poetry of it?
I let him believe the tune was pouring out as he squeezed his way into the world. Damn if that late-’80s song doesn’t still make me cry, still make me run the reel of what-ifs in my head, but screw the what-ifs.
Those three days, each birth, were the most magical days of my life. Kate Bush nailed the feeling better than I ever could.
Someday, I will tell them the whole story. That the one born on July 24th was conceived while their mom and I wore Halloween costumes, her favorite holiday. That the two knuckleheads arrived out of Thanksgiving spirit, which has always been my holiday of choice. Those details can wait. For now, I’ll let the myth live a little longer.
Fritz got his shower.
Hazel settled for a yogurt and a banana instead of her nuggets.
George munched on Orville Redenbacher.
And me?
I finished my bourbon, leaned back, and let the stars shine over Riverside and the Divorced Dad District. It wasn’t about popcorn or showers or Spotify or dinonuggies. It was about them showing up, one by one, orbiting the Oldman with their simple asks. Proof that in all the things I should’ve done, there is one thing I never failed at...
...I always showed up for them.
Saturday brings rugby and the halfway point to Saint Patrick's Day. If you don't have anything to do... Go out to Lemont and watch the Blaze ruck or go to The James Joyce and hear the bagpipes fill the air. 1983 is Flashback on XRT today.




Friday, September 12, 2025

September 12th, 2025

    Life has a way of serving me a lesson in humility. A sign, an event, sometimes even a déjà vu. Something always shows up to put me in my place. Whenever I start to complain or wallow, the world finds a way to knock me down a peg and remind me to pull my head out of my ass. That’s the heart of today’s quote: there is always perspective if you’re willing to see it.

Since it’s National Milkshake Day, I will add this... give me a malt over a shake any day. But truth is, either one is a win.




Thursday, September 11, 2025

September 11, 2001: A Morning lost


   I was thirty-five years old on September 11th, 2001. By then, I had been working in the bond room at the Chicago Board of Trade long enough to know the rhythm of a trading day. The morning rituals, the camaraderie, the jokes, the way the floor woke up and came alive with the opening bell. The scream of down ticks and the roar of up ticks.

What I did not know, what none of us knew, was that this particular Tuesday morning would be unlike any other. A day when the world would shift. A day when a colleague’s voice on the other end of my headset would vanish forever.
It started out like every other workday.
The congress L carried me from Oak Park into the city, the train rattling over familiar tracks across the westside, the skyline growing larger at every stop. It was warm, unseasonably so, the kind of September morning that makes you wonder if summer has not quite let go yet. I walked into the Loop, coffee in hand, morning paper under my arm, White Sox cap pulled to my brow and into the Board of Trade building I went. The routine was comforting as I swiped through the turnstiles, nodding at the security guards, taking the escalator to the fourth floor.
Once I got up to the trading floor, it was like slipping into an old pair of shoes. I pulled on my trading jacket, shoved a water bottle into the pocket, and took that first deep breath of pit air… sweat, cologne, newspaper print, coffee, and adrenaline. I made the rounds, shaking hands and tossing hellos to my customers. Sharing a few quick jokes with the guys in the pit. That was our ritual, too, grease the wheels with camaraderie before the bell.
Then I grabbed my headset. That headset was my lifeline. Every day it plugged me into two worlds. One voice here in Chicago, Jeff, a cash trader with Rosenthal and one voice in New York, Jimmy O’Brien, OB, working as a bond broker at Cantor Fitzgerald.
Jimmy was thirty-three, a husband, a father, living in Park Slope, Brooklyn. He was the kind of guy who could bust your balls and make you laugh in the same breath. He had that unmistakable New York accent that could cut through the chaos of the markets.
Jeff was not on yet that morning, so it was just me and Jimmy shooting the shit as we waited for the 7:20 open. The conversation was easy, the kind of small talk that builds friendships across miles of wire. He told me he walked his dogs to Prospect Park and went home. He took it easy with his family, watching the Giants play the Broncos on Monday Night Football.
I told him about my softball game, how I struck out and had to buy the team a round of overpriced shots. He laughed hard, really leaned into it, busting my balls with that Brooklyn swagger. We had a running thing about me being the big Chicago Midwest hayseed guy and him being the marble mouth New Yorker. That morning was no different. For a few minutes, it felt like every other day.
Then Jeff clicked in. The trio was complete, and we went to work.
The open was quiet. No big numbers, no market shockers, just another Tuesday. I was quoting bids and offers to Jeff, feeding him prices while Jimmy worked orders in the cash market. In the background I could hear Jeff and OB volleying back and forth, moving size, pushing orders. The headset was alive with their voices, and I was right in the middle, the bridge between Chicago and New York.
And then… silence.
Jeff suddenly shouted, “OB, you there? What the fuck—OB, am I filled?”
But OB did not answer.
I looked up at the Jumbotron on the trading floor. The image hit me like a punch to the chest. One of the World Trade Center towers had black smoke pouring from the side. My stomach dropped.
I told Jeff, “Flip on CNBC. Look at what is going on at the Trade Center right now.”
An uncomfortable pause and then the line went dead. Jeff had hung up, no doubt trying to reach OB directly, trying to figure out if he was okay. Trying to make sure that trade was not the last thing they ever worked together.
I took off my headset and stared at the screen. The pit went still. Hundreds of traders, usually loud and raucous, stood frozen, eyes glued to the smoke curling out of that tower. The air felt thick, like we had all stepped into a different world.
Phones started ringing across the floor. Customers liquidated positions, locals got flat, and one by one, traders and clerks slipped out of the building. None of us knew what was next. Was Chicago the next target? Was the Sears Tower, The Board of Trade, the Federal building in the crosshairs? We had no roadmap for what we were seeing.
The Board of Trade did not close right away. That is something I will never forget. While chaos unfolded on live TV, the exchange dragged its feet, waiting. Finally, after the second tower was hit, after news of the Pentagon attack broke and another plane was unaccounted for, the order came down the markets would shut immediately.
That was it. The spell broke.
We surged toward the exits, jackets still on, papers abandoned, all of us funneling down escalators, through the coatroom, out into the streets. Hundreds of people, all at once, pushing into the Loop, desperate to get out of downtown. I bolted for the Congress stop, hopped the subway, and sat in a train car full of pale, stunned faces.
The ride out to Oak Park was a blur. Underground for stretches, disconnected from news, we sat in silence. By the time the train broke into daylight near Halsted, word rippled through that one of the towers had collapsed. Nobody was sure which one. North, South, it did not matter. A building I had seen with my own eyes was gone. Thousands of people were inside. My friend might have been one of them.
Back in Oak Park, the sky was shockingly blue. Thin, wispy clouds floated like nothing had happened. The air smelled of late summer, almost sweet like corn. It was surreal. I did not go straight home. Instead, I cut into Ascension Catholic Church, my parish. The doors were wide open. Inside, it was empty. I lit a candle and knelt, the waxy scent filling the silence. I prayed, though my mind was a storm. Tears came, hot and heavy. I did not know if OB was alive. Deep down, I already knew.
The sound of school bells rang outside. Children poured into the playground, screaming, laughing, chasing each other like it was any other recess. Their joy was piercing. I remember thinking, we just lost our comfortable world. Childhood innocence colliding with the harshness of what had just happened. America was under attack. We weren’t naïve anymore.
I walked the five blocks home slowly, still in a daze. It wasn’t even noon yet, but I craved a margarita from the Mexican place up the street. The bar wasn’t open. So, I sat alone in my apartment, flipping through channels, watching replays of the towers falling, trying to piece together scraps of information. I called colleagues, I called friends and I tried to reach OB over and over again. Nothing.
My girlfriend, the woman who would later become my wife, was taking graduate classes at DePaul that morning. She caught a train out to Oak Park as soon as she could. Her father, my future father-in-law, had been in his law office in the Loop, but he made it home safely, too. We checked in with family and friends, one by one, ticking names off a mental list, making sure they were accounted for.
But there was one name I couldn’t cross off.
Jimmy O’Brien didn’t make it out.
That realization sank in like concrete. He had been on the other end of my headset one minute, laughing about me striking out in softball, and the next, silence, smoke, collapse... Gone.
So much happened that morning, and by noon it felt like the world had aged a century. The millennium came in like a boxer rocked by an unseen uppercut. The trading floor, that sacred stage of my working life, was suddenly small and powerless. The rituals of yelling and screaming and hand signals seemed meaningless against the images of towers crumbling, lives ending and innocence lost.
I think back on that day often, not just the horror, but the details. The water bottle in my jacket pocket. The sound of OB’s last laugh. The pictures on the Jumbotron when the first smoke appeared. The rush of bodies at the turnstiles. The blue September sky in Oak Park. The empty church. The children’s laughter. The silence of my apartment.
September 11th, 2001 was the day America changed, but for me, it was the day I lost a colleague and a friend. The day a Brooklyn accent went silent forever on my headset. Years later they found six inches of Jimmy’s shinbone. September 11th quickly moves further away with time. I age through life continuing my career, getting married, having children, getting a divorce and OB will always be thirty-three.
Years throw their elbows, but the story keeps its shape. Sometimes I think about that last conversation with OB and how absolutely nothing in it would have made the highlight reel of our lives. Walking the dogs, watching football and me striking out like a bum. That is the point. The day before a world ends is never an opera, it is a soft shoe. It is a laugh you think you will hear again in ten minutes. It is a man in Park Slope walking back from Prospect Park with two leashes in one hand and a bottle of beer in the other, thinking about ordinary things. It is a Chicago guy playing softball with his buddies from the neighborhood, thinking about ordinary things. Two men, two cities, one headset.

 

 


September 11th, 2025

                                                             May their memory be a blessing

Sunrise this morning is at 6:27



Wednesday, September 10, 2025

September 10th, 2025

 What if tonight is the last night you go to bed?

That is what September 10th is. It is the last night thousands of people went to sleep thinking they would wake up Tuesday morning, kiss their kids, walk the dog, grab a coffee, make the opening bell and have a normal day.
But they didn’t.
They had their last day.
For me, September 10th, 2001, was softball night. I pulled on a pair of softball pants, threw on my Wild Turkey jersey, and drove over to Ridgeland Common for the first game of the fall season. Oak Park autumn ball isn’t like summer ball, the games move fast. Every batter starts with a 1-and-1 count. By the end of the season, we are playing under stadium lights at 9:30 at night with wind chills, so shaving off pitches was survival.
First at-bat, I step in, brain on autopilot, and rope one down the first-base line foul. That’s strike two. Next pitch floats in, high and lazy, clear ball… ump rings me up. I forgot about the fall pitch count and struck out without taking a last swing.
The Wild Turkeys bench exploded... not angry, but delighted. Because in our dugout, you strike out, you buy shots, and back in 2001, Irish car bombs were the weapon of choice. Twelve players, plus girlfriends, spouses, hangers-on… two hundred bucks evaporated out of my wallet before I left the field. That was my Monday night, September 10th.
The next morning, headset on before the open, I checked in with Jeff at Rosenthal and Jimmy O’Brien from Cantor Fitz. Brooklyn guy, voice like gravel and traffic horns.
“So, what’d you do last night, Jombo? More of that Chicago beer-league hayseed softball?”
I told him about the strikeout, the shots, the damage to my wallet. He laughed so hard I can hear his coffee spill.
Half an hour later, an airplane went through Jimmy’s trading room.
That was it.
One minute, we are busting balls about Irish car bombs and softball. Next minute, he’s gone. He never called back. Never got to walk his dogs again. Never held his five-week-old son again. Jimmy’s name is carved in marble at Ground Zero now.
That is why this word is in the Grabber section today: Squander.
I never stepped into another batter’s box after that and I have never squandered a day since. That is why I write these chalkboards. That is why I point out the sun, the moon, the planets, the stars. That is why I use the word astonishing so much. Because every damn day is.
September 10th is a day to live for the people who didn’t get September 12th. Take the dogs for a walk. Call your parents if you still can. Meet a friend for oysters. Order the cannoli and the glass of port. Tell your kids you love them twice, not once.
Jimmy O’Brien’s children are adults now. He never had the chance to watch them grow up and that is why we never forget.
Because one day, without warning, we will all have our Monday night.
Don’t squander today.




Tuesday, September 9, 2025

September 9th, 2025

 The Cave, the Treasure, and the 14,471 Day Drought....

Fourteen thousand, four hundred seventy-one days.
That is how long it has been since the Chicago Bears won Super Bowl XX. Back when Walter Payton still carried the rock, Ditka still chewed gum like it owed him money, and McMahon’s headband was cooler than all the quarterbacks we have had since.
Today’s chalkboard says, “The cave you fear to enter holds the treasure you seek.” Well, around here, that cave is called Soldier Field. Every September, Chicago walks right up to that dark entrance like a pack of suckers with season tickets and old memories. We squint past the shadows, hoping this year, maybe this year, we find the damn treasure.
Only ghosts live in that toilet seat stadium. Duerson, Payton, McMichael and The Super Bowl Shuffle. The monsters have left, and the cave swallowed the roar. What is left is a city leaning on hope the way a drunk leans on the bar at closing time. Praying that the next round is the one that finally changes everything.
Fourteen thousand, four hundred seventy-one days since the last title. One more September, one more chance to chase the treasure.
If you’re scared to walk into the cave again, you’re not alone....
...but here in Chicagoland, we keep walking in because that is what this city does, we show up.
Because we are the Bears shuffling crew and we don’t stop fighting for our Monsters of the Midway, even if it kills us.




Monday, September 8, 2025

September 8th, 2025

 It is going to be a long day. I woke up at two o’clock in the morning and if I stay up to watch the Bears… Monday will be longer the Canterbury Tales.

Tuesday will be tired, but who can sleep when we are in the middle of such a gorgeous end of summer, beginning of autumn.
From the full moon to the Monsters of the Midway, it’s going to be a miraculous Monday.
Bear Down.




September 7th, 2025

      Being a baseball fan in Chicago is like being in a bad marriage. You keep showing up, keep believing, and somehow keep getting your heart stomped on. We finally got a couple of miracles in this lifetime, Sox in 2005, Cubs in 2016. That is more than most of our parents and grandparents ever got. They lived and died waiting for parades that never came.

On the South Side, the Sox are just about to put us out of our misery. Up north, the Cubs still have “a chance,” but don’t kid yourself, being a Cub fan just means your disappointment shows up in September instead of June.
Then there are the Bears... God help us.
Monday night kicks off another season of Monsters of the Midway mythology, and it’s been forty years since they were kings. As of today, they’re technically “in the hunt” for a Super Bowl. By Tuesday morning, that hunt will look more like a crime scene.




Saturday, September 6, 2025

September 6th, 2025

 I’ve got the Shepley scowl. I thought it was my Oldman’s trademark, but it turns out that it came bundled with the Shepley big ass. I inherited both, no refunds, no exchanges. That is why I do my “smile ups” every morning, one hundred of them if I can. I do them while brushing my teeth, shaving, shampooing. I gotta keep the face loose before the world hardens it up.

I try to flash a grin wherever I can. Elevator rides, grocery store aisles, gas stations and especially at the doctor’s waiting room. I will even smile at the poor bastard standing next to me at the urinal. If he looks uncomfortable, I hit him with one of Don Shepley’s greatest hits: “This must be where all the pricks are hanging out!”
Best time to test your smile is during traffic altercations. Picture it... Mr. Subaru rolls up, ready to bark at me at the stoplight. My grin either cools him down or lights him up. That’s when I drop the Oldman’s hammer: “Listen, Scout — you don’t matter in your own life. Why should you matter in mine?” Smiling throughout...
I like smiling at strangers because it throws the world off balance. It keeps them guessing... and hell, sometimes it even connects us for a second or two. So, I’m making it official. September 6th is Smile Saturday. Go make the world astonished with your smile!
Flash it at the next person you see. If it doesn’t change their day, maybe it’ll change yours.