Thursday, November 6, 2025

November 6th, 2025

 Let’s get back to a normal Morning Chalkboard.

The last couple days I did my best impression of Ernest Hemingway. I’m a big adjective guy and Papa didn’t have much use for them. It was tough to bang out seven-hundred-word stories without modifying my nouns.
Many of you might have received an email from me in the past. You noticed that I didn’t use pronouns, but had adjectives in my signature.
I use gregarious and grateful as my two adjectives.
That is how I roll.
I don’t cut myself short with he or him. I go for the gusto and let you know that I am a sociable and thankful man.
“Redbeans and Ricely yours, John S. Shepley (gregarious/grateful)”
I will have to admit that I stole that line in my signature from Louis Armstrong.
Damn, it’s three o’clock in the morning and I want a plate of redbeans. Actually, a bowl of chicken and sausage gumbo would hit the spot right about now.
Let’s get this Thursday started. I’m going to make some coffee and stand under the remainder of the Beaver Moon. I do it every month. It gets a little cold in the winter and I can’t afford much more shrinkage at my age.
Anyway, TMI…. Go get some nachos today and find something astonishing.




Wednesday, November 5, 2025

November 5th, 2025

 “The Moon Over Both Shores”

The moon rose slowly that night, heavy and low over the river. It hung there like a coin flipped by someone unseen, deciding who would win and who would lose.
On one bank, the people shouted.
On the other, they shouted back.
Between them, the current carried away the words until only the frogs and the crickets knew what was said.
An old man sat at the crossing bridge, a cigar burning between two fingers. He had been perched there since dusk, watching them build their fires. One side’s flames were blue, the other’s red, and the smoke climbed to the same pale sky. The observer wondered if the moon cared whose smoke would reach it first.
The moon had seen worse during past phases. It had watched cities burn and lovers promise forever. It had listened to generals speak of peace and men whisper of war. It forgave each one the same way as it shone, then turned its face away when the sun rose.
The old man flicked ash into the dark.
“They all think they own the night,” he said.
No one heard him but the river. The river didn’t argue. It only murmured its slow reply, the kind of truth that doesn’t need to be repeated.
Further down the shore, a young man climbed a crate to make himself taller. His voice carried like brass. He spoke of broken things and stolen dreams, his arms slicing the air as if cutting through fog.
The crowd roared.
Across the river, another man stood on another crate, shouting nearly the same words but meaning something else entirely. His crowd roared too.
The moonlight hit both of them, equal and unbending. It made their faces silver and hollow, like masks at a masquerade no one wanted to attend, but were forced by their own ignorance.
The old man lit another cigar. The match flared, and for a heartbeat he saw his own reflection in the flame... two eyes, tired and small, staring back.
“You can’t outshout the moon,” he said. “It listens to all and sides with none.”
When the wind picked up, the flags on both banks snapped and tangled on their poles. A few men kept shouting, but most grew quiet, realizing their fires had dimmed. The moonlight spread across the water like a clean sheet over a corpse.
A woman appeared at the edge of the bridge. She carried a lantern with a cracked glass and asked the old man if the crossing was safe.
“As safe as anything else tonight,” he said.
She nodded and started across. Her reflection wavered beneath her steps. In the middle, she stopped and looked at the sky.
“Funny thing,” she said. “The moon don’t seem so far when it’s full.”
The old man smiled.
“That is how it fools us. It comes close enough for hope, then backs away before we can touch it.”
When she reached the other side, she didn’t join either crowd. She kept walking into the dark, her lantern swinging like a second moon in her hand. The shouting started again behind her.
She didn’t look back.
The night deepened. The old man stayed until the moon climbed higher and the stars began to fade. He knew what would come with dawn. The posturing, the noise, the proud men claiming they’d won something. He had seen it before. They would call the daylight truth, but he knew better. Daylight only exposed what the night forgave.
The river whispered on, taking the ashes and echoes out to the sea.
By the time the first light touched the water, the bridge was empty, the crates abandoned, and the two fires burned to the same gray ash.
The moon, pale and distant now, watched from the western sky. It had no side, no speech, no mercy. It was only a mirror for men who couldn’t stand to see their own reflection in daylight.
When the sun finally rose, it washed away the silver, leaving only the smoke. The old man’s footprints led off the bridge and into the reeds. He had left before anyone noticed. Maybe he followed the woman with the lantern. Maybe he followed the moon.
And by the next night, when it rose again, it was thinner and less forgiving, but still there. Watching. Waiting for the shouting to start anew.
Because it always does. The shouting will never go away, but those shouting will be replaced. Replaced by time and future full moons.




Tuesday, November 4, 2025

November 4th, 2025

 The path wound through the woods like a ribbon forgotten by the sun.

The man walked it alone.
He had walked it before, in the spring when the leaves were young and green, in the summer when the air was thick and alive, and now, in the calm chill of November. The light fell differently each time, but it was always the same path.
He thought of peace as he walked. Not the kind you read about or pray for. The kind that comes for a few minutes in the quiet, when the only sound is the wind brushing through branches and the earth beneath your step. He wondered if that was all peace ever was, a brief stillness between storms. Maybe that is why men chase it like the holy grail.
The path reminded him of his father.
The old man used to walk these woods too, not for exercise or sport, but because it was the one place he could breathe. When the son was a boy, he didn’t understand that kind of silence. Now, years later, with the old man gone and his mother’s voice only an echo in memory, he finally understood. Their deaths hadn’t brought him peace, only a different kind of noise. Grief has its own hum.
He thought of his children next.
Each one different, each one still figuring out what their own peace looked like. He had tried to teach them what his father never said aloud that life isn’t about winning, it’s about walking. You raise them, you steady their wings, and one day they go. They turn back for a moment and smile before the trees swallow them up. You want to follow, but you know it isn't your journey. The path can't run backward.
The sun shifted.
It had started on his left when he began the walk, but now the angle had changed. It broke through the trees in slivers, lighting the path ahead in pieces. That is how peace worked, he thought, it didn’t come all at once. It came in shards and fragments, through breaks in the branches, through the little mercies of time.
He thought about his work, the decades of it.
The winning years and the bad ones. The nights staring at the ceiling wondering if any of it meant something. Success had never felt like peace. It was motion. The same restless motion that carried him through the years, from one decade to another, one chapter to the next. You can make money in this life, he thought, but you can’t buy stillness.
The woods have grown darker now.
The light had turned amber, thin and tired. He reached a bend in the trail where the trees opened wide enough to see the western sky. It was a dull orange, streaked with gray. The day was closing, and he could feel it in his bones. The kind of ache that wasn’t pain but reminder. He stood there for a long time, just listening.
Maybe peace wasn’t something you found.
Maybe it was something you built...
... in the way you forgave your parents, in the way you let your children go, in the way you walked through your own doubts and never stopped moving.
The wind shifted again.
He started back toward home.
Behind him, the sun was almost gone, and ahead, the shadows were long and reaching. He thought about the quote he’d written on the chalkboard that morning: Maybe the peace we all seek is but a dream.
He smiled a little.
Maybe peace can never be found, but the dream was worth the walk.




Monday, November 3, 2025

November 3rd, 2025

The clock may have rolled back, but my body didn’t get the memo.
We spend our lives chasing hours, but the truth is, our rhythm runs on something deeper than the hands on a clock. Mondays already come with a built-in jolt of anxiety, and when you throw in the “fall back,” everything feels out of tune.
I wake up every morning at 3:33. This morning, the old clock on the wall said 2:33. My body said, “Nice try.” That’s my last sentence about Daylight Savings Time for the year. Let’s move on to something more important... Sandwiches.
Today is National Sandwich Day, a day for the working stiff, the road-trip driver, the construction crew, and the lunch-pail dreamer. When someone asks for my favorite sandwich, I don’t hesitate: the Ricobene breaded steak sandwich. It’s the heavyweight champ of Chicago handhelds. I also have a soft spot for the pork tenderloin that stretches across the “I” states, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa. Big as a steering wheel, thin as a Sunday newspaper.
The corned beef at Manny’s is the stuff of legends. The jibarito, that Puerto Rican gem where plantains take the place of bread is a proud addition to Chicago’s digestive story. The Italian beef is our city’s birthright, especially when it’s loaded with giardiniera, and don’t get me started on the Italian sub. Everybody has their spot, but mine’s Alpine. It’s the neighborhood joint I grew up with. Bari and J.P. Graziano are both worth the trip. I don’t do Fontano’s for personal reasons, we will leave it there.
Lately, the Nashville hot chicken sandwich has muscled its way into the spotlight, but let’s not forget the humble classics: the grilled cheese, the peanut butter and jelly and the BLT. These are the sandwiches that raised us.
... And no, a hot dog is not a sandwich. That’s a fight for another Chalkboard.
So, as you battle the Monday clock and rub the sleep out of your eyes, remember.... time may change, but rhythm doesn’t.
Grab a sandwich, support your local mom-and-pop joints, and enjoy your lunch. It’s the first Monday of November, and the week isn’t waiting for you.
Now get up and get it started.




Sunday, November 2, 2025

November 2nd, 2025

 The day has arrived that many of us dread.

Clocks fell back an hour last night, and our sunsets take away the end of our late afternoon. More importantly, the five o’clock cocktail out on the balcony has come to a close for the season. The world feels darker, the day feels shorter, and that little golden slice between work and dinner gets stolen from us.
Still, there is a funny sort of comfort buried in the numbers. The first sunset of the season lands at exactly 4:44 PM. Maybe that is the universe’s way of reminding us there is still order in the chaos. A clean rhythm is shown with the Angel Number of four-four-four. A bit of grace between the lines.
So, I trade my balcony bourbon for the kitchen table martini. I swap the sound of wind through the trees for the hum of the furnace. It is still the same drink, the same reflection, but just in a different light. The clock can fall back all it wants, but my spirit sure as hell doesn’t have to.
Every sunrise writes the next chance and tomorrow morning, that first thin glow of daylight will prove it.
Tough game yesterday for my Irish friends. The funny thing about the Irish rugby fan.....
... they are just as happy and hopeful after the match as they were before the match.
Today is for the gridiron. I pray that your team will play well and come out victorious. Bear Down Monsters of the Midway and giddy up you Blue Stallions of Marion County.
Gusto, crock pots, chili bowls and family and friends nearby. That is what the first Sunday of November should bring....




Saturday, November 1, 2025

November 1st, 2025

    The first of November is here. It is the Feast of All Saints and it is the day Ireland and New Zealand battle for rugby supremacy.

My rugby story isn’t the normal one. Most rugby stories aren’t, but they all have a common thread. Once your story starts, you have entered a social circle that supports you through thick and thin.
On and off the pitch.
Today, thousands of people will come together on the shore of Lake Michigan. Teammates, classmates, travelers, old friends and newcomers as well.
At the end of the day, I will have friends that were strangers Saturday morning. I will probably have a fair share of pints. I will definitely sing off key. I will hug Irishmen and high five Kiwis. I will see my Blaze brothers and my Kennel Club mates and we will all be there to watch scrums and rucks.
I will hear many of my mates tell me that they are “with me” and I will reply that supporting call.
Play well Gentlemen… one team will win in the late Chicago afternoon, but everyone involved comes out the winner.
Don’t forget to set your clocks back one hour when you go to bed. Take a long look at that post five o’clock sunset. We won’t see another one until next year.
Oh…. may this day bring gusto and astonishment!





Friday, October 31, 2025

October 31st, 2025

 Every Midwesterner knows the feeling.

The one that hits you right around Halloween. You step outside and the air has that strange mix of warmth and warning. The sun still carries a little kindness, but the shadows are sharpening their teeth. You smell the leaves turning brittle, the first backyard firepit of the season, and the faint trace of winter waiting around the corner.
This is the final exhale before we hunker down. Tomorrow the clocks will fall back, and the afternoon will disappear faster than the CTA Christmas train in the chilly fog. The park benches will empty, the bikes will hang in garages, and everyone will start talking about soup.
But tonight, tonight belongs to the ghosts, the kids, the parents with beers in the stroller pouch and the people who know enough to stand on their porch a few minutes longer just to feel that last warm breath.
Raise your glass to the final ember of October. Enjoy it, Chalkheads. By morning, November will be on our doorstep and winter will be awakening.
Hanukkah and Christmas are just around the corner. Maybe the last holiday season celebrated in the five boroughs that mourn annually in September.
Tomorrow is rugby day in Chicago! Welcome home Ireland and New Zealand.......




Thursday, October 30, 2025

October 30th, 2025

 I was a Snickers and Three Musketeers kid, and occasionally the Oldman would hand me a Peppermint Patty when he grabbed the papers at the White Hen. Then one afternoon in 1978, a new candy bar appeared, Whatchamacallit. It was crunchy, chewy, and completely different.

To this day, I will pick up a Whatchamacallit at a gas station, and suddenly I am twelve again, sitting in the back seat of the Dadillac with WGN quoting the weekly commodity prices.
That candy bar isn’t just sugar and crisped rice, it’s a time machine….
…unwrapping a memory from when everything felt new and the world still had that “just opened” smell.
I think I have a quote for a future Chalkboard.
“A candy bar is a good Time Machine.” —John Shepley, The Morning Chalkboard
Tomorrow is Halloween, a holiday built on sugar and nostalgia. So here is a thought for my fellow Chalkheads: What’s your favorite candy bar and what memory does it unwrap for you?
The sun is smiling brightly today. Go enjoy one of the last sunny afternoons that won’t be dark by five o’clock and don't let that candy bar you grab spoil your supper.




Wednesday, October 29, 2025

October 29th, 2025

 Growing up, I often heard the phrase, “He’s been around the block a few times.”

It wasn’t meant as an insult. It meant a guy who has seen a few things, lived a little and learned the hard way. Turns out, that is what growth really looks like. Not a steady climb up some shiny ladder, but a looping, twisting walk around the block of life. Revisiting old corners with new shoes and a different stride.
You run into familiar faces, familiar mistakes and familiar dreams. Each time seeing them with a bit more wisdom and a lot less ego. Setbacks and reruns aren’t failures, they are checkpoints. Each lap around the block adds another layer of understanding, even if it feels like déjà vu. Throw in that reoccurring dream that drags you through the same high school hallways of memory and maybe that is life reminding you that the lesson ain’t over yet.
We are closing in on the end of October, and Saturday brings the long-awaited rematch... Ireland versus New Zealand back to Chicago. Hard to believe it has been nine years since the Irish stunned the All Blacks on the lakefront. One thing I have noticed between Soldier Field lined for football or painted for rugby. After a match, rugby fans hug it out and buy each other beers. After a game, gridiron fans often shout until somebody bleeds.
It is hump day you Chalkheads. Let’s slide into the weekend with a pint of grace, a bit of grit, and a warm welcome for the international crowd invading our town. Bring on Ireland’s Call and the Kiwis' Haka.




Tuesday, October 28, 2025

October 28th, 2025

 Today’s quote doesn’t need a long explanation.

It hits like a clean punchline right in the chest, you are the common denominator. Every win, every screw-up, every second chance...
...you are in the middle of it.
That isn't judgment, it is accountability. It is a reminder that we steer the ship, whether it’s calm water or a squall off Lake Michigan.
And fittingly, today is National First Responder Day. The heroes who show up when the rest of us are staring at disaster. Police, medics, firefighters, they are the ones running toward the trouble while we are backing away. You don’t think much about them until you need them, and when you do, you damn well remember their faces. It is easy to forget that they have families waiting at home, praying tonight is just another shift and not another headline.
Say a prayer for them. Buy them a coffee if you are standing in line behind a uniform. Give the sign of the cross when you see the lights flashing and pull to the side of the road. Because they have a job to do.
If the day ever comes when it is you calling for help, remember that these men and women show up not because they must, but because that is who they are.
Chicago has always had their kind...
...gritty, loyal, and brave enough to face chaos.
God bless our First Responders. May every one of them make it home after their shift.