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Saturday, January 10, 2026

January 10th, 2026

 I chalked a lyric most of us know, but for people in Indiana it isn't background music.

Front porches bring back memories for Hoosiers. Churning ice cream with your great aunts. Watching trucks go by with your great uncle. Listening to the ball game with gramma on the radio while grampa sat there smoking his pipe while reading the grain prices in the local newspaper.
Life in Indiana is about Faith, home cooking, hard work, family and community. I better not forget basketball.
Why does a kid from Chicago come off well read on the Hoosier State?
My maternal family comes from The Hoosier State. I lived all of those things on the front porch. I detasseled corn, I prayed before a meal, I swam in a crick. I went to the 500 and to the State Fair.
Last night the state of Indiana witnessed the Indiana Hoosiers win a big football game. They are one win from a National Football Championship. Hoosier fans grew accustomed to basketball championships, but football was always a losing proposition.
The head coach told a reporter when asked how remarkable this winning season has been. He replied that his team was zero and zero. Take one game at a time and if there was one thing I lived during my Exile in Indiana. Take one day at a time and take that day with Faith, Family and Friends near your side.
When you wake up tomorrow and the next day and the next, you are 0-0. Somedays we finish 1-0 and some we go 0-1. Most days we go 0-0 from start to finish and that isn't so bad.
I plan on having a winning record when I go to the Promised Land.







Friday, January 9, 2026

January 9th, 2026

    There are days when the story doesn’t arrive on time. No clever opening and no clean ending. Just the date, the temperature, and the quiet routine of a January morning doing what it always does. Today was one of those days.

Short daylight on a rainy windy day. Another Friday that looks like a hundred others before it. The numbers show up whether we do or not... 7:18 a.m., 4:39 p.m., 42 degrees. The world keeps moving without asking how we feel about it.
Then the human voice enters.
Not with a grand statement and sometimes without any answers. Just a presence that can either be comforting or it could be pitched with terror. After 21,742 days on this earth, I have learned that showing up counts even when the words don’t line up as neatly as you would like.
Some days are meant to be recorded, not explained. Counted, but not decorated. A reminder that life isn’t a highlight reel. Life is a long, patient accumulation of ordinary mornings and unfinished thoughts.
Today is Day 21,742 of the Jumbo Shepley experience. Just another tricky day for me.




Thursday, January 8, 2026

January 8th, 2026

 I can’t believe I had a crush on Blondie forty-five years ago.

Actually… it makes perfect sense.
The invitations to 60th birthday parties keep arriving, and suddenly 1981 feels close again. That was the year of sneaking beers into the basement and kissing sophomore girls. The year when fifteen felt like pressure, not promise.
The tide was high and the pressure was real, but we didn’t collapse. We kept hanging on.
Fifteen was an awkward age, all nerves and no instruction manual. I’m glad that I made it through. Not because it was easy, but because surviving it taught me something I still use. When the tide rises, you don’t panic, you hold your ground.
Sixty-eight days until Saint Patrick's Day. That isn't just a date to celebrate the Irish. That will be the day we have our first seven o'clock sunset. Sixty-eight days until Balcony cocktails at Happy Hour are in full force.
Happy Thursday Chalkheads.




Wednesday, January 7, 2026

January 7th, 2026

 There was a little sports shop tucked next to the El tracks by Wrigley Field. Just about every time I went to a Cubs game in the mid to late nineties, I would wander in there before heading home and buy a bobblehead.

They had a great selection, and they were probably ten bucks back then. Most of the time I was zipped up on a dozen Old Styles, give or take, so the purchase felt necessary, almost ceremonial.
Then I would catch the Howard line down going south into the Loop, transfer to the Congress, and head west out to Oak Park.
That stretch of steel and windows rattling through the city was time I had alone. Well, not exactly alone. I had my new bobblehead riding shotgun in a paper bag. I didn’t have a care in the world back then. Though, truth be told, I was still worrying about something.
It was the height of the nineties and the reckless Clinton years. The pits were full of traders and open outcry was roaring. The market opened at 7:20 in the morning and shut down at 2:00, period. When the bell rang, the day was done. Baseball was played in the afternoon and you used tokens on the CTA, not apps. Life had edges, but it also had more room.
Over time I built a decent collection of bobbles. When it was all said and done, I had fifteen to twenty. I still have the Houston Oilers and the Cleveland Indians. The rest disappeared somewhere along the way after I got married. Mostly after my bride asked why they were lined up on the dresser in our bedroom. Turns out I didn’t live in a bachelor pad anymore.
Back then, I had a lot of time alone. Just me and my bobbleheads. Hard work, softball games, cold beer, afternoon baseball and Sunday papers that were still thick with news. The world felt loud, but manageable.
The end of the world never came with Y2K....
...And I feel fine.



Tuesday, January 6, 2026

January 6th, 2026

 I don’t remember the last time I met the guys and played baseball in the park.

We didn’t stop and announce, "This is it, the last time we will ever do this together. We just went home, and somehow it became high school.
I don’t remember the last time I went to the diner with my daddy.
I don’t remember the last time my mommy held my hand.
Because endings don’t come with heads up. The last thing is almost never known to be the last thing at the moment it happens. Life slams doors, and life opens doors and we seldom know which door matters.
Today is the Epiphany, I go from the ending back to the beginning. In the beginning when the Three Kings showed up and brought gifts to the Christ child. His birth was announced with a star... not with a bang, but definitely not with a whimper.
Time to take the last ornament down and pack away the Nativity scene. Change out your green and red light bulbs for the colors of Mardi Gras season; green, gold and purple.
Stay dry today and go do things like it might be the last time...
... and do it with gusto.




Monday, January 5, 2026

January 5th, 2026

 The first Monday of January.

The holidays are over.
The noise is gone and for the next couple of months all there will be is routine, discipline and showing up. We have a long way until Memorial Day weekend, but the next 139 days will fly by quicker than we can run to the crapper when a fart is really a shart.
Monday won’t be so bad. At least it isn’t subzero and snowing. Go out there and find how much opportunity there is in 2026.



Sunday, January 4, 2026

January 4th, 2026

 I’m not sure why I cluttered the grabber section with a countdown to Opening Day at Sox Park.

I didn’t go down there for a single game last year. I haven’t been to a home opener since before Covid. Let’s be honest about Opening day... the lines are longer than the innings: the pisser line, the beer line, the polish sausage line, and then the slow shuffle out the gates after another loss.
This team has dropped one hundred games two years in a row. The only reason to get excited right now is that we have the Pope on our side.
Most of the teams I follow suck ass.
The Blackhawks have been horrible since they dismantled the Stanley Cup roster.
The Bears have been a rolling circus since they fired Lovie Smith. This year finally feels different, a breath of fresh air, but my expectations aren’t sitting out there bare-assed and begging for disappointment.
I have been an Indiana Pacers fan since the ABA days. They made the championship last year, they lost. Just another brick added to the disappointment pile.
And speaking of Indiana...
I have no idea what the hell is happening with their football program. They bring a Bobby Knight-type football coach to Bloomington and suddenly they start winning. Winning football games like the Hurryin' Hoosiers once won basketball games.
I have my checkbook out for the Hoosiers now. My expectations are spending real money on this remarkable team, and I know exactly how dangerous that could be.
Here’s a surprise for you, Chalkheads. I even have a favorite soccer team...
…and they suck too.
I have followed West Ham United for years. Yesterday they lost to the team in dead last place. West Ham is sitting third from the bottom on the table themselves. In the English Premier League, the bottom three teams get relegated. In American terms, they get sent down to the minors.
Can you imagine if we did that here?
The Bears, Blackhawks, and White Sox would be playing teams from Peoria, Fort Wayne, and Grand Rapids.
Now here’s the thing... I am not giving up hope, because I don’t believe in hope. When it is all said and done, my teams end up losing their last game. Maybe I’m the common denominator here. I’m the guy hitting every red light. I’m the guy who picked the wrong drive-up lane.
And still…
I will continue to cheer for the Bears.
The Blackhawks.
The White Sox.
The Pacers.
The Hoosiers.
And the Hammers.
Like Brian Wilson once said, "so be true to your school, like you would to your girl or guy. Be true to your school now and let your colors fly."
Here we go, the first full week of 2026. Like sports, I am not expecting much going into the year. I am Preparing for the worst, but ready for the best.
Now go perform some astounding things this week, you deserving Chalkheads.






Saturday, January 3, 2026

January 3rd, 2026

  The first Saturday of the New Year, and I thought we’d chalk some Billy Shakes.

Today’s quote comes from The Tempest, which has quietly become my favorite of his plays. The Bard is telling us that everything that has happened so far is just the setup. The story that matters is the one coming up next.
The past matters, but it shouldn’t define the ending. The past has broadened our strokes with every lap around the block we have taken. It has given us common sense and street smarts. It has also taught us how to love, and unfortunately, how to hate.
We have learned our routines, and when we dare to step outside of them, we learn something new about ourselves.
Experience should become our foundation, not our burden. Life is still being written every day. Sometimes it feels like writer’s block, but if we are willing to keep showing up, the story keeps growing one line at a time.
That short quote up on the Chalkboard reminds us to honor where we have been, but we sure as hell aren’t quite done just yet.
I woke up just before 2:22 a.m. to the smell of cigarette smoke. When that happens, it is usually my Ma paying a visit from heaven. Her way of letting me know she is still around.
Being up early gave me a front-row seat as the January Full Moon lit up the cloud cover. With a little luck, the clouds will break and I will catch a glimpse of the first supermoon of 2026. Jupiter is sliding across the sky, keeping close company next to the Wolf Moon.
If not this morning, we will get another shot Saturday night into Sunday morning.
The weather corner on the Morning Chalkboard doesn’t have a smiling sun today. Cold and cloudy over my neighborhood, but that is alright. I’m heading to the diner for breakfast with my boys, then off for haircuts. A small ritual we have been doing recently. One that will someday turn into a fond memory for the Shepley brothers.
Because the past will be their prologue too.
Go find astonishment and gusto today, you gorgeous Chalkheads.




January 2nd, 2026



It is one of those rare occasions when I have nothing to chalk about. Nothing on the radar to get worked up over. It is National Sci-Fi Day. Maybe a Twilight Zone Marathon tonight and a pizza. The sunsets will be at five o'clock by the end of the month and we have a full moon tomorrow. The January full moon is called the Wolf Moon.
Lets get this party started...




Thursday, January 1, 2026

January 1st, 2026

First thing, I chalked the correct year this morning.
2026 looks weird up there. The first quote is from the first song I heard in 2026; a little John Prine is a good start to the year. Clay Pigeons from the Sweet Revenge album. The Mailman from Maywood told me to find truth in myself rather than searching for external answers.
I started to chalk down what I would like to do this year, but decided it was a worthless chore. Six months from today I turn sixty.
That gives me twenty to twenty-five years left of living. That puts me in heaven between 2046 and 2051… that may seem like a long time to live, but on the flip side, 2006 and 2001 seem like yesterday.
That makes ‘46 feel like this Saturday and ‘51 falls on Monday of next week. I better vacuum and throw away my Playboy collection if that’s the case.
A cold and cloudy start to the new year in Chicagoland. Looks like a crockpot and movie binging day with a couple football games to throw on top.
Listen you Chalkheads, don’t put pressure on yourself with a shit ton of New Year resolutions. Just stay in love with who you are. Don’t be a jagoff and make your bed. Other than that, the sun comes up and goes down. The four seasons bring astonishment, and faith is a source of inspiration and security.
One last thing…. Watch your sodium.




Wednesday, December 31, 2025

December 31st, 2025

 I just chalked 2025 for the last time during 2025.

From tomorrow until the day I am done breathing, 2025 becomes a year gone by, a closed chapter. People who knew me in 2025 haven’t met me yet in 2026. That is a strange thought when you sit with it long enough. I am not entirely sure which version of me will show up tomorrow. Just that he will be older than the one standing here at the final Chalkboard for 2025.
I have never been one of those chumps who believes that flipping the calendar hanging on the icebox suddenly rewires your life. That is nonsense. Years don’t announce themselves as the change is coming. They don’t come with programs or banners proclaiming that everything is completely different. They define themselves slowly, quietly, and usually only in the rearview mirror.
While I was living through 2025, I never thought that this is a horseshit year or a fanfuckingtastic year either. Ask me again in 2027 or 2028 if you want a verdict on 2025.
One thing that I just realized about 2025: it was the first year since 1971 that I didn’t go to a White Sox game. That is a hell of a streak to break. 2025 was also the first year since 1984 that I didn't make blueberry pancakes for an overnight guest. The end of those two streaks tells me this year mattered in ways I won’t fully understand until a future acquaintance explains it.
Tonight, when you sing that song and you get to the part about old acquaintances, remember this: before too long, you will be an old acquaintance of yourself. The version of you sitting here right now will quietly slip into memory. Out with the old, in with the new, whether you are ready or not.
I am looking forward to getting acquainted with the 2026 version of me.
It is wild to think the 2016 me is already ten years old. Even stranger that the 1996 me is thirty. I haven’t forgotten any of those old acquaintances. Some were a joy to be around. Others were complete jagoffs, but they all got me here to 2026.
By the end of today, I will meet the 2026 me face-to-face. I have faith that bastard is gregarious and grateful. If I am lucky, he is someone that I can fall completely in love with again. Someone who knows how to handle the ebbs and flows that are coming. Because they sure as fuck are coming.
Auld lang syne, Chalkheads.
Don’t forget to toast that old acquaintance. Because it is you....




Tuesday, December 30, 2025

December 30th, 2025

 Many a Board of Trade guy has gotten on the wrong train.

The first time I did was in the summer of 1988, on a Friday night, drinking Old Style with the older guys I worked with at Continental Grain. I was twenty-one, living back at my Oldman’s house in Oak Park, thinking I knew more than I did.
I jumped on the Lake/Dan Ryan line heading west and passed out somewhere between confidence and stupidity. Back then, Lake Street ran straight through the West Side and tied into the Dan Ryan which headed south. I slept through Ridgeland, all the way to the end of the line at Harlem/Lake. The train turned around and headed back toward the Loop with one drunk kid stretched out, learning a lesson the long way.
By the time we turned south again, rolling past Old Sox Park, past 47th, stopping at 63rd, an older Black woman leaned over and told me plainly: "You’re on the wrong train, in the wrong part of town, for a white boy.
She wasn’t rude.
She wasn’t dramatic.
She was a guardian angel.
I thanked her, got off at 69th Street, and stood on the platform waiting for a northbound train. My eyes wide open and my heart pounding. I didn’t sleep a wink the rest of the way home. I was scared the whole ride, and I deserved every second of it.
When I finally walked in the back door, my dad was sitting in the family room, awake.
“Where the hell have you been?”
I told him the story. He shook his head once and said, “Go to bed.”
I never passed out on the CTA again.
Years later, I made one more train mistake. I took an express by mistake out to Aurora when I was living along the BNSF line. Terese came and got me: George packed in the back seat. I figured I was headed straight to the doghouse, but George was having trouble sleeping, and that long drive knocked him right out. Sometimes grace shows up when you least deserve it.
I didn’t pay an expensive price for either trip. I learned and I remembered.
The longer you stay on the wrong train, the more expensive it is to get home. Luckily, I didn't get robbed and thank goodness George was cranky that night.
Today is National Bacon Day. I bake mine in the oven. Nothing says good morning like a couple of sunny-side-up eggs, hash browns with onions, buttered rye toast, a cup of black coffee, and four or five strips of bacon cooked medium to medium-well.
Sunrise today was 7:17 AM... still late but getting there. We are on the last fumes of ’25.
Finish strong.
Take the A Train Chalkheads, have some bacon, and don’t sleep through your stop.




Monday, December 29, 2025

December 29th, 2025

 What a difference a day makes.

Yesterday it was mild, temperatures pushing the upper fifties. Overnight, the winds howled in and delivered a cold, snowy commute to work this morning. That is December in the Big City for you. We had a Gray Christmas last week and a cold welcome to 2026 this week.
Do you think the same thing will happen Thursday night when we change the five to a six? Will the change in year bring a drastic change in life?
I’m not sure that every December 29th I look back at the year and think it was a horseshit year, but when I stack up all the horseshit years, I still see a tremendous run at life. Perspective has a funny way of doing that.
I am already looking forward to a couple of my favorite holidays. In fifty days, I will be celebrating Fat Tuesday. Then in 187 days, I will be celebrating the 250th year of this great country that I am blessed to live in.
Bundle up, my Midwestern Chalkheads.
Like Don Shepley used to say, “It’s colder than a witch’s tit in a brass bra!”




Sunday, December 28, 2025

December 28th, 2025

I took my Christmas tree down yesterday, December 27th.

That might be the earliest I have ever de-Christmasized my home. No twelfth day, no hanging stockings, no lingering lights. Just back to regular life.
I remember my mom taking the Christmas tree down during Super Bowl XIII, January 21st, 1979. The Steelers beat the Cowboys. I remember that because I remember the feeling of Christmas being officially over at the latest date in my life.
Here is something funny about age and memory: if you were born in 1966, you can always remember how old you were when certain Super Bowls were played.
We were getting ready to turn twenty when the Bears beat the Patriots 46–10 in Super Bowl XX. We turn sixty this coming year as Super Bowl LX is played on February 8th.
That is how the high school Class of 1984 can keep time. Not with calendars, but with championship football games.
Remembering dates gets harder the older I get, not because my mind slips, but because the milestones pile up. There are more to remember.
2026 will be the 53rd anniversary of the day I mastered cursive. I walked up to the blackboard in Sister Francis Irene’s classroom and nailed the word little. Carefully crossing each t separately, the way we were taught when penmanship still mattered. That was the first time I felt mastery. The first time I knew I could do something cleanly, correctly, and on my own.
2026 also brings the semiquincentennial. That is a mouthful. For me, it will be “the bicentennial plus fifty.”
Years ending in six are my decade years. I turned ten in 1976. My parents were getting divorced. I turned twenty in 1986 when the Bears won XX. I turned thirty in 1996. That year is a little foggy. I turned forty in 2006 and became a dad when I met George. I turned fifty in 2016. My mom died and my marriage was running on its final fumes.
I don’t know what sixty brings in 2026.
My faith tells me good things will happen in 2026, but I’m old enough to be prepared for the worst. Someone I know will probably head to heaven. My company could shut down if business keeps slowing. I’ve lived through that kind of fear before, and once you’ve tasted it, it never fully leaves you.
My kids bring volatility into my life, especially the youngest. The daughter who turns thirteen in 2026. The one with the oldest dad in her class.
My neck is stiff. My knees, ankles, and hips argue with the alarm clock every morning. My ears ring constantly and I only use my schwantz to go pee.
2026 isn’t exactly advertising itself as a banner year. So, I will keep chugging and go with the flow. Just play it by ear and see what next year brings.
I think I am continuing down the path of becoming an introvert. I may even have to change one of the adjectives in my email signature. Yes, adjectives. Pronouns are limited and too political. I am not a him/he. I am gregarious/grateful. Though I’ve considered changing gregarious to unsociable in 2026, but let’s just get there first.
Hopefully one of the O’Brien sisters won’t be correcting me on January 5th for chalking the wrong year like she did in 2025.
Don’t worry, I am not changing my signature adjectives, and I will still be searching for astonishment and gusto in 2026. There will be days when I put a smile on the sun and days when I don't.
What are your adjectives?
If you use pronouns, maybe follow my lead and switch to adjectives in 2026. There is more freedom in an adjective. Adjectives give you more room to breathe.
Let’s call 2026 the year of positive adjectives. Let’s go with that, Chalkheads.




Saturday, December 27, 2025

December 27th, 2025

 We were standing around the cheese and cracker table on Christmas.

Nothing fancy.... a couple fabulous dips, some sharp cheddar and a half-empty box of Carr’s water crackers. The kind of table people gather around because nobody knows what else to do with their hands. The conversation was easy and going well considering I was with my ex and her mom. We talked about the Shepkids. We talked about the weather. Old stories that still worked, the kind that make people smile without effort. The kind you tell when you are grateful nobody is digging.
Then the conversation zigged and zagged, like conversations do, and it landed in 2010. That was when my ex-wife said it.
"That was when you were 'incapacitated'."
The word didn’t fail.
It hung.
It took aim.
It hit me harder than Speckman ever did in an Oklahoma drill back at Dear Old Cathedral.
Her eyes were steady when she said it. Not dramatic... Not cruel, but mad, hurt, and sad... all braided together. That word carried weight for her. It carried memory and it carried cost.
She left it wide open. I could have shut it down and maybe steer back to weather and cheese, or I could walk straight into it.
I walked straight into it.....
I was between jobs in 2010. My position in the bond room had been eliminated, and for the first time in my career, I was unemployed. George was four and Fritz was a newborn. I took unemployment and became a stay-at-home dad. A short-term plan that stretched longer than expected. Somewhere in the middle of that hiatus, I pulled a full Burgermeister Meisterburger. I stepped over a toy on the stairs and ripped my quad clean.
Now I wasn’t just unemployed. I was unemployed and in a cast.
I slept on the pull-out couch in the living room. My ex suddenly had to carry a baby, a toddler, and an incapacitated husband. The tension started the moment I came home from the hospital. What I thought helped, actually made everything worse. The Vicodin prescription Hinsdale Orthopedics sent home with me. Three refills of ninety pills for a total of 270. It was perfectly legal at the time. It was perfectly normal and it was perfectly reckless. Today, you might be lucky if they give you ten.
I had worked on the trading floor in the late ’80s and through the ’90s. I saw addictions up close... cocaine, booze, ecstasy, weed. I also saw careers die. There were funerals for people that were still young. I didn’t think I was an addictive person, but if you give anyone that much of a drug that quiets pain and anxiety at the same time, you are going to find the soft spot.
I loved my Vicos.
I loved them with breakfast. I loved them with lunch. I played with George and rocked Fritz while I was clouded by this powerful opioid. They paired well with vodka, gin, bourbon and especially beer. As my rehab continued, the pills became my helper.
While my body healed, something else quietly slipped. I turned my attention into being a father and I stopped being a full-time husband.
I moved from the couch to the bedroom floor, sleeping with the Shepley brothers. Nights were about bottles and diapers, not conversation. The smiles faded and the hugs disappeared. Kisses became rare and the Vicos made sex nearly impossible.
Add in a move to a better school district, the weight of not working, and you can cue Earth, Wind & Fire’s "After the Love Has Gone." You could hear it without the radio. It became the theme song of our marriage.
For her, that word, "incapacitated" holds all of that. For me, at the time, it was shits and giggles. I was numb, I was medicated, I was detached.
Then the last bottle ran out and the brace came off. The crutches disappeared and so did the love. Here is the strange grace of it, when the last Vicodin was gone, I didn’t go searching for more. I didn’t spiral deeper, but the damage didn’t care. I hadn’t just ripped a muscle above my knee. I also ripped up my marriage.
I was tired of sitting around and being a loser. I went back to the Board of Trade one last time, the way I did when I was a snot-nosed kid looking for a shot. I walked around the bond room. It was empty, grim, filled with men staring into the end of something. Then I walked into the grain room, where there was still noise, still life. I met my boss and started immediately. I have been with the same trading company for fifteen years now.
One good thing came out of that hiatus, but at a high cost.
My wife and I fell out of love. The magic didn’t explode; it evaporated. We became guardians of the Shepkids. Partners in logistics only. We became Co-parents. No longer lovers and no longer friends. Just two adults carrying painful history.
... and all of it came flooding back from one word at a Christmas table.
"Incapacitated."
This isn’t a Christmas ghost story. It has no redemption arc or gifts of the Magi. There isn't a Red Ryder BB gun to shoot your eye out with. Just a chapter from the opioid prescription era, where a legal bottle quietly changed the trajectory of a family. No amount of money, reputation, success, or late apologies can reverse what’s already been lived. The past doesn’t negotiate and it doesn’t refinance. It just sits there with the ledger closed, daring you to tell the truth about it.
Today the tree comes down and maybe one last eggnog. Life keeps moving, whether we are ready or not.




Friday, December 26, 2025

December 26th, 2025

 “Someday soon we all will be together, if the fates allow…”

That line has always gutted me. It comes from the saddest Christmas song ever written. Sung by someone who already knew how the story bends. A person hoping, not promising that next year all our troubles will be out of sight. Until then, we muddle through somehow.
I don’t muddle and you Chalkheads know what I think about hope.
I don’t have time to muddle. There is no muddle dive or muddle sweep in my playbook. No safe little screen pass called just to survive the down. Muddle is for people waiting on relief instead of choosing action.
That song matters because it admits something people don’t like to say out loud: not everyone is having a happy Christmas. Some folks are carrying loneliness. Others are hauling addictions, finances, sickness, regret. Sometimes all of it at once. Christmas doesn’t cure that, it just shines a brighter light on it.
Christmas morning, I thought about feeling sorry for myself. That was a muddle option, a fake toss to a trap that was never going to get called in the huddle. So instead, I gathered up my sons, and we drove over to my mother-in-law’s house.
Ahead of us were my ex-wife and my daughter. One who hates me dearly. The other who thinks Dad is obnoxious and embarrassing. I didn’t have high hopes for Christmas Day.
Then something unexpected happened.
My daughter curled up next to me by the fire pit and she told me she loves me. Her mom and I got along. We finished each other’s sentences. We worked side by side in the kitchen. We laughed; we even smiled. I saw flashes of how it once was, Christmas past sneaking into Christmas present. I hope Hazel saw it too.
I did muddle a little later, smoking a cigar without PopPop, not getting a Christmas call from my Oldman or my Ma. I realized Christmas present is already sliding into Christmas past.
There will never be another Christmas with kids who are 19, 16, and 12. This might be the last one with Molly, our 13-year-old black lab, begging for scraps through the glass dining room table. There may not be many Christmases left in that house. A place I’ve gone to for twenty-five years, far too big now for a widow to sit alone in once the noise leaves.
When we packed up and drove away, I worried she might start muddling in the quiet. I thought somewhere down the road, there is a Christmas where I will be the one left alone. Left to remember an overcast day, a fire pit, my seventh-grade daughter, her mom, her grandma, all of us in sweaters on a mild Christmas Day. All of us getting along and enjoying that day. A day when fate did bring us all together.
As I get older, I start believing the day we will all be together is in heaven. Half the people who loved me are already there.
Until then, my job is simple: making Christmas a happy tradition for the Shepkids. Making sure they never learn to muddle and when they do, remember so many more are worse off.
Today is Saint Stephen’s Day or Boxing Day to some. A day to clean up, wind down, and gather again. Maybe in a pub, a church basement or a quiet kitchen table. Christmas present becoming Christmas past, with Christmas future less than a year away.
It may be cloudy today. Just remember, the sun is smiling somewhere, and your shadow is getting longer. Take a moment to admire the Christmas glow and the astonishment before it all gets wrapped up for next Christmas....
.... If the fates allow