Sunday, July 30, 2023

July 30th, 2023

     My son George spends almost every Saturday with his grandfather, who he has affectionately called Poppop since the day he started talking.

Both of my grandfathers were in heaven by the time I was five. I never had the luxury of a grandfather’s wisdom.
PopPop is my father-in law… though I don’t know how that works after a divorce. I guess it depends on the family or the circumstances. In our case it is the circumstances.
PopPop has had a love for trains since he was a little boy growing up on the Southside of Chicago. He loved taking pictures of the old steam locomotives cutting through his neighborhood. PopPop has a vast knowledge of railroads and that broke the ice for me when I started dating his daughter. My father was a career railroader, so I had a good background with trains.
PopPop has a beautiful model train collection in his basement. A whole section filled with shelves holding O-gage locomotives and railroad equipment. He still has his original transformer and steam locomotive from his childhood and many more he has bought through the years.
Mr. Bergmann, PopPop was always a stickler when it came to operating his train board. He was the only person who could run a locomotive on his train table.
For years there was a light on his table that didn’t work. He could not figure out if it was a bulb or a wire. He even had an electrician take a look at the vast number of wires crisscrossing under the layout.
When George was about four, he was crawling under Mr. Bergmann’s choo choo trains. This was about the time we realized there was something special about our firstborn child. Georgie got under the spot with the faulty wire and jiggled this, finagled that and suddenly PopPop screamed out,
“George! George what did you do?”
I was upstairs and thought the worst had just happened. I ran downstairs and PopPop and George both had huge smiles on their faces.
“George fixed the light that hasn’t worked for years! He was under the table, I was running the ‘City of New Orleans’ and VOILA….The light came on!”
From that point on PopPop let George run his trains. PopPop would remove and replace any steam locomotive George wanted to run. A four-year-old grandson had the privilege to operate The Bergmann Railroad. George is the only family member that was ever given permission to run the trains.
From that day George and PopPop have been thick as thieves. PopPop has the gift of understanding how George is wired and he handles it well. That is why they get together almost every Saturday for several hours.
Every weekend PopPop has their schedule planned. Mr. Bergmann is also a stickler for planning things out and holding firm to the itinerary.
This weekend George called his grandfather on Friday afternoon and told him the plan has changed. I was sure this was going to make a couple of planets collide, but it didn’t.
PopPop not only trusts George with his train board, but he listened to George’s new plan and approved of it.
George told Pop to get on the 10am Metra in Hinsdale. George would get on ten minutes later when it arrived in Riverside. They would get into the city and walk over to the elevated tracks that form the Loop.
The CTA was running two vintage cars made in 1923 to celebrate 100 years. Both PopPop and George were excited.
They spent an hour riding around the Loop repeatedly in the vintage 4000-series railcars. Then they met JoJo, George’s grandmother, for lunch at their favorite restaurant, Bruna’s. George planned out the whole day and created a fond memory for years to come.
These Saturdays together are piling up. Just like the Saturdays I once had with my father. The sad day will come when Pop takes the choo choo to heaven, leaving a vast collection of fond memories for Georgie. A gift that will never be taken away from my son.
I laid in bed last night thinking about PopPop and MY relationship with him. It has become close again in the last year or so. I realized that Mr. Bergmann will always be my father-in-law. Maybe the reason I met his daughter was to give him a train conductor grandson?
Life has a funny way of working out, but at some point, it always works out. You just got to let it come at its own accord.
How ironic is it that today is National Father-in-Law Day? Like I said, funny how things work out.
It is Sunday Funday and for me it started at 1:54 this morning. I was able to catch the tail end of the moon before it settled into the horizon. Remember the August Full moon is Tuesday. August has two full moons this year and both of them are super moons.
This week is the Sturgeon Moon and at the end of the month it will be a blue moon. The term used for a second full moon in the same month.
Let’s end July with happiness and good health! August brings the sixth-year anniversary of the Chalkboard experience. It sure has been a therapeutic journey that has kept me grounded and inspired every single day.
Until tomorrow Chalkheads!




Saturday, July 29, 2023

July 29th, 2023

 The last few Christmas seasons I tell the story about the lady I work with that dropped off a Christmas tree. She wanted to make sure we had a tree at my new home in Riverside.

I’ll tell that story again in detail come Christmas time.
I bring it up because the same lady gave me two tomato plants this spring for the balcony. They are getting close to their first BLT and Caprese salad. The thing is, I’ve never grown tomatoes before.
It has been a fun summer chore keeping them trimmed and watered.
As a father I plant seeds everyday. The Shepkids don’t know it, but they have become a vast garden of JumboLove and Jumboisms. Forty years ago this was known as The Wrath of Don Shepley. The difference between the two generations is… I gently use my thumb and press the seed firmly. My Oldman pounded it into the ground.
I used to piss my dad off all of the time, but it was when I disappointed him that I felt bad.
I could take “You gotta be shitting me you stupid son of a bitch!”
But when he calmly said, “Son, I’m very disappointed in you.” That is when I felt horrible.
Life is full of disappointment, dead ends and closed doors. The cycle of life has its ups and downs.
On the ups we pick the flowers and harvest the vegetables. On the lows we plant seeds that will grow again.
The summer of ‘23 has been pretty mediocre. The one thing that has made the summer a little better has been watching my tomatoes grow.
Soon they’ll be picked and the pots filled with mums. The kids will be back to school. The t-shirt drawer will be replaced with sweatshirts and the leaves will crinkle on the lawn.
Don’t let getting older stop you from planting seeds. These Chalkboards can be considered seeds. Someday I’ll sit back and enjoy the beautiful garden that life has given me.
Until that day comes… I’ll just keep on grinding and keep on loving you.
'Cause it's the only thing I wanna do!




July 28th, 2023

    I woke up from a good sleep, but I had an Earworm right off the bat. The same Earworm has been chirping in my head the last couple days.

“It's been seven hours and 15 days, it’s been 15 months, it’s been nothing compares, nothing… since you’ve been gone, I can eat my dinner in a fancy restaurant… nothing compares, seven hours, to you.”
You never know how loved someone is until they are gone. Whenever a celebrity passes away my feed lights up with posts from people I rarely see on Facebook.
Hell, I’ve been guilty of it myself.
Before we know it these beloved celebrities have been gone for years.
I remember what I was doing when I heard Elvis died, when John Lennon died and when Kurt Cobain died.
I was sad last week when Tony Bennett died, but I’ll continue singing and listening to his songs.
The one that hit me hard in the last few years was the loss of Charlie Watts. Yesterday was Mick Jagger's 80th birthday and pictures of Mick with Charlie were on the news.
Many saw Watts as the drummer of The Rolling Stones, but he was much more than that. Stones fans know how many layers there was to him. The Stones will never be the same without Watts banging on his drums.
Mick will be gone soon. So will Willie and Kristofferson. Luckily for us their music will live on.
Part of my Faith in God is built on my idea of what heaven has in store for me.
Heaven to me is a big reunion, but it also has opportunity.
The opportunity to see a Louie Armstrong and Billie Holiday show. A chance to catch Gershwin or Cole Porter or Hoagy Carmichael.
So many of you were sad yesterday with the news of Sinead O’Connor passing away at fifty six. All I knew about her was the one Prince song she covered and the picture of the Pope that she ripped up on SNL.
She was much more than that to many of you. Sorry for your loss.
My early morning earworm is gone for now. Time to get Friday started and roll into a great weekend.
Put on some Prince, some Petty some Bowie today. They will never be gone as long as the music is playing.




July 27th, 2023

     I just erased five paragraphs of bullcrap. Twenty minutes of wasted effort that wasn’t worth reading.

It’s Thursday…. Attack the day with Gusto. July didn’t creep, it leaped.
Sometimes the rain is sideways and the people ahead of you are losing their umbrellas to the gust of wind. Keep your umbrella under your arm and let the rain pelt your cheeks. Your hair will eventually dry.
Chili Dogs always make the storms go away!



Wednesday, July 26, 2023

July 26th, 2023

    I had nuns whack me with rulers and board pointers. I had a couple paddles smack my rear end by priests. I had coaches that called me a ”fat ass” and “queer.”

I wonder if I could go back and file a lawsuit against them?
Here I am driving a beat up car, renting an apartment and wearing jeans with holes in the pockets.
I don’t deserve living like this… I can’t remember the last vacation I went on.
Oh wait, I remember now. I took the Amtrak to Pittsburgh and saw my dad for the last time.
My life sucks because of the abuse I’ve had at the hands of nuns, priests and coaches.
I’m going to hire Jackie Chiles and sue all of the above.
No….. don’t worry! I’m just bullshitting everyone.
I’m actually the person that I am because of those nuns, those priests and those coaches. I drive an old Blazer and I am a career Arb Clerk because of the decisions that I made in life.
Sister Mary Philomena, Father Lonnegan and Coach Hutchinson instilled the integrity and work ethic that I try to use everyday. They gave me the straight F’s in life that make me a strong man.
FOUNDATION: FAITH, FAMILY, FUNDAMENTALS and FRIENDS.
I’m not sure what happened up in Evanston, but I’m sure it is similar to what has happened in Columbus, Ohio and Bloomington, Indiana.
Coach Fitzgerald is cut from the old school. He could probably be compared to Coach Woody Hayes and Coach Robert Montgomery Knight.
Unfortunately it’s another era and Coach Hayes and Knight would never survive in today’s world. They ended up failing at the end in their era.
My oldman always told me that a man can make a decision in a split second that could change the rest of his life. That sure happened to Old Woody on the sideline of a bowl game.
Today’s quote is from The Ohio State head coach, Woody Hayes.
I met Coach Hayes at a funeral home when I was a boy. He talked to me about my grades and if I treated people kindly. He asked me if I obeyed my parents and went to church. Then he asked me what position I played on the gridiron.
Coach Hayes made his Freshman spend a couple hours a week learning grammar and literature in the locker room after practices.
All of the nuns, priests, teachers and coaches that pushed me hard also cared for me and wanted to see me succeed.
….. and because of them I have succeeded.
I don’t have the beautiful wife, the beautiful house and the beautiful car. I do have a strong Faith in God and a strong Faith in myself. I get up every morning and work my dick off. I try hard not to call the guy who didn’t use his directional a "fucking jagoff" in front of the Shepkids.
I’m not sure what happened at Northwestern. I’m sure some things happened that young men and women in today’s world couldn’t handle. Unfortunately now it’s a political volleyball in a media circus.
I’ll tell you one thing. I’d send my kids to play for Coach Hayes, Coach Knight and Coach Fitzgerald in a heartbeat.
It’s Humpday and it’s gonna be a hot son of a bitch out there.
Take precautions!
If you see your Jewish friends today and they don’t seem very happy, let them be. Today is a very sad holy day for them.
Jumbo says, “use your GoldBond today and drink plenty of H2O!”




July 25th, 2023

     I’m going to be quick today because I just spent twenty minutes looking up several things in my dream book.

I had some vivid dreams that all came to an end when I wasn’t answering a land line telephone.
The telephone had an area code of 449. As an Angel number it represents a message that it is time to move on. An Angel might be telling me to turn the page.
In the last fifteen minutes I caught a snake while fishing. I had a tiger eat the snake. The Tiger then attacked a deer and after finishing off the deer came after me. Suddenly a dog appeared at my side and chased the tiger away.
Then I’m in a house making out with someone when I realized I was late for work. I’m trying to find a phone to call work and when I do it starts ringing. From a 449 area code.
So todays quote is fitting for the struggles of life that might be symbolized in snakes, tigers, deer, dogs, kisses and being late for work.
A Naval motto that means to keep going, never quit, never surrender, always keep trying, and keep working until the job is complete.
A fitting rally cry for not just a midshipman, but for a big kid pushing through life.
Never stop reaching for the impossible dream that has always kept you centered on life’s journey.
Today is the National Day to jump on a merry go round. Feel the breeze on your smile and watch for the kaleidoscope…..




Monday, July 24, 2023

July 24th, 2023

   When I moved over to Riverside six years ago I received so much help and support. Do you need a couch? Do you need sheets? Do you need a microwave? Do you need bikes? Do you want Barbie dolls and accessories for Hazel?

I had four friends drop off their Barbie doll collections. We had campers, play houses, clothes, cars, shoes, Ken, closets, furniture, another Ken, beauty supplies and another Ken.
All totaled, 27 Barbie dolls and three Kens….
Hazel turned four a couple weeks after the separation and those first three years played a shit ton of Barbie at her dad’s. Sometimes Fritz would join in and sometimes George would stop by BarbieLand and spout off statistics about Barbie.
Yesterday I went to the Barbie Movie at North Riverside Mall. I thought the movie would be empty because I stereotyped. The mall is predominantly Latino and African American these days.
Lesson number one on Barbie Movie Sunday. People of color play with Barbie.
The rest of the lessons on Barbie Movie Sunday caught me by surprise.
I left the show stunned by the messages placed throughout the movie. It wasn’t at all what I expected and there isn’t a spoiler alert attached on today’s Morning Chalkboard.
I left with the further realization that woman have a long way to go still to become equal in society. Women still deal with social stereotypes, body image, mental health, sexual pressures and the always awkward relationship with men.
The Barbie doll is perfect. The perfect height, perfect breasts, perfect legs, perfect smile. She’s successful and has attacked many careers…..in BarbieLand, but not necessarily in the real world.
The movie dissects all of this in a perfect way. It was well done and a strong message for little girls. It was also a good message to send to the little brothers and the big dads as well.
George stayed home, but Fritz went to Barbie with his little sister. He liked the movie and kept calling it a documentary. I think it might have hit him as a documentary because he caught the message the movie sent.
The biggest thing that set me up was the role Ken had in the movie. It showed that Ken was an accessory to Barbie. Ken showed the fragility of men. Barbie and all of the Barbies run BarbieLand and Ken is only there if a Barbie needs a Ken. Opposites swap between BarbieLand and reality.
The movie does an incredible way of showing men as the inferior sex, a complete opposite of the masculine roll in real life.
This wasn’t my daughter’s movie on her birthday weekend. This was Jumbo’s movie this weekend. I came away with a stronger playbook on how to raise Hazel in the real world and not a make believe Barbie world.
I told Hazel that this movie will have a different meaning when she watches it with her high school friends in a few years. I told her that she will probably watch it with her college friends over a nostalgic girls night out. She will watch it alone on the couch on a snowy Sunday when she has her first apartment and she will probably watch this movie with her daughter many years from now.
“Your Grampa Shep took me to this movie when I turned ten. Uncle Fritz was there too.”
It was a successful birthday weekend. The memories will last a lifetime for Hazel and me too. I never expected to wipe tears from my face at a Barbie movie. I was waiting for Brad Pitt to tell me, “don’t cry in front of the Mexican’s!”
Last weekend of July… the sunset time on the Chalkboard is creeping closer to eight o’clock.
We have a week full of ninety degree days. So make sure to use your GoldBond and drink plenty of water.




Sunday, July 23, 2023

July 23rd, 2023

 I pulled Betty the Green Blazer into a developing line for the garage at the Shedd Aquarium Saturday morning. A couple cars ahead of us pulled out of line abruptly and we inched closer quicker than I expected. Close enough to a sign that Hazel read and then asked,

“Dad? Did you buy tickets already?”
I replied that I didn’t as the sign came into my view….
“The Shedd Aquarium is sold out for today.”
That was why cars were leaving the line and that was why Betty followed suit.
My baby girl was so excited to go see fish and was now facing disappointment. Last year I would have been dealing with a meltdown, this year I was calmly asked,
“Since you didn’t think about buying tickets in advance, do you have a backup plan……Dad?”
She handled it well, so today I put this Maya Angelou quote on the board so she can further recognize how well she handled yesterday’s situation.
Me on the other hand….
….I squeezed Betty’s steering wheel firmly and yelled out the famous Don Shepley line, “You Gotta Be Shitting Me?!?!?!” and added a “Son of a bitch, Mother F’r, F me!” to the end for stronger effect.
We ended up at the Museum of Science and Industry and had a better time. Pulled right into the second row of the garage and set off for fun. Hazel went into the Coal mine for the first time. Watching the expressions on her face throughout the exhibit was worth the price of admission.
We drove back up Lake Shore Drive as a boat regatta raced along Lake Michigan. We drove by Soldiers Field as teenyboppers started gathering for a Bayoncie concert. The city was beautiful and bustling with excitement.
We were heading towards Margie’s Candies when Hazel decided she didn’t want ice cream for lunch. She wanted a cheeseburger and she wanted one from The BillyGoat.
Proud Dad moment with that decision…
We walked into the Goat and Mr. Sianis yelled, “Hey Jumbo, good to see you! You no at the trading floor no more?”
Proud Hazel moment when someone knows her daddy.
I told him it was Hazel’s birthday weekend and he bought her a Sprite. He made her promise that she comes back in eleven years so he can buy her an Old Style and a Malort.
These next eleven years are going to fly.
Today I have to go see the Barbie movie. This is the best ten year old birthday that I’ve ever had!
“Dad, please don’t embarrass me!”




July 22nd, 2023

 When I don’t like something, I chose to turn it off. That goes for a song on the radio, a story on the news or when the Bears are getting shit kicked.

Just turn the channel.
Until this last week I didn’t know who Jason Aldean was. My love for country music is Patsy Cline, Merle Haggard, Johnny Cash and The Good Old Boy’s Blues Brother Band from Joliet, Illinois.
In 1980 Charlie Daniels released a song “In America.” It was controversial and became very popular.
Here is the first stanza….
“Well the eagle's been flyin' slow
And the flag's been flyin' low
And a lotta people sayin' that America's
Fixin' to fall.”
America was coming off of Watergate, gas shortages, high interest rates and the Iran hostages.
This song was a pick me up for a down and out generation.
Another song that comes to mind that I liked, believe it or not….
“1989 the number another summer (get down)
Sound of the funky drummer
Music hitting your heart 'cause I know you got soul.”
Yep….. I was a Honkey jamming to Public Enemy thirty five years ago.
If you don’t like the message….
….Turn to another station!
It is alright to read James Baldwin and Maya Angelou and still vote for Reagan and Trump. It might seem unlikely, but I’ve always been unlikely.
I turn the volume up for Dr Dre and Snoop Dog, but didn’t vote for Obama.
If you don’t like the message…..
….turn to another station.
My daughter listens to Lizzo in the shower. If I was closed minded I would wonder “why is my daughter listening to a fat black chick?”
Lizzo is a trained musician and an inspiration for all young woman. same with Lady Gaga and this Tyler Swift girl.
I like this song catching heat this week. It has a strong message!
Hip Hop has reached to the darkest part of the Urban soul and Jason Aldean sings about small America’s feelings on today.
Small America and the Big City are two different groups of people. They will never see eye to eye and they will never be friends.
That is unfortunate.
If you don’t like the message…
….turn to another station.
Last night I sang “Time after Time” to Hazel for the first time since Tony Bennett’s passing. I started to cry a little. Not the Cindi Lauper song, the old standard made famous by Mr. Francis Sinatra and Anthony Dominick Benedetto.
When I’m asked to sing bedtime songs, I always bang out the same three. “Moon River,” “Time after Time,” and “Rainbow Connection.”
Off to dream alone.
I gotta go make pancakes!
Have a beautiful and blessed Saturday. Put some meat on the grill and some love on the sheets.






July 21st, 2023

 Houston, we have a problem




July 20th, 2023

 I bought a bar of soap at the Riverside Farmer’s Market yesterday. I’m excited to use it in the next hour. Big hands, I know your the one….

Big birthday weekend coming up for one of the Shepkids. I gotta find a Shrek cake somewhere.
Yeah…. Most of my friends take their kids out for margaritas!
I’m buying a Shrek cake, going to the “Barbie” movie, going to Shedd Aquarium and Margie’s Candies.
All the mommies in Hazel’s class listen to that Tyler Swift with their daughters. Hazel listens to Billie Holiday with her dad.
I hope everyone enjoyed their hotdog yesterday. I received a dozen pictures from friends eating hotdogs.
TIme to hit the Thursday grind. It looks like it’s going to be a hot one in Chicagoland. Make sure to use a shake of GoldBond on the nooks and crannies today. Go out and catch some live music tonight and look for lightning bugs.
When you go out walking, always strut yourself……




July 19th, 2023

 Today is National Hot Dog Day.

I love hotdogs….
From the day my mommy cut them up and put them on a plate with ketchup. I’d plop in front of the television and watch Bozo on Channel Nine.
I like them with chili.
I like them with with sauerkraut.
I like them with coleslaw.
I like them dragged through the garden.
I like them with French fries.
If I’m having a bad day I’ll go to a hot dog stand and get a Chicago dog. Suddenly that bad day doesn’t seem so bad anymore.
Go find your favorite Mom and Pop shop today and treat yourself to a tube of lips and assholes. Sit on the hood of your car or on your tailgate and enjoy God’s favorite meal.
My favorite hotdog stands are Parky’s on Harlem and Madison in Forest Park. Pete’s on Ridgeland and Roosevelt in Oak Park and Little Joe’s on Plainfield Road in Countryside just east of Mannheim Road.
Of course I love a depression dog from Gene and Jude’s up River Road.
I’ll always stop at 35th Street Dogs just west of Sox Park before a ballgame.
Jim’s Original has a good dog, but I go there for the Maxwell Street Polish.
I don’t go to Weiner Circle… that’s not for me and the Superdawg way up north is….way up North!
All the best hot dog stands are on the west and Southside of town. My humble opinion.
I don’t care if you are in Iowa City, Noblesville, Nashville, Iberville, Savananna, Austin, Brooklyn or Cincinnati.
Even if you are in Cornwall, London or Huddersfield…. It is important that you enjoy the simplicity of a meal featuring a hotdog. I don’t care how you decorate that gorgeous gift of gastrological beauty.
Just do yourself a favor and get as close to heaven as earth will allow.
Have a hotdog at some point today.
One of the first things I’ll do when I get to heaven is find the closest hotdog stand.
Happy Humpday Chalkheads… it’s okay today to drip mustard on your shirt.




Tuesday, July 18, 2023

July 18th, 2023

 The other day I mentioned how a song can change as it ages through our life. Today’s quote comes from a song that holds that power. At least it does for me.

When I was young I thought this song was an anthem that celebrated how awesome it was to be a young American. When I was fifteen I wasn’t smart enough to understand the lyrics, so I just heard them.
As I’ve gotten older I’ve realized it’s a pessimistic take on the American society. It touches on the hatred, political mistrust and violence that America exhibits, seen through the eyes of a British pop star.
It isn’t that I’ve lost my love for this David Bowie song. It just doesn’t have the same magic it had. I’m not that twenty year old shnockered on Jägermeister shouting “we were the young Americans” at a kegger because those were the only lyrics I really heard.
Yesterday when I was blazing across 31st after work and the song came on Betty’s radio it sounded hardened to me. A symbolic take on a long mediocre career and the failures of marriage.
“We live for just these twenty years, Do we have to die for the fifty more?"
This song was no longer a drunken anthem for a young punk, but a cynical canticle for a middle aged man.
I once remembered President Nixon’s years as the time I played with GI Joes and pretended that I was Dick Butkus.
Now I look back at that fallen administration as the beginning of an era where the president was no longer the King. Bowie foreshadowed how the role of the presidency would become a mockery.
That twenty year old kid had so much success in front of him. This old man can look back at the failures and defeats the rest of the years brought along.
I had a bedroom in the basement that was underneath the dining room floor when I was young. My father would take the hind legs of a dining room chair and pound them on the hardwood floor.
“Too loud! Turn it down!”
Well I turned down the volume and listened to the words. David Bowie gave us a beautiful look at how we see our lives growing up in a painful society.
Sometimes it is good to interpret the mistakes that have been made…
McCarthyism, racism and Watergate.
Life isn’t always as beautiful as Vivaldi can make it.
Here is today’s assignment….
Listen to “Young Americans” with the sound cranked to eleven. Just like you did when it was fresh to your ears.
Then listen to it cranked to four. Like you do when you’re driving and you can’t find an address. Google the lyrics and read along.
That is a lesson in how music can change as we age through our lives.
Another Smokey day in Chicagoland. Someone needs to teach these Canadians how to properly extinguish a campfire.
I just remembered about the bills I have to pay, they were due yesterday.
Two for Tuesday Chalkheads….




July 17th, 2023

 It’s funny how the last episode of “The Blacklist” got me to reading a ton of poetry over the weekend.

On today’s Chalkboard I pulled a quote from the T.S. Eliot poem “Wait Without Hope.” When I first read and analyzed this poem in the great classrooms of an Indianapolis high school I was told to look at it from an opposite perspective.
It might have been the first time I was told to look at something from outside of the box. Since the day I first read this poem I’ve looked at the word “hope” as a cop out excuse to bullshit myself.
“Oh, I hope this happens!”
“Oh, I hope that happens!”
“Oh, I hope I win the lottery!”
We’ve always been told to never trust someone that tells you to trust them. This is true and in the same context never trust someone who is selling you hope.
Don’t confuse hope with Faith (and I always capitalize that “F” word). If all you are doing is hoping for things to change, hoping for things to improve, hoping it doesn’t rain on the day of your big party….
… you are just putting yourself in a vulnerable position that only leads to disappointment, failure and frustration.
If the world seems dark, turn on a light. If life seems boring, make it exciting. If nobody is on the dance floor, get your ass out there and move your body and glide like a 747.
What did I do this weekend?
I heard on Saturday, “These ribs are good dad… do we have anymore?”
On Sunday, “This salmon is tasty… do you have anymore?”
On both Saturday and Sunday, “you’re reading more poetry, how can you read that stuff?”
If I did anything productive, I showed George that I make great fucking ribs, delicious salmon and I like reading poetry. The seed has been planted.
This weekend I was reminded to rage against death and to see things from a different perspective.
Happy Monday Chalkheads!
It is July 17th and two weeks from today is the last day of July.
I listened to the breeze through the leaves yesterday. They are beginning to blow with the starch of summer. They are losing the softness of spring. They are saying it is time to attack the summer with gusto because Labor Day is less than fifty days away.
Keep an eye on your shadow. It is walking further away from you…




July 16th, 2023

 Yesterday I got carried away talking about Saint Swithin I barely mentioned Dylan Thomas. So I pulled another line from his poem “Do not go gentle into that good night” for the Sunday Chalkboard.

Dylan Thomas was born in Wales just before World War I. He was known to be more of a Romantic poet, which made him a little different than his contemporaries. Many poets between the two World Wars and into the 1950’s wrote with more of a social flair. Dylan Thomas never went that route and I think that is what made him one of my favorite writers.
To me he was like a Percy Bysshe Shelley for the 20th century. Unfortunately for the second half of the century he died young. Thomas pounded eighteen shots of whiskey at a bar in Greenwich Village in 1953 and died at the age of thirty nine.
Maybe it was a fitting ending to his life when you think of the poem. The poem touches on how different types of man look at life and the final outcome, death. It takes the perspective from a son telling his dad at the end of his life to fight to the end. Love life to the fullest until that final breath.
…and that was what Dylan Thomas sure as hell did.
You know what just popped into my head?
Fuck death!
It’s going to happen to all of us eventually.
Why pay attention to it?
I’ve been counting down the years on past Chalkboards. Recently I wrote that I have just twenty eight more summers left.
Why give death that credit?
We all have our own definition of living life to the fullest. If I do have twenty eight summers left or twenty seven and a half at this point….
…I am sure as fuck not going gentle into that last night. Leave the light on for me Tom Bodett. I don’t know when this rager is going to end.
For so long I keep punting the ball on happiness.
Things will get better after the divorce.
Things will get better when the kids are a little older.
Things will get better if I work harder at my job.
Things will get better with a little more water under the bridge.
Things are better right now and will only get better if you go for the first down on every fucking play.
Don’t punt the ball!!!
Alright….. it is Sunday the Sixteenth of July. We are on the hump weekend of summer. Do yourself a solid and have some sweet corn for dinner tonight. Nothing screams middle of July like a steaming cob of corn.
Do yourself another favor, read this poem and decide if you are wise, good, wild or grave.
“Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.”