Sunday, August 31, 2025

A Farwell to Summer (Chalkboard Bonus)

 

The Last Evening of August

There wasn’t a breeze on the last evening of August.
The air hung still, heavy with the usual late summer fatigue. The kind that makes you feel like the whole world has been holding its breath for weeks and is finally about to exhale into September. Bats glitched across the fading sky, their quick, erratic movements cutting black strokes against the pale orange wash as the sun settled into another month.

The cicadas screeched softly from the tree line. Not the manic roar of July, but something quieter, wearier, as if even they understood summer was reaching its close. Above them, the moon hung half-lit in the southern sky, its borrowed light pulling at shadows like a slow tide.

 The sun has slowly melted into Monday, while the constellation Scorpius crawled ahead in the first-quarter glow. Its curve bending toward Antares. That red heart burning stubborn and low on the horizon. A reminder, maybe, that some things burn brightest right before they fade.

Lincoln Avenue and the Quiet Glow

The last of the dog walkers drifted home down Lincoln Avenue. Their shadows stretched long under the soft hum of the gas lamps, that old Riverside glow pooling in front yards where annuals leaned like tired sentries. There wasn’t the flash of lightning bugs anywhere, no tiny bursts of electricity to illuminate summer’s final bow. The stage was closing without fanfare, and nobody seemed to notice.

The moon crept toward Antares, slow and deliberate, like it had nowhere else to be. I sat back and let Charlie Parker’s horn spill from the speakers, sharp one second, soft the next. Cutting across the stale air like a memory you’re not ready to unpack. My Avo burned lazy between my fingers, its smoke curling up into a ceiling of stillness, while the espresso and Licor 43 blended vanilla and citrus into the edges of my thoughts.

An Unused Season

August and summer were the subjects scaling through my mind, each one taking turns on the balance beam of regret. It wasn’t a bad summer, not exactly, but it was an unused one. A season that somehow slipped away while I was busy catching up on work, running numbers, chasing markets, grinding through another set of days at my trading desk.

I spent more time watching the green of the corn belt than the blue of the lake. More hours staring at soybean spreads than sunsets…. and when I wasn’t buried in the churn of my career, I was helpless with the nurturing of family, stuck between wanting to do more and not knowing how to fix what was fraying.

Then, in the distance, fireworks cracked against the dark. Not mine. Some other town’s celebration carried on through the breeze, too far to see, but close enough to hear. That is summer in a nutshell, isn’t it? Somebody else’s joy, miles away, drifting just out of reach.

Rebirth, Regret, and GoldBond Powder

Daylight gave way to darkness, and with it, the season gave way to its clamor. I thought about autumn the way I always do, not as death, but as rebirth. A chance to reset, to take inventory, to sharpen the edges before the cold sets in.

One less summer to live.
One less summer to forgive.

That is the math that keeps hitting harder every year. As the smoke from my stogie curled across my face, I wondered if I’d spent this season wisely or wasted it altogether. No margaritas on the beach. No music on the stage. The rituals I used to chase slipped right past me, swallowed by workdays and quiet nights that stacked into months.

And yet, there were moments. Little ones. Enough to hold onto.

The Ice Cream Stand with George

Picking George up after his therapy sessions became my favorite part of the summer. No plans. No agenda. Just a dad and his son at the ice cream stand. He always ordered soft-serve, and somehow, without fail, he’d finish his cone before I was halfway through mine.

Then came the grin. That scheming little grin.
Always trying to finagle my last bite, but I never gave in. Not once. That was our dance. That was ours, only ours.

Hotdogs, French fries and Fritz

With Fritz, it was the occasional trip to our hotdog stand. A ritual, small but steady. Parky’s, where the smell of grilled onions hangs in the air and the umbrellas over the tables have their own kind of nostalgia baked into the fabric. Something I once shared with my father. Something I now share with my son.

We’d sit there and talk, and I’d listen, really listen. As he tried on his voice, trying to balance who he has been and who he wants to be. You can hear it in your kids when they are starting to figure things out. It isn’t loud, it isn’t dramatic. It’s a shift, a subtle settling, and if you are paying attention, it sounds like growing.

Hazel and the Roar

My daughter, though… Hazel didn’t spend much time with her dad this summer. That part stings. Her little squeaky voice, the one that used to light up rooms, has shifted into something new… a sparky, sarcastic roar. Maybe part of me loves it, because it has strength. It has fire. It is her owning her edges, but I want her to have that roar when she’s twenty-two, not twelve. I want to buy her time before the world forces her to sharpen her teeth.

Farewell to a Boring Summer

The stogie burned down to its butt.
The espresso cooled.
The liquor slipped into the last quiet traces of spicey content.

And above me, the moon settled into the silent branches, indifferent as always.

Farewell, boring summer of 2025. One less summer to powder the nooks with GoldBond. One less summer to worry about sunscreen. One less summer of mediocre baseball in Bridgeport. The White Sox mailed it in again, and maybe so did I.

The Polar Bear ice cream shop will board up soon.
The umbrellas at Parky’s will fold away until spring.
Hazel will have one less summer to be embarrassed by her gregarious father.

What Comes Next

I look forward to fall. To the soft rain of autumn teardrops and the quiet dark that comes to claim the streets earlier each night. Another full moon is coming. Another scoreless period will run out of time. Another season will turn, whether I am ready or not.

Maybe that is the thing about summer?
It doesn’t end when the calendar flips.
It ends when you realize how much of it you let slip away.

 

August 31st, 2025

 Today’s quote comes from one of the most famous of Billy Shakes’ 154 sonnets, Sonnet 18.

The one that opens with, “Shall I compare thee to a summer’s day?” The line that I chalked, “Summer’s lease hath all too short a date,” lands like a quiet reminder, that summer is fleeting, and so are we.
The Summer of 2025 has slipped into memory now. We will never live these days again except in the stories we carry forward. Everyone thinks Sonnet 18 is a love poem, and maybe it is, but beneath it lies something deeper...
... the truth that youth and beauty will fade, that time builds against us, and that we need to grasp the moments while they are here. We must paint them in wonder and keep them alive not just in life, but in legacy.
For me, Labor Day’s legacy will always be tied to a childhood memory. Trying to stay up all night with my mommy, watching the Jerry Lewis Telethon, seeing the tote board climb with every donation. That was my marker that summer was over and the school uniform was waiting to wear.
Tomorrow, we turn the calendar to the “Ber” months, September through December. The stretch of the year where the air cools, the sweaters come out, and the anticipation builds for Hanukkah, Christmas, and the promise of a new year. These months bring coziness and comfort. Warm drinks by the fire, raging bonfires in backyards, and quiet evenings under heavy blankets.
This last week of August pulled out our school colors, filling stadiums and fields with cheers that bring back fond memories of seasons past. Take time to walk beneath the tired leaves before they flash their quick brilliance and let go. Notice the angle of the sun today, how it drapes itself differently across your shoulders than it did in July, already preparing to join the birds on their southern journey.
Summer may have ended, but autumn arrives carrying its own kind of grandeur. The kind Billy Shakes knew how to capture, and the kind we keep alive by remembering.
Sunday-Funday has a smile on the sun and a memory to create.




Saturday, August 30, 2025

August 30th, 2025

 I quote a man who defended his country against the brutality of a devil hiding behind a swastika. For Winston Churchill, success wasn’t a final destination where you could rest and relax. Instead, success created a greater need for sustained, relentless effort to maintain and build upon it.

That is a mantra worth carrying as we push through life’s victories and setbacks.
I have stood at a trading desk so busy my head was spinning, and I’ve stood there on quiet days where my thoughts and worries had all the room they wanted. I’ve had weeks where one Shepkid shines and another one completely falls apart. That’s life, the ups and downs, the ebbs and flows. Some days the road is smooth and other days you blow an axle or flatten a tire.
The trick is remembering there are good days behind you and better ones ahead, even when you are standing in the middle of a bad one.
The weather girl here at The Morning Chalkboard has dialed up something rare for August 30th, a mild kickoff to the season. Most football games this time of year call for sunscreen, sunglasses, and short sleeves. Not in 2025. Today, you can leave the SPF in the drawer and let the breeze do its work.
So, to whatever team stirs your heart... whether if it was under the Friday night lights, on the college gridiron, the pro stage, or the rugby pitch... good luck today. Sports have a way of reminding us who we are and where we belong.
Success, after all, isn’t where you stop. It’s where you dig deeper. It’s where you lean in.
Go Team. Always.




Friday, August 29, 2025

August 29th, 2025

    When this Chalkboard project is all said and done, it won’t just be a collection of quotes and scribbles. It will be a map. A record of where John Shepley stood when life threw him a curveball and how he carried the weight.

One day... George, Fritz, and Hazel will look back and see the path... every climb, every stumble, every hard day survived will be written right here in chalk.

Generations before us had photo albums, letters, and stories passed around the dining room table. We have smartphone cameras and blogs. The ShepKids are the first generation to inherit a living timeline. A chance to scroll through their family’s story and see the fingerprints in real time. This board isn’t just about weather reports or moon phases; it’s proof that we were here, we stood our ground, we watched our shadows, we gazed at the stars, we witnessed time together and we kept moving.
Life will never be easy and you don’t want it to be. If life feels easy, it means something is wrong. Struggle shapes you, pressure sharpens you and the storms don't ask for permission.
The mark that you leave behind isn’t about the size of the load. It is about the way you shoulder it, the way you stand back up, the way you keep walking even when wind across the Chicago River bridge cuts you sideways.
Resilience
Dignity
Character.
That is the inheritance.
When the ShepKids read the Morning Chalkboard years from now, I hope they understand one thing:
Legacy isn’t built by what you bear. It’s built by how you bear it…
... and who is watching when you do.




Thursday, August 28, 2025

August 28th, 2025

  I wanted to talk about an issue that I am having with a Shepkid and school. I was going to ask for advice and bitch and moan about the situation.

Then another mentally unstable person got its hands on a gun. Taking its agenda and guns to a Catholic school where this monster shot up a church while the students were attending the first mass of the school year.
It hit me hard because I went to a baker's dozen "First Day of School Mass" through my school years. Kindergarten through senior year in high school.
Suddenly the issues at Highlands Middle School became petty compared to those at Annunciation.
My Shepkids sat at the dinner table last night. Two kids in Minnesota did not.
Fade to black




Wednesday, August 27, 2025

August 27th, 2025

 “Sadness is but a wall between two gardens.” — Kahlil Gibran

I looked back at who I quote the most on the Chalkboard. Billy Shakes, Hemingway, Whitman, Fitzgerald, Churchill, Maya Angelou, Woody Hayes, Reagan, Yeats and now Kahlil Gibran joins the top shelf. The Lebanese poet knew his way around a metaphor, and today’s is one worth parking on for a while.
Sadness as a wall, not a destination and not a dead end. A temporary barrier. When you are standing in front of it, you can’t see anything but the bricks. The weight of it feels permanent, but Gibran’s telling us to remember that there are gardens on both sides.
Those gardens?
They could be the seasons of our lives. Joy before, joy ahead, separated by a stretch of dirt you’ve got to walk through.
Or maybe Gibran’s talking bigger... this life and the next one, separated by the wall we call death. Either way, the metaphor sticks: sadness deepens the roots so the joy blooms higher. You can’t appreciate one without knowing the other.
I figured out life got easier when I finally understood the difference between metaphors and similes, irony and hyperbole, oxymorons and analogies. Words are tools and Gibran shows us how to use them without wasting any.
Since it is hump day, maybe this one hits harder. The middle of the week, staring at the wall, wondering if the weekend is worth the grind. However, there is always another garden on the other side, even if you’ve got to dig your way through to get there.
I threw a little Greek into the grabber section for the person who sent me those ungodly emails yesterday. “Dimmítte impio.” Roughly translated: Be gone, wicked one.
Now let’s climb the wall and find something astonishing on the other side.




Tuesday, August 26, 2025

August 26th, 2025

 "I always get to where I'm going by walking away from where I have been." — Winnie the Pooh

Winnie the Pooh is like comfort food. He takes us back to a different time in our lives. When we were naive, confused, and vulnerable. Oh wait… that sounds like yesterday.
Years ago, I read a book that blended Taoist philosophy with Winnie the Pooh and it stuck with me through the years. The idea was simple: happiness and wisdom come from embracing your true nature and living in harmony with the universe.
Be more like Pooh... Stop overthinking, stop overcomplicating and slow down enough to actually enjoy the honey.
Then reality has to set in. I live in Chicagoland; with bills to pay, kids to raise, work to get done, and an ex-wife who seems to have sprinkled eggshells all over Cook County. Busy people don’t live in the Tao of Pooh.
Maybe that is the point. Maybe that is why Pooh’s wisdom hits harder now than it did when we were kids. You can’t always control the chaos, but you can control whether you let it consume you.
Today is Get Checked Day. Ladies, get those mammograms scheduled. Fellas, while the women are taking care of their boobies, maybe make sure the balls and the booty are all good too. That reminds me of what my Oldman told me on my 35th birthday:
"Moose, it is time to find a doctor with small fingers."
Joking aside... do whatever you can to make it to your 85th birthday. Life is too short not to get checked and too astonishing to cut short because you didn't want to go for a check up!




Monday, August 25, 2025

August 25th, 2025

      I started this Chalkboard years ago to give the ShepKids something familiar at their Oldman's place. Just like the one that hung in their mom’s house. It wasn’t about quotes or weather forecasts back then. It was about grounding the ShepKids. Giving them a solid footing and a strong foundation when everything else around them was shifting.

When I was a kid, my mom moved me all over after she divorced my Oldman. There wasn’t much stability, and I didn’t want that for my kids. So, that is why I hung this board in my kitchen, and somewhere along the way it became more than a board. It turned into a ritual. A daily reminder that no matter what else is going on, this is still home.
Speaking of keeping things together, my middle guy, Frederick Joseph, turns sixteen today. God made Fritz the middle child because He knew he was strong enough to hold the seams. He looks after his baby sister. He has learned to comfort his older brother. He is the one who smooths out the bumps for everyone, then grabs a hotdog at Parky’s with his Oldman. That is why I nicknamed him “The Glue.”
Like the Chalkboard, Fritz has been the consistent piece that has kept our splintered family together. That is a hell of a responsibility for a kid who has only been here 5,844 days. Fritz carries the wit of his Grampa Don, the compassion of his Gramma Ceil, the brains of his PopPop, Grampa Ed, and the common sense of his JoJo, Gramma Mary Jo. He is a Chalkhead, through and through.
When he reads today’s quote, “The most difficult thing in life is to know yourself”...
... I hope he takes it to heart. That is the big hurdle in life, kid. It took your Oldman a long time to figure his ass from a hole in the ground.
Find good friends. Keep faith somewhere in your routine and don’t you ever stop looking out for George and Hazel. That is what makes us Shepley. English and German through and through.
It is the last week of August and autumn temps are teasing us, but don’t you dare drag those sweaters out yet. If you see any pumpkin-flavored nonsense, run for the hills. We still have plenty of GoldBond days left before Halloweenie shows up.
Happy birthday, Fritz. Sixteen looks good on you, kid. Keep holding us together, make the world better and watch out for jagoffs that don't use their directional.




Sunday, August 24, 2025

August 24th, 2025

 “The fountains mingle with the river, and the rivers with the ocean.”

Percy Bysshe Shelley
Shelley saw rivers flowing into the ocean. I see it every day on this Chalkboard. Little moments, small conversations, old friends, new faces. They all drift into something bigger. Sometimes that “bigger” is life itself, and sometimes it is just knowing where you have been, who you’ve met, and the pieces of yourself you have left behind along the way.
I have met a lot of people in my life. From my early Chicago years to my teenage days in Indiana. From my Oak Park crew to my colleagues on the floor of the Board of Trade. From the folks I knew living west of Mannheim to my neighbors now in Riverside. I have crossed paths with an army of people... teammates, coworkers, neighbors, classmates, rugby brothers, even total strangers who somehow became stories.
Yesterday I went out to watch rugby, to see some of the guys I met twelve, maybe fifteen years ago. The Blaze sides played out of their minds, two solid victories...
...and on the drive home I started thinking.
I might know a shit ton of people, but here’s the truth: there isn’t one person in this world who considers me their best friend.
I don’t have that buddy who just pops over to drink a beer and watch the game. I don’t have a Ben Affleck to my Matt Damon. I don’t have a Kramer for my Seinfeld. No Barney Rubble to my Fred Flintstone.
What I have is a long list of people who would show up if my life hit the wall. I have support, plenty of it, but not that one constant, the guy who calls without a reason or just knocks on the door because he knows he can.
Some of it is timing.
Some of it is the natural cycles of life.
I have two groups of friends that have been together since kindergarten and I came into those circles down the road, always joining mid-story. I have stayed in touch with friends from my twenties, but then the friendship recession hit. People moved, People got married, started families, chased jobs, drifted off into their own lanes.
Then came my midlife crisis, and right behind it, the collapse of my marriage. I had my newer rugby buddies, but their bonds were built on twenty years of bruises and beers together. I was the new guy. Then Riverside gave me another circle, but those friendships had their own roots. Once again, I was the new guy.
And here is the thing about getting older: the cycles keep coming. One day, I’ll step away from the trading desk and lose the day-to-day camaraderie of colleagues that I have stood beside for decades. Another friendship recession is on the horizon as people start aging out, selling their nests, heading to warmer, tax-friendly states. That shift is coming whether I like it or not.
It’s the Eleanor Rigby problem... the quiet risk of isolation when the circles around you thin, but maybe Shelley had it right all along: the fountains, the rivers, the ocean.
People drift in, stay a while, then drift out, and the current keeps moving whether we fight it or not.
If you are one of the lucky ones who has snagged a best friend, hold onto that. You have something rare...
... and if you haven’t, maybe the trick is to stay open, to keep flowing, to let new tributaries find you.
Today is Waffle Day. It is going to be gorgeous. Sit by a fountain or a river if you can. Hell, if you’re lucky enough, sit by an ocean. As August slides toward its last stretch, go into autumn with a clear agenda.
Make it astonishing.




August 23rd, 2025

   I came across today’s quote while digging for something to chalk about and it sent me straight back to high school and Death of a Salesman. I hated that play when I was seventeen. I hated reading plays in general. This one had flashbacks and dream sequences that made it harder to put together.

Recently I stumbled onto the 1980s film version with Dustin Hoffman and John Malkovich. Watching it made me pick the book back up after forty years of life under my belt. It made me realize this literature that I once thought was garbage was a masterpiece.

Willy Loman is the American Dream on two tired and worn-out legs. His hard work, hustle, determination and the promise that it all adds up to success was an illusion that Arthur Miller ripped apart. Willy was chasing ghosts, haunted by his failures, living inside the false grandeur he built for himself. That hit me hard, not because my story is Willy’s story, but because I know what it is like to be my own worst enemy. Every time life knocked me down, it wasn’t fate. It was me throwing the punch.
It took me years to stop fighting myself and once I did, the world didn’t change, I did. Suddenly, astonishment wasn’t something I had to chase. It was right there, waiting for me as it always was.
Today is Saturday and it is rugby day. Opening day for my beloved Chicago Blaze. George will be off hanging with his JoJo, and I’m going to spend my afternoon with hookers and flankers, rucks and scrums. There’s a smile on the sun, and there’s a glorious day ahead.
Go get some gusto out there and find the astonishment in August twenty-third.




Friday, August 22, 2025

August 22nd, 2025

 Dorothy Parker would have been 132 today.

That is why I chalked one of her lines. She wrote like she drank... hard, fast, and without apology. No sunshine, no unicorns, no rainbows. She understood chaos, the kind that keeps you staring at the ceiling fan at 3 a.m., waiting for the hammer to drop. That is why her words hit like they do. We’ve all got storms to face.
I knew storms in the bond room of the Chicago Board of Trade. Back when men were louder than the phones and the jackets were louder than the men. The pit wasn’t a workplace; it was a war zone. Screaming matches from the opening bell to the final trade. Brokers and locals bidding and offering like their mortgage and car payment were hanging by a thread. Hand signals cutting through the air like semaphore for the damned. Phones ringing off the hook. Runners, trade checkers, and arb clerks holding it together while their hearts pounded like Professor Longhair on a piano in New Orleans.
Calm?
Never trusted it.
A quiet pit meant trouble was coming. I’ve seen it all...
... stock market crashes, dictatorships toppling, planes slamming into towers. That kind of life rewires you. It makes you pace when the room goes still. Makes you twitch when the phone doesn’t ring.
Now, here we are on Dorothy’s birthday, with a Black Moon rolling in this weekend. The third new moon in a single season.
Dark sky.
Clean slate.
Fresh start if you want it.
Finish the week strong, but don’t forget the gusto. Life is too damn short to whisper when you can roar.




Thursday, August 21, 2025

August 21st, 2025

     My Oldman hammered into me that you can judge a man by how he finishes a job. People say “measure twice, cut once.” My Oldman? He would measure it from every corner, every angle, every edge and still stand there, scratching his head, deciding what saw to use.

Then there was my Gramma down in Indianapolis, teaching me how to mow her lawn when I was nine going on ten. This wasn’t some simple box-shaped lawn. It was a palace garden in the middle of Broad Ripple. Flower beds, bushes, twists and turns everywhere. Oh, and her lawnmower? It was built out of leftover parts from a Korean War helicopter. Sharp blades spinning inches from my ankles, nothing between me and losing a foot but pure dumb luck.
Those two mentors worked me to the bone and made damn sure I walked away with a lesson every time. I heard today’s quote,
“It’s who goes the hardest, the longest”
...and immediately thought of my Oldman and my Gramma. Between that and today’s Grabber section,
Acta non verba/Actions, not words
...the takeaway is simple: talk is cheap. Nobody remembers the assclown who said they would do it. People remember the guy who showed up, strapped their helmet on, and went the distance.
August 21st looks like a beautiful day here in Chicagoland. Labor Day is eleven days out, and yesterday, on my walk, my shadow was leading the way.
Let’s finish the summer strong, you Chalkheads.




Wednesday, August 20, 2025

August 20th, 2025

 There are two kinds of white people who read James Baldwin.

First, there’s the one who got assigned Baldwin in some college class. All they knew going in was that he was a “fragile little Black man with a big civil rights voice.” Then they actually read him and walked away with a better understanding of humanity.
Then there is the second kind: the guilt ridden try-hard to impress. They want everyone to know they read Baldwin. They read Angelou. They read Morrison. Hell, they even tried reading Langston Hughes. They will tell you about the Miles Davis vinyl they bought in college, but they won't tell you who they voted for in the last couple Chicago mayoral elections. It is less about Baldwin and more about résumé building.
Me?
I’m neither. I’m the honky who picked up Notes of a Native Son because my hippie professor thought it was “cool, man.” I caved in when he said it was “just a collection of essays.” Holy hell, this “gay little Black man,” as Baldwin once called himself, blew me away. I’m not here to stand on a platform and preach. I’m not going to list every Black author I have ever read or pretend it made me enlightened. It didn’t make me woke, it made me self-aware...
... And that is what counts.
Today’s quote isn’t about race. It is about connection. Baldwin writes, “The moment we break faith with one another, the sea engulfs us and the light goes out.” He is talking about the threads that hold us together... empathy, trust, community. When we stop showing up for each other, when we turn away, the light dies.
That is why I chalked this quote on National Radio Day. Because the radio is always on in my house. Voices connecting voices, strangers talking to strangers, music binding people who will never meet. Different people with the same heartbeat.
Turn on your radio.
Read some Baldwin.
And remember this latest Jumboism: people are different, but human beings are the same.




Tuesday, August 19, 2025

August 19th, 2025

 Well, that was the longest stretch we’ve gone without a Morning Chalkboard in almost eight years of chalking.

I come back and find out over a thousand folks are stopping by the blog on a daily basis. The other day in the LaGrange Park Ace, a lady asked if I was the guy behind the Morning Chalkboard. She said she and her husband read it every morning...
...and her husband calls me a modern-day Paul Harvey. That one made me smile. My Oldman would be proud.
People have gotten used to knowing when and where the sun rises and sets, what the moon is up to, and what season is creeping around the corner. That reminds me, these next two mornings, a couple hours before sunrise, the crescent moon will cozy up with Venus and Jupiter. I’ll try to snap a picture with my crappy cell phone camera and hope the sky cooperates.
Today’s quote hits hard: “The biggest prison is a home without love.”
It doesn’t matter if it’s a studio in Berwyn, a Chicago bungalow, a cabin in the woods, or one of those Lego-looking mansions in Hinsdale. Without love, it ain’t a home. Same goes for the heart. If it can’t love, it’s nothing but a jail cell.
We have seventy-three days until trick-or-treaters hit the street, a hundred until Thanksgiving, and somewhere in between 93.9 FM will flip the switch to wall-to-wall Christmas songs. With the humidity and thunderstorms that we have had lately, the last thing I want right now is Nat King Cole crooning about tiny tots.
But I’ll admit it...
...August rain has smelled damn good these past few days. Second only to the sound of snow falling in December.
Alright, you Chalkheads, the board is back. Let’s get it on and find astonishment today.




Thursday, August 14, 2025

August 14th, 2025

     George handed me this quote and asked me to chalk it. No backstory, no setup, just the quote. Sometimes that is all you need. Justice isn’t about warm fuzzies, it’s about protecting the people who follow the rules from the ones who break them. Mercy for the guilty sounds noble until you realize who pays the bill. Thanks, kid… you’re learning faster than most grown-ups I know.

Steve Martin turns 80 today. I swear he was already 60 when he sang about King Tut… and that was almost fifty years ago. The end of summer is creeping in, the sun is smiling today, and I’m just standing here wondering how time manages to sprint while I’m busy tapping my toes.




Wednesday, August 13, 2025

August 13th, 2025

Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “The best tunes are played on the oldest fiddles.”
Now, when I hear “fiddle,” my mind goes straight to Charlie Daniels and that story about the devil heading down to Georgia. The way I see it, “best tunes” aren’t about a one-hit wonder. They are not bubblegum pop that fades when the summer is over. They are American Pie... eight and a half minutes long, two sides of a 45, and still packing a punch 55 years later.
The “old fiddle”?
That is not me, and it is not you either. Old fiddles are the great uncles and grandpas with liver spots and stories you have heard a hundred times.
I’m GenX.
I’m the latchkey kid who grew up on cartoons and cereal, not dust bowls and radio dramas. A Stradivarius might make a sweet sound, but so can that beat-up piece of wood Willie Nelson’s been strumming into history. The trick is simple: play your fiddle loud, play it proud, and give it to the world. Then slather a big old slab of butter on your toast and keep going.
Today is our day... National Left-Handers Day.
I’m left-handed and proud of it. I turn my notebook upside down, so the spiral isn’t under my arm. I swing a golf club from the left side, I wear my mitt on my right hand and put my left hand on the small of a back. My mom told me I was special because I was left-handed. My dad told me not to listen to her. The paperboy is special. The baker on the corner is special. You want to be special? Learn to play the fiddle, then make the devil regret he ever stepped foot in your county.
It’s August 13th. The sun is grinning, the farmer’s market is selling cheap corn, and somewhere there is a kid from Georgia tightening his bow, ready to take on the devil himself. That’s the spirit... don’t shy away from the challenge, don’t play timid, and don’t save your best tune for later. Bang it out right F'ing now!
Whatever your “fiddle” is... music, work, family, love, play it like you mean it. Play it until your hands ache and the strings fray.
...and if the devil shows up for a duel, send him packing back to hell with his tail between his legs.
Now pass the toast, the butter and the jelly. Let's get this Wednesday tuned up.




Tuesday, August 12, 2025

August 12th, 2025

 A friend that I have known since 1978 texted me out of the blue yesterday, asking if I was okay. She said that I have been talking about death and heaven more than I usually do. She was worried and wondered if I was sick.

First off, that’s the sign of a strong friendship...someone paying enough attention to notice when your tone shifts.
Second, no, I am not sick. It has been a while since I rolled around in the hay and I just need to grapple some hip hop thighs. Or maybe I just need a vacation and a couple days away from the grid.
I am destined to bury most of the people that I care about as penance for the dumbshit things that I have done since the summer of ’66. So we can rule out any illness.
Last night I stumbled on this old Chinese proverb and yeah, I’d rather call it an Oriental proverb, because to me it feels more traditional, less political. The Orient had a way of boiling truth down to a clean sentence.
This one says: Be not afraid of growing slowly; be afraid only of standing still.
Translation?
Growth doesn’t need to be a sprint. It is the small, steady steps that stack into something solid. Keep moving forward, even if it’s at a crawl. Stagnation is the real enemy and if your journey happens to stroll past a tavern with an Old Style sign swinging out front, or a hot dog stand that steams the buns...
... well, that is just part of building character.
Today is National Vinyl Record Day. I don’t remember the last time I played baseball with the neighborhood kids or who was the priest the last time that I served mass or who tackled me in that last game of smear the queer...
... But I do remember Val selling me my last vinyl in 1986. It was Play Deep by The Outfield, singing about Josie and her vacation far away. Val told me it was shallow and I should stick to Talking Heads and R.E.M..
Maybe she was right, but I played it anyway.
So take your time today. Use your turn signal. Don’t watch the water boil and remember...
... even slow motion is still motion.