Welcome to the Big Leagues

A few weeks ago our local minor league baseball team held a mid-summer promotion as a token of thanks for its sponsors.  Because I convinced my restaurant to write them a check with a fair number of zeros behind it early in the spring, my invitation arrived in the mail, crisp and sealed, waiting for an RSVP.

The event had its fair share of appeal.  Besides FREE food as well as FREE beer (though I was going to have to tap the Rockies or take a ride on the Silver Bullet, which is asking a lot of a manager of a brewery), they were also opening up the batting cage where we could take a few cuts and test our mettle on the same field where the soon-to-be-big-boys play ball.  In all honesty, I could have cared less about batting practice- they had me at FREE food and FREE beer (I can stomach anything, after all).  My wife, however, a varsity softball player herself, was intrigued.  It was a date!

With all the FREE going around, we went ahead and brought along our son.  No reason to deprive him of any discount-priced calories or the chance to see mommy crank a foul ball off her wrists, after all.

Dinner went down smooth, as anything does when you are able to lube it up with ballpark chili and chase it with banquet beer.  My wife went down to get her name on the better’s  list while I stayed put to get my money’s worth before making my own way down to support her efforts in the cage.

I tried to remain inconspicuous as I tried to find a seat, but at 6’4″, 250lbs and a few plastic cups in, incognito is difficult to do, and before I knew it I was recognized and on the list myself. 

Damn.

 Off to the dugout I went…

To loosen up and stretch…

…and wait for my intro music to play over the PA system before thousands (or tens) of my adoring fans (people patiently waiting their turn) raised to their feet in thunderous anticipation (drank their free beer and ate their free chili burgers and chips).


Let’s just saw I didn’t disappoint.

The first person to greet me at the steps of the dugout was my son.  I picked him up and we celebrated my trivial moment with a big hug and kiss, when I looked deep in his eyes and said,

“Hey, buddy, let me put you down.  Daddy really needs to pee.”

As luck would have it, there was a restroom at the end of the dugout.  While taking care of business, I felt the door to the tight bathroom open into my back where my son peeked around it and let me know he needed to go as well.  Suddenly I realized the opportunity had presented itself to allow me to pass along one of life’s great lessons:

“If you want to play in the Big Leagues, son, you must first pee were the Big Leaguer’s peed on their way to The Show.”

Broken Spoke

After a game of hide-and-go-seek with my keys that set me a few minutes behind of my normal morning routine, my heart shuttered as I heard something crush undernieth the weight of the rear tire of my car as I peeled out cautiously eased my way out of my driveway.  I tried to corral my imagination as I opened the door to investigate the carnage, and breathed a deep sigh of relief when I saw it was just my kid’s bike, sans the kid.  Until I saw that its front wheel resembled a capital letter “L,” that is.

As the cheapest man I know, rather than look into getting a new bike, or at the very least a new wheel (those things are expensive) I busted out a hammer and a pair of vice grips and beat the living hell out of the thing until it again resembled a circle and was able to rotate completely without rubbing the sides of the frame.

For weeks my son seemed not to notice, and as he wobbled his way around the driveway each night before dinner, I beamed with pride at my frugal nature and craftsmanship- until I saw this tweet from my sister:

“T says he would like a tire for his bike that is not bent for his birthday. Simple, practical, & yet a little sad…”

Sometimes you gotta know when to say when…

Happy 5th Birthday, Buddy!

Sportin's Some New Wheels- Staight Ones, Even!

Sportin' a new bike, with straight wheels even!

The Make-up Artist

On mornings my son goes to school, he typically gets up as my wife turns on the shower.  With his thumb in his mouth he crawls into my bed and finds his spot buried in the sheets with his head nestled on my shoulder.  Together we lie there until we hear mommy turn the water off from her shower.  This is my signal to get the boy dressed.

I tell him to go to his room and grab the clothes that he had pick out to wear the night before.  With his first spark of the day he rolls off the bed and hurries back with pants, a shirt, a pair of undies and a big smile.  We wrestle playfully as I peel him out of his jammies and get him ready for the day ahead.  By this time Mommy has put on some clothes as well, and takes the lead with the boy as she leads him downstairs for a healthy breakfast.

At this point I am off duty for the rest of the morning, and lay my head back down on my pillow, rest my eyes and fade in and out as my inquisitive little boy plays twenty questions with his loving mother.  For instance, this is what I heard this morning:

SON: Mommy, can I put your make-up on you?

MOMMY: No, but you can watch me put my make-up on.

SON: {mild yet high-pitched fit}

MOMMY: Don’t start this morning.  Here, help me by holding that.

***BRIEF MOMENTS OF SILENCE***

SON: MOMMY NO! That doesn’t go on your eyelashes!  It goes on your lips!  MOMMY STOP!

MOMMY: Stop that!  Give me that!

SON: MOMMY THAT”S NOT THE RIGHT COLOR!

I must have fallen asleep for a bit as I never did hear them leave.  It must have been a deep sleep to boot.  If I didn’t know better I’d swear that this was the duo that kissed me goodbye on their way out the door.

Clown

The Greatest Picture Ever

So Erik and I went to Beer Club Night at a Colorado Springs Sky Sox game (Thanks again, Peter) for a piece on rediscovering.wordpress.com.   The premiss was one man’s perceptions (Erik) of another as he gets a bit too deep in some Rocky Mountain Refreshment (Yours Truly).  Anyway, coming out of concession’s with #9 & #10, I saw the team’s mascot, Sox the Fox, taking pictures with the kids.  It turns out I have done this before-

Innocence from last season

Innocence from last season

With a few too many already flowing in my veins (all within the spirit of the article, mind you) I ran down (stumbled really, and lucky not to have broken my neck) to our seats and tell Erik what I found.

We rush to Sox’s table where I am greeted skeptically by his handler.  I take a deep breath, and do my best to keep my eyes from straying in different directions, and tell the gentleman that me and my partner are writers of a travel blog (it’s true) and were covering the Mug Club for the site.  We told him that a picture with Sox would be a great accent for our piece.

It’s a funny thing that happens when you let people think you are doing something important.  Where just moments before this guy was about to call security and have me put in an arm-bar and removed from the premises, he opens up my path to Sox the Fox and says, “Oh wow!  Take a few if you have to!”

Thank you sir, but just one will do…

It's good to see you again, buddy...

It's good to see you again, buddy...