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The JackB

"When you're in jail, a good friend will be trying to bail you out. A best friend will be in the cell next to you saying, 'Damn, that was fun'." Groucho Marx

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Archives for April 2010

Loss- A Familiar Pain

April 14, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

Many years ago I worked with a woman who had two dogs. I can’t tell you much about the dogs. I don’t remember names, breeds or much of anything other than she loved them. Loved them so much that when one dog died she had to take time off from work.

I remember being surprised by this. I had grown up with pets who were part of the family. We had dogs, cats, hamsters, mice and birds. Not all at the same time, but they were a constant part of my childhood. I was familiar with loving my pets but not to the extent that this woman did.

I was a 27 year-old newlywed who lived in a modest apartment. She was about four foot nothing in her stockings and couldn’t have weighed more than a 100 pounds. A tiny single mother whose child had gone off to college she had no one but her dogs. Or so I think.

So many years have passed it is hard to remember and it is possible that some of the grains of time have become lodged in my eye and consequently have blurred the details.

What I know for certain, what I can say without hesitation is that I thought of her as being old and was quite surprised at how upset she became when her dog died. I understood that it was hard, but I didn’t quite get how it required time away from work.

But age and life experience have helped to bridge the gap and I understand things a little bit better now than I did then. Because the truth is that I still miss my old friend.

This past weekend we took the new puppy to see the vet. The same vet that the big lug used to see. As I stood there I remembered when he was just a puppy, far bigger than the new guy, but just as curious. I stood there and remembered how he used to prance around the house and how we’d play together.

And then I remembered how it was at the end. The struggle to walk, the incontinence and other indignities of old age. How hard it was to make the decision to let him go and how the light went out in his eyes in the same room that I was standing in.

As screwy as it may sound, I felt a twang of guilt. I felt sad that he was gone and that I wasn’t able to do more for him. He was the best of friends and a trusted confidant who was taken away far too early. And I realize that every time I see a Golden Retriever I look for him.

He’s not coming back. There won’t be another like him. There will be other dogs and the bond between the new one and I is growing daily. I suppose that I just felt like I needed to put it out there that he hasn’t been replaced. His memory lives on with me.

Filed Under: animals, Life and Death

Thomas The Tank Engine Has Left The Station

April 13, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

English: The during a Thomas the Tank Engine w...
English: The during a Thomas the Tank Engine weekend. Thomas at Avon Riverside station. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“Time it was, and what a time it was, it was
A time of innocence, a time of confidences
Long ago, it must be, I have a photograph
Preserve your memories, they’re all that’s left you”
Bookends– Simon and Garfunkel

Kristen’s guest post about toys made me smile. Not just because I can relate to the daily battle to avoid being over run by toys but because it reminded me of the toys that used to be. Toys that once thrilled and enchanted my children have come and gone.

I wrote about it once…four years ago. Thomas The Tank Engine used to be a friend of ours. For a short while he was master of the house. Countless hours were spent playing with him. Those days were very special to me, a snapshot in time that has never left my memory.

The toddler who loved Thomas transitioned into a little boy who also loved Thomas. The father of that little boy loved to watch him play. I know, because I am that father and I did love it. It was beautiful to watch his mind work, to see how his imagination was stimulated by the trains.

And then one day it was over. Thomas became a “baby toy” and he moved on. I remember thinking to myself that I should mark the day as a transitional moment. He seemed so big and mature. And now I have to smile, because that big kid is far bigger.

Now he comes home from school with real homework. He talks to me about telephones, telegraphs and stage coaches. He shares stories about science experiments and asks me about stories he reads in the newspaper.

Seventy pounds of boy wrestles with me. Still not big enough to beat me, but large enough to make it more challenging.

The younger version wrestled with me too. But he was so little I hardly noticed. He could swing on my neck and I didn’t care. Sometimes he’d sit on my lap and share a train with his baby sister. For a short while she took over taking care of Thomas.

And again I marveled at how she would take the tracks and assemble them. I’d smile as she moved the cars around the tracks. But Thomas never grabbed her in the same fashion. She played with him because she saw her brother do it. She played because she had and still has no greater hero than her big brother.  Whatever he did was something that she wanted to do.

But she was and is her own person. She had dolls that she loved. The dark haired beauty has always loved her dolls, always loved to play house. That was more fun to her. The chance to pretend to be mommy was more interesting.

So she gave up on Thomas. For a while we kept Thomas around. The train table sat in the playroom, all the pieces secured in the drawers below. But eventually Thomas made his way to the garage and new toys came to live here.

And now she too is so much bigger than she used to be. The short little girl with dark eyes and a massive amount of long curly black hair is bigger. Ten inches were shorn from her locks. Ten inches cut off and sent to Locks of Love.

She too has become an avid reader. Few days pass in which she doesn’t sit down to read a story to me. Few days pass in which I don’t receive a detailed report about the life of a girl in kindergarten.

Now the two of them jockey for time and position with their parents. Both eager to spend quiet time with us. Both eager to play games, but none of them are called Thomas because that train has left the station.

Filed Under: Children

A History of My Child’s Life

April 13, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

hbooks

Not so long ago my kids were engaged in the kind of bickering that was certain to lead to hand-to-hand combat and I found myself lost in thought. I wasn’t completely ignoring them but I had this hope that my lack of intervention was going to lead to their finding a way to resolve without parental involvement.

It wasn’t a crazy idea nor would it be unprecedented. There have been more than one occasion in which they figured it out and I had some hope that it would happen again. Unfortunately it didn’t happen this time. Such is life.

I find myself saying that a lot lately, “such is life.” One of my many catchphrases it comes into daily parlance from time to time only to be switched with “it is what it is.” Simple, trite remarks that are supposed to reflect the reality that some things happen and there is not much that you can do about them.

It is not something that I am happy about. The kids don’t really like it much either. We want concrete answers that we can hold onto. We want to be at peace with ourselves, but it is not always easy.

The dark haired beauty is much better at it than her brother or myself. She does an excellent job of taking what comes and rolling with it. But we boys are no so good about it. It is not in our nature to just accept. We spend time thinking about these things, wondering if there is a way to defeat our adversary. There must be a weakness that we can find.

She doesn’t get caught up in that. It doesn’t mean that she is accepting of wrongdoing, just that she handles it differently. She lets it roll off her back. I have gotten better at it, but still struggle. And my son, well he is my boy. That fire in my belly burns in his too, but he doesn’t have the benefit of life experience. I do what I can to help him with these things, but as my grandfather used to say, you can’t screw an old head on young shoulders.

Sometimes I think that the blog has been good for my parenting skills. I can read old posts and take myself back to earlier times like when he asked me not to die. Sometimes I read them and cringe. But they also provide a context that I have forgotten about or launching points for a new discussion. They offer a chance to see just how much the kids have grown and how their ability to reason has developed.

*******

Earlier this evening they asked me to tell them stories about my childhood. I talked about Sounds of My Youth and made them laugh with tales of how I teased their aunts.We covered a lot of ground and I shared bits and pieces of The Long And Winding Road and talked about how life really is a journey. They asked me to talk to them in Hebrew so that they could practice. They giggled at my thick American accent and asked me to tell them more stories about what I was like as a little boy.

I smiled and told them that some things would have to wait for tomorrow. It was received with the normal response of “no, just one more…please etc.” I growled and said that I wouldn’t acquiesce tonight. The lack of response made it clear that either I had used the word before or they understood what it meant from the tone of my voice.

And then the dark haired beauty made one more play. She asked if she could sing part of a song to me. I smiled and said ok and was showered with kisses and the chorus of Bad Romance. On a side note, she learned that song from one of the mother of a girl in her class. I wasn’t too happy about that, but fortunately she has never seen the video.

I would have been more than irritated about that, but I digress. More on this later.

Filed Under: Children

A Test of Wills- Jack Versus The Puppy

April 12, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

Tune in to hear about puppies,  cool commercials and junior high anxiety.

Filed Under: Audio Blogging

Two Kids & A Dog- Part Two

April 12, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

It is 7:30 A.M. and the house is relatively quiet. The interminably long spring break ended last Friday leaving the house devoid of human children. Now it is down to the man child called Jack and his canine pal.

We’re a few days in to our new adventure and I am reminded in so many ways of what it was like to have a baby in the house, except there are a number of significant differences beyond the obvious.

This baby is agile, mobile and came equipped with a set of teeth that he likes to use on whatever catches his fancy. He is being crate trained and is gradually coming to understand that his new home is a cool place to hang out. It hasn’t taken long for him to decide that the crate is a cool place to store his toys and he often spends time in it of his own accord.

But he isn’t quite ready to sleep in there for a full night and has woken us up several times. So I have taken to sleeping on the couch so that I can be next to his crate. This seems to have provided some comfort to him but he still wakes up in the darkness and expects me to play with him. I find myself using some of the same lines that I used on the children with similar results.

I don’t expect that this will continue for too long or should I say that I hope not. Lack of sleep makes a grumpy father even grumpier.

Overall the transition has been relatively smooth and he is a most welcome addition to the family. The children love him and freely tell him so. This eases the sting of fatigue somewhat and I am hopeful that he doesn’t manage to eat too many valuable possessions. I say hopeful because I grew up with dogs and no matter what you do, they will always find something.

As for myself, well I am just as taken with the guy as everyone else. He’ll be my companion throughout the day so we’ll have plenty of time to develop a friendship. With any luck his training will progress quickly and I’ll find it easy to work. It will be good for both of us if I don’t have to lock him the crate too often.

But even if that happens he’ll be in the same room with me so I hope that this will help him realize that he is not being abandoned or punished. I’ll explain to him why he is in there and that I can’t have him chewing up the house while I try to work.

The thought reminds me of a Far Side cartoon I saw many years ago. In one scene it shows a person speaking to a dog and in the next it shows what the dog understands. An understanding that consists of “blah, blah, blah, blah…” Yep, I don’t really expect him to understand all that I say or why he is in the crate beyond a very basic level. But I’ll feel better telling him so…

In the old days when the kids were babies that were breastfeeding I used nursing time to take care of things around the house. They were little moments in time in which I couldn’t participate but they don’t exist here. So I have to be more diligent about taking advantage of quiet moments. Since he is currently asleep at my feet I am going to sign off again and try to get some work done.

Bark atcha later.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #6

April 12, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

2010 is the year of the daddy blogger and as such it is time again for the Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience. This is the 6th edition of our weekly series. A collection of posts from the unsung heroes of the parenting gang. Take a moment to read the posts the men have written and let them know that they are appreciated.

Juggling Eric: Just Like Her Daddy
Canadad:Creature of Habit
Clark Kent’s Lunchbox:Saving The World Can Be So Blasé: Houston Family Magazine
A Man Among Mommies:Another Birthday Has Past…
Suburban Daddy:Poor Buzz
Dadwagon:A Week on the Warren Wagon 
Pacing In The Panic Room:Liam
Tessa’s Dad: #FatherhoodFriday – No worries, be happy
Jack:We Aren’t Chickens! A Child Questions Reproduction
Jack: Two Kids & A Dog- Part One
And Triplets Make Six: Tales from the Trips
PapaRocks6:Fatherhood – Reflections on a large family
DC Urban Dad:My girl knows what she likes…..
A Dad’s Point of View: It’s a Wonderful World — Really!
Poop and Boogies: Invisible
Almighty Dad: Toyota Recall Hits Home. Not so Bad
Daddy Files:Mommybloggers Rule 
Always Home and Uncool:Shopping with Father
Makes Me Wanna Holler:A Man And His Car – A MMWH PSA
Treppenwitz: The Bread Run
Mocha Dad:Tales of a Toddler
RebelDad:Desperate Househusbands Hit Prime Time
A Dad’s Heart: What’s Up, Chuck
Ed @ Home Dad: The Smuggler
SAHDPDX: Guest Post: Music Time
Sex and The Single Dad: My First Bra
DaDa Rocks: Four Generations- Isn’t That A Special Thing
Dad’sHouse:Blind Date in a Camper Truck
New York Dad:Divide and conquer or fall asleep trying…
Writer Dad:Grammy – A Big Giant Bag of Happily Crazy
Dadvocate: DADvocate Podcast Episode 3 Interview with Chris Jordan

That’s it for now. This shouldn’t be considered a complete list of the many fine daddy bloggers, but it does provide a small glimpse into our world.

If you like what you see here then please consider becoming a fan of the blog. Have additional questions/comments? Send me an email at talktojacknow-at-gmail-dot-com.

Prior Editions:

Festival Of The Fathers- A Blog Experience
Festival of The Fathers- A Blog Experience Part 2
Festival Of The Fathers- A Blog Experience Part III
Festival Of The Fathers- A Blog Experience Part 4
Festival Of The Fathers- A Blog Experience Part 5

Filed Under: Festival of Fathers

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