• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary navigation
  • Skip to footer

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

  • About Jack
    • Other Places You Can Find Me
  • Contact Me
    • Disclosure
  • About Jack
    • Other Places You Can Find Me
  • Contact Me
    • Disclosure

Archives for June 2010

It Has Been A While

June 7, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

“It’s been a while
Since I could hold my head up high
and it’s been a while
Since I first saw you
It’s been a while
since i could stand on my own two feet again
and it’s been a while
since i could call you
But everything I can’t remember as fucked up as it may seem
the consequences that I’ve rendered
I’ve stretched myself beyond my means”
It’s Been A While– Staind

I hate the Celtics. Hate them, hate them, hate them. They are the enemy and have been for as long as I can remember. It is not because of my father or any family member. We liked sports, but I can’t say that anyone is a rabid fan. But at some point in time, somewhere in a time I can’t remember I made the decision that I didn’t like them.

Several hours ago, or should I say yesterday they beat my Lakers. My Lakers, none of whom would know me from Adam lost. Lost a game that they should have won, let it slip away. Such is life, things happen that are far more serious than basketball games. Things happen that are of real import, but sometimes we forget about them.

Sometimes we forget about them because sport replaces them, for however long. Oil spills, flotillas, earthquakes all go away. But that is a different post than the one I wanted to write. In fact I am not really sure why I chose Staind to start this post. I had intended to quote Mark Twain:

“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.”

It is one of my favorites. But sometimes blogging comes after work and such is the experience I had today. So my ideas are colored by fatigue and an inability to sleep. That should adequately explain why I chose to begin as I did. But even if it doesn’t, I don’t care. Too tired.

We watched the game as a family. Shouting, cheering and exhorting the team to beat those pesky leprechaun loving players from across the land. I stared at them and remembered, as I always do, the sixteen year old boy who traveled from America to Israel.

It was that summer of ’85, the one that I have said and still say changed my life. There we stood in Hezekiah’s Tunnel and shouted at the group from Boston. Another group of kids from America on a summer trip- fans of the hated ones were before us. The month prior to our trip the Lakers had finally broken the curse and defeated the hated ones. So we stood there and shouted at each other. It was in relatively good fun, though I do remember being told by a girl that she would never date a Laker fan. I’ll save that story for a different time.

Kobe was Magic and Gasol was Kareem. They don’t look like each other and their games are completely different, but still the images blurred. The children sat next to me, transfixed and asked me to tell them about the game and teach them about what had come before.

Ray Allen was on fire, firing from all over the court and scoring. I yelled at the television, begged Derek Fisher to keep a body on him. My daughter squeezed my hand and said that I should be there. I smiled and said that I wish. Dark eyes looked up at me and said that I could beat Kobe Bryant. If only the hero she sees was reality.

I so love this sport. Smiled and told her that I can’t do it, can’t beat him. Said that he is better. She looked hurt and I told her that it was ok for some people to be better at things than we are. Said that we have to try our best and that as long as we do it is ok.

We cheered out loud and danced in our seats. Once or twice I paused the action and walked up to the screen. I looked at my son and told him that I wanted to diagram the play. I showed him how it worked, pressed play, rewound it and showed it to him again.

He asked me what I wanted and I smiled. Told him that I wanted him to remember that part of basketball is about will and effort. Told him that the reason some teams win is because they try harder and that if he outworked the next guy he would find good things.

Smiled again at my daughter and asked her if she understood. I am hokey that way. I love that kind of rah rah stuff…in private, Within my home I am prone to it, but outside not so much. But I do know that the reason I have some things in my life is because I worked for them. And I know that some of those things came because I outworked someone else. I went the extra step.

I know that on the basketball court the only way I survive playing with the kids who are twenty years younger is by working harder and smarter. These are truths and life lessons that my kids can benefit from.

I hate losing to the celtics. I hate it because I hate them. I hate losing because they aren’t better. They don’t have more talent. They don’t play better as a team. But sometimes the ball bounces their way and today was one of them.

We go back to Boston for the next three games. The series is tied 1-1. In other years I might have been worried about three consecutive games in Boston, but not now. I tell the children that I don’t want to hear them complaining about the refs. We lost the game because they scored more not because the refs fixed the game.

I tell the kids that victory in Boston will be sweeter, but they are young and don’t understand it as I do. They don’t have that edge. They don’t appreciate the idea of coming into someone’s home and taking it. And for the silly Celtic fans who believe the myth of outworking the Lakers it would be especially bitter.

I want to shatter that fantasy of theirs. During the past 30 years we have more championships than they do. It is 9-4. If all goes as it should then it will be 10-4.

The hatred for the Celtics isn’t one sided. They hate us too. But it is only fair to say that both sides, Lakers and Celtic fans look down upon the other fans. We appreciate Jordan, but the Bulls were a flash in the pan. The Spurs were solid, but again flash.

No other team has the history that we do. No other team has been pitted against each other in the same way. So we have a special place in out hearts, assuming that celtic fans have a heart. Truth is that it has never been proven that they do.

The game ends and I look down to my left. The dark haired beauty is snoring softly into my side. I am fired up, but I have to smile. So I pick her up, kiss her cheek and carry to her bed. As I tuck her in I whisper that if she asked me to, I would find a way to beat Kobe.

A short time later I escort her brother into his bed. We speak briefly and he tells me that he loved watching the game with me. I tell him that it was special. He asks me to stay and I say no, I have to work. So he reaches up and hugs me. As I walk out of the room he tells me to work harder than the other guy.

Here I sit hours later, having completed part of a project. It is almost 2 AM, morning comes far too soon. Much coffee will be needed. I think that I have succeeded in my efforts, but I am not sure. But the kids have heard what I said and they have expectations. So I go to sleep now and hope that soon I can tell my son that I did indeed outwork the other guy.

Filed Under: Children

Who I Should Have Been

June 7, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

There were many nights when Johnny would wander through the hills and forests surrounding the castle. He’d walk amongst the trees and find a quiet place to sit and think. Or so he would have said had you asked him where he went. The truth was a little bit different.

Different in the respect that some nights he never stopped to rest. He’d walk all night long and into the dawn of the next day. With no particular destination in mind other than wherever his feet took him he’d head out into the darkness in search of answers to questions that couldn’t be answered. It was his own walkabout, a semi-spiritual journey in which he found himself wandering.

If you didn’t know him you might have thought that he was seriously disturbed. It wouldn’t be the first time someone accused him of some sort of mental malfunction nor would it be the last. He was born with a serious case of wanderlust and itchy feet that made him crazy. But it wasn’t the kind of crazy that you needed medication or traditional therapy for. Rather it was the kind of thing that made him ask questions about life. He had so many interests in so many different topics that sometimes he wished that he could live for a thousand years.

The number was picked arbitrarily but the reasoning was sound. A thousand years would provide enough time to more fully explore the many interests. There would be time to be an archeologist, a doctor and a scientist. Plenty of time to visit the usual tourist traps and even more to seek out the quiet places that only the  locals knew.

And so it was from time to time that he found himself feeling crazed with the desire to just run. Sometimes he would imagine himself to be a wolf. A wolf who would run beneath the moonlit skies in search of who knows what. Setting off at a gentle lope, tongue hanging lazily outside of its mouth the wolf never tired.

I suppose that it would be fair to say that it took a particular kind of woman to deal with Johnny’s idiosyncrasies. Not everyone could handle the intensity of his presence or the fire that was ever present in his eyes. He wanted the description to sound mysterious and regal and yet he really didn’t care much if it made him sound like an unhinged lunatic. Contradictions upon contradictions and content to be consistent in his inconsistencies had been a hallmark of his life.

He was well aware of these things and conscious of who he was.

Some of his past companions had found the aforementioned traits to be problematic which is probably why they were no longer part of his present. A few of them had caught his attention in ways that the others hadn’t. Chemistry is how some people would describe it. There was something about them that got under his skin and made it tingle.

In his youth he allowed that tingly sensation to drive him. It was the primary determinant for deciding whether a particular companion would be allowed to stick around for an extended length of time. Eventually life experience taught him that he needed more than that tingle. He needed someone who would hold his attention in other areas. Someone who could accept the moments of wanderlust and his desire to explore the road not taken.

Over time he found a few who could accept him for who he was. But it was harder to locate the one that he could do the same for. There had been one who seemed to do it. One who had come in and helped to take the edge off. It never stopped to surprise him how she had appeared in his life. If you asked him when it was that they had fallen in love he would tell you that there hadn’t been a time when they weren’t, they just didn’t know it.

It had happened over night. One day she was a stranger and then the next she was the woman who tamed him, at least as much as he could be tamed. And then one day she was gone. If you have never experienced it than you can’t understand it. It is intentionally vague and ambiguous that description, but those who have lived it will understand the reference.

The walkabouts weren’t new to Johnny. They had been a part of his life for as long as he could remember, but it was certain that while she was around he didn’t feel that crazy urge to get moving. It was only when she left that the feeling returned and so they resumed.

He wandered back into the darkness and and wondered if he was living the life he was meant to live or if somewhere out there he’d discover who he should have been. But the thing that really drove him crazy was the fear that he’d discover who he should have been and find out that it was who he couldn’t be.

And if that happened, well then what.

Filed Under: Fragments of Fiction

Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #14

June 6, 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. Here we are in week 14 of our ongoing journey throughout the daddy blogosphere. In honor of my pal Aaron at The Daddy Files I am including a Lakers logo, as seen above. Never hurts to be associated with champions.

Random Thoughts: Father’s Love Their Daddies Too
The Daddy Files: BEAT L.A.!!!
Real Men Drive Minivans: RedEnvelope has Father’s Day covered
Almighty Dad: What to do If a Collection Agency is After You
And Triplets Make Six:Call to Action
The Daddy Yo Blog: Window to the World: A Dad’s Eye View
Clark Kent’s Lunchbox: Running With The Big Dogs At DadCentric
Random Thoughts: Goodbye John Wooden
Dadwagon: Week on the Wagon: Grumbly Edition 
Rebeldad: Hey Guilty Moms: Follow Our Lead
DadsHouse:Parenting After a Toxic Divorce
SAHDPDX:Five for Fighting, or a flagrant two
Dad Revolution: Romance in the Age of Parenthood
Always Home and Uncool: Are We Raising Kids to be Winners or Participants?
SAHD in Lansing:Fatherhood Friday: Dana Glazer on Band of SAHD this Sunday
Dad is In The House: Field Trip: Harbor Freight
Dadvocate: An Interview with Rabbi Ilan Weinberg
Sex and The Single Dad: LAKERS BABY!!!
Hot Dads: Super Soccer Dad, World Cup Edition
Daddy Geek Boy: Flashback Friday: Baby Steps
A Twisted Xtian Dad:Please learn to sleep again
Natural Papa: Hank D and the Bee: Reduce, ReUse, Recap
Wrath 66:  Dude, Where’s My Blog?
Outnumbered: Leave Me Alone, You Alien Bastards…
BellaDaddy Blog:  SummerTime? Break it Down!
Makesmewannaholler: Bye Bye, Backfat – Hello Boxing Gloves!
The Dapper Dad: Father’s Day Wish List

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
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #6
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #7
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #8
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #9
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #10
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #11
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #12
Festival of Fathers- A Blog Experience #13

Filed Under: Festival of Fathers

Goodbye John Wooden

June 5, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

John Wooden was someone that I looked up to. I never had the privilege of being one of his players. I wasn’t old enough or good enough to have played for him in college. Nor did I get the opportunity to attend one of this basketball camps, although I know many who did.

But I did have a number of regular encounters with Coach Wooden. When I was in junior high I used to see him almost daily. You see he used to jog past my bus stop each day. Upon occasion he would stop and talk to us. It was never for very long and I can’t say that I really remember anything he said. In part it is because I didn’t really appreciate just how special that was. But what stuck with me was the fact that this man who is considered to be a legend took the time to talk to a bunch of kids.

And in the years since I have read his books, watched some of his videos (such as the one below) and studied his Pyramid of Success. I appreciate them all because they are sensible and offer life lessons that can be applied at any time. Thank you Coach Wooden, you made a real difference.

Filed Under: Life, People

Music For The Weekend

June 5, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

It won’t be long before my fellow Laker Fans and I listen to this. In the interim here are some tunes to take us into the weekend:

Baby I Love You: Aretha Franklin
Burning Love: Elvis Presley
Hit The Road Jack: Ray Charles
Sir Duke: Stevie Wonder
Back In The High life: Steve Winwood
Loaded: Primal Scream
Spiritual High– Moodswings ft Chrissie Hynde

When The Levee Breaks– Led Zeppelin

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fathers Love Their Daddies Too

June 3, 2010 by Jack Steiner Leave a Comment

(Originally posted here. It provides a good segue for some posts to come.)

It is not always easy navigating a room full of toys in the dark. Experience dictates that even in a room that has been cleaned up has a couple of stragglers that manage to avoid the toy box. And said stragglers share two things in common.

They will be located in places in which you cannot see them in the dark but still cannot avoid stepping on them. The second trait is worse than the first because it is the guarantee that the straggler will have sharp, pointy edges that instinctively know how to create maximum pain in whatever part of your body comes in contact with them.

In spite of the dangers a father answers the call of the frightened child and does his best to reassure him that it was just a nightmare. The monster receives a punch in the nose, a poke in the eye, a kick in the pants, a fat lip and a broken tuchus. The second monster receives more of the same and the crocodile is swung by its tale and sent into outer space.

Dad is victorious again. All hail the conquering hero as he has prevented another catastrophe.

And then from the dark a voice asks “Daddy, do you ever get scared?” And the response was an affirmative “yes, sometimes I do.”

“Daddy, do you talk to your daddy when you are scared?”

“Yes, I do.”

“Does he talk to his daddy when he is scared?”

“Yes, grandpa does.”

“Boy, it never ends does it.”

And with a smile the proud father agreed and reminded the little boy that no matter how old you are it is always nice to talk to your father.

Filed Under: Children

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Things Someone Wrote

The Fabulous Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Jack Steiner

 

Loading Comments...