Looking Back & Looking Forward

On New Year’s Day, it feels appropriate to look back and take some stock of the year that has just passed, and look forward to the year ahead. No major deep thoughts here, just a checklist and a draft ‘to-do’ list.

Looking Back at 2008

– lost 25 pounds

– ran a Half-Marathon, Marathon, and a 5k

– got a new dog

worked very hard locally to help elect our new President

– first time visits to Austin, TX and Denver, CO (loved them both)

Looking Forward to 2009

– organize and enjoy a local inaugural ball

– run a Half-Marathon and a Triathalon

– paint the kitchen

– take a trip home to Huntington Beach, CA this summer

– send my oldest child off to college

Digital Christmas Past

In the classic 1989 movie, Christmas Vacation, there is a touching scene where Clark Griswold spends an afternoon locked in his attic. He bundles up in some old clothes, discovers some old hidden Christmas presents, and get misty with nostalgia watching old holiday movies.

I’ve recently moved my online abode from one web host to another. The task involved taking some time to backup and transfer files from one to the other, and that brought about some fun discoveries in a digital analogy to Clark’s experience in his attic.

Way back in the year 2000, we took our annual family Christmas letter digital. No longer would we stuff, lick, label and stamp envelopes as we had for years. In the new millennium, our holiday wishes could travel the digital tubes of the net (Yes, there are some offliners to whom we will always have to send a hard copy letter, but they miss out on all the fun links).

Typically, in addition to sending our Christmas letter by email, I also post it to the web for easy sharing with afterthoughts or others who missed out on the email. For that first letter in 2000, we produced the below video (and made it available in high and low bandwidth versions in Quicktime AND RealPlayer!). And for any who care to dig deep into the Casey Family digital Christmas Letter archive, I say, “Get a life, and enjoy!” Here they are: 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.

Stay tuned for this year’s letter coming soon!

Game Ball

Media_httpfarm3static_xcfhx

While digging among our sports gear to find my daughter a frisbee, I found a baseball that took me back in time, 31 years and 5 days, to a Thursday night little league game, when I was 11, at which it was given to me.

 

I was no stand-out as a little leaguer. I had my moments in the outfield, catching a pop-up here and there. But my greatest defensive contribution was probably my effective chatter (hey-batta-batta, schWING!), while on offense my Eddie Gaedel size strike zone put me on base with a walk much more often than my bat ever did.

 

But on this particular Thursday night, I had a fine sports moment. My team, the Orioles, had a one run lead going into the final inning. There were two outs and the Phillies had a runner on third. The batter hit a fast grounder that might have been an easy game-ender, had it not got past our first basemen. But it did, and it instead rolled to me in right field (the traditional position for the most skilled little leaguers, naturally).

 

It would have been understandable to hear a few sighs from our meager crowd of parents, looking at the prospect of extra innings should the runner on third score and tie the game (were there more runners on base? I don’t remember, let’s say there were and two runs would have meant a loss). The play was at home, and I made the throw to our catcher ‘Tank’, and it somehow got there in time and on target. The runner was out at home, game over, Orioles win 11-10.

 

In the dugout, the coach asked the team, “Who gets the game ball?”, to which they responded in unison, “Casey!”. In recent years I’ve re-discovered a love of baseball that I haven’t had since those days as a little leaguer. From my five or six years of little league baseball, there are only a few such memories. This was one of the best.

Fat & Crazy

I’m soooo doomed. Yesterday’s Washington Post reported that men in their 40s who carry their extra weight on their abdomen are more prone to suffer dementia in their later years. Apparently, fat is nastier when it surrounds your other organs than when it’s just hanging from your legs and arms. Now I don’t consider myself particularly ‘fat’, but I was told by my doctor last week at my regular physical that I had 20 pounds to lose, and one look at me would make it obvious to anyone where I can find them. Right there on my belly. I still have skinny arms and legs, but my belly sticks out like I’m a pregnant man.

So what might motivate me to action, besides the threat of dementia? A bet of course! My neighbor and good friend, TJ, is in the same boat as me. He’s younger, and so got fat faster than me (jk tj!), but is essentially the same weight as me with the same target of slimming down to 180. We agreed to have our own mini Biggest Loser challenge, and the winner will enjoy a 90-minute massage purchased courtesy of the loser. I don’t know how I will do, but I predict a second place finish.

Stay tuned for news of progress, or failure. Who knows, the dementia may set in early and I’ll just type some gibberish, but that’s already my norm. At least I’m in good company.

Study Links Middle-Age Belly Fat to Dementia
The Washington Post, 3/27/08

Pick Two

I don’t recall when I first heard this line, but it’s been a mantra I’ve repeated time and time again ever since. It captures, in simple terms that everyone can understand, the choices that must be made when looking to purchase any service.

Media_httpfarm3static_xqnig

Happy Birthday Colleen!

Media_httpfarm2static_dhugo

You’re already in bed after your first day as an 11-year old. But while there’s still some minutes left of your birthday, I thought I’d tell you here in my blog how much we love you and are proud of you. The first thing that comes to mind when I think of you, is fun. You are a fun person to be around. You like to play games (are a wicked backgammon player), and you are also very funny (not looking, I mean humorous 🙂 You’re very curious (yes, like the monkey) – always wanting to learn new things, adventurous (yes, like a pirate) – always eager to try new things. And you are also friendly, kind, and quite a looker too!

Happy Birthday, Colleen! We’re very excited about being with you all of your 11th year.

BTW, the CUBS won tonight!

Back to School

Ah, where does the summer go? Ours was full and fun, but now September is here once again, and this week was time for heading Back-to-School.

We’ve now left elementary school behind, as Colleen enters middle school as a 6th grader, and Will is now our second child in high school. For the last twelve years we’ve had one or more kids attending Henderson Elementary School, and I’d like to say thanks for the great job they did for each of them.

This morning, Colleen and I walked to our respective bus stops together. My pickup is just across the street from hers, and just a few minutes earlier. It was kind of strange, standing across the street waving at each other. Her to catch a school bus to take her five miles to school, and me to catch a commuter bus to take me 30 miles to work.

Tonight I rushed home from work to make it to Back-to-School night at my daughter Katie’s high school. The parents there followed their children’s schedule from class to class, spending 10 minutes in each for a quick introduction and overview from the teachers. I have to confess, it made me glad that high school is far behind me. She will have a heavy workload in classes that I hope will engage as well as challenge her.

If we continued counting years as grades in our ongoing education of life, then this fall I’m a 37th grader. I’m not done learning, but the degrees I work for now come bi-weekly and have dollar signs on them.

Oh yeah, and looking back at last year, we can’t forget what else going back-to-school brings next.

Wrigley Anniversary!

Media_httpfarm2static_dgdrf

So our actual 20th Wedding Anniversary is this Wednesday the 22nd. But we took a quick jaunt to Chicago last weekend so I could share this anniversary message with Jennifer a few days early.

And the 1st place Cubs even won the game! Perfect 🙂

Ants in my Samoas

Media_httpcaseycomblo_umohi

Big crisis in the kitchen today… some ants found their way into our Samoas. You know Samoas, the 2nd best selling of all the Girl Scout Cookies (look out Thin Mints, Samoas are gaining on you!), they are my favorite. So there was our open box of Samoas, with about 2/3 of the cookies still remaining, but crawling with little black ants. We shook off each cookie and put them in a Ziploc baggie and wiped out those left on the box and the counter. But it was quickly apparent that many ants clung to the cookies and were in the Ziploc as well. So I got out a second Ziploc, and individually transferred each cookie, first giving it a good shake, and then moving it to the second baggie. I was left with one baggie full of angry ants (who met a ghastly ending I won’t describe here), and a second baggie full of ant-free and delicious Samoas. Or so it seemed.

Of course, all of this Samoa-exposure had me craving them, and despite spotting a few who had made it to the second baggie, I ate three or four of these yummy delights and then set the sealed baggie down by my chair. Well I get things were getting warm in the Samoa bag, or something was drawing the ants out of the nooks of the remaining cookies to see what was going on, because each time I glance at the bag there were increasing numbers of ants in the sealed bag. Lesson learned, shaking a Samoa is not an effective way of removing ants, there’s just too many nooks and crannies in the cookies for them to explore. But eat them anyway, you’re bigger and higher in the food chain, and it takes more than a few ants to spoil a Samoa.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7