Be well.

[Updated below]

The three posts that appear directly below this one were all written yesterday and saved in draft form, which is why they’re appearing at all.

Due to a sudden and dramatic shift in my personal circumstances, I am putting this blog on an indefinite hiatus. I genuinely don’t know when I’ll be able to return. If it’s sooner, then so much the better; if it’s later, then we’ll meet again one day.

Farewell for now.

UPDATE 8-28-07: Thanks to everyone who has either commented or e-mailed with well-wishes; as ever, it means a great deal to me. While all this falls into the general category of “Stuff I won’t blog about except to mention in such vague terms that nobody but me will ever know what I’m really talking about here”, I can at least report that today things are better, and that my return will, in all likelihood, be in fact sooner rather than later.

However, it won’t be for a few days still, because I’m still too raw and too tired to write coherent postings about anything interesting. That being the case, I’m going to make this an “official” hiatus of definite length: unless something else happens, I’ll return to active blogging next Tuesday, the day after Labor Day.

Oh, and Jen: are we having a Christmas party? I think that would be great for all us denizens of the Buffalo Prefecture of Blogistan. We should discuss this.

See you all in September.

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I heart JP Losman

Here’s what I love to see: JP Losman, the Bills’ young starting quarterback (entering his fourth year with the team), has taken his new hometown into his heart in a big way:

When Losman started to think about what he could do for the City of Buffalo, it’s no surprise his focus went to the grass-roots level. Lending his name to a project, donating a bunch of money and then handing it all off to subordinates is so not his style. If Losman is going to get involved, he’s going to roll up his sleeves and throw his heart into it.

So this summer, Losman created a project called Buffalo Lives, a nonprofit organization with a goal of beautifying Buffalo one block at a time.

His new project has a website, BuffaloLives.org. Of this project, Losman says:

“When you pick a name, you ask yourself, what are we trying to get accomplished?” he said. “We’re planting things that are going to be alive and stay alive. It’s not a dying city. It’s a city moving forward.

“It’s a city that has had the greatest number of comebacks in the last couple of years, according to some studies of the number of people moving back to their communities,” Losman said. “It was just rated in Forbes magazine as one of the coolest cities in America for nightlife, culture, art, music. It is being recognized, but the actual people of Buffalo need to recognize it.”

The 26-year-old Losman is a native of Venice, Calif., and spent his college years at Tulane University in New Orleans. After being drafted by the Bills in 2004, he moved into a downtown condominium. Last year, he bought a house on Oakland Place, near Women and Children’s Hospital.

“The old-style homes in the city — they were built to last,” Losman said. “Whereas you go to California, and they box you in like rice. The homes are twice as expensive as here in Buffalo and twice as small and twice as close together. There’s no backyard.

“On any given night, you can hear good music,” Losman said of Buffalo. “On any given night, you can go to many great restaurants. People do take pride in the area, but I think people need to realize they can take more of a leadership role in their community than they realize.”

This is just terrific. Bravo, JP.

Now, win the Super Bowl one of these years, and you’ll be worshipped like nobody since…Jim Kelly!

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Sentential Links #109

OK, after a one-week respite from Sentential Links, we have the triumphant return of…Sentential Links.

:: Found out my unborn daughter has Down Syndrome and a surgically correctable congenital heart defect. (Scotty and I exchanged e-mail about this a while back, but I’ve avoided mentioning it here until he decided to go public, which he now has. Go give him some love. His family’s starting a tough journey. This will be their first child. And that’s not the only less-than-favorable news he’s had lately.)

:: I read some interview with Stockwell – it was recently – and he was asked, “So who taught you about sex?” He said, “I did a movie with Errol Flynn when I was 13. I got quite an education.”

:: My mom has always told me that if you hold onto an article of clothing long enough, it will eventually come back into style. (Well, I hope so, because I think I’d look very dashing in a tricorne, and yet they stubbornly remain out of fashion.)

:: We suggested that if he liked that, he might also like his steak better if he dipped in sugar. (Oh, the humanity!)

:: Some fake ears and straight eyebrows are a great disguise. No one will notice you. Bet you can’t tell that that’s really Kirk underneath that disguise.

:: I Think the Monthly Comic Needs to Die! (That’s the post title, actually, but it works.)

:: What if David Lynch, director of progressive films such as Eraserhead, Blue Velvet, Twin Peaks, Inland Empire and others had actually directed Return of the Jedi back in 1983? (Huh-whuh?! Link via. Again, I say, Huh-whuh?!)

:: Because my own parents so entirely abdicated involvement in my own life I tend to go overboard in the other direction. It’s easy for me to want to rescue too much. It’s easy for me to want to FIX every problem the boys have.

:: I’m sure childhood always seems much more innocent while you’re going through it, and everyone else’s always seems more hollow. Were parents always so fearful, or did they have more faith in people and in the world? And is today’s lack of faith justified or paranoid? I just hope that, should the time come that I have my own kids, I don’t forget what it was like to be one.

:: The CD, which was 25 years old last Friday changed that forever, and it seems a pity to me. In a funny way the artifact focused your attention on the music, and prevented it from becoming wallpaper. That’s how music should be listened to, attentively, and although my iPod shuts out other sound, the experience of recorded music in the 21st Century is more often than not a component of the multitasking that consumes our daily lives. (I never mentioned the anniversary of the compact disc here, but longtime readers know that I adore the CD and will mourn its slide into history. I genuinely feel it’s the ideal music format. I’m terribly skittish about relying on purely digital means of music distribution for a number of reasons, not the least of which is the ephemeral nature of the devices themselves. I’m on my third computer in ten years…but I still own the first CD I got, way back in 1988. And that disc is still playable. Who knows if MP3s will be playable in just five years?)

And that’ll do it for this week, folks. Be careful out there. It’s a hard, cruel world, full of evil and desperation. Walk with love!

(Or walk with a big stick. One of the two will suffice. And if you can walk with love and a big stick, well, the world’s your oyster!)

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Sunday Burst of Weirdness (Monday Edition)

OK now….

:: Want to hear some simulated version of “sexy” women “moaning” your IP address? Sure you do. This is definitely weird, even if as a joke it’s only funny exactly once. The second time, it’s amazingly lame. (Click “refresh” if you don’t believe me.) This probably isn’t work-safe, by the way.

:: A wall clock my mathematics professor father would love.

(Both these links via Making Light.)

:: A month or so ago, Lynn Sislo sent me a link to I-am-bored.com, as a possible source for all manner of weirdness. I haven’t checked it out yet, but I will do so right now. In the future I’ll look through it for the stuff that most catches my fancy, but for the purposes of this post, I will click the “Weird” tab at the top of their page, and then link the fourth item on the list that results. OK?

[clicking…clicking again…counting down five links…clicking….]

And here it is: a cautionary film about LSD, made in the 1960s. Watch this and tell me you weren’t waiting for the inevitable walk on by Troy McClure!

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Three

So did his untamed brightness come in the end to flame, and then ash, and at the very last, in the clear voices of the lios alfar, into song under the stars.

-Guy Gavriel Kay, “The Darkest Road”

Three years ago today, Little Quinn was born.

His short life was terribly, terribly difficult — so difficult, in fact, that even though he’s been gone for longer now than he was with us, we still stand in his shadow. We try to move out, but in truth, some part of us will remain in his shadow for all the rest of our days. His tale is not yet over, and its end may yet be a sad one.

His wasn’t a life that made for the kind of happiness one associates with a baby. Instead, the happiness that he brought came with a series of prices we’ve yet to finish paying, the happiness came in very small moments that would end as quickly as they came, and the happiness was always leavened with sadness that will remain a part of us forevermore.

The Road goes ever on and on
Out from the door where it began.
Now far ahead the Road has gone,
Let others follow it who can!
Let them a journey new begin,
But I at last with weary feet
Will turn towards the lighted inn,
My evening-rest and sleep to meet.

-JRR Tolkien

I recently had occasion to tell a very dear friend that as I grow older, I see life more and more as a journey. Each of us walks a series of unmarked roads into and out of countries both beautiful and not, seemingly going nowhere in particular but always, inexorably, ever so cruelly, toward Mr. Whitman’s unknown region:

DAREST thou now, O Soul,
Walk out with me toward the Unknown Region,
Where neither ground is for the feet, nor any path to follow?

No map, there, nor guide,
Nor voice sounding, nor touch of human hand,
Nor face with blooming flesh, nor lips, nor eyes, are in that land.

I know it not, O Soul;
Nor dost thou���������all is a blank before us;
All waits, undream���������d of, in that region���������that inaccessible land.

Till, when the ties loosen,
All but the ties eternal, Time and Space,
Nor darkness, gravitation, sense, nor any bounds, bound us.

Then we burst forth���������we float,
In Time and Space, O Soul���������prepared for them;
Equal, equipt at last���������(O joy! O fruit of all!) them to fulfil, O Soul.

–Walt Whitman

What makes the journey worthwhile, it turns out, is not the places we see along the way, but the companions who share our path. Some only walk the byways with us for a short while, others longer; and then there are those who somehow continue to mark our way even though they themselves are long, long gone.

Come, my friends.
‘T is not too late to seek a newer world.
Push off, and sitting well in order smite
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths
Of all the western stars, until I die.
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down;
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles,
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew.
Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’
We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,–
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.

-Alfred, Lord Tennyson

And then it seemed to him that as in his dream in the house of Bombadil, the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise.

–JRR Tolkien

When I finally come to the shore of that same country, I hope that my son is there on the pier, waiting to take my hand.

(Regular blogging, including the Sunday Burst of Weirdness, will resume tomorrow. “The Gray Havens” painting by John Howe.)

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Notes

A couple of things:

:: I guess it’s time to start giving actual hints for Unidentified Earth 15, so here’s the first hint: the Carter Administration.

:: It’s time to identify the false item in my second Seven Things post. Ready? Here goes…it’s Number Five. Those were the teams, but the Pirates lost, not the Phillies. It was a cold and drizzly day at Three Rivers Stadium, and I drank about six hot chocolates at three bucks each or whatever it was that hot chocolates went for at Three Rivers back then.

My second Major League Baseball game — and, thus far, my last one — was on my twenty-first birthday, when I and a bunch of friends went to the Hubert Humphrey Metrodome to watch the defending World Champion Twins defeat the Royals, 9-2.

:: By the way, check out ShrpSports.com, if you ever need a source for all-time results of various sporting events. If you need to know who the Milwaukee Brewers played on June 10, 1981, you can find it here. (They lost to the Texas Rangers, 12-5. Two days later a labor issue caused a two-month work stoppage in MLB.)

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Unidentified Earth 16

Wow! Either this recurring feature has seriously dropped off in popularity, or I managed to come up with stumpers two weeks in a row, as last week’s entry is as yet unidentified. In fact, no one even hazarded an actual guess! What’s up with that? I might start giving hints, but for now, concentrate on the corners of the image there; they may help clarify the type of thing we’re looking at.

And with that, it’s time for this week’s entry, which is admittedly quite a lot easier.

Where are we?

(Rot-13 your answers!)

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Maybe I should pose holding a power drill?

In the comments to this post at Belladonna’s blog, I am taken by not one but two of her readers to be female. Aieee!

Of course, this is obviously due to the fact that my Blogger avatar photo looks totally minuscule over there, so that while my long hair is clearly visible, the beard is not. But maybe I should help matters by butching up my photo! (I could try signing my posts over there with my real name, but that’s not likely to help either — one of the occupational hazards of being a guy named Kelly.)

I just think it’s funny that this happened twice in one comments thread!

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Errands

Yesterday was a hectic day after work.

I didn’t feel like making that much effort at dinner, so I bought a rotisserie chicken and some potato salad.

I put a little gas in the vehicle.

I kept a medical appointment.

I picked The Daughter up from her day camp, and treated her to a Slurpie from 7-11.

I bought a ream of paper for the printer.

And….

I picked up the little cardboard box, about the size of a new box of checks (or the box your year’s worth of church donation envelopes come in, if you do that sort of thing), containing Baby Fiona’s ashes.

Almost three months after she was born, and almost a full month before she should have been…I brought her home.

There is “more of her” than I thought there would be. The box is surprisingly heavy. The ashes themselves are in a Zip-loc bag. They are mostly a fine gray powder, but there are bits of coarser, whiter material scattered throughout. We’ll find some kind of appropriate container sometime…but for now, her little box is wrapped in a blanket.

Three children. Two are in boxes.

Forgive me, world…but there are times when I hate you.

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