photo


17
Nov 13

Catching up

The post that places photos from other days on this day, to show what would otherwise be forgotten, and to have a day’s worth of easy content. Enjoy.

Allie stole her chair back. And she’s holding an iPad hostage, too. Things are very fluid on the front lines:

Allie

Three more shots of the foliage that drives all the kids wild:

leaf turn

leaf turn

leaf turn

Nick Marshall is on the loose against Georgia. Pretty sure that’s a holding call that the officials blew. That crew is so talented both sets of fans felt they were hosed by the referees. That’s talent. Anyway, the quarterback picked up 101 yards with his feet on 19 carries:

Nick Marshall

He’s throwing this one into your office. Marshall was 15 of 26 for 229 yards and a score through the air. Are you ready to complete this pass? Then War Eagle:

Nick Marshall

Corey Grant is fast. He picked up 53 yards on six touches, including his 21-yard touchdown:

Corey Grant

This is Ricardo Louis. He’s still just a freshman in this shot, and not yet a legend. He had four catches and the game-winning score:

Ricardo Louis

Nick Marshall sneaking in for one of his touchdowns:

Nick Marshall

Here’s Ricardo Louis again. Still just a freshman. But I notice he’s always behind the defenders. Good place for receivers to be. Make them chase you:

Ricardo Louis

I said on the second Georgia possession of the night that they couldn’t slow down Dee Ford, and thus you may as well give him the Heisman now. He tormented Georgia’s Aaron Murray. Indeed, this is the heartbeat before he destroyed him on the last play of the game. Ford is blurry because he moves that fast. This is the way QBs see him in their nightmares:

Dee Ford

It has been a long time since I took a picture of a scoreboard:

scoreboard


13
Nov 13

I ran a lot, let’s just leave it at that

Here are two extra photos from last week’s fall foliage kick. This tree probably won’t have anything left on its limbs the next time I see it. But it is flaring beautifully:

leaves

This, more about the sun and the darkness, really, is at my grandparents’ place. While I prefer the longer days like everyone else, we do get some great angles from the sun this time of year:

leaves

Elsewhere, I ran my first 10K tonight. I was going to run the usual five, but everything felt OK, so I kept going. When I got to five miles, my previous personal best, I decided I could press on to get the nice round kilometer number. And everything felt more or less OK.

And that continued until I stopped running and took a shower. After that it all seemed like a bad idea. Since then, through the night various and different parts have been achy. My feet and my knees. My feet and my quads. My feet and my calves. Always my feet.

Clearly I have room for improvement.

Things to read …

Which brings us to this, from the Wall Street Journal, that bastion of considerate opinion and coverage of serious issues: OK, You’re a Runner. Get Over It. Once upon a time, kids, the Journal did write about serious things. Promise. I suppose we should blame the Internet.

I learned new terms today: “Snowplow parents” and “teacups.”

This young woman was on track to graduate early. And then she had a bad car accident, with a traumatic brain injury. She had to learn to walk and talk and feed herself again. And then she went back to school and graduate. That’s the short version of a remarkable story. Now her brother is trying to raise money for continued therapy. Read about it, and please share that link.

My friend Jeremy from The War Eagle Reader recites the greatest story ever written about a college football game. Worth a listen for football fans:

Here’s the text version.


11
Nov 13

Veterans Day

Since I wrote all about him this weekend, here’s a picture of my great-grandfather Tonice before he went off to war:

Tonice

You can read about it here and here.

Just for fun, this is, perhaps, the first picture he took with me. The back of the photo says this was in a state park in Tennessee. We sure knew how to dress back then, didn’t we?

Tonice

I know quite a few veterans. I’m related to even more of them. Every time I read something about gallantry I think of at least one of those people. I’m fortunate, then, in a lot of respects.


10
Nov 13

Catching up

The weekly post that provides a home to extra photographs from the previous week. Also, it is a nice way to get a day’s worth of content with minimal effort. There’s football on and the weather’s nice and I rode my bike and I got ice cream and you can deal with simple filler. On with it, then:

Rage! Rage against the dormancy of photosynthesis! A famous tree along the first base side of my grandmother’s front yard:

It always seems like you are near the top of the world up here. Not even close. But it seems like it:

We’re just standing outside, look up and see this guy’s wings caught in the early evening sun:

The powerful, defiant flare near the end, the holdout green near the stem, the promise of next spring’s buds already on display. There’s a lot to love about flowering dogwoods:

I got photo-bombed:

The red-orange-green is what I was after. Didn’t quite get it. Still pretty:

David Bradley was a 19th century brick maker. He was also a farm machiner maker. He bought a plow company from an in-law in 1854, building a company that took up a whole block in Chicago. Three decades later he bought out his partner. Before the turn of the century he moved shop to what was then called North Kankakee, Ill. About 15,000 live there now, but the Panic of 1893 almost wiped the place out. Bradley’s operation was courted and they ultimately renamed the village after him.

What came next was common. The Bradley family sold out to Sears, Roebuck in 1910. It ran under Sears until 1962, when it was sold to the Newark Ohio company. Most of the factory in Bradley was destroyed by fire in 1986. This site tells me this cover of my grandfather’s old walk-behind tractor is at least 50 years old:

Sunset over the western pasture:

My grandmother’s dog, BB:


9
Nov 13

Giving the present

Someone in my family must always give the blessing. And usually there is a storytelling period after dinner. If there is any general silliness, because my family enjoys silliness, this might get in the way of storytelling. If there is to be the presentation of something there is usually a speech.

I’d already offered the blessing and I had no speech. I’d thought of things to say, but nothing I could say seemed simultaneously big enough and small enough for the moment. I can’t explain that, dichotomy, you’ll just have to go along with it. So I said to my grandfather, about his present, that it was from the four of us: my folks, my wife and me. It was something we did, I said, because of how much we cared for him. I finished my speech saying that we’d cared a lot about this project, and that we hoped he liked it, too.

He unwrapped the box, cut the tape from the folds and he flipped them back and looked at this handsome cherry box with a black background and colorful elements inside.

I had the good fortune to sit next to him and tell him what they all meant. He listened closely. He read, for a long time, the certificate that came with the flag we had flown over the U.S. Capitol. It said that it was flown in honor and memory of Tonice, a Christian, husband, father and grandfather, a medic in the 137th Infantry Regiment of the 35th Division, wounded at the Battle of the Bulge. The certificate noted it was flown on the anniversary of the end of the war.

I pointed out what some of the medals meant. I told him that this booklet had a few pages describing what was involved with each of the medals. I said the rest of this booklet was text about the 137th’s time in France and Germany and Belgium while my grandfather’s father was there. It reads day-by-day. Read it at your own pace, I said. Just please promise me you’ll at least read through Christmas Day.

That day’s notes are comforting. It was important to at least read that much.

All of this had been a mystery in the family. Now, for his birthday, my grandfather suddenly had a lot more information about what his dad did in the war. My great-grandfather had never talked about it that much, if at all. And this would have been far too fancy for such a quiet and humble man. But it was important to me to find it and important to all of us to share it with my grandfather.

By the time I started explaining the medals, my grandmother had walked over. She leaned in to see it the display case sitting on his lap. She was eyeing the walls. Where could we display it?

My grandfather is a pretty quiet man, too. He took it all in, and it was a lot to take in. But his reaction was almost inscrutable. When we left last night he gave me a big hug. This wasn’t new. He thanked me again for the display case. He held on a bit longer than normal and thanked me a few more times. That wasn’t why we did it, of course, but it was a hint about how he felt about the thing, and that was gratifying.

Today my grandmother said he read through all of the pages that I’d given him. He’d read awhile, she said, and then show her something. He’d read awhile longer and then show her something else. She’d thanked me last night for making this for him — How often does someone thank you for something you did for a third person? — and today she made sure that we knew how much he was enjoying it.

He got up this morning, she said, and walked around their house staring at all of the walls. She’d asked him what he was doing. He said he was looking for the right place to put the display case. They’d thought, at first, about hanging it over the sofa in their living room. The way their home is laid out this is essentially the center of the universe.

But, he’d decided there might be glare from the window opposite. He found a new place and we installed the display case today.

Clem

We realized it is in a place where everyone who walks in their home will see it. We realized it is also in direct view of my grandfather’s recliner.