Doomed by the Road Trip Breakfast Curse

There’s only one thing I hate about road trips. One thing — breakfast. Everything else I can handle. Even enjoy. Endless miles. Rest stops. Bad coffee. Seeing new parts of the country. Meeting new people. That guy at the rest stop who mumbles, “Wanna’ see what I got here in my pocket?” We went out to Missouri to collect my master’s diploma. Over to Louisville to visit with family. Down to the Smokies to plunk river stones the size of European cars into a stream. We covered more than 2,000 miles, burned through nine tanks of gas, and used a lifetime supply of wet wipes. My stomach is still trying to repair the damage from a cup of tar masquerading as coffee. But it was an amazing trip, and a thrill for my 3-year-old daughter who had never seen mountains before or spent so much time motoring from one place to the next. And I would do it again tomorrow — hop right back in the car and go … if not for those dang breakfasts.

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Watch Out World: Mom’s Moving to Town!

I’ve never been hit in the head with a concrete block. Not before I answered the phone the other night. It was my mother and she cut to the chase: “Brian? I sold my house. I need to be out in June. I’m coming up this weekend to see about buying or renting a place. We’re going hunting Saturday. Be Ready!” Click. The block hit me flat side down, clean in the forehead. Ker-splatt! I sat on the floor watching stars orbit my head and considered calling 911. What would I say? “Yeah, hi, I just got a phone call from my mother about her moving up to St. Augustine. It laid me clean out on the floor and I think I have a concussion. Could you send someone over with a couple Harvey Walbangers … stat?” What had just happened?

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Sick Days, Boredom and How to Rot a Good Soul

It swept in like a summer thunderstorm — fast, ferocious and relentless — knocking me on my back. Some 24-hour bug — I swear it wasn’t swine flu — that has been going around. Left me feeling achy, nauseous, grumpy and with a pounding head like a woodpecker was trying to make a home in there. And then it was gone, as suddenly as it arrived. Strange. But it had sure taken its toll. I normally weather things pretty well. I don’t like to slow down, no matter what the circumstances. My leg fell off? Hmmm. Well, I’ll worry about that later. I was sick enough that I didn’t go into work the next day. It felt like a mean hangover. Like one of those evenings when you say to yourself, “maybe tequila shooters wouldn’t be such a bad idea.” As I went about my “sick day,” tired and bored, longing to go do something … anything … I wondered why there was always such an appeal to being sick as a kid.

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Ballad of the Hybrid

Eco-car: Why are you so weird? A battery in the boot? A push button to start ya? That ain’t the way I was reared. It’s a song — an opening line to one I’ve been writing. It came to me as I was driving about in a Toyota Prius, one of those so-called hybrids that are revolutionizing the automotive world. I rented one while in Missouri last week to defend my thesis. I had imagined a thesis defense would be like standing atop a castle gate during a barbarian siege. It was nowhere near so dramatic. I hadn’t meant to rent a Prius — it was assigned to me when I showed up at the rental car counter at the airport. It had some kind of super-electric regenerating blah-blah-blah steam-driven, weed-eating, carbonated soda pop engine that ran both on gas and the energy it stored in the batteries out back.

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A Dear Mom Letter for Computer Deficiencies Everywhere

Dear mom, It pains me to say this, but I felt something had to be done. I have to get this off my chest. I just can’t go on anymore holding this inside — bottling it up and trying to keep the cork from bursting out. Remember, I think you’ve been an amazing parent and never did anything to hurt me (although, giving me those hot toddies when I was a kid to help my bronchitis was definitely questionable.) So let me get this out: You cannot call me on the phone anymore to ask for help working out issues with your computer. You just can’t. I know it’s complicated stuff to grasp. But it’s killing me. It’s growing a field of gray hair in uneven patches atop my head. It’s making tense muscles in my neck snap under the strain. I blew a blood vessel in my eye the other night. I might have to seek counseling. In short: I just can’t do it anymore.

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A Leaking Roof Returns to Roost

“I see you up there,”I shouted. “Don’t think I don’t see you.” I was staring up at the ceiling. In the middle of the night. Pointing. POINTING! I must have looked like a madman. Luckily everyone else in the house had gone to sleep. Not even the dog was up to worry about me … my sanity. The dog would have had me hauled off to the loony farm. She can dial a phone. But I wasn’t crazy. I saw it. A glimmer. A peak. A little spot. A tiny trickle. A drip. Yes, a drip. The leak was back. It had been so long since I had seen it. All winter. All summer. Back to last spring, and maybe earlier. In some ways it was like seeing an old friend — reassuring and comforting — until you remember the last time you saw this particular individual he drank all your beer, insulted your wife, turned your house upside down and ultimately relieved himself on your living room floor.

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Odorless Underwear and Waterless Toilets?

Sometimes I have trouble believing that the world around me is real. Sometimes I think that it all just has to be a figment of my imagination — maybe I’m slumbering and whatever I ate for dinner is making me dream strange things. How else to explain those stories you sometimes read that make your jaw drop open and your eyes pop clean out of your sockets. Like this story from Reuters that was, no kidding, headlined: “Japanese astronaut tests stink-free underwear.” I nearly fell out of my chair. The lead started out: “Teen-age boys, are you tired of embarrassing questions about when you last changed underwear? Japan’s space scientists may have just the answer — a line of odour-free underwear and casual clothing.”

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80 to 30, and Back Again

Quick geography lesson: The United States is a really big place and not all of it has the same weather. For instance, if you leave Florida where it’s a balmy 80-plus degrees in March and set out for New York City, you’ll likely find that flip-flops and T-shirts won’t cut it. Unless, of course, your idea of Manhattan is hypothermia and a frostbitten toe falling off. Here in Florida spring is in full effect. It’s warm out, the leaves are an eye-tingling shade of green and there’s so much pollen on the ground that you have to shovel the driveway just to get your car out in the morning. New York is in no such disposition yet. The trees are still barren and temps are straining just to reach 50 degrees during the day, and dipping into the low 30s at night.

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Damn the Economy. Give Me Some Good News

It’s been the absolute doldrums in the news recently. You can’t pick up the paper or switch on the TV without thinking to yourself, “Is there such a thing as a fourth world country? I bet my dollar could go a long way there.” Gloom and doom. Utterly depressing. All the talk of layoffs, bailouts, busts, bankruptcies, foreclosures, ponzi schemes and that poor jilted contestant on “The Bachelor.” Heartbreaking. So I want to help everyone take a collective deep breath by giving you some positive and upbeat news to read. I thought I would search out all the warm, fuzzy, feel-good, happy news I could find and relay it on to you. Call it a balm for the soul.

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Bouncing Back and Closing a Chapter, a Year Later

It was an official closing of a chapter. Slamming shut of the book. The recovery is now complete, the past is all behind me and the goal I set for myself a year ago has been achieved. “You know the surgeon who stitched you up said you might not run again,” my wife reminded me after I finished the Gasparilla 15K down in Tampa last weekend. It was almost a year after the fateful surfboard injury when a fin from my board stabbed me in the thigh leaving me with nerve damage — a prickly, pins and needles sensation up and down my leg — and a thigh that looks even scrawnier than before.

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