nostalgia

  • 29 Feb

    Leap, Leaplop, Leaplopanonymous

    Today is Leap Day, an extra 24 hours in our year in which anything is possible.  Of course, it’s a Wednesday, so that does put some limits on what you can do, but I still say dream big.

    Take this post.  By blogging on Leap Day, I’m doing something I’ve never done before and will not have the opportunity to do again for four years.  I went back in the archives and found a post from February 28, 2008, but not the following day.

    It turns out there’s a reason for that.  On February 29, 2008, I boarded Southwest Airlines Flight #192 from Jacksonville, Fla., to Baltimore.  How do I know this?  It’s in my day planner.  If you know me at all you’re probably not the least bit surprised that I still have it and found it in less than a minute.

    I was living in Jacksonville in 2008, producing the weekend morning news shows at a television station.

    On Leap Day 2004, I was a college junior who apparently spent that Sunday put the final touches on a story I wrote for the feature writing class I was taking that semester.  A few weeks later we printed it in the school paper.

    In 2000, I was a high school junior.  Records from this year exist, but nothing specific to this day.  I know I took a class that year that involved playing fantasy football.  Our school was also evacuated for a chemical spill.  Good times.

    In 1996, as your math could tell you, I was a 7th grader.  Exact information for Leap Day is scarce.  My locker was yellow.  I got detention for the first time for forgetting my history homework at home.  My assignment was to make a Puerto Rican flag.  These are the important nuggets I carry around in my brain.

    Leap Day fell on a Saturday in 1992, when I was in 3rd grade.  I have no idea what I was doing that day, but it’s at least conceivable that I hung out with current roommate MR.  That year we were in the same class and first became friends.  The working theory is the relationship was based upon his skill in drawing Bullwinkle and my ability to do the cartoon moose’s voice.

    In 1998, Leap Day was on a Monday, which didn’t matter to me so much back then because I was still a year away from hitting the harsh reality of Kindergarten.

    In 1984, things were even easier.  My day probably went something like this:

    “Wait, what’s that over there…is that a hand?  HOLY COW I HAVE A HAND.  Wait wait wait.  What’s that on the other side.  ANOTHER HAND?!?!  AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!  THIS IS THE BEST DAY EVARRRRRRRRRRRR!!!!”

    Happy Leaping.

    By cjhannas nostalgia Uncategorized
  • 01 Feb

    I Bent My Wookie

    For years I had a lot of random stuff decorating my bedroom, mainly carryovers from things I had in my college dorm room that really had no meaning.

    Now when I look around the room, whether I see something on the walls, on my desk or dresser, I can think of at least one story about that object and a person tied to it.  I think I’m going to share some of those stories, though it’s very possible I’ll get distracted and this will be the first in a one-part series.

    Today I want to tell you about Chewbacca.  Anyone worth any pop culture salt knows who Chewbacca is, but you don’t know this one.  He’s much smaller, coming in at about 3 inches in height, but don’t let his size fool you. He’s still a badass.

    I got Chewie on Monday, December 29, 1997.  Before you get too frightened at my awesome recall skillz, I have to admit that on my own I would have at best guessed the year.  I was a freshman in high school, and the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., had an exhibit called “Star Wars: The Magic of Myth” (note the very 1997ness of that website).

    In a word, it was awesome.  The exhibit had the suits for Chewie and Darth Vader, C-3PO, R2-D2, a Stormtrooper and others, along with the models for all the different spacecraft including the greatest ship ever made: the Millenium Falcon.

    December 29 was during our Christmas break at school, and I remember my mom and my Nana picking me up from track practice along with my little brother (a huge Star Wars fan).  You needed a ticket to get into the exhibition, and thanks to my penchant for collecting stubs from just about everything I’ve ever been to, I still have that one:

    After we made our way through the exhibit, we naturally ended up in the special Smithsonian Star Wars gift shop.  I browsed around for a little bit looking at the admittedly cool stuff, but there was nothing I couldn’t live without.  Nana, however, insisted that she buy me something, so I went over to a series of bins with the smallest items I could find.  They were little figurines of all the major characters, and I settled on Chewie, by far the best character in the series.

    For a long time he resided on my various desks, but now has a far better home in my quasi-entertainment center guarding the Blu-ray player.

  • 17 Dec

    Here Today, Gone Tomorrow

    It’s amazing what can seem vitally important to us today, and then a week or year later seem absolutely irrelevant.

    For some reason the other day I was looking back at some of the really, really old posts, and besides noting how strikingly my writing has changed since then I found it interesting to compare what I was writing about then versus what I think about today.

    I don’t tend to share much deeply personal stuff, so posts like this one from August 23, 2005 really stand out:

    “…It didn’t help that I saw a someone for the first time in about a year that really made me think about the mythical “what might have been.” What would life be like now if a few things back then had happened a little differently? They’d be different, very different, but I couldn’t help but feel like they would be just as good. It’s not like I haven’t thought about this before, or in the past year, but actually being there, three inches away and having a conversation made it so much more real. Here’s to one more week of being lost in my head, then back to classes and the world of no time to think…”

    Clearly someone was on my mind. But five years later, I could not even remotely tell you who that was. No idea.

    I spent a few minutes trying to piece things together: I was in grad school in Maryland…working part time at a local mall…still lived close to where I grew up…

    Nothing.

    Someone who affected me enough to move me to write is now absolutely no part of my life. I guess that’s how it goes.

    Not long after that I reconnected with someone who hadn’t really spoken to me in a long time. In those five years since, we slowly became good friends again, much closer really than we had been before. But as life does, things between us changed quickly (seemed interminably long at the time) and we’re right back to having not spoken in months.

    Even though we lose some relationships we value so highly at the time, we still move forward with those experiences (and sometimes lessons) that help shape the relationships still to come.

    Of course, back in 2005 I was already in the habit of doing not-so-smart things.

    Happy Friday.

  • 30 Jun

    Six Years Ago Today

    Today is a pretty big day for me. It is my 30th consecutive day of blogging, the last day at my part-time video job and the sixth anniversary of a great relationship with Altima.

    Of course, Altima is my car, which I bought on this day in 2004. When I rolled off the lot, the car had a whopping nine miles on the odometer, most of which came during my test drive. I remember the instant peace of mind that came from trading in my dying 1993 Pontiac Grand Am for the gleaming Nissan goodness.

    Here’s what I looked like that day in my family’s standard driveway car picture:

    Note the tucked-in blue polo and khaki shorts, which indicate that I was either on my way to or from a shift selling shoes at Galyan’s. My brother’s red SUV with 18 bajillion miles on it is down at the street.

    Strangely enough, all of my life journeys since that day six years ago have covered exactly 49,994 miles. I was doing a lot of math on my way to work yesterday trying to see if there was any chance I would get home today at the 50,000 mark. I think this is pretty close (remember I started at 00009):

    During the past six years I moved six times, lived in four states (Pennsylvania, Virginia, Maryland, Florida), had six employers, was called a nerd on live TV (for my Rubik’s skillz, thanks Rebecca!), ran a marathon and three half marathons, owned two different cell phones and two different laptops, attended five family weddings (cousin, aunt, brother, sister, cousin), and ate countless meals at Taco Bell.

    Altima also acquired two bees in that span of time. They are both located in the bottom left corner of the back window, just an inch or so apart. Strangely though, one of them has been there since the first week I owned the car and the other just appeared sometime last year.

    You can’t quite see them here, but they are just below the stickers:

    A closer look at the peacefully resting bees:

    I tried several times to get the first one (left) out with a vacuum and other implements, but to no avail. At this point, they are really a part of the car’s ambiance. I mean, if things get lonely on a road trip I can always talk to the bees.

    That brings the June Blogoganza to a close. Hopefully someone enjoyed me posting that much, though I apologize for the days I clearly had nothing to write about (and wanted dearly to skip). Definitely not writing anything tomorrow, so you’ll just have to occupy yourself with the archives. Hasta luego.

  • 22 Jun

    Continuing Saga

    When we last left our story (from my 8-year-old self via yesterday’s blog post), the gang had returned from an errant time travel trip to the exact moment the blueberry dog was due to wake up from a wayward taser shot.

    Chucky was wrong about Good Humar Man’s house smelling like a dead skunk. The stench was from the blueberry dog, who had been sitting unconscious for six months and emitting a smell that can only come from a magical dog named after a fruit.

    “You idiot, it’s just the dog” Danny said. “Help me clean him up, and would someone open a window!”

    Danny and Chucky picked up the groggy dog and brought him into the shower to rinse him off. Since he is a magical dog, he actually enjoys being bathed and sweet blueberry scents began to waft from his coat.

    Troy took charge of airing out the house as the rest of the group set about to planning their retaliation for the dog’s kidnapping.

    “Why don’t we just let it go and get some Taco Bell,” Chris said. “All of this time traveling and bad-guy chasing has my stomach screaming for food.”

    “You’re always hungry,” said Troy.

    “So you should be used to it by now.”

    “Annoyed, yes, but I’ll never get used to your constant belly-aching. Pun intended.”

    “Whatever.”

    Danny and Chucky came back into the room with the now-sweet-smelling dog. The group decided they should try to return to the lair and confront Blueberry Bebop and his henchmen, Dr. Heat and Mr. Chewy.

    With no better ideas than simply blowing up the hideout, Chucky did something so simple that everyone was shocked it worked. He asked the dog what to do. After all, what good is a magical dog if he can’t talk?

    The magical blueberry dog, who curiously did not have a cool name like Elmer or Fabio, launched into a speech defining such clear and precise strategy that you would have thought he was trained at West Point. Actually, he was trained at West Point, but it was the West Point Kennel.

    He explained that the henchmen had simple weaknesses that would render them completely inert–Mr. Heat was susceptible to ice cream, while Mr. Chewy was easily distracted and frightened by penguins.

    The team was so pumped up by the dog’s speech that they immediately ran from the building to launch their attack on Bebop’s hideout. Fortunately for them, there are not many inhabitable places in Antartica, so the hideout was conveniently located across the street.

    Good Humar Man went straight for Mr. Heat, defeating him with a barrage of ice cream sandwiches, fudgesicles, chocolate eclairs and sno-cones. In fact, he was so satisfied by the cool treats that he officially changed his name to Mr. Lukewarm.

    Mr. Chewy was a slightly more difficult challenge, but the group was in luck. It just so happens that Chucky was an experienced penguin whisperer, and was able to get a dozen of the tuxedo birds to follow him to the lair. At the mere sight of the waddling bunch, Mr. Chewy began screaming and shaking uncontrollably as he pleaded with Chucky to make them stop. Chucky is an extreme guy, as noted by his use of bazookas and tasers earlier in the story, so he allowed the penguins to knock Mr. Chewy down and perform a choreographed celebratory dance just to freak him out.

    Mr. Chewy was never the same, and would spend the rest of his life wandering Antartica screaming the words of Nelly Furtado’s “I’m Like a Bird.”

    With the henchmen taken care of, the group focused on Blueberry Bebop. A quick search led them to a large room on the second floor of the lair. They were surprised to find the door unlocked and Bebop inside taking a nap. Apparently he had not heard the encounters with his henchmen.

    “This looks like it is going to be easy,” Chris said. “Should I go ahead to Taco Bell and get us a table?”

    “Yeah, we got this,” Good Humar Man said. “Just make sure you don’t get one too close to the soda machine. I hate when people have to stand next to our table while I am eating.”

    “No problem, chief.”

    Chucky, Troy and Danny sprang into the room and pinned Bebop to the bed. Good Humar Man shut the door and yelled to wake up his adversary.

    “Get up you jerk!”

    Bebop’s eyes popped open, and he saw that his captors had made it impossible for him to escape. He knew why they were there and sought to explain himself.

    “It’s all just a big mix-up you see,” he said. “I have a blueberry dog too and he ran away from home. I was looking for him out in the street and I thought I saw him in your yard.”

    “So you lost your dog and thought you would just take mine,” Good Humar Man said.

    “No, no! He looks exactly like my blueberry dog–they all do!”

    “A likely story. I think you just wanted to have a magical one. You should have just paid the extra $20 at the pet store, you cheap jerk!”

    “I didn’t have the money back then, and besides, I don’t even need the magical version. I was happy with my blueberry dog, he just ran away. That’s all.”

    “You know, I am feeling very generous today. I am going to believe you. I just have one stipulation–you have to mow my lawn for a year.”

    “Your lawn? We live in Antartica.”

    “Oh, right. How about you just come to Taco Bell with us. You’re buying.”

    “Deal!”

    The whole crew went off to Taco Bell and shared a peaceful meal at a table that was far from the soda machine. While they were eating, Bebop’s blueberry dog returned home after being gone for six months. Since the door was locked, he curled up on the front porch and went to sleep, hoping his owner would return soon and let him in from the cold.

    The End.

  • 21 Jun

    The Case of the Missing Magical Blueberry Dog

    Some of the things I write are really forgettable. “The Case of the Missing Magical Blueberry Dog” is not.

    I wrote this amazing piece of literature as a third grader, apparently with the help of a kid named Troy. He lived a few houses away from me during elementary school, and was definitely one of the more unique kids at Floris Elementary.

    It is a wonder our teacher that year survived given the cast of characters in our class. But I guess it was this kind of incredible storytelling bursting from her students’ brains that kept her coming back day after day just to see what we would come up with next.

    One note before I get to the story–the Danny Schwartnager character was supposed to be named after Arnold Schwarzenegger, but clearly spelling complicated last names was not our forte. I will leave in the rest of the misspellings, so bear with our third-grade skillz:

    It took place in Antartica. Suddenly Blueberry Bebop drank rubbing alcohol and dognapped the magical blueberry dog. When the Good Humar man found out that his dog got dognapped he told Troy, Chris, Chucky and Danny Schwartznager. He was going to find his dog.

    When the Good Humar man got to the hideout he said, “allright Dr. Heat, give me back my dog!!!!!” He walked up the hallway…. the steps came closer, who would open the purple steel door?

    Chucky opened the door. He took his lazerride bazooka and blew up the door. He took his tazer and tried to shoot Mr. Chewy but missed and shot the magical blueberry dog. It knocked him out for a half a year. Troy said, “Without the magical blueberry dog we will all be doomed.”

    To be continued…

    (I found a page titled “The Case of the Missing Magical Blueberry Dog Part II” and can only assume it will continue this very clear plotline):

    Good thing Troy had an time traveling divise, so he can type in a 1/2 a year. But he acciduntally typed in 123,456,789,001 and a 1/2 yearr in the future. When they were there Troy realized that he typed in the wrong year.

    There was alot of panic Troy was worried. Chucky screamed, “How do we get back?” Troy replied, “I don’t know but there’s got to be a way. Let’s try going back in time 123,456,789,001 years in the past.”

    When they got there Chris said “Home sweet home.”

    “Sweet? It smells like a dead skunk in coffee,” said Chucky.

    The End.

    Tomorrow on the blog, I go “back in time” to help third-grade Chris finish this story in a somewhat coherent way (at least with better spelling). Stay tuned.

  • 16 Jun

    Taking the Floris Elementary Stage

    In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue. Five hundred years later, I was in the 4th grade and landed a prime role in a play about Columbus.

    I won’t bury the lede–here’s the video of that sweet production:

    The show is called “In Quest of Columbus” and features what I believe is the entire 4th grade at Floris Elementary that year. The real highlight for me comes around the 13:45 mark, where I think I tell the girl standing next to me that I disagree by saying “you’re all wet.” Did this play somehow get set in the 1920s?

    I vaguely remember some kind of audition process, and I’m glad I didn’t end up as one of the nameless, Hawaiian shirt-wearing chorus folks. Both of my current roommates suffered that fate, though one of them didn’t even remember he was in the play at all until I explained the whole thing. I just asked the other one, and he didn’t recall it at all.

    I think my twin sister is one of the “cabin crew” but I’m not 100 percent on that. Actually, that sounds like a terrible thing to say. Let me look again…There she is! Ok, definitely a pirate. I mean, crew person.

    It is interesting to look back at my classmates, with so many of them easily recognizable (probably because we went to the same high school as well). But then there are a bunch of faces that look completely foreign. In my group of “explorers” I can name eight of the other 12 kids. Two look sort of familiar, and I might guess one of their names. Those last two though, I haven’t the foggiest clue where they came from or where they went.

    Also note that I may be the fourth tallest one that stage–not a usual sight.

    I must say that I nailed the basic requirements of an elementary school actor, mainly that I didn’t say my lines as quickly as humanly possible. I do wave my arms a lot to make emphatic points about every single word I am saying. I guess I thought the audience really needed to pay attention to my message.

    Another highlight comes at the 23:30 mark as we wake up in a sort of camp-like scenario. I remember struggling with this first line in rehearsals–there are actual words I was supposed to say but it was to be done in a sort of yawning fashion. It came out as complete nonsense…but it got a laugh!

    Alas, there was no Oscar for my performance. Maybe next time.

  • 03 Jun

    Going Way, Way Back

    I know you’re a fan of the archives here, but those only go back to 2005. As a special treat (read: I’m lazy today and don’t want to tackle my original blog subject), here’s some original material from February 2, 2001. Written for a creative writing class, I have resisted the urge to make any corrections. Enjoy.

    The murky pond water reflects in the noon-time sun. The water splashes and separates as an old, carved wooden canoe cuts through it. An old grizzled man, his face dripping with sweat, guides the canoe to the bank of the pond. He lands the canoe gently on the muddy grass on the side of the pond. Cautiously he emerges from his craft, his long gray mangled hair dripping from the journey. The man, Earl, grabbed the canoe and pulled it from the pond. This was no easy task as the canoe was made of solid wood. Once he had the canoe on shore, Earl took a moment to rest and contemplate what was to come for the rest of the day. Not remembering what he had to do, Earl was forced to return to his camp. He was sure to bring along the canoe, for fear someone might notice it, or even steal it. He arrived after a short walk at a small clearing in the woods. This was his home. Surrounded by trees, small bushes, and undergrowth, and on top of the bare brown dirt. This is where he slept, on the ground, with the grit of the fine dirt imbedded in his hair. He was alone except for his canoe and a box of his belongings. The box was the most important thing he had. The large black trunk with brass latched and handles, is all that remains from his past. It contains all of his possessions, everything that he cares about. Earl unhooked the brass latches and retrieved his black organizer, the only thing that tied him back to the real world. It had been three years since he had left Texas for the back woods of Louisiana.

    He was a prominent lawyer. He had a wife, a son, and a large house in the suburbs with a large yard and a new car. Every facet of his life was going well, and Earl was content. That is until Thursday December 21, a day that Earl will never forget. Like any other day, Earl woke up, got dressed, and headed to work. The trip was only twenty minutes, and Earl had done it a thousand times. He drove his red 1995 Ford Escort down the highway, going just over the speed limit as he usually did. Traffic was light, and it was a beautiful morning, so Earl decided to shave a few minutes off his commute and drive a little faster. He pushed down on the gas pedal until the car was flying down the road at ninety miles per hour. After several miles Earl checked his watch, he was making amazing time. He continued at his blistering speed, unwilling to slow down and waste the good time he was making. Suddenly in his mirror, Earl spotted a policemen closing fast, with lights and siren blazing. A pulse of fear ran through Earl, and sweat began to build on his forehead. The policemen drove right up behind Earl and directed him to the side of the road. Earl knew he would get a ticket with a large fine if he stopped. He would also be late for work for the third time this week, and maybe lose his job. So he made the decision not to stop. He pushed the car even faster and began to weave in and out of traffic. After several miles and many near collisions, Earl exited the highway. He sped down the off-ramp and ignored the red light at the base. As he passed under the light he smashed into a purple Dodge Caravan. The van, carrying a mother and two children, was split in two and thrown off the road. Miraculously no one was killed. Earl’s car was demolished, but he managed to escape injury, except for a few minor cuts and bruises. The mother in the van suffered two broken ribs, and broken jaw, and a mild concussion. The two children, both boys age seven and ten, suffered a broken arm and leg each. The policemen immediately radioed for help and proceeded to arrest Earl. An ambulance arrived a few minutes later to transport the family to the hospital. Earl was taken to the police station and was put into a cell. He called his house and spoke to his wife, Jeanne. She was irate and could not understand what would cause Earl to do what he did. He hung up the phone and sat in the corner of the cell with his head in his hands. What had he done, he thought to himself. What was he going to do?

    The day came for his trial. Earl stood before the judge in and orange prison jumpsuit and handcuffs to hear the charges against him. He was charged with reckless driving, failure to stop, failure to obey and traffic signal, reckless endangerment, and with causing the accident. He was convicted on all of the counts after a plea of no contest. He was sentenced by the judge to eleven years in prison and $2,500 in fines. He was also ordered to pay the family he hit $10,000 for medical bills and suffering. His life was over. He couldn’t imagine what the next eleven years would be like away from his family, his house, and his job. He was taken away by an officer to his home for the next eleven years, the Texas State Penitentiary.

    After just two days in prison, Earl knew he wouldn’t last. He would go crazy if he had to stay. So he put his brain to work on a way to get out. Carefully he studied his surroundings. The drain in the middle of the cement floor, the metal air vent up above, and the small cracks in the gray walls. After a week, he had devised the perfect plan. After dinner, Earl was sent to his cell. He retired to his bed and waited for the right time. He heard the guard walk down the hall, and the click of the door as he left. That was his cue. He sprang from bed and prepared is escape. He slid the bed out from the wall and tilted it on end. He managed to climb up the bed and reach the air vent above. He popped off the metal grate and climbed up inside. After crawling a short way he found himself on the roof of the building. He walked cautiously across the roof to a ladder. He climbed down and moved slowly to the fence guarding the outside of the prison. He found the section in the fence that he had noticed, which had a small gap at the bottom. He squeezed underneath the chain links and ran to freedom. It wasn’t until the next morning that they discovered he was gone, or that Earl stopped running. By then he was far away in the woods of Louisiana. That is where he now resides by himself, waiting for the day they will come and bring him back to prison. For now he sits with the box of belongings he gathered in a frantic and brief return to this house. Nobody saw him, but his family knows he was there. A note let them know where he is, and that they will probably never see him again.

  • 02 Feb

    Nationwide Bearhouse!!!

    Six days without a post? How did you possibly survive? Trust that I was slightly busy with some important stuff.

    Now I’m back to confirm that my brother has been a dork for a really long time, and I was an entertaining 12-year-old.

    Both pieces of information come to us thanks to an audio file created during a trip to Staunton, Va., in what I believe was the summer of 1996. We were heading there to play in a baseball tournament, which seemed to be a frequent destination for us during that period of my life. I think we made four trips to the tiny town in three years.

    It’s about a three-hour drive, and despite its relatively nice scenery along I-81, it can get a bit boring. Joining me in the car for this journey were my brother Ben, teammate Corey, Corey’s mom and my mom behind the wheel.

    I brought a little tape recorder, which the boys used to document the trip. The tape has everything, including music from the band Seven Mary Three, a little ditty from the Game Gear game Winter Olympics, a fake commercial for “Nationwide Bearhouse,” discussion of an imaginary ape and some high quality storytelling.

    You’ll hear Corey first, I chime in for a second before he continues with his log of things that are happening, and then I get the fun going again with something about pressing a button.

    Enjoy.

  • 29 Jul

    All I’m Askin’ is Please, Forgive Me

    CDs, no matter how much you may like them at one point in your life, will inevitably be forgotten and stashed away. You pick up new ones, fight with the tight plastic wrapping and rock out to the latest sounds.

    While the new ones are the same size and hold the same amount of music, they don’t come with one thing the old ones all have–memories.

    I defy you to put in a CD you haven’t listened to in a few years and not think back to the time it was a mainstay in your rotation. Think about the car trips it gave a soundtrack to, and the people along for the ride.

    Lately I’ve been bringing one of the old favorites to my car each morning. Between my morning and evening commutes, there is just about enough time to get through the whole disc.

    After listening to a dozen of them, I have yet to experience one that didn’t bring me back to when I first hit play. With most of them, this is the first time I have played them in my current car, which I’ve had for five years now.

    One thing is clear–the current ride has a FAR better sound sytem than the 1993 Pontiac Grand Am I drove in high school and the first three years of college.

    But the Grand Am was the beginning for CDs from bands like SR-71, Incubus, Lifehouse, Beastie Boys, Good Charlotte and Barenaked Ladies. It was also the ride responsible for transporting my carpool cohort from Copper Crossing (our neighborhood) to Oakton High School and back.

    There were four of us–Myself, Kristen, Becky and Dave (or David if you like). I think I picked everyone up in that order, though I just spent five minutes trying to remember that detail from something I did at 6:30 a.m. in 2000-01. It’s the most logical order based on where they lived, so I’ll assume that’s how I did it.

    The music seemed to be sort of my choice, but it quickly became clear that there were some favorites among my collection, and others that weren’t quite as welcome in the CD player. I can’t even begin to describe how many times we listened to SR-71’s album “Now You See Inside.” Ditto for Lifehouse’s “No Name Face.” Not that I was complaining–they were my CDs after all.

    But poor Dave. He was more into bands like MXPX, The Get Up Kids and of course, JEW. You haven’t heard of JEW? Well neither had I until early on Friday morning. Fridays were Dave days–that meant he could pick the music and we had to listen. It seemed like a fair system for someone who didn’t complain the rest of the week and even gave up any desires to sit in the front seat.

    So there we were, sitting in Dave’s driveway as he settled into the back. I reached my hand back to receive his chosen disc. It’s label? JEW. Naturally, I asked about this mysterious band only to be chastened for not knowing the now-ubiquitous Jimmy Eat World.

    In the afternoon, I’m confident I dropped off Dave first, then Becky and finally Kristen. I know this for a fact because of SR-71’s song “What A Mess.” It was by far Kristen’s favorite, and it was the soundtrack for the 30-second drive from Becky’s house to hers. She didn’t have to ask if it was OK, or even the track number. Once Becky got out, my stereo went “beep beep beep” the appropriate number of times to get us to track No. 3. Sometimes we’d even skip forward to the chorus, since, you know, 30 seconds isn’t that long.

    I bet even Dave remembers the words to that song. Maybe I should get him a copy–only $8 on Amazon right now. A small price to pay for those memories.

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