Uncategorized

  • 06 Oct

    Ideas Lost

    The death of anyone represents unrealized potential, the loss of what could have been with another minute, year or decade of life.

    With the passing of Steve Jobs, the world paused to remember a man who changed a lot about the way we create, share and experience the world ours has become.  He led a company that revolutionized whole lines of products that now seem essential in our lives.  Now the question will always be, “What else would he have done?”

    His lost legacy is not unique.  You can ask that question about anyone.  A loss of life is the loss of inventions, books, works of art, ideas and experiences.  With each one, the world — in ways however grand or minute — will never be the same.

    A few years ago I read a book that remains one of my favorites.  It was recommended to me by a friend, written by an author I had never heard of.  The story is one I connected with from the first page, with an unforgettably unique protagonist — the kind of experience that left me wanting to read everything he had ever written.  Sadly, there wasn’t much else. 

    The book was “A Confederacy of Dunces,” which earned author John Kennedy Toole the Pulitzer Prize in fiction.  But under the weight of depression he killed himself, and it was only after his death that “Dunces” and another book he wrote at age 16 were published.  It’s a shame the untold stories in his head were lost before they were told.

    So to the creators, the storytellers, the visionaries and anyone with ideas kept private because they seemed silly or unimportant — please share them.  The world wants to know.

    By cjhannas Uncategorized
  • 26 Sep

    Nats a Wrap

    The Washington Nationals may be a few games under .500, but in the 14 times I went to Nats Park this year they went 8-6.  Clearly I’m a good person to have around.

    The last visit of the season was yesterday, a 4-1 win over the Atlanta Braves in which I saw pitcher Chien-Ming Wang get his first Major League hit.

    That was a milestone I actually saw three times this year in what was an eventful and extraordinarily fun season at the ballpark.  The most incredible moment by far was rookie pitcher Tom Milone belting a 3-run homer on the very first pitch of his first Major League at-bat — the eighth pitcher to ever do that.  In case that game needed a little more drama, Nats star Ryan Zimmerman won it in the bottom of the ninth inning with a walk-off single.  A post-game concert by one of my favorite bands, Lifehouse, was icing on the cake.

    Late-game heroics were a common thread all season, as we watched Zimmerman end a game last month against the hated Philadelphia Phillies with a walk-off grand slam.  Michael Morse finished off our May 27 evening at the park with a walk-off home run as well — that’s three of our 14 games ending in walk-off wins.

    That doesn’t count June 14, when the Nationals trailed 6-2 heading into the bottom of the seventh inning.  Even with three more at-bats, it seemed like the Nats had no chance.  But they responded with six runs in the inning, scoring on a wild pitch to tie the game, and getting the eventual winning run when the Cardinals pitcher hit the Nationals batter with the bases loaded.

    In July, the Nats scored a winning run against the Cubs on a late suicide squeeze play, which I unfortunately missed because I had to leave the game early to make it into work.

    At another of our games, an opposing player hit a home run into the left field stands.  The fan who caught it threw it back onto the field — an impressive toss that made it all the way back to the infield.  Unfortunately for him, security was not as enthused and kicked him out.

    Our second-to-last game had a few quirks, going 13 innings, and featuring both two ceremonial first pitches and two between-inning races between the president mascots.  Those mascot races this year also gave me the opportunity to see Teddy Roosevelt be tackled by a monkey and a leprechaun, and for human Jayson Werth to grab a win himself.

    I can definitively say it was a very unmemorable year for pitcher John Lannan.  Except for opening day, I did not remember him starting a single one of our other games.  Well, apparently there were three others.  Better luck next year, John.

    Here’s to 2012.

    By cjhannas baseball Uncategorized
  • 22 Sep

    Salt on the Side

    While many fast food places are really particular about giving out extras like forks or ketchup, McDonald’s is apparently very conscious about salt.

    Before today I would have offered up their fries as an example that they are in no way concerned about the amount of salt they hand through the drive-thru window, but that was then.  Now I know better.

    As I counted down the seconds remaining until my weekend this morning at work, all I could think about was how hungry I was and how much I wanted to solve that problem by downing a couple of Egg McMuffins.  This is actually a very convenient thought to have at such a time since there’s a McDonald’s on my way home.

    I pulled into the drive-thru, ordered my two Egg McMuffins and nothing more.  After paying at the first window, the nice woman inside handed me back my credit card and receipt, which looks like this:

    I don’t remember ordering the salt packet, but I’m glad they are so concerned about inventory that their computer system actually has an entry for “Salt Packet.”  And that it has no cost.

    When I got home and opened the bag, I found two Egg McMuffins, and three napkins (why aren’t they are the receipt?), but no salt.  Maybe I should go back and get a refund.

  • 18 Sep

    Strasmas

    Last year I saw Nationals pitcher Stephen Strasburg strike out 10 batters in his electrifying second start as a major league pitcher.

    Then he hurt his elbow, had surgery and spent months outside of my baseball-watching world.  Until last night.


    Strasburg walks to the dugout after pre-game warmups

    I had a ticket to check out his previous start, which happened to fall on a workday and during a week in which it rained constantly in the Washington, D.C., area.  I figured there was no way they would actually play the game, and decided to grab a few more hours of sleep before my overnight shift instead.  They played.

    The next night was one of the games in our 14-game ticket package.  It rained, but we made the effort to go into the city determined to watch the game, which of course was canceled before we even made it to the stadium.  Fortunately though, we were able to trade those tickets in for any future game and ended up with a Strasburg start.

    Our normal seats are down the third base line, so it was extra fortuitous that the replacement tickets just happened to put us right next to where Strasburg was warming up before the game.  Here’s that, plus what he does best — striking people out to end innings:

    He ended up pitching six innings, allowing one earned run on four hits and striking out three.

    The Nats lost the game in 13 innings, but I was able to see a few interesting things along the way that had nothing to do with the game.  First, there were two ceremonial first pitches.  I didn’t know that was technically possible.  In the bottom of the 12th inning, the remaining fans mounted an impressively long version of the wave that seemed to grow stronger and stronger each time it went around the stadium.  That is, until Jayson Werth struck out looking, immediately everyone so much there was no will to continue.

    There was also the unprecedented second running of the Presidents Race, which typically happens in the middle of the fourth inning.  But with the game stretching deep into the night (actually it was pretty quick for a 13-inning game), the presidents made it out for a second run.  I took video of the first one, which will surely satisfy your lifelong desire to see a leprechaun tackle Teddy Roosevelt:

    If you are into such things there is a blog devoted entirely to the Presidents Race.  And yes, I’m jealous I am not responsible for it.

  • 04 Sep

    Lifehouse In The Nats’ House

    [Lots of people ending up here from Google searches — 2012 NatsLive info here]

    Last night I had one of the best baseball game experiences of my life.

    It started with a rookie pitcher who in his first Major League start threw two no-hit innings, then hit a 3-run HR in first first at-bat. On the very first pitch he saw. Which I (sort of) predicted:

    Bro: “Oh the pitcher’s up.”
    Me: “We haven’t seen him hit, he might be good.”
    Bro: “True…”
    Me: “If I see a pitcher homer in his first big league at-bat I’m never coming to a game again. I’ll never see anything better than that.”

    I guess predicting the future happens to be in our genes. Late in the game, with the Nationals trailing by two runs, my brother said Ryan Zimmerman would hit a walk-off home run. He later amended that to just a walk-off hit.

    Ninth inning. Bases loaded. Ryan Zimmerman hits a single. Two runs score. Nationals win.

    The game itself would have been high on the list of great experiences, but these tickets we bought back in March just happened to fall on a day when the Nats were having a post-game concert featuring Lifehouse.

    That would be Lifehouse, one of my favorite bands. (Yeah yeah, not a universally accepted choice, but I like them, so whatevs.) They’re best known for their hit song “Hanging By A Moment,” which came out when I was a senior in high school:

    When I heard they were playing after the game I figured they might do four or five songs, but they ended up playing 12 in all. I was slightly disappointed they didn’t hit my favorite one, but I’m not about to argue about a free concert. One of the big worries about hearing a band you like play in person for the first time is the fear that they will be terrible live, but fortunately I thought Lifehouse was fantastic last night.

    Here’s a medley of the show (minus “Nerve Damage” which I failed to record at all):

    For people who care about such things, the set list was:

    -All In
    -Spin (which I used in a montage in my documentary)
    -Nerve Damage
    -You and Me
    -Whatever It Takes
    -Wrecking Ball
    -Beast of Burden (Rolling Stones cover)
    -Falling In
    -Hanging By A Moment
    -Halfway Gone
    -First Time
    -Broken

  • 02 Sep

    High Fidelity

    Sometimes life is all about timing.

    Last week I finished Nick Hornby’s “High Fidelity,” which at another point in my life I think I would have really enjoyed. But for some reason I had a really hard time connecting with it in a positive way. It doesn’t have anything to do with Hornby since I’ve read and enjoyed several of his other books, but rather with how some of the elements relate to things that are going on right now.

    One of the major issues is the attitude of the main character, who runs a record shop and uses the story of several past loves as a lens to explain his latest relationship issues. His attitude is awful — brooding, negative, excessively sarcastic — and one that mirrors the kind of thing I’ve been working very hard lately to eliminate from the main character in my own writing project. (Yes, I’m still writing. Maybe I’ll update soon, but it’s been rather challenging in the past month or two.)

    Given that he owns a record store, it’s not surprising that music plays a big role in the story. There are musicians, endless top-5 lists of artists, albums and songs, and lots of talk about how certain songs can be closely tied to something in your memory:

    “Sentimental music has this great way of taking you back somewhere at the same time that it takes you forwards, so you feel nostalgic and hopeful all at the same time.”

    We all have those. If you’ve listened to a piece of music at any point in your life, it’s impossible to not have a few notes or a chorus bring someone or something rushing back to your mind no matter how far your brain has to reach. Sometimes that sentimentality is a good thing that elicits strong, positive emotions, but just as easily those songs can leave you shaking your head.

    Books can do that too. Another thing that I think skewed my experience with this book was the name of one of the recurring characters. Seeing it over and over again rang notes that brought me back to a situation I once had such fond memories of, but which has since been tainted by a flood of negativity. It’s hard to change those associations.

    This was also one of those books that somehow ended up with a lot of dog-eared pages by the time I finished, but looking back at those pages I have no idea why I marked them. I should really start taking notes as I read. I’ll end with one that doesn’t really need any explanation:

    “I can see everything once it’s already happened — I’m very good at the past. It’s the present I can’t understand.”

    By cjhannas books Uncategorized
  • 27 Aug

    Hits Keep Coming

    This may come as a great shock, but as a child I was a bit of a goofball.



    That’s me at baseball practice at the age of 10. It’s from a tape I found recently that my coach had made of each of us hitting. I imagine nowadays it would be some slickly produced highlight video with a pulsing soundtrack, but back then it was cool to be able to watch ourselves play.

    My brother I went to some batting cages yesterday to take some swings and see if we could actually still hit long after the glory days of our baseball-playing years. I brought along a camera, and it was interesting to see how things haven’t changed much. Sure, I’m stronger, have a little more swagger in my stance and definitely look better in HD, but all those swings as a 10-year-old certainly laid the foundation.

    A little from then and now:






    The old video also showed that my penchant for neatness is nothing new. I had forgotten about my habit of cleaning off home plate whenever it was my turn during batting practice:



    Someone had to do it, right?

  • 26 Aug

    Outliers

    The notion of the American Dream is that anyone can work hard and be successful, and that those who achieve great things got to where they are through their dedication, brilliance and effort.

    In “Outliers” author Malcolm Gladwell says those things are all well and good, but if you look hard enough there are almost arbitrary advantages that make a huge difference in who rises to the top.

    “It makes a difference where and when we grew up,” Gladwell writes. “The culture we belong to and the legacies passed down by our forebears shape the patterns of our achievement in ways we cannot begin to imagine.”

    I heard about this book long before I read it, specifically the example of elite hockey players. Gladwell says that if you look at any collection of people from this group, you’ll see that 40 percent of them were born in January, February and March. That compares to just 30 percent for July through December.

    Why? It has to do with a seemingly innocuous decision — the date that youth leagues use as a cutoff to decide how old you are for that season. They say however old you are on January 1, that’s your age. So kids with January 2 birthdays end up being almost a year older than kids in the same league who were born December 31. That matters. They’re bigger, they’ve probably been playing longer, so they seem a little better. They end up being picked for all-star teams, which play more games and practice more, thus turning any small advantage in skill into a huge one, all because of that date.

    I was a huge beneficiary of this growing up. I played baseball, and in our league the cutoff date was July 31. My birthday is August 3, so I was always one of the older kids. Gladwell says if you look at professional baseball players, more of them are born in August than any other month. Not sure where I went wrong.

    But if you’re not that interested in sports, he says “these exact same biases also show up in areas of much more consequence, like education.” Parents have to decide when to start their kids in school, which makes a big difference given the group they progress with. Here, I was on the opposite side of things, always one of the youngest people in my class. I was in the same grade as roommates CA and MR as we went through school, but both of them are almost a year older than I am. Sure, everyone could drive before I could, but that didn’t mean I couldn’t do better than them on a test.

    As part of a larger point, Gladwell brought up something about IQ that I thought was one of the more interesting notes in the whole book. He writes that experts say after a certain point, having a higher IQ makes no real-world difference. There are thresholds at which you are considered to have the mental capacity to pass high school or get through college, but he says someone with an IQ of 130 is no more likely to win a Nobel Prize than someone whose IQ is 180. He compares it to basketball players — if you’re 5-foot-5 there’s little chance you’re going to play in the NBA. But being 6-4 versus being 6-6 isn’t as big of a deal — you just have to be “tall enough.”

    Being 6-3 did not help my basketball career, though if any NBA teams are reading, I am still a free agent.

    Among other people, Gladwell writes about Bill Gates and how going to a certain high school that happened to have a really advanced computer, and then living near a college with a computer lab he could go to in the middle of the night were small advantages that led to his incredible success. These examples are interesting and make you think about how those little things add up. But Gladwell also takes moments here and there to give a more practical view of why we should pay attention to these things:

    “Our world only allowed one thirteen-year-old unlimited access to a time-sharing terminal in 1968. If a million teenagers had been given the same opportunity, how many more Microsofts would we have today? To build a better world we need to replace the patchwork of lucky breaks and arbitrary advantages that today determine success — the fortunate birth dates and the happy accidents of history — with a society that provides opportunities for all.”

    Amen.

  • 22 Aug

    National(s) Pastime

    The Philadelphia Phillies decided to lose a few games in Washington over the weekend, and for some reason thousands of their fans decided to make the trip to see the beatdown in person.

    This has become a trend whenever the Phillies are in town, with their fans occupying a huge portion of the stadium. As per the stereotypical reputation for Philly fans, they do a lot of booing, mainly of the Nationals, even during super classy times like when the team was being introduced during a pregame ceremony on Opening Day last year.

    I went to the game on Saturday with my brother, Pat, and we were able to witness a rare moment in sports — both fan bases booing the same player. If you aren’t familiar with either team, Washington right field Jayson Werth used to play in Philly and this year has been terrible for the Nats:

    The great thing about hearing the Philly fans boo is that Werth did nothing but a favor to them. He signed a big contract as a free agent, doing zero harm to the Phillies, and given his performance this year I’m not sure what exactly they are mad about.

    There’s an old anecdote about Philly fans booing anyone, even Santa Claus. Well, after Saturday you can add George Washington to the list:

    Sure, some of those boos were from Nats fans who wanted Teddy Roosevelt to get his first ever win, but given the number of Phillies fans in attendance it had to be mostly them.

    Another thing I don’t understand about that fan base is their desire to grab the Nationals-related promotional items. Last year I saw thousands of Phillies fans pick up their free Nats hats on Opening Day. On Saturday, the first 15,000 fans got an Ian Desmond bobblehead. That’s Ian Desmond, shortstop for the Nats. I don’t think I saw a single Washington fan with a bobblehead — just those from Philly.

    I know if I went up to see a game at Philadelphia’s Citizens Bank Park and it was Shane Victorino bobblehead day, I certainly wouldn’t take one. Why would I possibly want it?

    Just more proof that Philadelphia, and its fans, are crazy.

    By cjhannas baseball Uncategorized
  • 18 Aug

    Major Wisdom

    You meet someone for the first time. They’re attractive, nice to everyone around them, have a really engaging personality, and seem like they could succeed at absolutely anything they try. In a word, they’re perfect.

    You set this person up on a mantle, an object of envy, someone you wish you could be like. They have it all together in ways you don’t feel like you do.

    But as you get to know them more, you see the cracks, those little flaws that bring them down from that cloud of seeming perfection. And yet, you find that as you see more of those nuances the person seems even better than you initially thought. There’s a more colorful story there, one that shoots through the highs and lows of life instead of cruising along at a constant one-note level.

    As a character in Helen Simonson’s “Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand” puts it, “Everyone needs a few flaws to make them real.”

    The story follows Major Pettigrew, a retired British army officer who lives in a small town characterized by proper social structures and country club attitude. The Major at once embraces the old set as a defense of traditional British ways against modern excess while also bristling at the lack of progress in cultural acceptance.

    The Major strikes up a friendship with a Pakistani woman who runs a sort of convenience store in town, a relationship that brings out more than a few off-handed less-than-enlightened comments from his friends and country club colleagues. As they connect into a deeper and deeper friendship, the Major (a widower) and Mrs. Ali (a widow) find an unexpected renewal of the types of feelings they thought had long ago left their lives for good.

    But life isn’t perfect, and when circumstances surrounding Mrs. Ali’s family force her to leave town, the Major is left to discuss the disappointment with a neighbor who pushes him to reach out to her and make sure she knows how he feels:

    “You miss her,” she said. “You are not happy.”

    “It is a moot point,” he said. “She made her choice very clear. One feels quite powerless.”

    Whether it’s a slow realization or an overt rejection, this is one of the worst feelings we can experience. You care for someone who decides they don’t want you as that part of their life. They make a choice and you can’t help but feel powerless as they leave you wondering what it is about you that makes it so easy for them to say “no thanks.”

    But sometimes we can save ourselves from that fate, or protect ourselves from that disappointment, if only we pay attention to the subtle and not-so-subtle signs, no matter at what stage a relationship may be. The Major, comforting his son who just had a fight with his girlfriend, offers some wisdom that a girl — or two, or 283 — in my past could identify with:

    “You are not the first man to miss a woman’s more subtle communication,” he said. “They think they are waving when we see only the calm sea, and pretty soon everybody drowns.”

    It’s really a sweet story about the Major and Mrs. Ali, the Major and his son, Mrs. Ali’s family, and how all of them interact in a community of differing goals, standards and ideas of how the world should work.

    I’ll end with one of the Major’s many nuggets of wisdom: “But we, who can do anything, we refuse to live our dreams on the basis that they are not practical.”

    [Note: I realize this is the kind of post some people may read too much into. Don’t.]

    By cjhannas books Uncategorized
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