
Nothing in Particular in no Particular Order. life - death - sports - movies - music and whatevah
Monday, August 31, 2009
SOMETIMES I WORRY ABOUT HANNAH

POPS BASEBALL
Pop’s Baseball
I don’t know what it is about baseball. I crave it all winter. I bust with anticipation from the final out of the World Series, to spring training, then can’t wait for the real games to start. Baseball has always been there. I played baseball some as a kid. Whiffle ball and backyard ball were constant activities. The memories I have throwing the ball with my dad will always be with me. Dad threw the ball long past when he should’ve. God bless him. When he couldn’t throw over hand, he threw underhand. He told me it was the same technique the referees use in football games. He could’ve kicked it back at me, I enjoyed every single moment of havin’ a catch with my Pop. Baseball is more than a game. And for me it’s the greatest sport ever.
When the Reds made the World Series in 1990, Pop came home with tickets to the game that night. He’d won the raffle at work and got 2 seats. I was jumping up and down. I was 20. I’d moved back in for a few months to get my life back on track. But my joy was cut short when he announced that he was taking my mom instead of me. I was heartbroken. So I watched the next 4 games on the TV and of course they won all 4.
I would call Pop sometimes just to chat, and a chatter he wasn’t. But then I’d ask if he watched the game last night, and he’d get to talking for a few more minutes. He loved to talk about Sean Casey and Dimitri Young, Danny Graves and Pokey Reece and Jose Rijo. I’d bounce things off him, rumors I’d heard, just to get his reaction. He could talk about baseball. Not stats and geek stuff, mostly just how he enjoyed attitudes and playing the game right. He knew baseball, he knew what he liked. He believed in and loved every hometown player.
I have a picture of me and my Mom and Pop at I believe the last game he ever went to. I was hosting clients at GABP in a luxury suite. He was amazed and told me how different it was watching baseball in such royal digs. I love that picture.
I remember when Mom called and said that Dad had fallen. They were at the hospital and he was ok. I was watching a Red’s game at the time she called. He was ok at the time. I raced there from about 20 miles away and he was up and talking just fine. He wanted to know about the score. The Red’s had won on a homerun if I recall correctly. He was more into that than the bump on his knee. He went home with Mom an hour later.
Then a few weeks later he fell again and they admitted him for tests. His battle started then, but the war was already coming to a close. There would be no more battles as there was no fight left in his body. And when he went to assisted living a few days later, I’d go to him in the middle of the day. We’d watch the Cubs day tilts and Sportscenter. He would drift in and out. But he seemed to be awake and watching when the 7:10 game started each night. We did this for a few weeks. But then the games would start and he would still be sleeping. I’d field some comments from his roommate about the game, he was much more alert than Pop. I’d make the drive home, listen to Marty and Joe, and try to make mental notes for Pop, if he had some questions about the game. He never did.
And when he was moved to hospice, they had no TV’s in the rooms. But I remember telling him about the game from the night before and reading the sports page to him. He rarely reacted but at times, he would give me a slight fist pump or squeeze my hand then drift back off, probably without a memory of the moment. I remember them all to this day. Luckily this only went on for a day or two. I can still picture me reading the sports section to him, the paper folded neatly into quarters so I could hold it in one hand. He’d taught me this technique decades earlier, said it was how you read the paper on the subways in New York. And so I read and read. The baseball season was steaming along and Dad was fading. Aloud I would read from the paper in one hand, and with my other hand, I’d hold his. I told him I loved him and always left the paper by his side when I left the room. “In case you wanna read this before I get back” I’d say to him.
And the night he died, I went to use the phone in the nurse’s station at that wonderful hospice unit. And the game was playing softly on a small radio on the counter. I called everyone close and told them that the time to say goodbye was upon us, maybe a day, no more. My sisters came to take over the vigil and I went home for some much needed rest. I watched the rest of the ballgame from my couch that night, and prayed. I prayed to God that this would be over soon. He wasn’t coming back, so please, let this be over.
Amy called around 11:00. It was over. She said, “He’s gone”. And so I got into my car, listened to the postgame show while I drove. And went to see him for the last time. The whole trip I was comforted by familiar radio voices, discussing a game that me and Pop loved so much.
Today I watch the Reds as much as I can. With a growing family and young girls, I don’t get to see the games as much as I’d like, but I can usually catch the end of the games. And with every game, there is a minute that makes me think about Pop. But for most of those moments, I don’t feel sad. I just wish he were enjoying it at home, in his chair with a brandy.
Sunday, August 30, 2009
MY BEARD HAS TURNED WHITE

I've spent the last couple of decades earning a living, trying not to die or to worry too much. And when the worries of the daily job got to be too much, i just moved on. But these days, movning on is very scary. I'd like to work in an industry that i'm more in tune with but I keep reminding myself that "wherever you go, that's where you are". So maybe the pressure in all my vocations has been from internal sources. I can't explain it. it's most likely real though. and if i listen to the voices in the back of my head I hear that I'm not supposed to be where I am right now. I'm not supposed to be doing something as lame as working for Dunder Mifflen. But until i really take the horns of my career and begin to steer it the way I want it to go, i assume that the gray will show up faster and faster. The gray i can take. The non-living the dream I want to though, that becomes a bigger chore every day I put on the suit and go shake hands with people in the field.
So for now the gray stays, and the job remains the same. Maybe if some of you faithful readers would share this website with a few of your friends, and they'd share it with a few more of their freinds, i could start to make a living doing what i love...writing about life and telling the tales of my youth. Any suggestions I'd take, just sent them to joeschaos@gmail.com . I'm happy to read them.
So in the mean time, i'll continue to observe and write when I can. I love doing what I do, I just need the traffic on the website to increas so that I can start to make some money off of it. And if that happens, I don't know what the rate of white beard hair will increase or decrease at, but i bet it makes a difference.
Getting old is fine with me. Can't wait to go see Hannah at college football games, and tailgate with her. Sarah should see her plan of world domination long before I have a chance to get involved with it. So bring it on! I'll take the age, take the gray, take the bad backs. Life has proven that it can't get me down. I have looked the scalpel dead in the eyes several times and said "bring it on". I'm not scared, I'm not afraid, I am an animal and I am prepared to eat you if I have to. So if you see me on the street, and the beard is looking whiter than you remember, it's still just me. Just Joe. Rockin the Joe-tee. Come on 39...i'll see you in 17 days. bring it. i've gone through lots worse things than my last birthday in my 30's. I eat 30's for breakfast around here, i put mustard on it. and anyway, I read that white is the next brown. i'm all about the style.
Saturday, August 29, 2009
BAD KARMA
I SAID I WASN'T GOING TO WRITE ABOUT THE REDS AGAIN THIS YEAR, BUT...

Tuesday, August 25, 2009
ERIC THE RED

In 2005, Eric had been retired from baseball for about 4 years or so. The Reds organization had decided they were going to put him in the Reds Hall of Fame that year. And so Eric was in town all that week for the ceremony and all the talk shows and media stuff. I was working for a radio station downtown, and the sports director was a guy named Wayne "Box" Miller. He was a local sports marketing and radio guy, and just happened to be very good friends with Eric The Red. I had known that Eric was going to be at the station several times that week, and I wanted to meet him, but I had an extremely busy week that week. So I came in the day after his interview was on the air, and "Box" came and found me. He said "Joe, where were you? I brought Eric out to meet you yesterday". Box and I had had many discussions about Davis, he knew I was a huge fan. And he'd brought Eric around to meet me because that's what friends do. Box was my good friend at the time, we'd sit and talk every day about sports, life, women. I loved that dude. So I thanked Box for what he'd tried to do for me. And so he asked me if I was free to go see Eric the next day. I didn't read too much into it at the time, but I agreed to meet back at the station the next day. So the next day came, and it was the day that Eric was to be inducted in the Red's Hall of Fame. He was at his hotel, with his friends, hanging out in the afternoon by the bar (i don't remember Eric drinking at all by the way). Box and I walked over and there they all were. Now, picture this. Eric Davis, my favorite Red, hanging at the bar with his friends from California, greeting me and Box. I leaned against the bar and listened as they cutup and talked and made fun of each other, told stories as I tried not to stare at Eric the whole time. I spent about an hour there with Eric and Box and their friends, not saying much, but trying to drink it all in, remember it all. I had been in radio for a few years, and had met many celebrities, and realized they were all just dudes with a lot of money, but on that day, for that hour, I was star struck. After an hour or so, we told Eric we had to leave, he spent a minute thanking me for coming by, and posed for a few pictures with me. He is good man. I told him I'd be there for his induction at the game that night, that I was hosting clients at our suite at the ball park, and invited him to come by during the game. We said goodbye and Box and I walked back to the station. I remember thanking Box so many times on that short walk back to the station. Box had made my week.
And that night at the game, I was telling friends and clients about my day, me more impressed with the story than anyone else in the room. And most of the people that were there in the suite with us seemed to think I was telling tall tales...sure, I had spent the afternoon in a bar with Eric the Red on the day that he was being enshrined into the Reds Hall of Fame. Sure, Joe's a bigshot, whatever. And then, around the third inning, the best thing that could've happened, happened. Box and Eric the Red walked right into my suite. And there he was. The whole stadium had just given him a huge round of applause, and had shown their love for our 1990 hero. And he was hanging out in my suite, a short hour later. My clients were thrilled, my friends were impressed and I was amazed by the sheer entertainment of the moment. It really couldn't have been a better day.
I haven't ever gotten a chance to meet Eric The Red again, and I'm sure he wouldn't remember me, but I'll always remember that day. I'll remember that he was just a man, hanging out with his friends, and I was just a fly on the wall. But this man was one that had electrocuted a city for years in a true baseball town, and I was priviledged enough to have a personal connection to it, no matter how insignificant I was to the situation. And I'll always have that memory. I had cheered this guy so many times, and then I cheered him again that night on the most special night of his career. Eric the Red was a badass dude. And I got to hangout with him for a couple hours. How cool is that?
I've attached a picture that I hate, I was about 25 pounds heavier then. But Eric is the picture, not me. I look like Elvis just before he died.
DADDY-DAUGHTER DAY
Monday, August 24, 2009
STAR WARS FLAWS

FUNNIEST THING IN THREE WEEKS, NO KIDDIN
This is the funniest thing I've read in weeks. I was laughing out loud, especially the first half. Thanks to C Trent for posting it today.
MONDAY BACK TO WORK
Sunday, August 23, 2009
ERIC DAVIS: MY FAVORITE RED

TRY NOT TO SING ALONG
SONG FOR THE DAY
Saturday, August 22, 2009
INTUITION
How do you explain intuition? I guess Wikipedia just explained it. But really, how do you explain it? Certain people have good intuition, certain people have bad intuition, which actually means they have no intuition. Is it guessing? Is it magic? Is it voodoo? Maybe it's being able to sew together the seems of seemingly unrelated entities that most of us can't typically piece together. Maybe it's metaphysical. Maybe it's science. Isn't it possible that intuition could be totally a physical and chemical thing? Science doesn't have answers for everything yet. It could be that intuition is signaled my pheromones that ignite little ideas in our subconscious that make it possible for certain brains to connect non linear points on the maps of our lives. It's just a theory, but I always will believe in things that may be. I refuse to live my life under the belief that there might not be answers we just haven't found yet. And I really don't need proof of anything. There needs not be science for things to be real. Sometimes science doesn't apply. And for intuition, this may be one of those times.
So let's assume that intuition exists. By the same non scientific properties that don't exist to prove it, couldn't that mean that it's not always accurate? Couldn't it be that some sort of chaos lies in wait for all things? Like one event could trigger another, so that what's forseen may not be the actual outcome? But perhaps it's one of several likely outcomes? Maybe people with the "gift" see some of the outcomes but can't figure out which ones will be and which ones won't. It's not an exact science because it's not a science at all. That's possible, right? Definitely.
Or Maybe it's more of a Divine Gift. Maybe God made it so that one in every 10,000 souls is one that can see things in advance. Maybe He needs people on Earth that can do this. Maybe He has a quota. Maybe He needed these people to help regulate the rest of us. Like, He needs each of them to help him with something important at some point. Maybe they'll never get that one important assignment, but they are there, in place for God if He needs them. Or maybe these gifted souls are more like crossing guards we had as kids, only now in life, and they're always around, always making sure we stay between the white lines, crossing from here to there. And maybe these gifted souls are the ones closest to him, like they are messengers. Gifted people don't typically tend to understand it all do they? They might just see what they see and don't know why. This could be why this is all more scary to them than the people around them.
Or maybe being a gifted person is more like having a higher sense of logic. Maybe these people are just smarter than most of us. And I'm not talking about math or science or physics. But these gifted souls are smart enough to pick up on a world full of signs, signs that they may not understand or even be able to point out to the rest of us. And their gift is able to take all the signs they have seen, absorb them, put them into context and gain a certain knowledge or perspective about something that most of us haven't been able to piece together at all. Their logic lets them see the signs.
Maybe it's nothing more than something like a feeling, or an emotion. And those feelings or emotions are driven through their subconscious, pinging off of non-related happenings, bumping and spinning until they actually arrive at something in the consciousness that actually makes sense. They say that intuitiveness is more likely for the creative minds, so this mind can't help but take this one idea and send it through a stream of thought processes, uncontrolled by their efforts or intentions, and a hypothesis about a possible outcome is deposited into the front of the brain, and then they can focus on it. And this is what tells them to rationally believe that it's a sign, or a vision.
So, magic, voodoo, science, Divine Gift, logic...take your pick. But I tend to believe that it's all of the above. I want to believe that it's all of the above. Here's what I believe: God needed agents on earth to send things to...visions, ideas, knowledge. The answers to why He needed them aren't important. But He needed them, and so He created some souls that were intuitive enough to pickup on the signs that were already there for all of us. Those souls knew where to find answers to questions they didn't even know they had. They were smart enough to see the visions in their minds, and smart enough to hear the notes of mystery in their minds and creative enough to piece it all together so that somewhere, somehow, some sense was made of it in in their minds. Soothsayers? No. Gifted people? Yes. Blessed with the gifts to be able to understand what most of us cannot. To be able to see when most of us think its dark. To smell the unripened fruit of an enigma that hasn't even become a mystery yet.
Why wouldn't gifted people exist? Did Albert Einstein exist? Did Alexander Graham Bell exist? Didn't Al Gore invent the internet? Have you ever seen a Picasso? Didn't Michelangelo paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel? Have you ever had a preacher at your church really seem like he or she really "gets it"? Or a teacher that could totally make you learn, in spite of yourself? These people exist. They will all claim that they were "called" to their work. They were drawn to it. They couldn't avoid their life's work. Mickey Mantle was as self destructive as any baseball player in history, yet he couldn't prevent himself from becoming one of the best all around baseball players in history. The point is, why wouldn't gifted people exist? How could they not? How could we expect that there aren't certain people that just excel in these areas? Do I believe in those circus tent people who claim to see the future, or talk to the dead? Not really. I believe they were close to a gifted person at one time, and thought they could capitalize on that feeling of being closer to a Higher Power. Tarot cards? seems like guessing to me, but some people need to use them to help their spirits rise, to help them hope. I'm not asking sooth sayers to go away, some people need them.
From my experience on earth, Gifted People do exist. I don't know how it works. But I enjoy living in world where people like that could exist. I can't accept that this world is one that doesn't have special things or special people. If it was a world without miracles, how many of us would have died at birth or never been born at all? I must believe this world is a world where anything can happen. I don't want to find out that things are always as they seem. I can't accept a world where everything makes sense. I don't need to know "why" on everything but I will always ask. I accept that there are things and ideas and people that are here for a certain purpose. Sometimes the chaos factor may keep certain people or ideas from fulfilling their specific destinies, but they still have purpose don't they? They have to. I believe in Gifted People. Living the life I have lived and having seen the things I've seen and having thought the thoughts I have, I refuse to live in a world where miracles don't happen and where Gifted People don't exist. It's just not possible for me.
WORK IN PROGRESS
Call it ADHD, call it having little kids, but today I can't finish anything that I've started. I've made myself a promise to finish something tonight, and to post it. So, come hell or highwater, there should be a new piece of original writing on this blog tonight. Check me out later or tomorrow. In the meantime, here's the Simpson's Evolution, hope you're into science and nature. This is important stuff here...
Friday, August 21, 2009
I FEEL LIKE THIS COULD BE CALLED "THE LAST SUPPER"
NEW LOOK SITE
Wednesday, August 19, 2009
WEDNESDAY THINGS

IT IS WHAT IT IS
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
REMEMBER WHEN KISS WAS COOL?

But KISS used to be the defiant ones. They used to scare the shit out of people. They used to be larger than life, blue flame hot. Now they're just a group of old jewish boys from New York, who used to be cool. But I digress.
I'm thinking about how they should've gone out. They should've gotten a mobile home, completely painted it with KISS logos and KISS artwork, set it on fire and drove over the Grand Canyon. Or did the same with a rocket ship and loaded it with TNT and blow it up over the atlantic on a full moon night. I mean, they used to spit fire, spit blood, wear leather and spikes, and do "hard" shit like called themselves Demon and Kings in Satans Service. What the hell kind of lifestyle is it to follow up with living in Malibu, playing house-dude? Lame. And now, since they're all bored, and maybe are just greedy rich bastards, they've decided to partner with Wal-Mart and sell their new record. Well thank you KISS. I'm so glad you've decided to make some original songs for the first time in eleven years. I used to love you guys, i grew up with you guys (you're all 20+ years older than me though) and I used to think you were a bunch of badasses. Now I'm just sad for you all. And Gene talking about Wal-Mart cashiers?? Huh? Like Gene freakin Simmons has ever in his lifetime been to a freaking Wal-Mart. They should have set their hair on fire while in full make up, and started having gasoline fights on stage...not Wal-Mart endorsements. Seriously? Wal-Mart? Greed.
So I guess my boyhood memories are still in good order, they just don't mean as much as they used to when it comes to KISS. I like Gene's show, I really do, but he's the worst part of it. And Paul Stanley was a terrific front man in the 70's and 80's. Peter Criss and Ace were all we needed them to be. They should've kept the makeup on in the first place. They should've stayed hard. Because even though they'll probably have a hit single, and make a bunch of dough on their Wal-Mart tour, it's still Wal-Mart. And now KISS is part of the Wal-Mart family. That's just not right, you know what I mean? It's just not right.
TUESDAY THINGS

- The new Radiohead song is free to download here.
- Brett Favre is still an asshole. click here if you care.
- Bill is a bitch. Click here.
- Red Sox fans are all assholes, the fan in the picture is a complete a-hole. Story here.
- This dude HAS TO BE an asshole.
Monday, August 17, 2009
MONDAY THINGS

- Today I got my e-ticket through HP to get my laptop overhauled, and completely without charge. Warranties are the best. So, I'll be posting sporadically over the next couple of weeks. I know your lives will feel emptier. Deal with it.
- The 30th anniversary of Elvis' death was "celebrated" over the weekend. I love Elvis, he is the King. He was the coolest dude. But you know the crazies all showed up at Graceland, sporting their "Elvis Lives" tattoos and bad porkchop sideburns. Get a life. He's dead. Listen to your 45's, look at some articles, read Elvis' Wikipedia page. Get over it.
- The Cincinnati Reds continue to be one of the worst teams in major league baseball. I won't be writing about them anymore until 2010. Unless I change my mind.
- There is still no known cure for cellulite.
- And then there's this. Nice. Proud to be an American.
- Mario Puzo wrote the Godfather 40 years ago, and it's one of the best selling books of all time. But guess who's never going to read it because he's seen the movie a gazillion times? Me. Hold your applause till the end.
ALRIGHT ALRIGHT, SO I GET A LITTLE SAPPY
Saturday, August 15, 2009
RED CONVERTIBLE
Tuesday, August 11, 2009
ALOHA
Monday, August 10, 2009
NELSON DEMILLE: I RECOMMEND YOU READ HIS BOOKS

CUSSING MAKES ME FEEL GOOD...
Sunday, August 9, 2009
CAESURA

A timely pause. Caesura is when an author wants to punctuate a phrase, for timely affect. When he wants to make a point linger, for just another beat. When an author physically denotes "WAIT! WHAT I JUST SAID NEEDS ANOTHER SECOND TO MARINADE!". I learned this in one of my favorite movies, Eddie and the Cruisers. And even though that movie might be a bit corny and pedestrian, I love it. And I love the idea that there is a functional item in English grammar that tells us to hold on, hold up; pause.
And even though I butcher the English language daily by acting like I can write, it's important to me to know that these types of things exist. A timely pause is used all the time, in writing, in music, in movies, and in life. What makes it so cool is that we use this type of thing all the time, in everything that we do, unless you're like a courtroom reporter or something. How often have we been talking to someone, and we say something important, and we just kind of let the listener sort of hang for a minute? It's important. It's very useful and can be very powerful.
I tend to think that my life may be a Caesura. My entire life. Like my soul did something great, or horrible or evil in a past life, and my existence today, while maybe entertaining or humorous to some, may just be a timely pause for something greater, in the next life. I feel I am worthy of something great, something less ordinary, but what it is just hasn't ever occurred to me. Maybe I know that I've been a part of greatness, and my soul is resting, sitting this one out. That doesn't mean that the potential for greatness isn't here, because I know it is. But maybe I'm not supposed to be anything wonderful, not supposed to be anything memorable. Maybe I'm just supposed to be Nothing In Particular.
Predestination is something I've thought much about. And if my life has been predetermined, in this lifetime, to be one of little or no consequence, then I've pretty much lived up to that potential. But, when I think about predestination, I always think there might be that instance of chaos that may interrupt an otherwise well thought out plan. Isn't it possible that I could just stumble onto something great, something unique, something interesting? As much as I think about life, love, sports, music and whatevah, I have a good chance of just running into something don't I? Didn't Bucky Dent accidentally hit a three run homer for the Yankees against the Red Sox in 1978 in a deciding playoff game? Dent had 40 homeruns in 12 seasons, which ain't alot, yet he is most known for that one single hit. There's no way Dent said to himself "jack this ball out of the park dude" when he went to the plate in that game in 1978. But he did it. And so maybe I'm Bucky Dent of the blogosphere. Maybe i'll put a good swing on one, just one time, and hit one out of the park. At any rate, I keep going to the plate, putting good swings on each pitch, hoping something good will come of it. Sometimes I'm guessing, and other times I'm over thinking the game, but in the end, I'm giving life professional at-bats.
So a timely pause, maybe this life is that. Maybe it was meant to be that. But for the life of me, I can't see one reason to think that the chaos factor couldn't come into play, and send my life on a different course. I am waiting for greatness, always have been. And maybe greatness isn't something that spends, or can be singled out or can be traded for. Maybe I am the human Caesura. Maybe this life is just a pregnant pause. But I've been looking for my chaos moment. Looking, waiting, and hoping. If it doesn't ever happen, then I am not a failure. I am just a man, a father, a son and a disciple of the world. I am who I am, and I hope. And I hope and I look and I think. And then write about it a little. I guess it couldv'e been worse.
ATTA BOY GOD!! YOU GO BOY!

Today I spent a pretty hot day at the pool. At long last! Just what i've been wishing for. Finally, the pool and the great outdoors were hotter than the Batcave. Me, Hannah and Sarah all have a little redness on our noses and cheeks. Thank you God for the perfect hot summer day. And it seems that we've got another hot summer day on hand for sunday, so color me a pool boy! Atta boy God, that's the way we roll in SW Ohio! Good Job! Thanks for hearing me in the previous posts. Now, i've heard something about rain and chilly monday and tuesday....we'll have to work on that. But great job on the weather today, man. Loved it! thank you Sir!
Saturday, August 8, 2009
SOMEDAY I'LL BE SATURDAY NIGHT
Friday, August 7, 2009
INSOMNIAC FORBIDDEN CAFFEINE. GOD LAUGHS
DIRECTOR JOHN HUGHES DIED. NOT GOOD
Thursday, August 6, 2009
TYLER DURDEN'S WARNING









