Seasons in the sunset - A seventy (+3) year old looks ahead and back

Seasons in the sunset - A 80 year old
looks ahead and back

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Houses for Sale

Houses for Sale

I have decided to sell my house. Anxiety has settled in, telling me I need to free up money for other pursuits.

Other pursuits? 

OK the grand-kids. Hockey lessons for one thing, plus train trips and plane trips and car trips - to and from CA where two of my five grandchildren live. Trips aside, there are other sports as well: soccer, swimming, basketball, and baseball. And, as for college costs eight years ahead? Don't ask.

Trust me, youth sports aren't free like the old days (1950s). They cost big-time, and me, like a good number of parents (actually I’m a grandparent), am convinced that my progeny will either play professional sports or, at the very least, be sifting through college scholarship offers as he or she romps toward early adult life with both mind and body in decathlete-like fitness prior to settling on his or her MD in training residency location. OK - that's a joke, but something like that.

Somewhere along this continuum the progeny will fall in love with a self-assured, attractive mate of equal or better intellect and I will move toward a re-classification - that of great grandfather ... and living perhaps ... where? I don't know, think "King of Queens," the TV show where grandpa abides, let's just say, in quarters, that are below the ground floor. 

House will be long sold by then and my power and influence will have diminished as well.

Oh ... and I'll be living ... oh, I don't know ... Kansas maybe.


 Epilogue-1

My Madison, NJ house finally sold, closing date 1/31/2013. New address is the sun-porch of daughter Ashley’s home in Florham Park, NJ, a few blocks north.
 
Just before the house sale, I traveled to Washington, DC by car to celebrate Obama’s inauguration with a dear friend. We spent the overnight in Annapolis, MD then drove to DC the next morning for the main event. I bought a Washington Post at Starbucks and we relaxed with coffee before moving on to a pub in Georgetown where we watched the day's events on TV, which was secretly my preference all along. I just wanted to be in the middle of the capitol on this day.

Came home through a late night blizzard, that began lightly on the NJ Turnpike, but became severely  more treacherous later as the car shifted and slid in snow ruts on the unplowed Garden State Parkway. 
 
Good news is that I lived to tell it.
 
With the house closing approaching, I began the moving process - gathering things, tossing things, and packing things in almost two dozen Staples file boxes. The contents of these boxes were mainly old writing notes and thousands of photographs created from a time before phone cameras and saving pictures on the computer. I had ten days to lug everything to either Ashley's garage (storage for perpetuity) or my tool shed size sun-porch room inside her house. For the heavy items, the last to go, I enlisted help from nephew Bob, twenty years my junior. That finished, I made my usual solemn vow, "I'm never moving again."  
 
OK, solemn? 
 
Frivolous would be a better adjective. Why? Because, among other things, I seem to be an addicted mover that should have long ago joined "movers-anonymous." Not sure if I hold the world record, but with thirteen moves since exiting the US Army in 1970, I think I'm up there. One of those moves was especially cherished as I returned to the same home that I occupied forty-five years prior, 9 Lee Avenue in Madison, NJ. Another was to the same condo complex, same unit. A third was next door to a former home in a development with all same homes. So same home, just next door.
 
No doubt my frequent home moves say something about me. Not sure exactly what or if it's something good.   
 
Hmmm.

With the house closing behind me, I took off for California on Thurs 2/7, where I stayed with west-coast daughter and family for six weeks. 
 
Upon return I began a new life as tenet in the home of my New Jersey daughter. The NJ living space is a first floor sun-porch. It's bright and cozy, with dimensions approximating that of a medium-size tool shed.

I am happy about it, honest.

Once settled, I resumed my perpetual post-move ritual of searching for lost items. Minor success there, or should I say, a work in progress? 
 
 
Epilogue-2
 
 In April 2020 I returned for a second tour in my daughter's sun-porch. Very happy about it. I feel it's the last move.

Friday, May 25, 2012

Backyard Pepper Game*

                                                            Backyard Pepper Game*

Eddie called about 5 PM and left this message: “Papa, can you come over and play baseball with me, bye.” All in one breath. Then he hung up.

I drove over when I returned home. We set up the bases, home plate and the backstop, located the balls and two bats. I pitched to Ed. He hit good, much improved over last year.  I chased the ball down and tried to tag him, always managing to just miss, causing him to giggle uncontrollably as he dashed around the bases. 


Backyard ball field - Spring 2012




Johnny came out and picked up the bat and Ed tried to pry it from him. Failing that, he offered him the other bat.  Johnny would have none of it.

“Johnny’s turn,” I said and he stood on home plate, the bat on his shoulder. I pitched, trying to hit his bat. He swung and to my surprise hit it, or rather, I hit the bat. “Run Johnny,” everyone yelled and Johnny ran, but carried the bat in his hand (he's 4). On the way to first he noticed his John Deere go-cart car sitting idle in foul territory and he re-routed himself. He climbed into the front seat. 

Short attention span was my take.

Soon Emma appeared. She too was an able slugger, hitting my pitches and adjusting her swing, low or high. Everyone had several turns and with each hit I scurried after the ball and pretended to try to tag the runners. There was much laughter and high pitched squeals and it reminded me of the days in the backyard with my dad, never wanting the game to end even as dusk turned to night. It baffled me that my dad, having so much fun, and always enthusiastic and happy throughout, was actually willing to eventually call it a night.

Another aspect of the game today was that Ashley watched the action from the deck just as my mom used to watch dad with John and me from the back porch steps. Ash had a smile on her face, which pleased me. After about twenty minutes she stood up and said, “Let’s go children.”

“Where to?” I said.

“The neighbors,” she said, “for a barbeque.”

I thought about the children. Were they thinking, “Poor papa, had to stop the game. He must be sad.”

I was OK with it. Eddie probably wondered why I didn’t protest more.


*pepper (from MLB.com) -- Pepper is a common pre-game exercise where one player bunts brisk grounders and line drives to a group of fielders who are standing about 20 feet away. The fielders try to throw it back as quickly as possible. The batter hits the return throw. (Pepper games are not prevalent today as they once were. In the 1950s, and before, pepper games were the requisite pre-game ritual in all parks, every game ).






See the following link for info re. the history of pepper games in Major League baseball
http://www.sptimes.com/2003/07/26/Rays/Once_a_revered_ritual.shtml

also
 http://www.baseballlibrary.com/excerpts/excerpt.php?book=house_of_david&page=14






Sunday, April 22, 2012

Who am I?

Who am I?
 
At the Bank today I explain to the teller, “I need to withdraw some money in order to deposit it in my daughter’s account in another bank.”

It is a harmless lie, frivolous really.

But the question is, why do I see fit to lie? A silly thought goes through my mind. I don’t want the teller of TD Bank to feel slighted that I am taking money from his bank and putting it in another bank where my checking account is located. So I make up the story about my daughter needing money.

Seriously? That's weird.

                    A Normal Person
Still, I feel that I am a normal person. People seem to think so at least. They see me on the street; they say hello, smile maybe. Why? Because people are friendly. 

And I'm normal.

However, I do have a strange trait or two. For example I like to save impractical things. High on the list are the remnants of do-it-yourself tasks: the worn out headlamp that I replaced in my VW, the, also replaced, lock mechanism from the back door. A scribbled note from a grandchild. 

Please! Am I a hoarder? 

                    Tuesday Morning
Now it is 7:30 AM, a Tuesday.  Hoarder is sleeping. I hear the front door rattling. A morning visitor? Still in bed, I guess that a child is staying home from school, which means early duty for me.
I throw off the covers, stumble to the door. Daughter Ashley is already in the living room with Johnny, 5, in tow. Ashley positions Johnny on the couch, turns on the TV. Finds the cartoon channel. "Hello John," I say. 

No answer. Ash turns to leave for work.

“He may not eat,” she says as she goes out. “Try to give him something.”

That’s it for instructions, except for this final word, “I don’t think he’s really sick.”

No comment from me. I shout, “Have a good one,” as she drives away.

I fetch a blanket and cover John on the couch. He’s fixated on the TV.
I go about my morning routine, coffee and newspaper. After a half hour or so John makes a request.

                  Playing Store
“Do you have a cash register?” he says, “and some bills?”

Cash register? Bills? 

I think I actually saw a toy cash register somewhere in the last few days. Had to be in the playroom in the basement I tell myself. I trudge down the cellar stairs.

Voila! The gods are with me. "This is why I save things," I tell myself. I cart the plastic cash register up the stairs. Halfway up a voice startles me. The voice says, “Welcome back.”

Huh?

It's the cash register speaking. Sounds female I think, guessing that I pressed something to trigger a recorded greeting. I take a moment to see if I pressed a button.

Forget it. Toys, talking toys. Things are weird these days.

I hand the register over to John. “Do you have credit cards, “John asks, “and bills?”

I give him old cards, a file folder of paper scraps (bills I explain) and a coffee can filled with saved coins. He busies himself for an hour, opening and closing the register, putting coins in the drawer, coloring and applying duct tape to the file folder.

The morning passes. I make lunch. We head for the library. Soon it’s pick-up time for the others, Eddie and Emma. The afternoon glides by.  

Straightening up that evening at home I survey the living room. It’s a mess. I arrange the “play store” paraphernalia - papers, coins, crayons, the cash register and a roll of duct tape – more neatly as one might clean up a work desk at the end of the day, except that I merely shift these items around, leaving them on the floor, at the foot of an easy chair. I think of Johnny playing there all morning which brings a smile. I decide to leave the toys in their spot, on the rug by the chair.   

                    Toys on the Floor
A week has passed now. The toys are still on the rug, waiting for the next visit from John. Or so I pretend.

I like the toys there, which makes me wonder – why is that? But then, I know why.

Sunday, February 12, 2012

A Meatball Recipe

                              A Meatball Recipe

Late last night, under the influence of a single glass of red wine, I forced myself up from the couch and into the kitchen. The cupboard was bare but for a cupcake size container of Chef Boyardee Mini-Bites.

Full disclosure: I didn't actually purchase the Mini-Bites (never!). They were leftover from a grandchild's visit. FYI: The subtext of "Mini-Bites," is Spaghetti Rings & Meatballs.

I popped the contents into the microwave and 60 seconds later proceeded to down the whole thing - without leaving the kitchen counter.

The following day, I felt compelled to check the ingredients for the meatballs. I confess I feared the worst.

Here are the ingredients (most prevalent items are listed first):

It starts with beef and pork. OK so far, except for me. I claim to be a vegetarian.

I blame the wine.

Then there's water, crakermeal, a few vitamins (niacin, iron and thiamine mononitrate, riboflavin and folic acid) added to counter anti-nutrition claims I'm sure. Finally, there is Soy protein, (Concentrate they call it). Fine.

So nothing lethal, I guess, conclude I'm not going to succumb to a Mini-Bite overdose after all.

But the next ingredient surprises me. It's caramel coloring and it's listed ahead of, and thus in larger proportion than, “flavorings.”  Flavorings are a secret so your guess is a good as mine. I'd wish otherwise but assume that food laws say it's OK. So be it. Anyway the last thing is soybean oil. All together not bad for a "prepared food."

But I said that the caramel coloring surprised me. I don't know why it's necessary. For the life of me I can't recall any complaints about the coloring of any meatballs over the years - ever. And I'd bet loads that no homemade version has caramel coloring, Still it pops up frequently in numerous food products.

Ice tea in a bottle is a prime example. Why? Is all I can say.

Seriously, does anyone have caramel coloring in their cupboard?

OK - Chef Boyardee - or ConAgra Foods, the parent corporation - whichever you prefer - it is their label that is the source of the above ingredients and Chef Boyardee spaghetti was a favorite of mine as a kid. Chef B named products are still around but I'd wager the caramel coloring wasn’t in there during my childhood in the late 1940s. I could be wrong, but I, for one, never thought about the meatball color? Maybe because it was always such a nice caramel color. Oh well.

Go to the link below to view an original 1940s Chef Boyardee TV commercial on YouTube:

Below is a comment about the YouTube clip:
Yes, there was a real "Chef Boy-ar-dee". His name was Ettore "Hector" Boiardi, and he operated a successful Italian restaurant in Cleveland during the 1920s and '30s. His customers liked his spaghetti sauce SO much, he began giving it to them "on the side" (eventually, with grated cheese and uncooked spaghetti) - then, he sold a "complete spaghetti dinner" in packages, with other canned products, and concentrated on that business. By the end of the '40s, American Home Products bought him out.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

A Halyomorpha Halys visitor

A Halyomorpha Halys Visitor

 Last Thursday evening, while sitting on my couch in a mild vegetative state, I heard a soft pop sound to my right. I looked up, thought for some seconds, then turned my head toward the lamp on the end table. A dark spot the size of a lima bean came into view on the lampshade. I immediately suspected Halyomorpha halys.

Ever consciousness of avoiding offensive language I’m going with the Latin here. The slang is stink bug (no caps and, yes, somewhat disrespectful). It is the equivalent, in my view, of referring, to police-officers as “fuzz.”  So I'll avoid it. Equally non-offensive is the non-Latin acronym BMSB (i.e. brown marmorated stink bug).


OK, ... marmorated?

From Wikipedia: The term "marmorated" means variegated or veined, like marble, which refers to the markings unique to this species, includes alternating light-colored bands on the antennae and alternating dark bands on the thin outer edge of the abdomen.

Anyway ... I am familiar with these characters and they do fall under my “no kill shelter” policy for all in-home insects that, for me, has been in effect since childhood.

So I get up and head to the Kitchen for a water glass (my capture tool of choice). On my return I pluck an unopened envelope from my desk, a credit-card-come-on from Capital One Bank.

Fine.

Tools in hand I approach the H. halys. These guys don’t require sneaking up. Still I move slowly and place the open end of the glass against the lampshade surrounding the H. halys with glass. I slip the Capital One envelope under his (or her) feet.

Voila – I now have the tumbler, capped by the envelope, with BMSB inside. I proceed through the front door and set the glass, sans envelope, on a chair on the front porch.

The next morning, stepping out for the newspaper, I see that the BMSB has departed the water glass. Mission accomplished is my thought.

Two days later I am vacuuming the living room and notice another brownish-gray lima-bean-like object on the floor. I stop my cleaning to inspect.

Another H. halys.

I move closer, nudge the insect with my finger. He doesn’t stir. Again a nudge. Again no reaction. I assume he has passed on and think maybe I’ll add the guy to my collection of bugs. For the past year I've kept a bottle full  of little creatures for the grandkids to view under a microscope. I got the scope two years ago but they have yet to use it and it's still in the unopened case. Someday maybe. Meanwhile I'm saving bugs.

For some reason, when I restart the vacuum, I circle around the passed away BMSB and decide to leave it on the floor. This act, or non-act, is extremely perplexing to me, and I am fully aware that it may suggest mild derangement - but I let that pass.

I get on with life.

Now another day has gone by. I am reading the newspaper when the expired H. halys on the floor comes to mind. I decide to put him/her into my jar of saved insects (see above), so I proceed to the spot where I left him.

You guessed it – good old H. halys has “flown the coop.”

That night I strip my bed, inspecting as I go. I do this because a H. halys brethren was in fact discovered on my mattress just a fortnight ago, so I am aware that bed covers are a favorite destination. Anyway all is clear today. I put on new sheets, blankets etc. and fall asleep thinking respectful thoughts of my BMSB housemate and how I fell for the oldest trick in the book – the playing-dead-for-humans-trick. Just before nodding off I vow that if I find what’s-his-name I will give him a good home for the winter – perhaps in the garage.

Tomorrow, I'll search the couch, but I am secretly hoping that he turns himself in first.

P.S. A month later he's still missing.

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Snow Day in Jersey

                     Snow Day in Jersey
I let the snow – our first of the winter (not counting the October blast) - accumulate outside for a time (newspaper and coffee first) before venturing out with the shovel.
 
It is close to 11 when I take my last sip and put the paper down. It's the life of a pensioner. With daughter’s family and grand kids away I've got the day to myself.

Stepping on my porch I squint at the snow and guess that shoveling the light dry snow will be an easy go. My assessment is correct as I happily lift shovelfuls moving down the driveway.

Two doors away a neighbor is out as well. It is one of the many benefits of snow – neighborly chats. He is pushing a homemade double wide shovel contraption and seems deservedly proud of his ingenuity (fastening two actual shovels together and bracketing the handles). 

I meander down. “You’ll make short work of the walkway with a tool like that,” I offer, intending praise.
 
He smiles. “Yeah this works pretty good,” he says with modesty, then provides a demo by plowing a few feet from his driveway.  It’s a bit more of a struggle with the driveway snow, packed from passing plows. He looks up; draws a deep breath.

“Easy as pie,” I remark.

He nods without dispute and we chat some more, about the weather, local sleigh-riding hills, my daughter’s family who are his contemporaries.  The air is crisp, not at all bone chilling. Like a soprano’s perfect pitch the day itself is perfectly invigorating with the silent snow still falling and the intermittent pleasant sounds of shovels scraping the nearby sidewalks.

 Across the street another neighbor is wheeling a barrow full of firewood from backyard to his front porch, struggling just a bit through a yard of snow. “Should have done that yesterday,” we suggest – neighborly-like.

“You said it,” is the happy reply.

A third neighbor appears. He steps into the snow and onto the driveway which he attacks with a beginner’s eager-beaver vengeance. His house is directly across from mine and when his first burst of energy has reached its end, he straightens up and walks over.

‘We’re going away for a few days,” he tells me, catching his breath.

“I’ll keep an eye on the house,” I respond.

He thanks me; offers that his newspaper will be stopped, but tomorrow it will still come. “We’ll be gone; could you pick it up?” he says.

This fills me with glee – a free Sunday NY Times. “Don’t worry, I’ll save it for you," I say. Then add a joke, "But I might read it.” 

He gets it.

FYI: My own NY Times is limited to Monday through Friday. Can not resist plugging myself as a bona fide NY Times reader, albeit 5 days only. A pensioner’s budget is my justification. Silly man.   

But the snow: Yes – I do love the snow – especially days like today. Perfect.

Plus the free paper.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Throwing high pops - May 1982

                                        Throwing High Pops - May 1982

 It’s after school on a Monday, a bright afternoon in early May. Of course for me, age 42 now, it is no longer “after school”. For me it is “after work” though I presume for many of my contemporaries it is just beyond mid-day. As I have done on occasion in the work world, today I have found a way to leave work early - one of my learned skills as a corporate worker-bee. 

             The time of year is now well into the baseball season for the two junior high school teams gathered before me. My daughter’s school, the Falcons, is pitted against the Cougars, who now occupy the field, ostensibly warming up. 


              The Falcons are loosely gathered about their team bench, three twelve-foot board planks along the first baseline. Their coach, a youngish PE-type peers out at the field, toward the opposition, squinting into the afternoon sun. The collection of twelve to thirteen year old boys in his charge squirm on the bench behind him, emitting familiar adolescent banter. Much of their talk is for the benefit of a thin strand of their contemporaries, six in number, standing in a line approximately three paces from the bench. This string of six is of female gender and my daughter is among them.

I catch parts of the girl talk that seem like repeated versions of “No way - Call me tonight,” then “What time?” then “I don’t care.”

As for the Falcons, uniformed in away-gray (they're playing at home) polyester with green script F-A-L-C-O-N-S on their chests, they are, at the moment, neither studying the opposition, nor collecting themselves into a game face mentality. Nor do they mimic big leaguers. Instead they mimic themselves at recess, except for the fact that they are now confined to the bench area by apparent invisible fencing. Their noises seem not so much related to verbs or nouns. Predominate is a sound that I think would be spelled like “Shuuump.” It is often paired with a feigned punch to the eye or a karate-like chop to the neck. The “Shuuump” mixes with bewildering word formations (sometimes) and spasmodic gestures (always). 

        For example, apparently imitating an opponent during batting practice, one Falcon assumes a batting stance, then suddenly throws up both hands and yells, “Whoa!” Next is a backwards stagger (spasmodic) which prompts sharp laughter from teammates. The demonstrator then recovers from his stagger, pokes jab-like at a nearby mate’s eye and says, “Shuuump!” The mate winces, then breaks into an adolescent strut. And so it goes.
 
         I watch and listen, pretending indifference, which come to think of it is what the Falcons and the string of six are doing as well. The Cougars, in the field, provide background music - timeless sandlot chatter.
 
Soon the game begins and the string of six immediately executes, if I remember my military experience, a quite precise right face maneuver followed by a forward march parallel to the foul line. They pass first base and shift to a flank formation and walk six a breast in foul territory, toward the school building, shedding self-consciousness with each step removed from the playing area. Finally they disappear into a school doorway. 
 
Apparently, the actual game did not interest them.

Next to the doorway I notice a familiar sight, what I would call an incarnation of myself. It is a small boy pitching a rubber ball against the school wall. I watch, remembering days when I found joy and the best of dreams while throwing a ball against a wall. For the moment I forget about the official game before me and heed a pull to the boy at the wall.

“Let me throw you a high one,” I say, remembering the thrill of chasing a ball that moved against the sky, settling beneath it and then letting it sink into my glove.

“Throw it here,” I say.

The kid flips the ball to me and quickly drops into fielder’s stance - a dog ready to fetch.

“All set?" I say.

He just looks at me, his eyes wide. 

Just then the string of six re-emerges from the school. “Dad!” Brett shouts at me.

“What,” I say, ball in hand.

“What are you doing?”

“Playing catch,” I say.

“Dad, that’s Tom’s brother.” That would be Tom, the Falcon.

“Oh yeah,” I say remembering now the last name of my incarnation. “Roger, right?” I say. Roger doesn’t answer. He stays in the wide eye ready stance.

“You’re crazy Dad.” I take it as a compliment, but I know that interacting with "Tom's brother" is a no-no. 
Regardless, I turn toward Roger, “O.K.!” I say and take one hop and then arching myself backward fling the ball straight up into the air, aiming it as best I can so that it might descend in the general proximity of my ready fielder. I remember my father here - him throwing, and me watching the shrinking ball against the sky delighted and amazed at the same time, at the height of the throw. Then camping under the ball, and aware of the uneven slope of our Cottage Street yard under my feet, and then catching it.

 Somewhere along the line of time in a boy’s life is a point at which catching a ball in the air becomes easy for one accustomed to such games. As I watch this ball sail skyward I wonder if I have correctly gauged Roger’s place in this baseball skill spectrum. I do not want the ball to hit on his forehead instead of his glove. For that reason I didn’t throw this first ball too high. But Roger catches the ball with ease and so I throw another and another, each higher than before until my arm, at age 42, grows weak.

The fielder however was shows no sign of tiring. On the contrary, he appears even more enthusiastic. Just as I remember it – so well. 

I remember too, something else about playing baseball with my father. The game we played was that I would pitch the ball to him and he would tap out flies and grounders in my direction. Always brother John would be in the outfield a few paces behind me. My mother would sit on the back porch steps, a box seat, watching it all and from time to time exclaiming how amazing it was that dad never missed hitting a pitch. 


Officially this game had a name. It was called Pepper and big-leaguers played it to warm up before games. But what I remember most about our baseball games was that I never wanted them to end which was the thought that came to mind as I looked at Roger after pitching approximately a dozen high ones for him to field. I could easily have called it quits here, but for the look in Roger’s eye. Let’s just say, I’ve been there. That was the thing I could never understand as a child. Why didn’t my dad want to play baseball every single night - forever? Now of course I know, but back then, no clue.   

                Anyway, having had enough of throwing high pops, I walk toward Roger and say, “So what’s the game you play against the wall?” Sure as you bet there is a game that Roger plays with the ball and the wall. I’m guessing that it’s his own version of what might be labeled dream-ball, with special rules and all; no doubt. I wonder what it is exactly but I know I’ll never get it out of him.

                “I dunno,” he says.

                I look at the wall, a large patch of flat brick with no windows. Ideal, I think. Two stories in height, and set down onto a flat blacktop lot. Even at age forty I see the possibilities for many dream-ball-like games.

“Here, lemme show you something,” I say walking toward the wall. Another nice feature of this wall I now see is that it has a decorative like ledge about six feet from the ground. The concrete shelf of this ledge slants up about forty-five degrees from the front edge. Perfect I think.  

                “Here’s the deal,” I say. Roger is silent. “O.K. you throw the ball against the wall, I mean, I’ll throw it. If you catch it and it’s a grounder you’ve got to throw it to me to get the out at first. If it’s a fly, you got to catch it or it’s extra bases. Now see this ledge? If I hit the edge of the ledge, the corner, the ball will sail over your head. Then it’s a home run if it goes past the blacktop.”

                “Yeah,” Roger says. I don’t think he’s got it all but I’ll explain as I go.

                “All right, you ready?” I look at Roger and come to a pitcher’s stretch position. Roger is ready. “Shift over a little,” I say.  Roger slides, three hops to the left. In my stretch position I see from the corner of my eye that the Falcon game is in full swing. I hear loud shrieks, shouting, cheering, and notice fans jumping up and down, players running around the bases.

Back to dream-ball.  “O.K here comes the pitch.” I am both pitcher and announcer for this game of dream-ball. All dream-ball games require an announcer, someone that calls the game and shouts with utter amazement at the wondrous and sparkling play of the star player – in this case – Roger. *

I fire the ball at an upward angle so the rebound is an arching fly ball. Then I announce, “There’s a high fly to left, Roger moves back, he’s under it, makes the grab.” All of this actually happens. “Alright, one down, O.K., Roger, what’s your last name?” I figure that announcers can’t be calling the center fielder by first name over the radio.

“Benson,” Roger says.

So I put Benson into the game and just as I played for the Cardinals in my dreamball games. Roger Benson plays centerfield for the Yankees. He follows Winfield in the order, batting fourth. As fielder, I give Roger an assortment of grounders, flies, and line drives, and pop-ups. Roger manages pretty well for a ten-year old. I see that he doesn’t want the game to end. But I grow tired, as adults do, and after ten or fifteen minutes of firing the tennis ball at the wall I announce that this is now the last inning and the bases are loaded and Benson steps up to the plate. Roger, in the field, takes the identity of the Red Sox outfielder.

“Alright, here’s Benson, he already has three hits on the day and at the plate now he has a chance to win this game for the Yankees if he can get a hold of one here.” I try to bounce the ball off the edge of the ledge but I miss so the ball comes back to me. “Ball one,” I announce. Roger understands what’s happening here. Anything that doesn’t result in a direct hit on the edge I call a ball, or called strike or foul ball. Finally I get one that strikes the sharp edge and it sails high into the air and over the Red Sox fielder’s head and I launch into my game-ending announcement. “Oh my gosh, Benson has done it again, that ball is gone! What a shot! It’s far, far over the center fielder’s head! All runner’s are going to score and Benson has again won the game for the Yankees.”   

Roger high-tails-it after the ball, scoops it into his glove and walks back across the blacktop. I say “Nice game, Benson, you did it again. You won the game.” He looks at me with still wide eyes. “You hit the game winning home run,” I say.

“I know,” Roger says.

“Dad!” It's someone calling me. It’s the string of six again, heading back toward the school.

“Where are you going?” I say.

“For a drink.” But I knew that.

“Who’s winning?” I say.

“What are you doing?” Brett says.

“We’re playing a game. Who’s winning?” I say again.

  They all look at each other, without talking. As if passing the question on down the line, does anyone know the score?                

“Don’t know,” comes the reply. 
 

* When playing alone, as is most common, dream-ball players function in both roles, as announcer and player, which, for obvious reasons is often, both necessary better.