Category Archives: Uncategorized

Ghost Uptown

It’s Christmas Eve, and Uptown is mostly empty. The parking deck under my apartment building is maybe 1/4 full and in the hallways and elevators today I’ve seen a grand total of one other soul. I spent most of the morning catching up on basics like picking up, cleaning, etc. which I have ignored thoroughly for the better part of two months. This afternoon I finished my Christmas shopping and ran a few errands.

When I first went out today it was pretty crowded on the roads once I got out of Uptown. As the day went on, however, I noticed sharp drop off in traffic. “Makes sense,” I thought – “everyone’s gone home to be with their families now.” Uptown is nothing if not young and / or unattached. I’ll bet that my zip code empties out every year just the same way. They all go home to visit their parents more than likely. I did so without fail until my daughter came along, and while she was very little and I was still married everybody came to see us. Anyway, it was while driving back to my apartment that I realized that this may be the very first Christmas Eve in my entire life that I have spent entirely alone.

This year Christmas doesn’t really start for another couple of days. The Greatest Kid in the World and I will be together beginning the night after Christmas and the following day we’ll drive to South Carolina to be with my parents. This schedule is because on even years she spends the days before and including Christmas with her mom and then the days after that until the New Year with me. On odd years it’s the opposite. Right after I moved to Texas last year it was an odd year holiday season, and I spent Christmas in Atlanta with my parents and the GKITW.

So… This is the first year I’ve been in Texas for any part of the Christmas holiday and it’s just me here. Being a single adult has it’s odd moments. This is one of them. Fortunately it doesn’t have me down in the dumps, though I will say that it does bring attention to just how much of an extrovert I am. Tomorrow I’m going to drive back to Georgia (yes, on Christmas day) and the following night I’ll pick up my daughter. That will end about 72 hours straight with me not having socialized with anybody at all. Probably the longest stretch of days I can think of like that in, well, I’m not really sure. A really long time.

Of course when I get back this place will be the exact opposite. I remember clearly from last year. Not only are all of the regular residents back in town, but they’ve brought all of their friends with them. Around here every bar and restaurant is in full swing for the New Year, and I’ll be out among some friends myself greeting 2009.

Until then, however, this place will likely remain just as empty and quiet as it is right now.

Paint, Whitewash and Substance Beneath

As some of my recent posts have indicated, I’ve been pretty concerned with the progress and portent of the current recession. Most days I’m able to somehow remain unperturbed by it, accepting my sense of what will likely fill our future without letting it get me down. Though I can’t recall where, I’ve read that experiences which match your expectations can sometimes bring an odd sense of well being even when you expect unpleasant things. Call it a psychological reward for having a correct sense of things perhaps, a confirmation that the way we understand the world is correct and, therefore, the future better understood and less threatening. My time in Atlanta this past weekend was filled with experiences which, despite their contrasts, did just that. They validated and reinforced my beliefs of where we are headed, and for that reason I suppose what might have been a downer was not.

My parents were in town for the same reason I was – we were going to watch the Greatest Kid in the World perform in the Nutcracker Ballet for the fifth year running, a family tradition in which most details have now become somewhat automatic. This year, however, her performance was at 7:30 pm instead of 10:00 am. Since the GKITW was spending the weekend at her mother’s house my parents and I had all Saturday to fill with something. With the Christmas season in full swing and not everything having been bought yet, out we went.

We got to Lenox Mall at about lunch time on Saturday. I have gone there dozens of times over the years that I lived in Atlanta and I still do some shopping there when I’m in town. It would be fair to say that I have a sense of the place and it was immediately obvious that things were not as they have been. By noon the parking deck on any given weekend is likely to be reasonably full, and it’s not uncommon to have to park pretty far from the doorways. It being the holidays I had some concern that just getting inside might have been a real hassle. Shockingly it wasn’t. On the next to last weekend before Christmas the parking lot was maybe half full. In 20 Decembers I’ve never seen anything like it.

The interior of the mall was still clean and brightly lit and the advertising signage still spoke of indulgence with vivid imagery and celebrity endorsement. Nicolas Cage and Uma Thurman were still smiling from their advertisements for jewelry in the form of watches and pride disguised as evening wear. There were still fantastic luxury cars parked in the hallways – a Maserati for $140,000, a Mercedes 550 for a more modest $100,000. Every sign and symbol of wealth were as prominently displayed as they have been for many years now. In short, all of the fixtures were the same.

Everything else was different.

Unlike years past, the shoppers circulating through the mall were not packed closely and struggling against one another like spawning salmon. They were spread out, timidly advancing from one place to another like cautious deer. To what may be my admittedly biased perception, it appeared that the difference in the crowd’s psychology was as certain as it was subtle: They seemed more concerned with themselves than their shopping trip.

As if the visuals were not enough, there were the snippets of conversation I kept overhearing while walking by shoppers and staff alike in various stores:

“…well all of those people at Bank of America aren’t just numbers you know – they are real people, more than a few of whom have been our customers for quite a number of years.”

“The prices you see here are not as good as the deals that you can get – our discounts are actually way more than what’s marked. Honestly we’re just giving things away right now.”

“…and I know for sure we are going to have a bit of belt tightening here too, hopefully nothing you’ll notice the next time you come to visit us.”

“It’s all 43 stores that we’re closing, not just this one. Our largest shareholder backed out and he owned more than half the company. That’s it. We’re done.”

Hearing all of this I couldn’t help visualizing what the future might look like. What would next Christmas hold at the mall? Could it be that some of the stores with nervous employees would be dark and empty, the “Sale!” signs replaced with “Available for Lease?” Will the Maserati and Mercedes be replaced with Toyotas, or perhaps not replaced at all? Will public service announcements be hung up where Uma and Nicolas once dwelled, their presence made too expensive by the times, their goods sent far out of reach of most shoppers? As is often the case, a look into the future revealed to me the past.

When I was a kid my grandmother would sometimes use an old southern expression to describe once well off folks that had fallen on leaner times. “Too poor to paint and too proud to whitewash,” she would say. It helped to explained the gentle dilapidation of the south that used to be so much more visible than it is now. Before the economic boom of the past 30 years it was not uncommon to see nice old homes that were kept up in the best possible way that a house can be maintained with no money. Neat and tidy, but worn and faded. Some flaking paint, a curled shingle here or there, a chimney with badly patched cracks, a window where broken panes were replaced but the rest left alone and looking all the older for the contrast. If the owners remained in good health their yards would sometimes retain the appearance of a grand old home in better times, but even then there were telltale signs. There were often plenty enough trees, shrubs and perennials but no annuals at all. Dogwoods and azaleas sure, irises and lilies likely enough. But pansies and caladiums, zinnias and tulips? Not likely. You could always divide the plants that lived through the winter and multiplied on their own, swapping them with neighbors that carried on in the same way. But spending money on plants that lived for only a season? That was frivolous.

It was that world and those times that came rushing back from memory when in particular clothing store. This place is something of a landmark for finer men’s clothing in Atlanta. They’ve been outfitting business executives for decades and the gentleman who always takes care of me when I shop there reminds me very much of my grandmother’s generation. Last weekend he gave me his usual greeting, but shortly thereafter did something that he’s never done in the years that I’ve gone there. He leaned in a littler closer and said just louder than a whisper, just soft enough that anyone else nearby would feel like they were eavesdropping to listen:

“You know we’ve got some really nice sport coats at 20% off right now.”

My hair stood up. For some reason that one sentence said more to me about the fact that we really are in a bad recession than anything else I had seen or heard that day or even in the weeks before. Lehman Brothers gone? Ah well. Unemployment up sharply? Very unfortunate. GM and Chrysler on the edge of existence? Scary, but remote. Now my Trusted Man was suggesting that this store needs to use price to motivate purchases? Somehow that was both very close and unsettling. It’s just not the kind of thing that they would say. Until now. I suddenly imagined myself visiting them a few years in the future, their previously glowing shelves worn and mostly empty, the carpet looking clean but threadbare and everyone on staff looking a bit thinner. It’s probably a silly visualization but it’s what I saw. It was just about all the shopping I could handle.

That night we seemed very far away from the mall as we watched the annual pageantry of the Nutcracker. There were all of the beautiful handmade sets and costumes and the beaming children so proud and happy to be be performing for their families in the audience. In that small town the whole community participates in the event – it’s not just the kids. Herr Drosselmeyer and Mother Ginger and some of the party guests are adults volunteering their time like so many others that make the production happen. As I waited for my child to appear I still carried the impressions of the day. I couldn’t help but imagine what the show might look like in future years. Will the bright and colorful costumes be faded and patched as discreetly as possible, the dancing troupe having to stretch their use year after year because of fewer donations? Will the set pieces become tattered and worn, but still serviceable?

Eventually my daughter appeared and I was back in the present moment. As I watched both the show and all of the families in the audience I found peace again. Focused in on their children and neighbors performing once again this year, they were far from the mall too. It may be that these people will become too poor to paint, but if so they’ll also keep things up as best as they can. They will make sure that the show goes on, and people will laugh and clap for their kids and bring them bouquets and proudly take their pictures. The kids would still be as proud and happy to perform as they were last weekend. Whatever hard economic times the future might bring this was a crowd that would find a way to keep up the really important things even if they weren’t always as shiny and new on the surface. They would be here for each other even if Nick and Uma were to drive away in Mercedes and Maseratis never to return.

A Whole New Level of Pain

Last weekend was quite a blur, and the week which followed was no slacker either. Consequently I’ve had a couple of posts queued up which I haven’t made yet, this one being one of them.

Very early Friday morning I flew to Atlanta where I had a completely full afternoon lined up. It started with a lunch meeting to which I arrived precisely on time from the airport. After a completely full day I treated my parents to dinner at Amalfi, a really nice little family run Italian restaurant on the south side of Roswell. Like me, my parents were in town to see the Greatest Kid in the World perform in the Nutcracker Ballet.

The next morning we got up and went shopping, but that’s a subject for my next post. After shopping we drove to the small town where the GKITW lives and watched her perform in the Nutcracker, did our traditional after show dinner and then drove back in time to crawl in bed at midnight.

I was up again at 4:00 am to catch a 6:10 am flight from Atlanta to Dallas. I was headed back because I wanted to join a day hike in Mineral Wells, Texas with a new group of friends. Landing at DFW at about 7:40 gave me enough time to drive the hour and a half out to Mineral Wells and get a little breakfast along the way.

As the map shows below, we actually started our hike in a tiny little “town” called Garner, Texas. How Garner qualifies to have any designation at all on the map is kind of hard to understand. The best that I could tell it consists of a church and a convenience store across the road from one another. That’s it.

Anyway, we entered the trail at Garner and walked toward Mineral Wells. The folks I was with are part of the same backpacking group that I made my aborted camping trip with last month. Healthy this time, I was eager to get my hike on and see what the day would be like. The weather could not have been better. It was a little breezy at first, bright blue sky and a high of 75 degrees. We were planning for a solid 14 miles, which is trail length from Garner to Mineral Wells and back as you can see:


View Larger Map

The hike was exactly what I had hoped for – about as physically aggressive as you can get on flat land without running. Our pace was somewhere between 3-4 miles per hour the entire way out and back. The trail was about as wide, smooth and flat as you can get. It is an old converted rail bed that has had the rails and ties stripped out so that folks like us can enjoy a long walk.

We made three stops in our 14 mile trek. The first and third were at a small park dedicated to Vietnam War helicopter pilots. Apparently the Mineral Wells area was where the Army trained helicopter pilots for quite a long time. The second stop, ironically enough, was at a McDonald’s on the eastern edge of Mineral Wells. There we were, doing some awesome healthy hiking and we go and stop at Mickey D’s. I had a cheeseburger and a small Coke. Most everybody else had an ice cream sundae. Obviously we were burning it all off, I just thought it was funny that we hiked through the Texas countryside with great exercise and scenery and a McDonald’s was our halfway point.

After that we headed back, and the last few miles our bodies started to protest the pace and distance. 75 degrees started to feel a little hot in the sun when the breeze stopped. Also, we never slackened our pace, going just about as fast as we could the whole way. A couple of us started to run low on water, and they in particular were feeling it. As far as that was concerned I was fine. I had my 100 ounce Camelbak and though it was getting pretty light the last few miles I felt plenty hydrated. It was obvious that we were sweating a lot. In five hours of hiking I had to pee only once while drinking almost three quarts of water and a Coke.

My adaptation to our speed was another matter. My legs were getting sore before we ever reached our starting point, which was a big warning sign that caught my attention. By the time we got back I was definitely feeling it, and once we stopped moving while we formed up around our cars to say chat a bit and say goodbye the alarm bells were going off. My legs were getting cramps just standing around. After a short while we all loaded up and headed off to our various destinations.

After driving nearly two hours to get back to Uptown I parked the car in the deck and went to step out of it and stand up. OUCH!!

Feet, legs, lower back – they were all very angry with me. I was stiff as a board. Shuffling slowly up the apartment I must have looked like a physical therapy patient. And I was exhausted. A vegetable really. I was so tired that I couldn’t even think clearly. I took a long hot bath to try to make the muscle aches a little better and it did help. As I sat there and soaked it occurred to me that my legs were actually more sore after this hike than they were after climbing Pike’s Peak! It had to be the pace. Pike’s was grueling but slow. We were moving when we went to Mineral Wells and back, and that had to be the cause. The good news – my knees were perfectly fine, which is further proof that all my exercise since September is really paying off.

The rest of the evening was a collapse into exhaustion. Originally I had planned to cook a dinner and chill out like I often do on a Sunday night, but there was no way in heck I was doing that last Sunday. Standing long enough to cook a dinner was out of the question. I can’t remember what I ate, but I sure didn’t cook it.

I tried to watch the Cowboys-Giants game, but by half time it was obvious I wasn’t going to make it to the end. I had started the day at 3:00 am Central Time, literally hiked my butt off, and stayed up until about 9:00 pm. A pretty solid 19 hour day! I hobbled to bed and slept a deep dreamless sleep for about 10 hours before waking up. It wasn’t enough. I was slow and dopey and achey all day long, but still really glad that I went. That level of exertion was actually exactly what I was looking for. I’m going to keep pushing myself harder and harder until I can do… I’m not sure what. Some really cool fun adventurous stuff. And I’m going to enjoy it the whole way!

“Almost Indescribably Terrible?”

While driving to the DFW airport to catch a 6 am flight to Miami yesterday morning I listened to the Wall Street Journal podcast. It was recorded last Friday morning and discussed at some length the job loss numbers posted last week. The numbers were really grim – 1.5 million jobs lost over the past three months alone.

Then tonight I caught up on some follow ups in the Wall Street Journal Online (a friend has sent me a free trial subscription) and it had the written reactions to the numbers from some economists. It was hard to read the lead off statement without getting that icy feeling in your gut:

This is almost indescribably terrible. In the past six months the U.S. has lost 1.55 million jobs, almost as many as were lost in the whole 2001 recession, which included 9/11 and the two months after. The pace of job losses is accelerating alarmingly, as this report attests, with steep drops in most sectors but the biggest deterioration in services — down 370,000 in November after 153,000 in October. Note education/health and government added 59,000, so core private payrolls even worse than headline. Desperate. –Ian Shepherdson, High Frequency Economics

Apparently the rate of job loss in the past few months is something the country hasn’t seen since 1974, and it’s expected to get worse from here. If that weren’t bad enough, there was this closing quote in the same article:

This was much worse than was expected and represents wholesale capitulation. The threat of a widespread depression is now real and present. –Peter Morici, University of Maryland

Oh vey.

On top of this glum news reporting I’ve heard some sad personal stories as well. An old friend in Atlanta lost his job recently and has been doing whatever odd jobs he can to keep himself busy. His industry has been hit far harder than most and I’m not sure what he’ll do over the long haul. I met a person here in Dallas this weekend on one of my two hikes who lost her job just last week – part of a 20% payroll cut at her consulting company. She was a recruiter there and has been doing that job function for most of her career. Then there is the new friend of mine who is a probation officer. One of her best friends is moving back to Texas right now after being laid off from her job as a police officer in California. She was one of ten new officers let go just last week.

Today my boss said he read recently that the real unemployment rate is hovering around 10% when factoring in people that have given up looking for a job. Again, most analysts are predicting a further increase in unemployment in 2009 so who knows where the bottom is.

Depressing. Like I said recently, I guess our time is up.

Red Wine, Italian Food and Texan Friends

This was a great weekend. In addition to the hikes today and yesterday I got to hang out with old and new friends during the evening.

On Friday Jill and Eric came over from Fort Worth for dinner and drinks. I’ve gone over their way several times so I think they felt like it was only fair to come see me on Friday, and I think they probably were looking for a change from their usual routine anyway. Since Jill was running and I was hiking on Saturday I figured we’d all get carbed up, which gave us a great excuse to have some Italian food at Taverna. It was the third time or so I’ve been there and I continue to think of it as a good standby. The food is solid – not “out of this world good” by any means, but plenty good enough. The wine selection is decent for a casual Friday night and the prices are hard to beat for the Uptown or Knox-Henderson areas.

After we went to dinner we walked around the corner to Bodega Bar (the pictures at this link do not do it justice) and had a final glass of wine to finish off the evening. Every time I go to that place I like it a little better. Amier (the proprietor) was there again on Friday night and I got to catch up with him for a minute about his little girl, now pushing 2 years old.

After my hike at Lake Grapevine yesterday I took a long hot shower and unwound for a little while before crossing the street for a book club meeting at Vino 100. This is the same crew I met with last month at Nikolini’s just a block in the other direction. Love the fact that Tiffany likes to organize wine drinking events that are within stumbling distance of my apartment. We discsuseed Acquired Tastes by Peter Mayle and I had two glasses of Educated Guess cabernet sauvignon. Loved it. I love most cabs of course, but this one was particularly good and reasonably priced considering it’s quality.

edudated-guess-cabernet

And I really enjoyed the company of a couple of new friends that I’ve made as a result of this book club. That and the discussion of Acquired Tastes gave me an idea for a post I plan to make about my most valuable philosophical observation for 2008. But that is the subject of another post.

Hiking Again and Again

This was a great weekend to be outside, and I soaked up as much of it as I could.

Yesterday I drove up to the north shore of Lake Grapevine for the 2nd time this fall to take a hike with a large group. We got started around 10:30. It was interesting for me to experience this trail as a hiker, since last time I had been one of the mountain bikers that we spent a fair bit of the hike dodging. I felt a little better watching some people who obviously knew what they were doing on a bike struggle to make it up some of the rockier climbing stretches. That had been me just last month.

But yesterday was easy by comparison. You really could not have asked for better conditions. Cool but not cold, dry, clear and not too much wind. I had to be back in Uptown by 3:30 and didn’t want to cut it close, so I did the math and figured my halfway point to be 12:30. The portion of the group that I wound up with included someone who has been slowly recovering from an ankle injury, so we were not pushing the pace very hard on the way out. We were enjoying conversation and getting to know each other a bit, which also kept us at a reasonable pace.

When it was time for me to turn around I was on my own. Everyone else was continuing on a bit further and then meeting for lunch and drinks afterward, so they were in no rush to get back. I decided that since I was on my own I would try to make the return trip more of a workout than a stroll, and pushed myself pretty hard. Just by walking fast on the rugged terrain I was able to get to a heart rate of about 120 bpm on the uphill stretches. Funny enough, while in that mode I was easily passing some of the mountain bikers while going uphill, then on the downhill stretches they would catch me again.

What took two hours on the way out took just over an hour on the way back. It wasn’t like maximum effort on the elliptical machine, but it was a good workout. The best part was that although one of my knees and both my calves were just a bit stiff for the rest of the day it was nothing like I had been this summer after hiking the Muir Woods. It seems pretty clear that all of my exercising has really helped my knees a lot – exciting – I’m not even really all that conditioned yet. I figure if I keep this up I’ll be in great shape for hiking long distances.

Today I got another perspective on how my aerobic conditioning is making a difference. I did not think I’d have time for any more outdoor activities today but it turned out that I did. I was able to get my “chores” done in the morning and that left my afternoon free. So naturally I went hiking again.

I met up with some other folks from the same hiking group this afternoon to go for a short trek through the Cedar Ridge Nature Preserve near Joe Pool Lake. I had done that exact route once before while on a date back in May. That time I recall being just a little winded on a few stretches. This time it felt almost effortless by comparison, and that was after doing one of my regular workouts this morning on the elliptical before the hike. Again, this is exciting stuff for me. I know I’ve got quite a bit of improvement I can do on conditioning still, and as I keep getting better it’s got me feeling more adventurous. This is exactly what I wanted.

I’m thinking about going back to Pike’s Peak next summer. That mountain nearly did me in back in July. This year? Well, I know a lot better than to expect it to be easy, but I’ll bet if I keep up my training I’m certain that it won’t be anywhere nearly as difficult as it was last time.

Younger Next Year

It’s a great book, and you should read it regardless of your age. Although it’s squarely targeted at people approaching retirement I wish that I had read it when I was 30 instead of 41. Still, I’m glad I’ve got it under my belt now.

The basic premise of the book is this – through a lack of physical fitness most of us walk around with the health, stamina and outlook of a person with a body far older than our own. Worse, whether or not we even realize it we mistakenly accept the idea that a gradual decline in our quality of life that is directly proportional to our age is inevitable. In other words, each passing year brings with it a few more aches and pains and a thing or two more than we can’t do or enjoy any longer. Rubbish, say the authors. Their main thrust is this – our biology is adapted to the hunter-gatherer’s daily level of physical exertion, and building a lifestyle that respects that means that aging does not have to result in each year being less enjoyable than the one before it.

younger-next-year

For our evolutionary ancestors, “will work for food” was not a mantra of the panhandler, but rather an unavoidable fact of life for every human being on earth. Instead of being able to order a #3 with Coke in the drive through, they exerted themselves to their peak physical performance in order to literally chase down their food. What’s more, they did so in groups that shared the common cause of survival. Those of our progenitors that got really good at working hard with their buddies day after day flourished. Those that didn’t were not able to compete so well, had fewer descendants and gradually disappeared.

Recognizing these facts begs the question of what they mean to our physiology and health. Getting to the root of that is the majority of the book. I won’t go into too many details (you should read it yourself) but suffice to say that the vigor and enjoyment we all want out of our existence can be almost entirely preserved to life’s end by exercising, eating properly and working to maintain and grow valuable relationships.

If that sounds like a dull or unrealistic message that you’ve already heard a million times before I can understand. What made this book different for me was two things. First, it explained the biochemistry of why this is the case far more effectively and confidently than anything I’ve ever read. Secondly, I just so happened to be reading it at a time when the message was perfectly aligned with my personal experience. I had already taken up serious exercise on my own precisely because my gut was telling me the message that this book offers. Deep down inside I knew that getting in better shape was absolutely necessary for me to continue the kind of adventures that I found myself  enjoying with new friends this past summer.

As Mark Twain once said, “The difference between the right word and almost the right word is the difference between lightning and a lighting bug.” This book delivers the message in just the right way.

Get it. Read it. Do it.

Forty One

Today was the beginning of my 41st year on this little ball of dirt tucked away in our non-descript corner of the universe. My birthday came and went with little fanfare since I was on a business trip to Houston, but I did get a few calls and emails from around the country over the course of the day, which was really nice. Also, the Greatest Kid in the World answered my nightly call to her last night by singing “Happy Birthday” to me over the phone. It made my day.

You know how some people joke about how “this is my 6th 39th birthday” as a way of not accepting the label of “40?” For whatever reason I didn’t feel that way at all when I turned 40. Maybe I had been looking at that number for a while and had adjusted to it well in advance. Maybe there was some novelty to being 40 that caused it not to feel like the downer that so many people talk about. Whatever the reason, I had no trouble at all accepting “40″, but I don’t much like “41.” Can’t explain it.

Ironically enough, I feel younger this birthday than I did on my last. But then I’m getting ahead of myself. That’s the subject of my next post.

The Autumn’s Golden Sun

Thanksgiving this year finds me in my ancestral home – that coastal land along South Carolina’s border with the Atlantic Ocean. From the colonial charm of Beaufort all of the way up to the tacky disposability of Myrtle Beach this place tends to be a soggy and hot. Something like the endless bayous of Louisiana I suspect, though far smaller in it’s total acreage of waterways, cypress trees and alligators.

The Gulf Stream’s northward flow up from the tropics has a lot to do with the region’s tenacious grip on warmer weather. The waters that flow northward from the Caribbean serve to moderate the temperature in the winter months quite a bit. Although it can get quite cold here for a day or two at a time it does so only rarely. I can only remember daytime temperatures in the twenties once or twice throughout the time that I grew up. Even during the nighttime sub-freezing weather hardly asserts itself until Christmas or later. I can clearly recall swatting mosquitoes on more than one Thanksgiving Day. Happily, this is not one of those years. My parents report that November has had it’s share frost already, with more than a few nights below freezing and some days that have barely warmed above 50 degrees. That’s pretty cool for autumn hereabouts, and the mosquitoes have consequently been dispatched into next year – probably some time in April if I had to guess.

The days of my youth happened here, and fall has been my favorite season ever since. Maybe that’s because it was so nice back then to be outside without feeling oppressed by the dead, dank heat of a summer past it’s prime. The occasionally crisp air was such a sharp contrast to the everyday experience of life in the Lowcountry that I remember feeling genuine exhilaration at those rare times when it felt like autumn. Between the damp gray days of rain there were sapphire skies, cold breezes and warm fires. Hidden among the relentless green of the pine trees and live oaks there were the variable colors of deciduous hardwoods – the purple leaves of maples, the plain browns of black jack oaks, the ocher of hickory and the mottled yellows of tulip poplars. Tucked between the haze of summer and the overcast of winter were dusky sunsets with whole horizons of unbroken copper and bronze, thin crescent moons and bright, steady stars.

Yesterday was one of those days. In the afternoon the sun filtered through the winnowed tree canopies of late November with that curious golden light that is peculiar to the autumn. Outside in the quiet of the waning year there was a hint of the musky smell of burning leaves somewhere far away. Inside there was the smell of roasting pork, cinnamon and clove, baked apples and boiling potatoes. It was and just as rare and special as it always has been.

I appreciate spring and summer more than I once did, but fall remains my favorite.

Just How Fat Was I Anyway?

When I’m in town my morning routine is something that I value. It’s certainly not the fastest way to get to work, but I love the relaxing, predictable and healthy start to my day. I get up, shower, make breakfast, and catch up on the news and blogs over a stout cup of french pressed coffee. After that I get dressed, ride the elevator down to my car and drive to work. I could do it with my eyes shut. Well, except maybe for the part where I read the news and blogs.

Anyway, this morning when I went to get dressed I remembered that every stitch of quality clothing I had was at the cleaners across the street. Since I had left the office directly for Llano on Friday I had not been in town to pick up my cleaning over the weekend. They don’t open early enough for my taste, so I decided to wear a pair of slacks that I would not choose under other circumstances. You might think of them as my emergency backup pants for situations like today. It had been a while since I reached for them last, and as a result I was in for a surprise.

In addition to being kind of dull and plain, these slacks are now also WAY too big. It’s one thing for your pants to have a little room at the waist band. It’s another for them to be so loose that they will literally fall off without a belt. To my surprise, that’s the condition I found them in this morning. They were so over sized that I actually had to fold them over a little on either side so that they didn’t scrunch up like clown pants. There was no choice – I had to go to the cleaners and pickup my regular clothes. No way I can wear those “Plan B” pants to work anymore. But as I dressed for the 2nd time this morning I realized that my regular clothes are getting a bit baggy in most cases too.

All of this has me wondering – before I started working out again this year just how fat was I anyway? I don’t think of myself as being super trim now (not yet at least) but when I look at how big these pants have gotten it really strains my imagination that they were once a close fit. My weight has dropped some, but I guess my body fat must be dropping a lot faster than my weight. No other explanation.

Another really nice benefit of this intense exercise regimen. I haven’t been able to work out since I got sick on Friday, but I’m really, really looking forward to getting back to it ASAP. For a variety of reasons.