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Why am I posting more…?

Well here are some reasons (in no particular order):

  1. I do a lot of thinking.
    • For anybody that knows me in any depth, they know that I have to always be thinking about something.  Regardless of what it is and how it relates to WHATEVER may be going on around me, my brain needs to stay full and active.  So I read a lot.  I actually do.  I never really thought that I did since I don’t read what you normal people would call “books” but more of articles and just little things that pique my interest.  I think it’s because I like to know a lot about everything, and not focus on only a single thing, which I feel is what you have to do with a book.  Of course, you can read multiple books at once, but then you are just stretching yourself thin and for a very extended period of time.  The way I go, boom boom boom done, next.  By the time you could read one book (I’ll assume one week), I could’ve read over 500 articles and other pieces of information on many different subjects.  I’m probably not exaggerating either.  So I have a lot going on in my head and feel like I have a lot to share.  Will I be sharing a lot of that here?  Maybe.  A lot of what I read is just random stuff that interests me, sometimes I’ll feel like blogging about it, other times I’ll just throw it up on Facebook or Twitter.  I’d like to lean more towards just throwing everything (no matter how brief) up here and since it also publishes to Facebook and Twitter, kill three birds with one stone.
  2. I like technology.
    • I mean, I put this blog together after all.  Blogger was too boring for me so I did this whole custom self-hosted Wordpress thingamajig.  Of course there are some drawbacks to it, I’m not hosted in the cloud like Google Services are, and when something goes wrong I have to fix it.  But there are also some benefits, like we can customize it more, and it doesn’t look like EVERYBODY ELSE’S blog (sorry, but most blog layouts all look boring to me, at least Google Reader evens out the boring playing field by stripping all of the floating babies and auto-play music out).  It’s fun for me to tweak with things, so this is another outlet to do so.
  3. The Shark thinks that only wives blog.
    • Yes, you heard that right.  The Shark, aka. Shark Gillins, aka. Mr. Famous Editor (check out his own IMDB page here) said to us previously that 99% of “family blogs” are just posts from the wives, that the husbands don’t do anything with it.  Well, I am like the Wizard of Oz.  I run the show behind the scenes!  Except now I’m out and you can’t handle it!  Where are my flying monkeys?  And Shark, your IMDB page doesn’t have your latest endeavor on BYU TV listed!  And no, don’t worry, his parents didn’t actually name him Shark.  He just likes Seafood a LOT.
  4. A good suggestion by Shayne Holmes.
    • Our good friends up in Redmond, Shayne and Stephanie Holmes (who inherited our fancy shmancy bookshelves, the 1 (er, 2) items we could not fit in our 26′ moving truck, or the 12′ trailer, or the 8′ trailer, or the SUV, or the Sedan) had an idea, or maybe just Shayne did.  He takes the Microsoft Commuter to work.  It’s a bus service, paid for by Microsoft, that runs routes all over the Puget Sound, to pick up and drop off people for work.  It’s part of their effort to reduce carbon emissions and be earth friendly and hippy (as they assimilate you into the Borg with Windows and Office).  So on his bus ride in, he took it upon himself to create a new blog and try to put up a post each day.  About whatever.  Random.

And now are are here.  So if you find what I write irritating, tough, there will be more of it.  There will be more quick little links to articles, more random thoughts, more whatever.  I like to share what I’m thinking, so now instead of just Emily or a select few, I’m making it known here to.  Or not.  We’ll see.  I might get bored of it.

I need to eat better…

No pictures in this post, sorry picture liking people. This will be just words, and probably boring words, maybe upsetting to many people.

I can eat whatever I want (see, I told you it would be upsetting). I have always been able to. I can’t gain weight (more upsetting). I’m glad I can’t. I used to want to weigh more when I was little, but now I’m fine with it. I am happy with the skinny lot I was granted.

However, I should probably eat better. It’s not that we don’t eat well, we do. We eat organic mostly, red meat sparingly, some meals entirely veggie. But when I eat, I EAT. And if I’m done eating and I will be hungry again in 3 hours, I will eat again. I do this all the time. By all the time I mean practically on a daily basis. I find myself going out at 9pm to grab more food.

And therein is where the problem lies. Going out to eat. There aren’t a ton of healthy options when you want to grab something quick, even less later in the evening. It’s not that I get junk (to me, junk is McDonalds or an equivalent), but still, it’s not as good as it could be. I could still go out to get my 2nd dinner but get something a little healthier. Or maybe not as much. I don’t seem to have a very timely “I’m full” mechanism. Then I’ll eat and eat and eat and at the end feel like I want to puke. It happened once. By happened I mean puke. It was for a birthday dinner (mine) and I ate 2 appetizers, a main course and 2 pieces of cheesecake (courtesy of my friends and The Cheesecake Factory). The cheesecake made a return engagement before we left the restaurant.

But then I was fine and we proceeded to watch a forgettable movie.

So I guess what I’m saying is I should be wiser. I could do many things. I’ll choose to do a few for now. I could only eat my 1 dinner and not a 2nd. I’ll choose to continue eating when I’m hungry. I could eat only at home for my 2nd dinner. I’ll choose to try and find quicker things to make at home, frozen perhaps, from Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods, but I’ll also choose to continue to get my 2nd dinner food out as well. I’ll also choose to try and cut out the unhealthier options I may choose (choose pun) for my 2nd dinner.

You can choose to hate me because I am choosing to do this rather than having to, but maybe if I don’t choose to do this now, I’ll have to when I get a heart attack. ;)

The Mark Grace Diamondbacks of Arizona

It all started sometime in early 1989.  I was 11 years old at the time, so that would’ve put me in 6th grade, my first year at Conway Middle School after being Patrol Captain my last year at Conway Elementary.  Big changes in life.  We were always in the middle of potentially moving someplace.  The Gulf Coast of Florida, Southern California, maybe no where.  I was always a fan of sports and playing outside.  I still remember my first baseball bat, it was a Rawlings metal bat with green writing on it, we got it at the Rawlings Outlet at the Belz Factory Outlet Mall in Orlando.  I still have that bat.  It’s so tiny looking at it now.

Unfortunately, I didn’t get to play baseball when I was younger.  I would get to play with my friends in the cul-de-sac though, and I’d do pretty well with our tennis balls.  Most of them would end up in Enrique’s backyard, which was straightaway Center Field.  I never really watched much baseball, TBS and WGN were new “Super Stations” and the only televised games were the Saturday game of the week.  ESPN was barely a blip on the radar.

I was at a mall, I think it Maryland visiting Dave and Jay (my cousins), there was a kiosk that sold baseball cards.  For some reason, I thought hey, I’ll buy each of us a pack.  They were 1989 Fleer and came with 25 cards a pack!  I remember opening mine up and looking at all of the cards, then being the type of person I am and loving numbers, I wanted to find out what the most valuable card I had was.  There was one card worth over a buck, and to think I only paid 25 cents for the pack!  That card…was a 2nd year Mark Grace, first baseman for the Chicago Cubs.  It was worth $1.25.

Mark Grace

Exactly!

Immediately, I took hold.  Baseball.  Baseball Cards.  Mark Grace.  First Base.  Chicago Cubs.  In the immortal words of Gandalf the White “It Has Begun!”  I became a mini Mark Grace.  I began to play First Base.  I wore #17.  I watched the Cubs win the National League East in 1989, led of course by Mark Grace.  He had one of the greatest postseason series a hitter had ever had to that point, no joke.  5 games, .647 batting average, 5 extra base hits, 8 RBI’s.  It looks like that pack of baseball cards was paying off.  After the season, he was going to appear at that same Belz Factory Outlet Mall at a baseball card show, signing autographs!  By this time I had PLENTY of his cards, including the coveted 1988 Score Traded Mark Grace rookie.

Mark Grace 1988 Score Traded Rookie Card

Danny recently got me a Graded (means it’s awesomeness has been verified by an outside company) one just like this, but it’s a 9.5 instead of a 9, the highest known rating for this card in existence since there are no 10’s (note: this is not my actual card).

I paid to have it signed.  It was awesome, I got to say hello to him.  I also had him sign a baseball.  That was sometime in late 1989/early 1990.  December or January.  I think I still have the little ticket that you had to get punched to receive your autograph.

I followed his career.  I watched his games.  I went to his games.  He hit home runs in the games I went to (at least twice that I can remember).  Mark Grace wasn’t a home run hitter.  I was almost given one of those home run balls.  Anthony Young is NOT cool!  Mark Grace was so cool.  He dated celebrities.

Janine Turner

Janine Turner of Northern Exposure fame. Harry Caray used to crack jokes about them dating when the camera would pan to her during a game.

He parties with fans after games.

Mark Grace and his legions

Mark Grace doing what Mark Grace does…

He was Harry Caray’s favorite, you could tell by hearing how he spoke of him.  He was my favorite too.  Eventually I even got him to sign a baseball bat for me, that was sometime in 1994/1995, maybe 1993.  I’m sure I have that autograph ticket too.  I thought he would be a lifelong Cub, just like Ernie Banks.  He was elected to the All-Century Cubs team as the starting First Baseman.  Of course he was…he was MARK GRACE.  He is widely credited as coining the term “slumpbuster.”  Don’t ask me what it means.  If you don’t know, you don’t need to know.  You search for it on Wikipedia and it’ll simply redirect to his page.

But the Cubs now had Sammy Sosa.  It was all about him.  He hit the home runs.  Grace was deemed expendable now.  Mark Grace had the most hits of ANY baseball player during the 90’s.  He also had the most losses.  The Cubs were not good.  They were “The Cubs” afteral.  The GM didn’t even give him a call once his contract expired.  Andy McFAIL (mis-spelling intentional).  I was really REALLY angry.  How could this happen?  Well, lo and behold, the Arizona Diamondbacks came calling.  Offered him a contract.  Boom.  Done.  Starting First Baseman for them.  They had Randy Johnson and Curt Schilling.  You may have heard of them.  It was 2001.  They made it to the World Series, against the Yankees.  The effectively killed off the “Evil Empire” in the best 7 game series you will ever hope to see.  Grace did well (he even his a mammoth upper-deck home run in Yankee Stadium in game 5).  He led off the bottom of the 9th inning of game 7 against the Yankees stud of a closer Mariano Rivera with a single.  He began the rally.  Luis Gonzalez just finished it off.  I jumped and cried like crazy.  Mark Grace was a winner.  He was quoted after the game as saying “What really feels good is I wasn’t good enough to play first base for the Chicago Cubs, but I was good enough to play first base for the World Champions and that feels really good.”  EXACTLY.

Mark Grace is a World Champion!

That team had a new name for me.  They would forever be known as the Mark Grace Diamondbacks of Arizona.  He didn’t lead them with the best stats, they had a LOT of players who played better, they were LOADED.  He batted 7th, he used to bat 3rd for the Cubs.

But to me, it didn’t matter.  I didn’t watch any more Cubs games on WGN.  I didn’t root for them to win.  I was glad the Marlins broke their hearts in 2003, they deserved it.  They punked out Mark Grace.  I do still have their jerseys and hats, I even get some new (vintage…note the pictures below) ones every now and then.  I’ll go to a Cubs game this Spring Training.  I still don’t have a Mark Grace jersey, but I will one day.  The Cubs are now the Evil Empire to me.  I really don’t care how they do anymore.  Forget the curse of the Billy Goat.  This goes way beyond that.  They traded style and substance for flash and steroids.  What have you done for me lately?

Mark Grace retired after the 2003 season.  Baseball lost its luster for me after that.  How could it now?  This was a cosmic connection that we had.  Look at this quote from him…

“I like donuts. I like Krispy Kreme donuts a lot. Too much”

Seriously?  Anybody who knows me knows that those words have probably come out of my mouth at one point or another.  I had nobody to root for.  I was more of a player fan, not a team fan.  I am still like that now.  Luckily Fantasy Baseball came calling, but I have since retired due to my obtaining the Triple Crown this past season (Baseball, Basketball and Football championships).  Mark Grace had wanted to become a manager, but nothing panned out.  The Diamondbacks offered him a job as the Color Commentator on their TV broadcasts.  Josh told me he was hilarious, but you could only see him on those local Arizona games.  Booo.

We now live in Arizona.  Last week the Mark Grace Diamondbacks of Arizona had a Fan Fest.  It’s basically a free event where you get to go out on the field and mingle with players, play games, see the stadium, fun stuff like that.  I HAD TO GO.  We penned this in (no pencil, this was not being missed for anything) and made our way.

The 2010 Mark Grace Diamondbacks of Arizona Fan Fest

They estimated that between 10,000-15,000 fans attended throughout the day, most where there to see Mark Grace.

By the time we got there, all of the autograph “donation tickets” were sold.  Mark Grace was sitting there, next to Kirk Gibson, practically calling out my name, asking to sign an autograph for me.

Me and Mark Grace

So close…yet so far away! At least the gentleman working the empty line entrance let me go up and take a quick photo.

They acknowledged that this was a problem that would be rectified next year.  I’d gladly have paid more than $5 to get his autograph again.  They’ll work on it, Mark Grace will make sure.

Anybody that lives within driving distance of a ballpark, you REALLY have to look into whether your team has a Fan Fest.  I went to an Angels one a long time ago but it was pathetic to say the least.  I mean, it was in the parking lot…NEXT to the Stadium.  Was it too out of repair to let the fans inside?  Hopefully they fixed that.  I even got to sit in the teams dugouts.

Me in the dugout

This was actually the visitor’s dugout, but you could go into either one and play around.

We decided to go underground, into the clubhouse.  They had an underground set of batting cages.

Fancy batting cages

Mark Grace used to take swings in these cages.

The clubhouse was really cool looking.  It was a wheel and spoke design, with the spoke being a large open space for gathering and probably wrestling.

Dugout

Nothing like your High School locker room, huh?

It was a very cool experience to be there.  They even have a Fatburger inside the stadium and the prices aren’t as ridiculous as you may expect.  The quality was pretty near close too, but alas, only fat fries are offered, no skinny fries.  We walked around a lot, bought 12 t-shirts for $2.25, and I even bought a game worn fitted hat for $7.00.  Good condition too.  Can’t beat that.

If you’ve made it this far, I know you’re probably thinking WOW, that was long, well maybe next year you’ll get to have Mark Grace sign something Adrian.  YOU THINK I’M DONE TELLING MY STORY?  THIS IS THE LONGEST POST EVER!  OF COURSE THERE IS MORE.

Like I said, they had players mingling around, doing interviews (Mark Grace hosted a couple of the Q&A’s, most questions were directed at him for the one I saw), throwing wiffle balls to kids, taking pictures with fans.

Taking pictures with fans.

TAKING PICTURES WITH FANS!!!

Ladies and Gentlemen, behold, our Family Photograph.

FAMILY PHOTO 2010!!!

Former Diamondbacks Reliever Mike Fetters, Emily, sleeping Morgan, me and Mr. Mark Grace!!!

You know this one is a) going up on Facebook as b) my PROFILE PHOTO!  I already told Emily, sorry, but the zoomed in icon view is going to be Me and Mark Grace, you’re getting cropped out unless people want to view the full picture.  He patted me on the back and afterwards noted how Morgan was sleeping and cute and stroked her back too.

Most.  Awesome.  Day.  I.  Could.  Ever.  Imagine.

I tear up writing about it again.  I’m really a big fan.

We’re going to some games this year, maybe get some package or something.  We don’t have Cable TV, so I’m not sure how I’ll get to hear or see his broadcasts, but I’ll find a way.

And next year, we’ll get that autograph.  I have a year to figure out on what…

The birthday food

Food is an important part of celebrating. It just is. And we like food anytime, no celebration required. Here’s a sampling of the birthday fare this year:

DSC_1378

Bialys. Adrian always talks about bialys (sort of like bagels, but different). Apparently you can only find them near New York or that part of the east. I even went to some place called Mikey’s Brooklyn Bagel Shop or some such thing and they didn’t know what I was talking about. So a couple months ago I found this recipe and decided I’d make them for his birthday. I am very afraid of making breads because it never seems to come out like I imagine. Here, the dough wasn’t rising right, but it came out okay in the end. Maybe not having anything in my head to compare it to was a good thing.

On Saturday, since his birthday was on Sunday this year, we went to the Il Fornaio Risotteria in downtown Seattle. It was good, as always. It’s hard to find real Italian food (Olive Garden doesn’t count, though I still argue it’s not bad for what it is, you just can’t compare it to actual Italian food).

We split a pizza for an appetizer. It was a little oilier than we felt it should be, but the pesto and veggies were good. Note the nice thin crust. Ahhhh. Looking at the picture makes me want to go to Italy. Or at least back to the restaurant, which is substantially cheaper than flying to Europe.

DSC_1388Adrian and Morgan with the desserts. We had creme brulee AND a chocolate fudge-like cake. Both very good. (Oh, and we had main courses of a grilled pear ravioli and the porcini risotto. Yummy.)

The rest of the birthday food got a little drawn out because my big plans for Sunday didn’t work out until Monday, but I’ll spare you the details. We’ll just say Saturday was the celebration day. :)

Daddy

DSC_1398Adrian’s birthday, and of course Morgan is trying to eat his knuckle, which is one of her favorite things to chomp on. I love this picture.