“Sexy” Has Taken Over From “The” As The Most Used Word In The English Language

"Right Said Fred" is too sexy for their shirts.

Americans now use “sexy” more often than any other word in the English language.

OK, I made that up, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t true.

Sex is a staple of reality TV, even in shows where you wouldn’t expect it.   A contestant in a cooking show I was watching said she wanted to bring sexy back to the kitchen.  I thought she was talking about doing it on the kitchen table.  Turns out all the hubbub was about spaghetti sauce.  I like pasta as well as the next person, but… sexy?

Sex sells – I get that.  And I have nothing against sex.  Quite the contrary.  But our nation’s obsession with being sexy as a be-all, end-all goal is shallow and boring.

This obsession was apparent when I was in the birthday card aisle at the store the other day.  Half the cards for 50-year-old women feature photos of buff, shirtless young men.  They’re nice to look at, but I wonder if the folks at Hallmark realize that what is sexy to a woman at 21 isn’t the same as what works at 50.

Here’s a short list of turn-ons for the older, more discriminating woman:

  • Slightly stooped shoulders – from carrying 50-pound bags of potting soil and water softener salt for you, and more than his fair share of the worries and the burdens. 
  • Missing thumbnail – from a hammer incident when he was building a tree house for the kids, or a pedestal for you.
  • Lines around the eyes – from laughing at your jokes, the kid’s antics and the things in life that otherwise would make you cry.
  • Thinning hair – from nights spent tearing it out, worrying how he was going to pay the bills and take care of his family.
  • Watery eyes – from mowing the grass no matter how bad the ragweed is, and getting choked-up watching home movies of the kids when they were little.

Being dependable and hard working, having a sense of humor, showing a little tenderness  – these are the things a real woman finds sexy in a real man.

And if these traits come wrapped in a package with strong, broad shoulders and a killer smile, that’s OK too.

Posted in General Ramblings | Tagged , , , , , | 25 Comments

And The Emmy of Secret Shamefulness Goes To…

Every little girls dream...and source of endless therapy.

Some of my TV viewing habits are a secret source of shame to me.  One show is so horrible I can’t even share it in the sanctity of the confessional.  But I know I can tell you.

I am hooked on “Toddlers & Tiaras.” 

In case you don’t watch crass, commercial television, here’s the Cliffs Notes version.  The show follows young girls (and babies) as they prepare for and compete in beauty pageants.  This hobby/money-making scheme/soul-destroying endeavor seems to be practiced primarily in the American South.

Many of the pageants are what they call “full glitz”.  That means the little girls try their mightiest to look like adult women, although not any women I’ve seen in real life.  They put on tons of make-up, have their hair teased up a mile, and wear poufy, sequined dresses.  Some even wear fake teeth called “flippers”.  These give them perfect, white smiles that mask the fact that they are missing teeth because, well, they’re really children.

If you took Dolly Parton 30 years ago at her Grand Ole Opry best, shorten the dress, add white patent leather shoes and ruffled ankle socks and subtract the bosoms, you would have the Ultimate Grand Supreme, which is the highest title.

For me, the family dynamics are the most interesting thing about the show.  They tend to fall into three type relationships:

 

  Mom

   Dad

   Child

And A Little Child Shall Lead Them

Plain, fat, can’t believe  this beautiful child came out of her

Deer-in-the-headlights, spineless

Rule-the-roost, tantrum throwing monster

In It To Win It

Thin, intense stage Mommy Dearest

Absent, always at work to pay for/avoid the whole business

Too skinny perfectionist heading for eating disorder or self mutilation

 

Won’t This Be Fun?

Well-meaning, clueless

Doting, clueless

Sweet kid who will be devastated to be one of only 3 girls in the room not to get a crown

  A couple of days before a big pageant, the moms take their little ones to the salon and spend the mortgage money on the works – hair, nails, spray tan.  Sometimes an eyebrow waxing is in order.   The Tiny Supreme-hopeful screams in excitement for the coming treat.

Pageant day is packed with activities, and little beauty queens start to droop at naptime.   The savvy pageant mom keeps Pixie Sticks and Red Bull handy to take care of that problem, and provide a wholesome meal for a growing body.     

They even have their own language. 

Many of the type 1 mothers refer to their daughters as divas.  The dictionary defines a diva as: a usually glamorous and successful female performer or personality.  This really confused me at first, because the moms were talking about 4-year-olds with no discernible talents.  Then I figured out that in pageant world, diva is actually a secret code word for: a child whose parents have totally given up any control, let her do whatever she wants, thus turning her into a spoiled, mean brat.  The moms seem to be proud of this.  Didn’t that used to be a bad thing?

Like Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy disease, those pushing pageants are almost always moms.  But sometimes the dad is the driving force.   Even Tom Hanks is hooked on the exciting world of pageants, as he explained to Jimmy Kimmel. 

I’m only sorry I didn’t discover this hobby when my girls were small.  It would have been a wonderful mother/daughter bonding experience.  And I just know both my divas would have loved it. 

Oh well, someday I might have grandkids!

Posted in General Ramblings | Tagged , , , , , , , | 40 Comments

Biggest Loser: Family Edition. Party Like It’s 1999

No, no! Wild horses couldn't drag us to the all-you-can-eat sundae bar! Oh, wait, I see you've got some wild horses.

Did you know that alcohol has calories? 

If you’re following along, you’ll know that this is the summer of the family weight-loss challenge.  We just finished the third week, and I conducted a little experiment over the weekend.  I wouldn’t have believed it if I hadn’t seen the results with my own eyes, but apparently alcohol can make you fat. 

Here’s the mathematical proof. 

Total pre-party weight loss:                10 pounds
                                                              + 75 family members and friends
                                                             +   5 haunches of beef
                                                              + 15 pounds of chicken
                                                             + 25 pounds of Portillo’s pasta salad
                                                              +   2 huge cakes
                                                              +   3 or so bottles of wine
                                                             ——–
Total Monday morning weight loss:      8 pounds

YES, THAT IS A GAIN OF 2 POUNDS! 

After a week of pain and sacrifice, how could just one night of debauchery produce such a calamitous result?

I was doing fine at the party – little beef, little chicken, little salad, little wine.  The wine was an unassuming little chardonnay, fruity yet unubiquitous.   It had a distinct grapefruit juice under-tone.  And grapefruit juice is good for you.  So I had a little more.

It was late in the evening, and most of the guests had gone home.  I saw it from across the yard – dark as the night had become, it called to me.  A double-chocolate layer cake, all by its lonesome.  I went to keep it company.

It’s like I tell my daughters.  When you drink you make bad choices.  

Now I’ve got to just shake this off and get back to work.   The important thing is for all of us to eat sensibly and lose weight responsibly for the sake of our health.

Besides, half of the family contestants were at the same party and it looked like I wasn’t the only one enjoying fine, fatty foods and liberal libations.   I may still be ok.

Posted in Biggest Loser: Family Edition | Tagged , , , , , , , | 17 Comments

How You Can Help Me Become A World-Renowned, Respected Writer

Willie's just sayin' what everyone's thinkin'.

“Peg, what can I do to make sure you get the fame, wealth and respect you deserve as a writer?”

I hear that a lot.

Why, just the other day, while I was giving a big goose to a small boy with a crutch, a boy so small some might call him Tiny, he said  “Peg, what can I do to make sure you get the fame, wealth and respect you deserve as a writer?  Bless ye mum.”

Since I am asked this so often, I’ve compiled a short list of easy things you can do to spread the word about me if…

  • You are a top literary agent/publisher/editor:  Let’s do a book! Have your gal call mine to set up lunch.  It will probably save time if you send your standard Rich & Famous Author contract before we take a meeting.
  • You are friends with Oprah:  Casually mention that she should check out this great blog, Peg-o-Leg.Ramblings.  Point out that a really good blog is all that is needed to make her media empire complete.
  • You are Oprah.  Hi, Oprah.  See above.
  • You have a friend who is a top literary agent/publisher/editor:  Enthusiastically, yet genuinely, gush about a blogger you know, with a warm, yet humerous take on modern life.  Enthuse how my Everywoman perspective would make a best-selling book/commercial blog/column, and that you are not being paid to say that.  Then lead him or her to my blog.  (This approach also works if it is your mom, dad, sibling or significant other who is a  top literary agent, publisher or editor, or if you suspect someone you pass on the street might be.)
  • You don’t have any friends:  Write a testament to me, in your own words, using words that are identical to those shown below.  Make a couple thousand copies of your flyer and hand them out on the street corners of the nearest really big city.  Passing out free stuff, like iPads (make sure they are iPad 2s – nobody wants the 1 anymore) along with the flyers will really get people’s attention

Peg is the greatest writer ever to be fruit of the loins of man.  Read her WordPress blog, Peg-o-leg Ramblings, and tell all your friends about it or die a hideous, lingering death involving toenail fungus.

Have a nice day!

Remember, it is better to give than to receive.  Do unto others, as you would have them do unto you.  And virtue is its own reward. 

Once you’ve done all you can to make sure my future as a best-selling author is secured, won’t you feel better about yourself? 

I know I will.

Posted in General Ramblings | Tagged , , , , , , | 27 Comments

My Grocery Store Knows Me Better Than My Husband Does

Money can't buy happiness, but with a coupon it's 20% off.

My grocery store knows more about me than my husband does.

It was exactly 10 years ago this past weekend that I signed up for one of their preferred savings cards.  I was nervous about it.  I don’t like the idea of the cash register collecting information about my buying habits.  But if you want to get Dannon yogurt at 20 for $10.00 (that’s how my store always shows the specials, so dumb people buy 20 of everything) you have to give your name, address, and answer all sorts of impertinent questions about yourself.

Now the cash register knows when I shop, and exactly what I buy.  

It spits out coupons specifically for me.  I bought a 20-gallon box of cheap Gallo wine once.  Once!  But the register remembers.  It thinks I’m a lush.  Every time they’re running a special on wine or beer, out comes a coupon.   The guy in front of me buying tofu didn’t get a booze coupon.  The register knows its prey.

Not only does the register know and remember, it judges.  In the early years, it would automatically print coupons for Hot Pockets and Dove Ice Cream bars.  But I think it has figured out that the kids are out of the house, and that I’m buying all that stuff for myself.   No more ice cream coupons.  Now it prints coupons for Kashi Go-Lean cereal and Weight Watchers frozen dinners.

Last month it gave me a coupon for a Hallmark Mother’s Day card.  It’s nagging me!  If it could have talked, it would have said, “Call your mother.”

I just know my grocery store’s register is sharing my information with all its computer brethren.   You think I’m paranoid?  Don’t be naïve!  Of course they all talk.

Last time I had a cold, I went to the drugstore and bought some Nyquil.  I used my drug store preferred card to get 50 cents off.   I stopped at the grocery store just 15 minutes later and the register spit out coupons for Campbell’s Chicken Noodle Soup and Puffs tissues.

This has gone on long enough.  I decided to turn in my card and find a new store, one that doesn’t know all my secrets – one that doesn’t judge me.   Time for a fresh start.  When I went there yesterday I fully intended it would be for the last time.    

I went to the checkout…and got a coupon for a dozen red roses.  It remembered our anniversary! 

Maybe I’ve been too hasty. You don’t throw away a 10-year relationship on a whim.  I’m going to give this thing another chance.  After all, they’ve got 2-for-1 on Charmin toilet tissue this week. 

But only for special customers.

p.s. I went to this store last night after I posted this blog.  I got 0 coupons at the checkout.  Zero.  First time, ever.  Don’t you dare think that computers don’t talk to each other. – obviously the register heard about this post and was getting back at me.

 

Posted in General Ramblings | Tagged , , , , , , | 39 Comments

Biggest Loser: Family Edition. Losing Is For Winners!

There must be 2 pounds of hair there - cut it all off. That's dinner? Gee, thanks.

Here we are, with the first week of the family weight-loss challenge under our slightly looser belts.  Time for a status update.

As I posted last week, my sister Terry issued a challenge  for all the women in our family to lose weight this summer, or die trying.   The winner will get cash and fabulous prizes.  I am referring to this dark time of pain as “Celery Summer”

Most of us got off to a slow start because of Fathers Day.  I think we all felt that being unwilling to consume mass quantities of fattening foods (or beers, or Sour Apple-tinis) might somehow send the message to the men in our lives that we don’t love them.  This rationale made perfect sense to me as I was perusing the menu at my favorite Italian restaurant on Sunday.  In retrospect; not so much.

Our sister-in-law, Lisa, joined the challenge as well.  I’m so glad!  Ever since December, I’ve been worried that she had the mistaken impression that I did not support her weight-loss efforts.   Nothing could be further from the truth!  Just because of a little post I wrote: “My Sister-In-Law is Ruining the U.S. Economy” , that was no reason for her to think I wasn’t behind her 100%.  Now that the president has assured us that happy days are here again, it should be safe for all of us to diet.

I called Libby for a progress report, but it was so noisy where she was that we couldn’t really talk.  All I could glean was that she was at Grandpa Tony’s with my Mom & Dad.  The place is well known for their deep-dish pizza and extra-thick milkshakes.  No doubt some very scientific, secret weight-loss stratagem at work here. 

Judy said she didn’t have a scale.  That would seem to pose a bit of an obstacle to tracking weight-loss with any degree of accuracy.  Perhaps I should point out that she isn’t going to be able to walk away with the grand prize just by claiming her jeans fit better.

Mary Kay will bear watching.  Her husband, Pat, is pushing for the win.  He’s appointed himself her trainer, and is cracking the whip with gusto.  He drags her out of bed before dawn each morning for what he calls a “brisk walk”, but which sounds more like the Bataan death march.  I may have to call Adult Protective Services to make sure he’s letting her eat. 

Mom went to Weight Watchers and lost 4 pounds.  What’s with the sensible eating plan?  The sneaky devil!

I haven’t heard from a couple of sisters.  Which means one of two things:

       a) They haven’t really entered into the spirit of the thing yet or

       b) They’re lurking in the weight-loss weeds, chewing their celery in silence and       lulling us into a false sense of security.

As for me, I won’t lie.  It has been tough.  I managed a shmeezly 3 pounds loss, which isn’t much considering all the painful deprivation I’ve suffered. 

The big culprit is my raging sweet tooth.  Last night at around 11 I was searching the cupboards for something sweet.  All I could find were mini-marshmallows and stale graham crackers, probably left over from my junior-high scout camp days.   I still ate them, fantasizing about the chocolate needed to make them into s’mores  – pitiful!  I considered a snack run, but that would have involved putting on a bra and changing out of my comfy, 20-year-old, holes in the crotch, painted-the-living-room-in-them sweats.   Only deeply ingrained laziness saved me from my yearnings for Ho-hos.   I may have to start going to bed around 6pm to avoid the late-night munchies. 

Today I found the hidden little Dove candy bars I had bought in the before-times (2 weeks ago) for the office candy dish.   This is a business office, for goodness sake, not Willy Wonka’s shop!  Executive decision: no more candy dish. 

Late breaking news flash from Lisa.  After joining the fray late, she has already lost 8 pounds.  Damnation! 

I’ll keep you posted on our progress.  In the meantime, I’m off to the YMCA to burn off some Dove bars.  Then I need to do some online research.  Anyone know how to send a candy gram?

Posted in Biggest Loser: Family Edition | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 32 Comments

My Mirror Is A Big, Fat Liar

Mirror, mirror on the wall...

I saw some pictures from our vacation the other day.  Looking at myself, I couldn’t believe it.   That fading, flabby, middle-aged woman was me?  They say that the camera doesn’t lie, so that means my mirror is the culprit.

It’s a big, fat liar.

When I look in the mirror, I see me.  It’s the same me that has stared back since puberty stopped shifting things around.  The teenager looking for zits, the young mom checking for baby spit-up in her hair, the career woman applying mascara before work….me, me and me. 

My grandmother once said, “I look in the mirror and I wonder how I got in this old woman’s body.”  I laughed, but didn’t really understand.  I do now.

It’s not that I haven’t noticed the gradual creping of the skin around my eyes, the reddening of my once-porcelain skin, or the sagging of my jaw line.  I have.  I do.  It’s just that I see the essential triangle of my face – eyes, nose and mouth, and it all looks pretty much the same as it ever did.  Reassuringly me.

Maybe that’s the thing to remember about this aging business.  That the essential self, inside, doesn’t change with age.  It only changes if we let it.  Or if we want it to.  And those changes, the ones that we make happen, can be wonderful.

As for the changing outer package that houses my essential self?  Starting today, I’m saving up for a full body lift.

Posted in General Ramblings | Tagged , , , , , | 33 Comments

I, Tourist

I took a bite out of The Big Apple a few weeks ago.  As anyone who has been to New York City can confirm, the sheer number of people on the streets is astounding.   Fully half of them work for tour bus companies.

My sister Lib, my kids (ages 19 and 21) and I couldn’t walk ½ a block without being accosted by a hungry cadre of tour bus pitchmen.  Two guys from rival companies engaged in mortal combat. for the chance to show us the sights.  When last I saw them on the corner of Broadway and 42nd St., the Gray Line guy had the City Sights guy in a chokehold I don’t think he was going to escape.

Zealous salesmen also accosted us in Chinatown, but they were pushing fashion accessories.  We came up from the bowels of the subway, squinting into the bright, June sunlight. I had barely cleared the top step when the first little Chinese woman got right up in my personal space: “You want purse?  We got Coach, Kate Spade, I get you real cheap.  You come with me now?” 

Apparently something about my trusty Mickey Mouse fanny-pack was offensive to those living in Chinatown, because by the end of the block I had been accosted by no less than 17 people promising all sorts of designer handbags at low, low prices. 

I felt like I was living that scene in Airplane where Robert Stack encounters an endless stream of panhandlers in the airport.  At the end he’s practically running, judo-chopping a Hare Krishna dude and gut-punching someone collecting for Jerry’s kids.

It got so my kids walked ½ a block behind Lib and me to avoid being contaminated by the Tourist Taint.

They were way too cool to carry a map.  However, they didn’t want to be lost forever in the endless blocks of Chinese restaurant supply stores through which we wandered, so they texted me to find out which way to turn at upcoming corners. 

The thing I don’t understand is – the bus people, the handbag people – how did they know I was a tourist?   What gave me away? 

A side-by-side comparison of me and Carrie Bradshaw, that iconic, albeit fictional New York sophisticate, shows we accessorize the same way.

Carrie courtesy of "Sex & The City", tourist sculpture courtesy of Duane Hanson, "Tourists II"

                                Carrie                                                    Me

1) Head          black straw-hat                           foam Statue of Liberty visor
2) Belt            black cargo belt                           Mickey Mouse fanny pack
3) Bag             Aubergine leather satchel          I Love NY Aqua souvenir tote
4) Feet           strappy Jimmy Choo sandals    Easy Spirit Funtimers w/Dr.Scholl’s inserts
5) Read          Vogue & Cosmo                            subway map, street map, discount coupons
6) Wear          fun & flirty designer outfit         fun & flirty K-Mart outfit

I guess New Yorkers have some sort of sixth sense that tells them who is an outsider.

We decided to do the double-decker bus tour after all.  You can get on and off again at all the major landmarks.  Like I told the kids as they slouched in the back row, shielding their faces with newspapers, native New Yorkers take these all the time.  The pitchman  said our savings in taxi fares that day would more than pay the $80-per-head ticket price!  

And in the end, I couldn’t pass up the chance to own a genuine Kate Spade bag for only $19.95.   I didn’t even know she made fanny packs.

Posted in Vacation Stories | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 30 Comments

Biggest Loser: Family Edition. Game On.

No thanks, I'm on my way to the gym. Perhaps my sister would like a chocolaty Ho-Ho.

All the women in my family are voluptuous.  Zaftig.  Generously padded with fleshy fleshliness.  At least that’s what we would be in a Rubens painting.  In modern parlance, one might say fat – if one were an insensitive boor.

Enter my sister Terry.

Last week, she issued a challenge: join her in her quest to lose weight and get healthy.  She threw the gauntlet down – right into a bowl of cottage cheese.   She’s putting her own money where her mouth is.  Or where her mouth should not be.  The prize?  $250.

If she wins the challenge, she gets to keep her money.  If not, she has to break open her piggy bank (sorry, poor choice of words).  That’s her incentive to stick with it.

Terry is a teacher.  As a group, I think they get an incredible burst of end-of-year, no-more-students-dirty-looks energy once the last grade report has been filed.  They start making lists of things to accomplish over the summer.  Apparently, “Get Healthy And Hot Before I Die” made it to the top of her list. 

Looking at photos from a recent family wedding may have given her a clue that this was not a bad goal for the rest of us, either.  Terry sent an email blast to our sisters, Mom and sisters-in-law.  The last are all in varying degrees of much better shape than us, but the invitation was extended to all, nonetheless.

The response was under-whelming.   You could hear crickets chirping over the interweb. 

Some years ago, a much-loved uncle asked, “Why are all you girls overweight?”  Much- loved, but pretty damn tactless.  That comment has stuck with me.  When I called Terry for details on the challenge, I was surprised when she mentioned the same, careless remark.   Tactlessness aside, it’s a tough question to answer. Our brothers are in great shape.  So why do all the girls overeat?

I don’t know.

My Mom and sisters were thin as kids and only gained weight as adults.  Not me.  I have struggled with this all of my life. 

When I was 13, my Mom took me to Weight Watchers.  She only needed to lose a few pounds, but she came along to help me.  Getting on a scale in front of strangers, being the only kid in a room full of fat adults, the group leader’s cheerleader-on-crack zeal for stuff like faux bread pudding (diet tips straight from God’s mouth to Jean Neidich’s ear)…I know Mom meant well, but God Almighty, I think that experience scarred me for life. 

But, and it’s a big butt (sorry), I know I need to lose weight.  The older I get, it becomes as much about health as looking good.  Diabetes runs heavily in my Dad’s family, and heart disease in my Mom’s.  Talk about doing a lousy job picking your parents! 

Our brother’s widow and our other two brothers (thin people all) generously offered  additional cash and prizes to encourage us.   Sweetening the pot, as it were, but with Equal.  

I signed on the dotted line.  Surprisingly, every one of my sisters and Mom did as well.

So it begins.  I’ll keep you posted on our progress through the summer, carefully editing out any parts that are less than complimentary to me. 

I’m really hoping for the best, for the sake of my family’s health.  If only you could meet them, you would see that each of these women is strong, loving, and funny and deserves only the best in life.  And if you did meet them, you could show your appreciation by treating them to a banana split.

Game on.

Posted in Biggest Loser: Family Edition | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 53 Comments

My Dad Has No Rhythm, Yet Is Master Of The Dance

My Dad is the one in the snappy plaid jacket.

My Dad sired 9 children.  He then topped that accomplishment by staying around, with our Mom, to raise every one of us.   For that reason alone, he deserves to be Father of The Year.

Not convinced?  Here are a few things you should know about him.

My Dad…

can clear a room quicker than you can say National Geographic.  Not because of poor hygiene or a less-than-winning personality, but because of his TV viewing habits. 

All us kids would be piled into our tiny sunroom watching The Monkees or Get Smart on TV Dad would come in, squat next to the set and start flipping the dial.  (This was in the dark days before remotes.)  He would come upon a fascinating National Geographic special on plate tectonics and there he would stay.   We all groaned, rolled our eyes, exclaimed “Da-a-ad!” and left the room.  If we were old enough to do so, we flounced out. 

As he squatted next to the set, chewing his nails and staring raptly at the educational program du jour, we would hear his voice faintly, fading as we scattered through our big, old house “Hey, don’t you want to watch this?  This is really interesting!”

should have joined the Navy.  He bought his first boat when we were young kids.  This started a life-long love affair second only to the one he shares with my Mom.   I loved the family trips, especially to Mackinac Island each summer. 

Each new boat was bigger than the last, and all the early ones were wood.   When I think of how much of my life was spent in the boat shed, stripping varnish off metal trim and sticking Coopernal-ed toothpicks into screw holes, all I can say is… Dad, I forgive you.

is one of the smartest people I know.  Too smart.  He was always ready to help with math homework, but his explanation would sail right over your head.  After just a few minutes, your eyes would glaze over.  We’d say, “Thanks, Dad, I get it now.” and he would walk away, mission accomplished.  He never suspected we would call a friend for help as soon as he left the room.

He has taught celestial navigation for years, a skill I greatly admire even though the topic makes me glaze over worse than math.

has no rhythm that I’ve noticed, but is the Master of the Dance.  He is best known for The Mosquito Ballet.

On sultry summer nights when we were very little, the windows and the balcony door in our bedroom would be opened to catch any stray breezes.  Somehow the mosquitoes always got in to plague us.  Dad to the rescue.  Wearing a sappy expression and brandishing a fly swatter, he would leap and pirouette about the room, chasing the pesky bugs.   We stood in our cribs and beds, flushed and sweating in diapers and t-shirts,  shrieking with laughter, the sound floating out into the hot, still nights.

is a Yankee Doodle Dandy.   Not because of his patriotism, though he is a proud and loyal American, but because of his zeal for the 4th of July. 

My Dad loves fireworks with the pure joy of a child. 

As my brothers got older they bought fireworks, most from the lawless land of Indiana, to set off in the driveway.  Dad half-heartedly endorsed Mom’s edict to stop because those things “were just too dangerous”, but you could tell only the strictest discipline kept him from elbowing the boys aside to light the fuses himself.  

To this day, almost every 4th of July, Dad and some of the family take the boat down the river to watch the fireworks over the water.  That’s the only way to see them.

tells a shaggy dog story with the best of them.   There’s a real art to telling the long, involved joke known as the shaggy dog.  Dad has great delivery, no doubt. The problem is remembering the whole story.  Early on, he developed a system.  He wrote down his best material and kept the notes tucked in the front pocket of his shirt. 

Our parents used to host cocktail and dinner parties pretty often when we were kids.  Dad would duck into a corner, surreptitiously refer to his notes, and then sally forth to slay the crowd with his latest gems.

All his shirts still have pockets, and they still bulge with papers.  I know for a fact most of those papers are jokes, now sent by friends via that new, joke-passing technology, email.

is a devout man.  He spent years in the seminary before deciding the priesthood was not for him.  But his faith and devotion to God have been constants in his life; something he and Mom passed on to their children.

When we were kids, we said family prayers almost every night.  As I entered my teens, I must admit that I didn’t have quite the appreciation for this ritual that I have now, in retrospect. 

Sometimes, in the middle of our devotions, one of my brothers would let one fly: pass gas, fart, release the Silent-But-Deadly hounds of hell.  Of course we all started giggling, then looked guiltily to our parents.  They tried to maintain the mood.  But more often than not, Dad would lose it.  He’d start laughing.  It was that highly contagious laughter that you couldn’t resist.  We all joined in, laughing until we were leaning on the couch, crying.  When it was obvious this train was not going to get back on the holy track, he’d waive us weakly from the room. 

Prayers called on account of laughter. I think God understood.

At 83, his ballet jumps aren’t what they once were.  The boat will probably be sold this year.  But Dad still teaches others how to navigate by the stars.   He worked hard every day of his life to provide for us.   He still tells a great shaggy dog story, and loves and supports God, my Mom and the rest of his family.   For these reasons and more, I’m sure you’ll agree that the Father of the Year Award should go to – my Dad.

What’s that you say?  My Dad sounds great, but you’d like to nominate someone else – maybe your dad?  Fair enough. 

If you’re blessed to still be able to do so, join me in telling each of our nominees for Father of the Year:

Thanks Dad.

I love you.

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