Friday Night Reading

Almost time to go light candles with the kids. If you are looking for some Friday night reading you might look at these recent posts:
or
Is Hell Endothermic or Exothermic?
The Almost Warrior
If I Was a Professional Blogger

    Candlelight - The Maccabeats

    My kids can't stop singing this. Although I suppose it is easier for them than Hanukkah Gone Metal.

    Posted via email from thejackb's posterous

    A Curious George Chanukah

    One of My Favorites
    I inherited a Nikon D90 that I like very much. However it is too large to carry around comfortably and the zoom on the lens isn't what I would like it to be. Instead of buying a new lens I picked up a new camera the other day. It is a Nikon S8100. So far I am enjoying it.

    It is a point and shoot that I can put in my pocket and take anywhere. I am not a professional or even an amateur photographer, but I enjoy photography. It is on my list of things that I wish to gain expertise in.

    The Coach

    A pack of 6.5 year-old girls run after a black and white ball. Oblivious to the cheers and the exhortation of their parents some break off pursuit to chase butterflies, talk about their puppies or watch birds fly overhead. In time those that have forgotten that they are playing a game will remember and go chasing after that elusive ball. They will run with smiles on their faces, pony tails bouncing in the air.

    Eventually one of the teams will score a goal and there will be much cheering and laughter. They will high five each other and look for their parents along the sideline shouting questions like, "did you see me mom?" Sometimes older siblings will roam the sidelines shouting out words of encouragement too. The girls are very appreciative and lap it up.

    It is night time now and the last game of the season has come and gone. For one night the team is meeting at a local restaurant to celebrate their time together. I stand in the back and watch these girls laugh and giggle together. One of them calls me daddy and the rest call me coach. I stand and watch them play together and I smile.

    "My name is Jack and this is John" I say. It is the end of August and my co-coach and I are meeting our team for the first time. A few feet away a group of mothers try to stay cool as they watch us interact with their daughters. The weather report says that it is supposed to be more than a 100 degrees today so we're not going to do much. It is really a chance to introduce ourselves and to let the girls meet each other.

    It is not my first time as a coach, but it is my first time coaching a girls team and I realize how different it is. Maybe it is not right or not fair, but we take a softer approach to the girls. We will push them but differently than the boys. We want them to have fun and that is the focus, but when their are nicks, scrapes and bruises we'll talk to the girls in a softer voice. Socialization is taking place. I am aware of it, but not sure how I feel. I haven't really thought about it that much.

    Later on it will occur to me that we are much harder on boys in general. They get thrown out into the world and are told to just suck it up. Girls are allowed to cry and show emotion in ways that boys cannot. But that is a tale for a different day.

    We lose our first game...badly. The girls don't care and we don't make a big deal out of it. This is about fun. The days pass, we have one practice and then a few days later another game. We lose again. Several more weeks will pass and we will lose those games too. The girls have finally begun to complain about losing. John and I don't tell them that we don't like it either, that is not our job.

    Our job is to have fun with them, teach them how to be part of a team and then win. Not every coach approaches it like that. During the season I will have words with one who takes it too seriously. I won't let him yell in a negative manner. He'll glare at me and I'll suggest that he join me in my basketball game. I tell him that out there he can do what he wants and I assure him that I will match his desire to win. But I won't bring that sort of intensity to the girls.

    At home my daughter complains again that she doesn't like losing. I explain to her that the losses could easily have gone the other way. It is a true statement but she doesn't have the life experience to understand that. She doesn't see how we could have just as easily been undefeated. I do my best to remind her that we are there to have fun and to remember that she will be playing for years.

    She kisses and hugs me good night and I smile. But her words stick with me and I want her to experience winning. If we added a second practice it would make a significant difference. We lose because the girls are inexperienced and they don't do what they should. One more day would help them to remember but this is about fun and I am not going to suggest the extra work. Between soccer, school and everything else they do it is enough.

    At the next practice a group of teenage girls set up camp next to us. My girls watch them closely. They want to be like the big girls. In concept I like the idea of role models but I am not real comfortable with this. The teenage banter isn't what I want to hear. Some are complaining about their bodies and I really don't want that. I don't want my girls to hear the one moan about how she wishes her "fat ass and big hips" would disappear.

    It is getting late and soon it will be time for these girls to go to sleep. John and I call them together and thank them for playing so hard. We hand out trophies and along with the other parents clap for the children. My girls are about to say goodbye to their first team. I wonder if they will remember this experience or if it will be lost beneath the million other experiences that are going to come.

    We thank them again and get ready to leave. The mothers hug and the fathers shake hands goodbye. My daughter reaches out her arms and I pick her up. She is exhausted and I am happy to carry her to the car. There won't be much more of this. Even though for years to come I will be strong enough to carry her I know that these moments are limited. The thought is bittersweet.

    When we reach our home I'll carry her inside and listen to her whisper "thank you daddy." Just before she drifts off to sleep I'll ask her if she had fun and she'll smile and nod her head. And again I will wonder if she will remember this time with me. Will she remember when daddy truly was young and had no gray hair. Will she remember running up the field with daddy or will it get lost among her memories.

    She is softly snoring now and I smile. Why am I concerned with her remembering me as being young. Maybe that is my own ego talking. What I know is that I will remember this time. I'll remember it for a million reasons. This is where I discovered that when it comes to sports she plays like I do with reckless abandon. I don't love her any more or any less for this. It was just a pleasant surprise.

    When I walk out of the room I will still be smiling. We lost every game but one but they had fun so I guess I can say "mission accomplished."

    The Pre-Candle Lighting Post

    Here is your midweek summary of what has been happening around these parts
    And your blast from the past:

    Taking a Risk
    Chanukah Songs
    The Chanukah Father
    A Holiday Gift Guide- Some Unusual Gifts

        Jack Versus Life

        I know sadness. I know what it means to have loved and lost. I know happiness. I know what it means to have loved someone fiercely with a passion that is indescribable and to have been loved like that in return. I know what it means to lose that and to fall from the heights into a black pit that swallows light and hope. I know all these things and many more because I have lived my life.

        There have been moments of incredible turmoil and pain. I have undergone considerable pain and suffering for some people and some things. I have danced in that proverbial fire because that is who I am. I am a firewalker, a dreamer and a visionary. I am a man, father, husband, friend, brother and son. Don't try to guess what order I place those in.

        And don't be fooled by the tone or title of this post. This blog from start to finish has always been a place to air out my thoughts and to explore ideas and feelings. When I look back at the start and see posts like Some things stick with you, What is happiness worth to you? ,Thanksgiving by myself and What made you who you are?
        I smile.

        I smile because it reminds me that I have always asked hard questions. I smile because it reminds me of how much has happened and how I have come. The boy I once was grew into a person that has grown and changed. I recognize all of the pieces and I see the influence of time and experience. There is a look in my eyes that didn't always exist. There are lines in my forehead that bear witness to the march of time.

        In a few hours we'll light our menorah and celebrate the first night of Chanukah. I'll watch my children very closely and take more than a little joy from the light in their eyes. My daughter has two loose teeth and desperately hopes that they will come out tonight. She told me that she thinks it will make the holiday even more special to receive a visit from the Tooth Daddy and Tooth Fairy.

        A Decade of Dad has taught and is continuing to teach me about life. This last decade has molded and shaped me in many ways. It has set me on a path whose ending I cannot see. I have goals and dreams that I didn't have when I started. There is a new plan and much hope that the work I put in now leads to the promised land.

        This blog still serves as a cyber sandbox. It still works its magic. If you know me in ways that no others do it  serves as a reminder of things that were and things that still may come. I like being a dreamer and I like being a story teller. This place helps serve that purpose.

        But I also like to get things done. I don't make many lists and I don't speak of many of my personal goals. But don't misunderstand the silence for a lack of them or laziness. I always am working on doing things that lead me closer to the places I want to go. I have two feet in the present and an eye to the future. And I know from experience and from "just because" that I am going to get there.

        So stick around and watch because there are going to be some interesting developments and new stories to tell.

        How To Become A Social Media Expert

        How to Become a Social Media Expert is the kind of headline that makes me roll my eyes. I hate it because it sounds ridiculous. I hate it because it sounds like a scam. I mock the so called experts who charge ridiculous amounts of money to teach others how to be successful at this. You don't need to pay someone to learn how to be an expert.

        In a moment I'll provide you with the single most important rule of social media and then you'll understand that if you pay someone for working in social media this is what you should be paying them to do.

        Engage with others. Listen to what people have to say and have a discussion with them.

        It is not any different than the real world. People are social creatures. They want to be heard. They want to be useful, worthwhile and valuable. The people that we like the most tend to do a good job of doing that for us. It doesn't necessarily mean that you have to be friends with everyone either. It really just means that you have a two way exchange in which both parties feel value and appreciation.

        Remember that The Power of Social Media is simple:
         
        Power in social media is derived from your ability to convince others to respond to a call to action.

        Engagement with others is the most effective way to do that. Ideally that means that you develop friendships with others. As a father I teach my children that you can never have too many friends. As a realist I know that you can't be friends with everyone, there simply isn't time. However that doesn't have to prevent you from using social media to become far more influential than you are today.


        Engage, engage, engage. That is it. Talk to others, be real and be authentic.


        That's all it takes. Now you are a social media expert and it didn't cost you a dime.

        Still Good

         I need to revisit this .