My Family

I Miss You and I Love You

The following is entirely personal, and largely depressing, if you aren’t interested or up for either of those things, I’d suggest stopping now and reading a different post.  Just want to make sure you know.

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It’s been a year since Erin and I lost Beanie.  We lost Beanie at 32-weeks of pregnancy.  It was, it was nothing we could’ve changed.  The problem that took Beanie from us was started before we even knew Erin was pregnant, and we knew before her period.  It was ultimately just bad luck, very bad luck.

Having said that, it doesn’t change much, it doesn’t really change anything.  I don’t know if I would change anything.  We could’ve found out sooner, maybe it would’ve hurt less, maybe it would hurt less now, but I wouldn’t have had those blissful months.  I’ve never had months that happy.  I think I will in the future, but those were wonderful times, and I don’t think I’d take those away.

Time has, as time does, dulled the pain.  I’m thankful for that.

Getting in the car and crying the whole time was just…it just was.  The car is my thinking time, and for many months if I was alone in the car, I was crying.  I think I can driver safer today, not crying.

But there is still pain.  I’ve found a peace with pain.  An embrace of it.  Crying, today, in some ways, it doesn’t hurt.  It feels honest.  It hurts to talk about losing Beanie, every time it hurts, but that’s not “bad”.  It just is.  I enjoy talking about her actually, at least on occasion.  I may cry while doing it, but it feels good to do it.  It’s something I don’t think people get, but they just need to trust me here.

I do think about her.  I think about her a lot.  Not everyday, not for days on end on occasion, but I probably think about her more days than not.  She’s my baby girl.  How could I not?

I do wonder what she would’ve been like, as a child, as a teenager, as an adult, I wonder.  I wonder, as is I think natural, about those lost potentials.  I miss that I’ll never experience those with her.  I would’ve liked too.

I’ll always wish I could’ve.  And that’s good.

At the end of the day I’ve learned somethings, they may very well be of no use to anyone but me, but that never stopped me from sharing before.  I’ve learned much purer versions of many emotions, namely love and fear.

I can’t say I know love like many parents know love, but I have an inkling of how little I know of love.  I love many people in this world, and many experiences, and many things, and I know I know very little about that word.  I just have a taste for how powerful it can be.

Maybe what I’ve learned more about, for better or worse, is fear.  I think I can pretty comfortably say I understand fear.  I’ve learned to understand fear in and out.  With this current pregnancy, oh, for those who don’t know, Erin is 24 weeks pregnant, it’s good stuff.  But with this pregnancy, Booger, I can feel the terror, shear terror.  Slight pains, slight things that the perinatologist is keeping an eye, and he is very confident everything is dandy for us, but I live in fear.  I’ve learned how randomly things can go wrong, horribly wrong, and I fear that moment, I fear that moment coming into existence.  Logic be damned, it terrifies me.

I’ve never been a person to live in fear.  I respect and listen to fear, it’s a good emotion, it’s an informative emotion, but it definitely has a much stronger pull in my life today.  I’m not unusually scared of climbing a cliff, I’m not scared of a car getting to close, I’m terrified of anything that happens to Erin and Boog, a slip and fall, a strange pain, anything, anything different that isn’t easily and quickly definable as “normal”, anything that could be “a sign”.  It’s an amazing, a powerful, feeling.

But for all this, let me again be very clear, I wouldn’t, even at the hardest of time, give up my time with Bean, as third hand as it may have been.  (As a guy, what else can we do but feel a stomach a move?  It is a wonderful feeling though.)  I don’t want you to think, after the previous paragraphs that I’m worse off for the experience.  I’m different for it, but I’m happy to have had it.  She was my baby girl.

I just wish I could’ve had a lifetime with her.  I never can, but I’d do almost anything too.

But it was what it was, and that can’t and couldn’t have been changed.  That much I know.  My job today, everyday, one of many actually, but the important one, is to, while honoring Beanie, to create a happy life for Boog to come into.  I can’t do anything for Beanie but love and honor her memory, but for Boog, I can do a lot for Boog, and I’ll do whatever that is, whatever that must be, because I want Boog to have a great life.

And I can’t provide a lot, but damn if Boog ain’t going to at least have the love of it’s Papa.  (Mama’s going to do the same I’m sure.)  I’ll at least make sure of that Boog is well loved.

And I can’t think of anything I’d rather do in this life.

But I will also always miss my little Beanie.  I love you girl.  You did have that, you always will have that.

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Later Addition, Erin, Mommy’s Post


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Death Valley Ice

Death Valley, Bad Water dry lake

This is Badwater, the lowest point in North America.  As it’s in Death Valley, average temperature of extremely hot, it’s dry most of the time.

As with other dry lake beds, this one’s surface is mostly salt.  The strange thing about walking across it though, at least for us Midwestern boys, is that in most ways, it’s just like walking across ice.

No, it’s not slippery, and as you can tell from the t-shirt Erin has on, it’s not cold, but it’s like ice.  It’s got that coloring, the color of ice with a touch of snow on top of it.  It’s got bubbles, not real bubbles, I think, I don’t quite know how to define them in two words, but those areas, largish areas where there’s a bubble and if you step on it, it breaks.  It makes that sound that old ice makes, that slightly cracking sound with every step.

I found the whole time I walked across it, I was afraid I was going to fall into some freezing cold water and die, despite the 90 degree temps.

A very odd experience, but also very beautiful.


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Stella, My Loving Pit Bull Terrier

Stella, My Loving Pit Bull Terrier

Stella loves her walks, no doubts about that one.  And she really loves her walks in new and strange places, which this wasn’t entirely, but it isn’t a common walk.  And perhaps most importantly, because it keeps Erin and I sane, it’s a longish, so Stella is tired for a day or two.  That’s bliss.


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20 Mule Team Road, Death Valley


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Pit Bull In Your Face!

Stella the Scary Pit Bull


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Sunday Afternoon Lunch and Nap

Bowl of Fire Nap


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My Three Hot Bitches in a Cave (Title approved by Erin)


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Esther the Pug on a Rock


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Roxy and Erin


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Another Forcing Erin to Turn and Look Moment


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Mom and Ken at Valley of Fire


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I Didn’t Kill It! Really.

This was actually after a hard day of sleep.  She lives a tough life.


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Beagle in the Ear


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Erin in Death Valley with Flowers


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The Basis – Temporary Textures on Rocks

So what is Temporary Textures on Rocks?  I can’t tell you for sure, but here’s my current thinking, which will probably change as I write it out, and I’m going to start with the short thoughts, get them said then deal with the big thought.  (If you think all of the following is artistic BS, I’m not going to disagree.  As a former boss used to call it, “mental masturbation”, but as much as that may be true, it’s also necessary.  Or at least enjoyable.)

It’s a study on texture.  The texture of light through a medium.  The texture of rock.  The texture of whatever is in the water or has come to rest on the rock.  It’s the study of a layer of texture on top of another layer of texture, with other textures mixed in.  It’s a study of the prominence of one texture over another, visually, with the need for the underlying texture, a texture to form the basis.

It’s an exploration of water and rock.  The first I had lots of in the Midwest, but while occasionally I was fascinated by it, water was in the end always there.  In Vegas it’s not, most of the time.  Here it’s fascinating when you get those rare days when you get flowing water.  In Vegas you do have plenty of rocks though, more than anyone would know what to do with, in all kinds of variety.

Temporary Textures on Rocks is an exploration of time.  It’s an exploration of the prominence of a very temporary texture, the texture of light, the texture of light through water, on to a texture with great, but still limited, permanence.  It’s about the speed of change of one thing, water and light, and the slow but wearing, steady change the water brings to the rock.  It’s about how those two are intertwined inexorably and unending-ly.

It’s a study of the the relationship between a very short term, fleeting texture and a much longer term, but ultimately impermanent texture.  It’s the study of their interaction, the interaction they have with other textures and what the mixture of all these textures and shapes create.  What they create in their complementing of each other, and their contrasting.  And how each is ultimately unfulfilled without the other, and they don’t exist without each other.

At the end of the day, I’m pretty sure, but not completely sure, this project, Temporary Textures on Rocks, is about, for me, mortality.  And that’s something I’ve thought a lot about over the past year.


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When You’re the Boss, and When You’re Not

Sid, a 6 week old puppy, seemed to think he should be alpha over all dogs, and most people as well.  Alas, when doing this around a 3 year old 45 pound pure muscle pit bull, the result is some time with a beagle on his back learning he may not be in charge.

And just to be clear, Stella was very nice about flipping him.  Enough force to do it, not enough to hurt him.  She taught him his lesson, with no harm done, except to his puppy pride.


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Crazy Dog Up a Canyon on a Dam


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A Little Sunday Action


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Dogs Walking Dogs

Walking the dogs is fun for us, largely because we go for a hike someplace cool and pretty.

We do though have the occassional problem of Stella, an energitic pit bull running too and fro.  She doesn’t run off, and she won’t, but she likes to stick her nose into snake holes and generally just bounces off everything and anything she can.

The pug, Esther, is just slow.

We were coming back from a hike, Erin, her mom and I, her mom needed a bathroom, and quick.  The trail was to busy for options other than the toliet at the trailhead.  I dragged her pug as fast as I could but it’s annoying.

Until Erin hit on a genius, and as with many great ideas, obvious, solution.  We let the pit bull pull the pug.

Stella got a resistance workout.  Esther got used to having to walk faster.  It’s also supposed to be good for building pack mentality and such.

Any which way, I like it.


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Stuff in the Backpack

So I asked for a fresh battery out of the backpack I was carrying.  The backpack has two pockets, a big one which is partially filled by a water bladder (water in the desert is good) and a smaller one for the knick knacks.

This is just some, some, of the stuff from just the smaller pocket.

This doesn’t include all the other stuff from the big pocket or the camera gear on my waist.

We pack too much crap.


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