In which I’m alive, I think

We had frozen pizza and garlic knots for dinner on Tuesday night. I wasn’t terribly hungry and didn’t eat a whole lot, at least by my standards. Around 10:00 PM we went to bed, with a two-hour delay already called for Wednesday, and I commented to my wife that I actually felt more full at 10:00 than I had after dinner. And that was an accurate description of how I felt– I wasn’t in pain, particularly; I just felt like I had overeaten. A lot. And it had been a good three hours since I’d had any food, and I hadn’t had a ton of food to begin with.

I, uh, don’t remember a whole lot in between that and waking up around 9:30 this morning? I mean, I clearly managed to call in sick a couple of times and do lesson plans and such, but I was probably asleep for 80% of Wednesday and I mean asleep asleep, not just, like, tossing and turning. I just got out of the shower, the first I’ve had since Tuesday morning, and I’m pretty sure my humanity is fully restored at this point, but holy shit the last couple of days have been unpleasant, and the amount of material that has come out of my body in that time has been genuinely unnatural.

So. Yeah. This was supposed to be a four-day week, then a day got cancelled, then I called off sick, and I guess I’ll go in to work tomorrow? I was supposed to ironman my way through January and not take any days off and it looks like I’ve blown that, but … yeah, I suspect toughing it out and going to work would not have been a good idea.

So what’d I miss?

In which I’m doing this all wrong, somehow

I had a conversation with a couple of former students a few weeks ago, at the end of June, and in that conversation one of them mentioned that their mother had had to leave town unexpectedly because their uncle was dying. I expressed sympathy and was, for a moment, rather taken aback at how little concern the student was showing. The explanation came a few moments later; they simply weren’t that close with that side of the family, and that particular uncle was someone they barely knew. Mom had apparently expressed her own lack of desire to leave and had done so purely out of a feeling of obligation.

I thought about it for a moment. I get it, I said. I have a few uncles myself who I probably wouldn’t mourn all that much.


My mother passed away in January of 2020. If you were to read her obituary, you would come upon the sentence Cremation will take place, and a celebration of life will occur at a later date. It is now July of 2023. That “later date” was meant to be a couple of months later, enough time to let everyone recover from the immediate shock and to give a family scattered across the country some time to gather.

You may be a step ahead of me in realizing what happened instead, and as of today my mother has never had a formal funeral. Her ashes– this is in accordance with her expressed wishes, for the record– are in my hallway closet, perhaps twenty feet from where I’m sitting right now. “You just keep me until Dad dies,” she told me, “and then scatter us somewhere.” She left no will or any other end-of-life instructions. Honestly, everyone just sort of took my word for it.

(That’s what she told me. I promise.)


Perhaps you have put two and two together already, given that I have yet to reveal the identity of the handsome gentleman who sits atop this post, and given said handsome gentleman’s fine taste in hats and facial hair. The same night– the exact same fucking night— I texted that sentence about having uncles who I probably wouldn’t mourn very much, I got a text from my brother that my uncle Bruce was dead. I don’t know the date of his death, and I doubt I ever will; he was found in his apartment, and I don’t know who by. My uncle Jim got in touch with my brother and he told me.

Bruce was my dad’s younger brother, by only a couple of years; he was 69 or 70, I think. Dad is the oldest of four, and Bruce was the second-born, followed by my aunt Lori and then Jim. Lori and Jim are far enough removed from my dad that Lori babysat us when we were kids, and I believe both still lived at home with my grandmother when my brother and I were very young. I have not spoken to Bruce or seen him in at least fifteen years, and I don’t think I’ve talked to Dad’s other siblings since the boy was an infant.

We just … don’t really talk to that side of the family, all that much. There are reasons. I won’t share them here– I’m sure you can find a way to forgive me– and honestly I probably don’t know them all.

Bruce lived in Chicago for most of his life. He lived there the entire time I was there, but I only saw him a few times during the near-decade we were both Chicagoans. He moved around a lot, spending a lot of time in Jamaica. He introduced me to Bob Marley’s music, instantly cementing himself as someone responsible for a chunk of my brain development in high school. He once brought back some hand-woven bracelets from Kingstown and gave one to my brother and I for Christmas, and in response to our nonplussed reactions offered us, rather grandly (Bruce did everything rather grandly), to provide us with the cash equivalent instead. Which was perhaps $2, if we were lucky. He may not have actually had that much cash on him, either. I remember him finding me reading the novelization of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom and asking me if I enjoyed it, a question that somehow led to him taking the book from me and quizzing me about it. I remember this story because I didn’t know the answer to the very first question he asked, from the very first page of the book– he asked how old Lao Che was, and I insisted that information wasn’t in the book at all, which is how I learned that the phrase pushing fifty means that one is nearly fifty years old.

I would guess he’s about my age or a little older in that picture up there, which would make it twenty-ish years ago. I’m not on Facebook, but his profile is public, and I was able to find his page and scroll through his pictures. And the thing is, I have no idea what he might have been fighting or struggling with toward the end of his life, but the most recent pictures were shocking. He’d lost a ton of weight, his beard now halfway down his chest and whiter than mine is. And he was old; that feeling would be inevitable given how long it had been since I’d seen him, but my dad’s younger brother now looked to have a decade on him at least. He looked like he’d been sick for a while when he passed. I have no idea what might have been wrong. He never mentioned anything being wrong, never said anything about a hard day, or being tired, or not feeling well.

The caption on nearly half the pictures? It’s a wonderful day to be alive. He had friends; there were tons of pictures of him with other people and lots of references to people and tags back and forth. But that quote kept coming up over and over again. It’s a wonderful day to be alive.

And now he is gone, and I’ve barely talked to him in two decades, and I somehow miss him anyway. I never missed him when he was alive. What kind of person does that make me? I don’t know.


We gave my uncle some time to get back to us about some sort of service and then, having heard nothing, I asked my brother to reach out to him again. Jim had said that he was going to go to Chicago to clean out his apartment and settle his affairs, which I suspect was not as big of a job as it might seem. He took a while to respond. He’d been busy with last-minute details for his son’s wedding– a wedding that no member of my family had been invited to– and said that “his cousins” were having a get-together later that week that he couldn’t attend. This is a direct quote: “There will probably be some reflection on Bruce’s life then.” Did my aunt come up from Florida for the wedding? They live in Michigan, not far from us. He didn’t go to this “get-together.” If the two of them were together recently, they did not bother to reach out to my father or to my brother and I.

My mother never got a funeral. Bruce, it seems, isn’t even going to get an obituary. My grandmother is buried in South Bend; my grandfather, who passed away when I was very young, is buried in a family plot in Arkansas. I have no idea whether he left any instructions about what to do with his remains when he was gone (and I kind of doubt it; Bruce was not a planner) and burying his ashes with his mother seems to be the cleanest solution, but right now I have no idea what’s become of him. I don’t know how he died. I don’t know when he died.

He mentioned having a cat, in one of the pictures. I hope one of his friends has it.

But hey. The cousins got together. There was probably some reflection.

I guess that’s going to have to be enough.

On hope, ctd.

You may– I suspect it’s unlikely, but you may– recall this August 2021 post about Makyi Toliver, a former student of mine and one I was quite fond of, who had been sentenced to 45 years in prison for felony murder. I don’t know if you know what felony murder is, but it’s a wildly unjust fucking crime. Makyi and a sixteen-year-old friend attempted to steal a gun from a third person, a bungled theft that led to the gun’s owner killing his friend and shooting Makyi at least eight times. This, somehow, led to Makyi being convicted of murder. 45 years. At 20.

I’ve corresponded with Makyi a couple of times– not enough, to tell the truth– since he’s been locked up. Yesterday morning I checked my messages and noticed that his account was marked as inactive. I didn’t initially think much of it; maybe he’d been transferred or the prison was changing providers or something.

At 8:00 yesterday evening I got a text message from another teacher who had also had him in her classes. Makyi was dead. As far as we know right now, he died from suicide. Why “as far as we know”? The jail and the coroner are refusing to give his mother any information, which means we’re relying on– wait for it– rumors and secondhand information from other former students at Parchman.

Makyi was a good kid. He was a good kid and he had an immense amount of potential and he didn’t fucking deserve any of this.

I hate it here, and I’m not okay.

I am only barely alive

I dunno what’s going on around here today, but I got up just before 9:00 this morning and, as of this moment, I have been yawning for ten and a half hours. Both my wife and I spent prolonged periods of time today acting as immobile sleep stations for cats. I had plans today, dammit, and lazing around the house in a semi coma wasn’t among them.

I didn’t even sleep poorly last night. There’s no reason for me to be this tired but I’ve been a damn zombie since the moment I got up.

Throw away the whole bucket list

We went to the county 4-H Fair today, and for the first time in my life I tried deep-fried Oreos.

I think that it’s probably okay if I die now. Not because they were, like, delicious or anything, but because I have been suffering for the last few hours and I think it’s best if I am never in circumstances where I might put one of those things into my body again.

“Still alive” counts as a circumstance, I think.

Also, I rode a ride with my son, a ride that turned out to have an extra chest belt that I didn’t notice, and when I pointed out to the guy running the ride that there was no universe where the thing was going to fit me, he shrugged and said “You OK?” and then walked away.

I didn’t fall out of the ride, so I guess I was OK, but … is this how we do things now?

Today was a nightmare from hell

but then we went to the zoo and looked at the pretty lights, and that was nice. Have a family zoo train selfie.

In which you’ve got to be kidding me

We have had, despite global climate change and all that, a pretty damn mild summer here in Northern Indiana. So naturally now that we’re going back to school and I have to spend all my time around smelly-assed unwashed 8th graders the heat index has shot up to 105. I wish I could find someone specific to blame this on so I could have them shot. Genuinely. And that’s before they give everybody Covid. It’ll be a great first day.

That said, I’m as ready as I’m going to be; tomorrow’s session is going to be only partially improvised, which is about as good as I can hope for given that I spent most of the day only barely able to remember how teaching actually works. And I’m pretty sure I’ll be able to sleep tonight, too. I think. Maybe.

Expect me to be quietish the next couple of days, as most of my life activities are going to involve coming home from work and dying. For now, I’m going to stay in the air conditioning and curl up with Jade Legacy and see if I can finish it before bed. If Fonda Lee hits the dismount as effectively as I’m expecting her to, this series instantly becomes one of the greatest triumphs of fantasy literature I’ve ever encountered. I have high hopes.

I think I’ll disappear now

Hey, remember how a couple of weeks ago I had lox for the first time and I was all “Hey, that was good“?

I had another one this morning, and now I am never eating 1) lox, 2) cream cheese, 3) capers, 4) tomatoes, 5) red onions, 6) bagels or 7) anything at all ever again.

I am not going to describe the nature or the quality of the distress I have been experiencing today but there was something wrong with that bagel.

I had a couple of posts planned– I finished a good book last night, and some interesting stuff has happened at work in the last couple of days, but right now I’m going to go lie down and try not to die.