My Transistor Sister: A New Chapter

I’m not sure if you’ve noticed, but I have failed to post any new content on here for a while now. I’m starting a new project. With help this time. When we’re ready to launch I’ll share the link to our new site!

Transistor Love.

Brothers and Sister. Wait, that sounds weird.

Here’s a little sample of what’s coming down the pike…

The definition of transistor (noun): a semiconductor in an electronic device that switches and amplifies the flow of an electrical current.

Following its invention in 1947, the transistor revolutionized the use of the radio, simultaneously making music portable and more affordable. The common man was given the ability to take his songs wherever he went, forever changing the way that people listened to music and in turn, forever altering the way music affected people.

Music is the ultimate transistor of life force. It connects us and our experiences, often enhancing them, amplifying the electricity of our sweet moments. Whether you’re cruising down PCH on a warm summer night, dancing at your wedding, drowning in your own tears after a bad breakup, hell… even getting your pump on at the gym, the right jam can catapult you into a state of pure euphoria. Well, aside from the drowning -breakup-dude. He needs to open those blinds and take Adele’s album off of repeat.

But you know what we’re talking about. You’ve felt it, I’ve felt it, and my Transistor Sister has felt it.

If you’re anything like us, you’re always searching for it. Music junkies scouring the internet for that special track when we should be sleeping. Creating workout playlists when we should be… well… working out.

Sometimes I get lucky, sometimes I get help.

My go-to “helper” is my brother’s girlfriend, so she’s technically not my sister… yet. We’re hoping that my little brother mans-up soon and pops the question, for our blog’s sake.

Regardless of legal titles, Patricia is my musical transistor, my Transistor Sister. Good music is passed to me through her, and vice versa. Well, technically our iPhones are the conduit but you get the point. We have both benefited from our reciprocal, musical relationship and hope that we can do the same for you.

We want to help you build your life’s soundtrack and maybe share some cool stories about our lives along the way.

 

Thanks for reading and stay tuned!

Optimo Primo Says: “Viva Kershaw!”

 

nl-baseballphoto

 

Here’s a stat for you:

Number of no-hitters thrown by Dodger pitchers between 1996 and May of 2014:  0

Number of no-hitters thrown by Dodger pitchers since I moved in with my roommate Nate two months ago:  2!

You’re welcome Los Angeles.

It’s like we came together and formed one giant, good luck, Dodger-cheering robot. Like Voltron or Optimus Prime, but Mexican.

Optimo Primo!!

I think that translates to “best cousin” or something, not really what I was going for.

But seriously, last night was amazing.

Clayton Kershaw is the best pitcher on the planet. He has won the Cy Young Award twice in the past three years. His  ERA over that three-year span looks like the blood alcohol level of a Sigma Chi (2.21!). The strikeout titles, the Pitching Triple Crown, the All-Star games. His accolades could take up an entire blog post and the dude is only 26. He is a top-step guy and leader in the clubhouse. Not to mention  he and his wife Ellen started an orphanage in Zambia, Africa and co-authored a book to raise funds for their charity the same year. Basically, number twenty two walks on water. It was only a matter of time until…

A no- hitter.

15 Strikeouts!

Complete domination.

 

One horrible throwing error away from  a perfect game. The look on Hanley’s face said it all, the guy wanted to crawl into a hole and die after that one.

But Kershaw kept his composure and gave us a Christmas present in the middle of June.

As Kershaw dominated on the mound, Vin Scully dazzled on the mic, urging viewers to call a friend, “or maybe three,” and let them know that Kershaw was “doin’ a gem.” Vinny went on to make fun of himself and the constant struggle to keep up with modern technology.

“I always say you can call your friends. But now you can text your friends. Or ‘hashtag Kershaw,’ or something… So Twitter your friends and e-mail your pals, ha!”

So we did. I posted a status on Facebook and group messaged my brothers and some ‘pals.’

The realization that most of my friends and family, and Dodger fans across Southern California had been robbed of the night’s magic was never so evident. This Time Warner cable dispute is quite disappointing. At the ripe age of 86, Lord only knows how much longer Vinny can call games. Some of his fans are reduced to sitting in their parked cars, in their driveways, and listening to the first three innings of his radio broadcasts. Really, I know a guy who does that.

Vin is the best. The Voice of Los Angeles. A national treasure. Don’t get me started, I’ll tear up.

 

The last call I made was to my Dad. A disgruntled Verizon Fios subscriber, my Dad doesn’t get the Dodger games this year and usually doesn’t want to hear about them. But all I needed to say were a couple of words to throw him into a frenzy. The conversation went something like this…

“Hello?”

Dad. What are you doing?”

“Getting ready for bed, what’s up son?”

“Kershaw. Ninth Inning. Get to the radio. Now.”

“LETY (my stepmother)!!!! I need a radio!!! Now!!! Kerhsaw’s throwing a no-hitter!.”

I heard some rustling around and distant yelling, and then he hung up.

He never even said bye. He didn’t have to.

After delivering that final pitch, the Dodger’s ace raised his arms in triumph. Nate and I danced and hugged like Kershaw and A.J. Ellis, like we had just played the game ourselves.  I think we scared the hell out of our little Asian neighbors downstairs. But screw them and their ever-barking Chihuahua.

That’s what this is all about isn’t it?

Baseball? The World Cup? The NHL Final?

It’s about being emotionally invested in something that we have no control over. It’s about creating memories with people that we care about. Moments that will stay with us for a lifetime.

That’s why Nate and I watch every game we can together. That’s why my brothers and Uncle and I text back and forth between innings. The same reason I snuck into the district office break room with my boss and a couple of principals to watch the Mexico game. We muffled our cheers and high-fived as our co-workers… well… worked.

 

I guess sports fans are romantics. And Dodger fans are spoiled, we have Shakespeare on the mic, every night.

 

 

My Nose is Emo

 

The human brain makes me laugh.

 

It’s funny to think about the little things that spark our minds, sending strong thoughts and memories to the forefront of our consciousness.

This morning, I re-discovered a mango I bought two weeks ago in the bottom drawer of of my refrigerator, it was so ripe my mouth watered like Pavlovian dog as soon as I saw it.

I love when that happens. Like finding an old favorite shirt at the bottom of the hamper, only tastier.

Anyways, when I bit into the juicy little treat,  a rush of nostalgia overwhelmed me. The smell and sweet taste of the tropical fruit were my time machine.  I was with my mother. It was summertime. Not a particular event or moment, but the images were strong and potent, emotional.

When a scent enters the nose, it travels  to the brain through the olfactory system of nerves. These nerves are part of the limbic system and transmit signals directly to the amyglada. The amyglada is an almond shaped cluster of nuclei in the brain that play a pivotal role in the formation and storage of emotional memories in humans.

In English: The sense of smell is strongly tied to emotional memories.

A whiff of cheap cologne takes me back to joyful, hilarious times with my uncle. When I smell fried chicken wings, I’m 16 years old and the cook at Barro’s pizza making 5 bucks an hour. I hated that job. But I worked with my brother and sister and good friends. Times were much simpler then. My family was still intact. I never thought I’d be emotional over minimum wage.

Life is sweet. Life is short. We never know when we are at the end of a good chapter, approaching the precipice of more trying times. I’ve learned that hindsight offers much gratitude. I now strive to alter my perspective and appreciate the present moments. Life seems to be much more enjoyable when living in a state of constant gratitude. So take a step back… slow down… and smell the mangoes.

Post-Chella Blues

I think it was the moon.

I think it was the moon.

Well it’s been over two weeks since I’ve posted a single word.

But I have an excellent excuse.

I’ve been on the moon.

Or was it Mars?

Shit. I don’t know where I’ve been, all I know is that it wasn’t Earth.

As I roamed the polo grounds of Coachella I noticed a half-baked hippy wearing a shirt that read, “Is this real life?”

David After Dentist couldn’t have said it better.

After four days of existing in the alternate reality known as the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, it hurt to leave. It pained me to think that I would have to wait 361 more days for that feeling to return. Post-vacation Depression is a real thing. Look it up.

Now I know what some of you are thinking, and my Dad totally agrees with you.

The drug culture is definitely alive and well at the festival. The rate at which mind-altering substances were consumed, and the blase attitude towards designer drugs like “Molly” that seemed to prevail with the majority, was quite astonishing. Dangerous stuff. Especially in those conditions.

My brother got a good taste of those dangers when he got pee’d on as we tried to help a kid who had obviously taken too much of something during Ellie Goulding’s performance. Okay, bad choice of words, he didn’t taste any urine, but he certainly got a little pee pee bath. You’ll have to ask him to elaborate.

But all of that aside, there is indeed something special about Coachella. The feeling was almost tangible and everyone could taste it. I think it floated around in all of the dust that I’m still hacking out of my throat and blowing out of my nose. Maybe it was knowing that you were having a collective, shared experience with 90, 000 other people that contributed to the aura. Maybe it was the fact that there was nowhere to charge your cell phone (well there was, but have fun watching your iPhone charge while Skrillex blows the roof off the Sahara tent). Battery life was too precious to waste on browsing social media. If someone called me, they got my voice mail.  The outside world felt distant. Maybe it was the dancing. Or the bonds formed with the groups camping around you. Maybe it was the Spicy Pie.

Whatever it was, I loved it. Everyone was happy, everyone was smiling.

I’ve been reading Ernest Hemingway’s, The Sun Also Rises  before bed for the last couple of weeks. The novel is about a group of American ex-patriot writers that live in Paris and travel to a small village in Spain for a bull-fighting festival. After taking a much needed shower on Monday night, fresh off my shuttle from Mars, I got into bed and cracked open my book. Although thankful to be home, wrapped up in clean sheets, I was already missing the noise of the festival.

It took me a minute to find my place as I knew better than to bring a novel to Coachella. As I read the first paragraph, the hair on my arms stood up as my skin turned to goose flesh. I guess I had left off right as the festival was finally set to commence. Bam! At the height of my Post-Chella blues, my boy Hemingway came to the rescue.  What are the odds?  I didn’t even know what the damn book was about when I borrowed it from a friend. In his signature minimalist prose, Hemingway described the “fiesta magic” better than I ever could.

At noon of Sunday, the 6th of July, the fiesta exploded. There is no other way to describe it… The fiesta was really started. It kept up day and night for seven days. The dancing kept up, the drinking kept up, the noise went on. The things that happened could only have happened during a fiesta. Everything became quite unreal and finally it seemed as though nothing could have any consequences. It seemed out of place to think of consequences during the fiesta.

…There was a close, crowded hum that came every day before the bull-fight. The cafe did not make this same noise at any other time, no matter how crowded it was. This hum went on, and we were in it and a part of it.

…It was a fiesta and it went on for seven days.

Nailed it Ernie. Nailed it.

 

#TrapLordz

#TrapLordz

 

 

 

 

 

 

The City of Angels… and Dodgers

This post comes to you from the back of a charter bus.

The “China Bus” is the best deal in town… 40 bucks for a ride from Orange County to Phoenix.

The bus chain is run by a Vietnamese company associated with Lee’s Sandwiches, so in addition to your ride they throw in an Asian baguette with cilantro and some mystery sauce that’ll make you tear up it’s so good. The buses are clean and the piece de resistance is the free Wi-Fi connection.

Sold.

I don’t even have internet at home.

Anyways, I’m headed to Arizona for the last couple days of my Spring Break vacation. It’s been a productive break, that’s for sure. I spent the last four days cleaning my condo and moving into a new place in downtown Huntington Beach with my buddy Nate, a fellow Dodger fan. We even have a little ocean view from our balcony… booyakah! The Big Guy upstairs has been good to me.

I woke up for the first time in my new place yesterday to a call from my Dad. The sun was barely starting to peek his face over the San Bernardino Mountains in the east. Too early for a dude on vacation. I let my voicemail answer. My Dad followed up the call with a text message, “Call me.” My old man isn’t much of a texter so that had me worried. I called him back.

“What’s up Dad?” I said in my 6 am frog voice.

“Hey son! What are you doing?” He sounded like he was two cups of coffee into his morning,

What do you think I’m doing guy? I thought.

“Just waking up Pops, what’s up? I asked again politely.

“Were you out on Main Street last night?”

“Dad. Last night was Monday. And I’ve been moving all week. Not exactly the combination for a party atmosphere .”

“Okay good. Just making sure you’re alright, I just read that there was a huge fight down there between Angel and Dodger fans. Three Marines got stabbed too. Ridiculous.”

Wow. Check out the link. Obviously, my Dad was wrong about the night in question, the incident took place early Sunday morning just as the  bars closed on Main Street. The Dodgers and Angels had just finished the final outing of their traditional exhibition series before the commencement of the baseball season. Also known as the Freeway Series, these meaningless games offer managers the opportunity to keep their teams loose after Spring Training. The games also give local fans the chance to see their ball clubs play in a friendly atmosphere before Opening Day. Obviously I use the term “friendly,” very loosely here.

As a Mexican American Dodger fan living in the heart of Orange County, I’d say I have a pretty good perspective on the Angel-Dodger “rivalry.” And frankly, I am sick of it. Loyalty to a sports franchise should never beget physical violence. If you’ve read any of my previous posts, you already know the kind of passion that I have for Dodger Baseball. You should see my office at work…  there are more Dodger bobble-heads on display than a grown man should have. I am always talking baseball with people, and it never fails…

“Oh you’re a Dodger fan I see! Heck ya, Angels suck!”

Or

“Dodgers? Really? Come on! Go Angels!

And if I’m talking to some real fans,

“Hell ya dog! Fuck the Angels!”

Umm… no bro. How about we don’t “fuck” the Angels. It’s fans like these that make folks leery of enjoying a baseball game in Chavez Ravine. They heckle and badger the fans of opposing teams as they walk through the aisle to find their seats. Their favorite chant is “Giants suck” or “Angels suck.” Basically, “Fill-in-the-blank suck!” They boo every opposing player that walks to the plate. At the very worst, incidents like the Bryan Stow beating or Sunday morning’s fight take place. Two of those Marines will be disfigured from the wounds they sustained from the altercation. Disfigured. Over “Angels Suck” or “Dodgers Suck,” whoever spoke first is irrelevant. I am certain that none of the individuals involved, on either side, can name five ball players on the team who they so desperately needed to defend.

As a kid, I cheered for Mike Piazza AND Tim Salmon. I used to love watching J.T. Snow, Garret Anderson and Darin Erstad take the field at Angel Stadium. Obviously my heart yearned for a bluer shade of baseball as my brothers and I cheered for the Angels, but we cheered nonetheless. I was elated for the Angel fan base and Southern California as whole when the Angels beat the Giants in 2002 and  became World Series Champions.

The Dodgers and the Angels aren’t even in the same league. How many post season games have the “foes” played against each other? None.

There are obviously underlying issues at the foundation of this rivalry that have nothing do with what takes place on the diamond. Although only 30 miles apart, the demographics and political ideologies held by the fan base of each respective team are polar opposites. Orange County is a Republican stronghold, predominately Caucasian, and quite conservative. Los Angeles is well… Los Angeles. Prejudices held by fans, on both sides, add fuel to the fire. One simply needs to read the comments section of the article about the fight to see the blatant bigotry on display. I had to stop reading. The “typical Mexican Dodger fans” comments were in full force. Sadly, it is a small minority of fans that have tarnished our reputation as a fan base.

Why do you think there was so much backlash when the Angels changed their name to the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim? Neither community can stand to be associated with one another.

One only needs to read a little history to see that the Dodger and Angels can co-exist peacefully.

What was the first Southern California baseball  team that revered Dodger owner Walter O’Malley purchased? Yup. The Pacific Coast League Los Angeles Angels. When Gene Autry was selected to start the franchise ball club in 1961, he bought the rights to the “Angels” name from Mr. O’Malley. The Angels now had a name, but no players. The upcoming draft would fill the rosters for the American League’s two new expansion teams, the Angels and the Washington Senators. A week before the draft, Buzzie Bavasi, the legendary general manager of the Dodgers, gave his scouting reports to the Angels new GM. The Angels drafted Jim Fregosi with Dodger scouting reports.

Let us not forget the Dodgers and Angels shared the beautiful confines at Chavez Ravine from 1962 to 1965. If the two ball clubs could share Dodger Stadium for four years, I’m pretty sure their fans should be able to watch an exhibition game without slicing each other’s faces with broken beer bottles.

And I hold all of you Dodger fans to a higher standard. When you wear that blue ball cap around town you represent a storied franchise with a rich tradition. A ball club that ended segregation in baseball and helped a nation heal from centuries of bigotry and injustice. So enough with the boos and the “Angels suck.” Leave that family wearing the opposing team’s jersey alone and eat your damn peanuts.

 

 

Long Live the Disco King

He may not have had kids of his own, but nieces and nephews loved him dearly. They even superimpose themselves into pictures for him.

He may not have had kids of his own, but his nieces and nephews loved him dearly. They even superimpose themselves into pictures for him.

My Tio Carlos was the man.

In Finally a Dodgers Post… Sort of, I  promised to tell you about my uncle one day. Sunday, March 2nd, marked what would have been his 46th birthday, and he has been on my mind more than usual lately. Apparently, when I said one day I really meant,  in like one week.

My uncle was schizophrenic and quite possibly the funniest individual I have ever known.

He was a hamburger connoisseur and an incessant gambler.  Not the reckless, bet your rent money type of gambler. More like the win twelve bucks from a slot machine and cash out as soon as possible type of gambler.

I’m not sure if it’s possible to be physically addicted to a combination of Tums antacid and Lotto scratcher tickets, but if it is… he was the poster child.

He was also the only person in my life who loved the Dodgers as much as I did.

Often, I would pick him up on my way to Dodger Stadium for a night game and the first thing he would do is change my radio station to Hot 92.3. He was a big Art Laboe fan.

Then came a punch on the knee or a strong half hug accompanied with a huge smile… a physical manifestation of his excitement to get out of the house and take in the sights of Dodger Stadium with his nephew.

In his last few years, my grandparents and Tio Carlos lived with my Uncle Vic in his West Covina home. My Uncle Vic would call me up on game days and make sure I still planned on picking up his brother after work.

“Hey Aaron. You’re still taking Carlos tonight right? Just making sure, because he’s been ready to go, in his Dodgers shirt, since 8 in the morning.”

As soon as he had the smooth, old school jams pumping out of my radio, Tio Carlos would ask me to stop by 7-11 so he could buy some scratchers. But he never wanted to go to the gas station en route to the freeway, he was always hearing about some guy winning a minor jackpot at a 7-11 across town. I would explain that his chances to win big were actually less at that particular store, but he would hear none of my negativity. So I’d make the drive to the damn gas station and what would he do?

He would put the newly purchased scratcher in his pocket and save it for later. After all that? A rather anti-climactic superstition if you ask me.

Half way to the stadium, talking loudly over  George Clinton’s Atomic Dog, he would usually say something along the lines of, “What are you gonna buy me to eat the stadium Aaron?”

I’d shoot him a stern look and he would back pedal, ” Just kidding bro, I’ll buy myself a burger… just get me a Coke.”

His quirkiness and child-like innocence were infectious. He was always polite but definitely lacked any sort of social filter.

“Did you see that chick back there bro? With the big butt. She wanted me.” The woman that “wanted him” was an usher at the ballpark and had merely shown my uncle where his seat was. But I always played along.

“Good job Tio, she was a good one!” I’d say after giving him a high-five.

Never a dull moment.

Everyone always thanked me for spending so much time with my Tio Carlos. I call bullshit. I should have thanked him.

A person suffering from mental illness lives a lonely life. We see them everyday. The forgotten citizens of our communities, walking the streets or standing on the side of a freeway exit. When they look our direction, we quickly shift our gaze, careful not to lock eyes, as if doing so would immediately turn us to stone.

Comparably, my uncle was lucky. His schizophrenia had developed late in adolescence and he had a strong support network from his family.

In middle school and high school, my uncle was popular. A great athlete and ladies man, he loved telling me stories about the nights when he would cruise Whittier Boulevard or Elysian Park in his white Volkswagen Bug, a pretty girl with “nice boobs” around his arm. Those were his proverbial glory days and part of him would always be stuck there. If I came over and he thought I looked handsome or hip on that given day he’d say, “Dang Aaron, you look like John Travolta in Saturday Night Fever.” I think that’s where my nickname for him, The Disco King, came from.

When he thought I looked buff after a workout, I looked like “Arnold Schwarzenegger.”

If I was really lucky he’d show me the exercise routines he and my Dad used to do out of his Arnold workout magazine when they were kids. I would watch him do half-assed push-ups and dips against the box spring of his mattress and laugh until my face hurt.

After the initial episodes that came with the onset of his condition, my uncle’s behavior stabilized with the help of medication and a regular routine. He knew he was sick. I often asked him about the voices he heard. When he was doing well, the voices were merely whispers. Soft. Tolerable. He had the ability to distinguish them from reality.

When he struggled, the voices grew louder with a seemingly persistent and negative connotation. He would hear the voices of family members or old friends, even complete strangers.  During these dark times, the line between reality and delusion blurred, resulting in paranoia. The episodes also effected him physically… throbbing headaches, dizzy spells, and constant heart burn were some of the symptoms he was forced to endure. With all of the antacid tablets he ate, the guy could have been a spokesman for Tums.

I often made the drive to my uncle’s house, hoping to surprise my Tio Carlos and watch the Dodger game on his couch instead of mine. It was not uncommon to find him in bed at three in the afternoon, with a wet towel over his head. Bad day or not, he was always happy to see me. Always.

The normalcy that my uncle experienced during his formative years left him yearning for a regular life. As we watched a game, my uncle would express his desire to find a good job and meet a nice woman. He wanted a wife and kids. A family of his own. He saw the lives that his brothers had built for themselves. His nephews were graduating college and securing good jobs. Embarrassed, he would sigh, “I’m forty five and I live with my brother, bro.” He thought he was some sort of burden on the family, a charity case.

My uncle longed for the life that many men take for granted. The shitty job, the nagging wife, the mortgage. That was his dream.

I often thought about my uncle and his future. Where would he stay when my grandparents passed? Who would look after him? He was not the picture of good health. Surely his poor diet and the endless amount of medication he consumed would catch up to him. Daily doses of Klonopin and fucking Clozapin can’t be good for your liver. Poor guy.

I was sure that one of his brothers or sisters would eventually take him in for the long-haul, but I always hoped he’d choose to live with me. Compassion, patience and a good sense of humor were must-have qualities when sharing a residence with the Disco King (or me for that matter). Hell, I couldn’t think of a better barometer for a future potential wife.

What? You don’t like living with Uncle Charlie? Okay, kick rocks.

Obviously the Big Guy Upstairs had different plans for my partner in crime. When he passed away in May, our family lost it’s heart and center. When he died in that fucking river bed, we lost our innocence.

There is still a large cloud of mystery that hovers over the death of my uncle. There are questions that will never be answered. Sometimes I get angry when I think of him, many times I get sad. But mostly… I just laugh. I am truly grateful for every second that I spent with that man. He taught me how to appreciate the little things in life. How to live in gratitude. How to laugh until your stomach hurts.

The best Thanksgiving... ever. Obviously, my uncle did not like my brother's long, "girly" haircut.

The best Thanksgiving… ever. Obviously, my uncle did not like my brother’s long, “girly” haircut.

Read Across ‘merica

Some dude dressed as a knight from Medieval Times had the reading slot before me, hence the crowns. Tough act to follow.

Some dude dressed as a knight from Medieval Times had the reading slot before me, hence the crowns. Tough act to follow.

I can’t believe that they let me mold young minds.

In celebration of Dr. Seuss’ birthday, classrooms across the country participate in Read Across America.

Basically, it’s a chosen day out of the week where parents, district employees and community members come into the classroom and read a book to the little ones.

When my good pal Vivian, the former receptionist at the district office, asked me to fill up  two reading slots for her classroom, I was beside myself.

Every other Wednesday, this little taco shop around the corner from my office sells tacos for 65 cents, so I order like twelve.  I rush over  to Vivian’ s school and we eat in her classroom while the 4th and 5th graders play tether ball or soccer or whatever it is kids do at recess nowadays. Once in a while I show the boys in her class who’s boss on the basketball court, so they all pretty much love me.  An elementary school court is the only place a short Mexican can feel like Shaquille O’Neil. “Mr. Polanco” goes hard in the paint.

I always hear the little girls gossiping that me and “Mrs. Martin” are going to get married. Damn women. Ten years old and they’re already starting shit. But whenever I’m on campus for district business they always scream, “Heeeeeeey Mr. Polanco!” Makes me feel like a Beatle or something. So I love them too.

Believe it or not I’m actually a certified social studies teacher in Arizona. Or at least I was. I’m sure my certification has expired by now. Vivian knows how much I love the kids and suggested I do a lesson during my time slot. I was all over it.

Vivian told me that the kids were  currently working on a Revolutionary War unit in her class. Since schools are under so much pressure to perform well on standardized tests, social studies lessons are  usually limited to like fifteen minutes a month. Okay maybe that’s an exaggeration but you get the point.

As I searched for age- appropriate Revolutionary War books to work my lesson around, I struggled to find something that would keep the kids excited. Or me for that matter.

“What am I passionate about…” I thought. It took me all of two seconds to decide that I was going to give them the most important history lesson they’d ever receive.

The subject: The Dodgers of course.

Emphasis on Jackie Robinson.

When I walked into Vivian’s classroom, the students gave me the Paul McCartney treatment.

Damn I love kids.

After a brief introduction (like I needed it) I took control of the class.

I told the kids that I had initially planned to teach them about the Revolution but… “I changed my mind.”  I was Ringo Starr for a few seconds.

Once the cheering subsided, I asked the class… “What do you think we’re going to talk about today? What do I love more than anything in the world?”

“THE DODGERS!” The class yelled in almost complete unison.

I proceeded to ask them to raise their hands and tell me who their favorite athletes were. Any sport, any sex, any time period. Thirty hands jumped up and the white board was soon filled the usual suspects… Michael Jordan, Kobe Bryant, Derek Jeter, LeBron, Michael Phelps, Matt Kemp, Gabby Douglas… even Mike Trout made the list. Orange County represent.

Once they were done I grabbed the eraser and removed all of the names except for Mike Trout and Phelps. I also left up an obscure  Nebraska Corn Husker football player (some kid’s Dad was obviously a fan), but he turned out to be black, so I erased him too. I explained that if it wasn’t for Jackie Robinson, none of the athletes that I erased would have ever had the opportunity to play the games they loved.

Following  the introduction, I had to ask one of the students to turn on the smart board for me so I could play a three minute cartoon clip  that summarized Jackie’s story and it’s significance  for the kiddos. Smart board. Damn technology. I still remember having to clean chalk boards after class for my 9th grade Spanish teacher, Mrs. Ortiz. I sure as hell didn’t have my own iPad in class.

I fulfilled my Read Across America obligation by reading two pages from the  Jackie Robinson book, Opening Day, that my pops had gotten me for Christmas. They seemed to enjoy it. Maybe they just liked the funny voices I made as I read. I’m a pretty enthusiastic reader .

Next I asked for volunteers.  My plan was to have them act out a few scenes from a play that Vivian helped me find, based on Jackie’s exploits. Everyone wanted to be Jackie. Probably because I brought a Brooklyn Dodgers hat for the star of the play to wear. I picked a short Mexican boy to play Jackie and a tall black girl to be Pee Wee Reese. Gotta love diverse schools.

Next up was the “mean fan.” The first hand I saw go up was the smallest girl in class. Erin was a shy little blonde with the cutest buck teeth I’ve ever seen. I was nervous about this character to begin with. I knew that I needed an actor that would project their voice and give the class some credible, negative enthusiasm.

Little Erin did not fit the bill. But her little blue eyes looked so damn eager. So I rolled the dice and handed her the lines.

Little Jackie and big Pee Wee read their lines without incident. They weren’t going to win any Oscars with their performances, but they held their own.

When the “mean fan’s” turn came, I held my breath.

With unexpected confidence, Erin stepped up and bellowed out at the top of her little lungs, ” Boooooooo Jackie Robinson! You’re a buuuummm!! Go back to the Negro leagues!” I had no idea  a cute little girl could sound so mean.

For a split second the students looked at each other in  amazement, you could hear a pin drop.

The silence was broken with an eruption of cheering and laughter that matched the pint sized actress’ convincing performance.

Erin, chest puffed out, turned beet red and gave the class a triumphant smile.

I’m not sure if my lesson, or the significance of Jackie Robinson’s accomplishments, resonated with the students. I don’t know if little Erin will remember her moment of pure excellence in front of the entire class.  But I sure will.

What a day.

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The World’s Coolest Uncle

That’s right.                                                                                                        photo

I am officially the world’s coolest uncle.

The logic is simple…

A = I’m pretty much the coolest dude in the world. 

B =  Just about the time my brothers and I were hitting the slushy slopes of Big Bear this weekend, our sister gave birth to a little human, instantaneously making all of us all uncles.

Therefore…

A + B = AB?

No, that’s not right. Whatever. Math was never my forte.

Regardless of the circumstances and official titles (we all know who the  cool uncle is going to be- sorry Rigo), my little sister had a baby. And that is awesome. Lord knows how excited my mother would have been. I wonder if she would have been “Nana” or “Abuelita” or “Grandma Ana.”

The birth of this little human, aka Charlene Lilliana, coincidentally, also made my dad a grandfather. He phoned my office on Tuesday afternoon to ask if I was interested in making a turn-around road trip to see the little munchkin. Considering the aforementioned circumstances, the call was quite surprising. But I’m a sucker for babies so he didn’t need to coax me much.

After yoga and a late dinner I packed a bag and made the drive to my Dad’s house. Six hours later I was back in my homeland.

No, not Mexico.

Arizona.

Apparently, with this insane East Coast weather,  Snow Birds have resorted to staying in hotels nowadays. Desperate times call for desperate measures I guess. After driving around the Phoenix area for about an hour and a half we finally got lucky and landed a room at five in the morning.

Excited to get out of the full-sized hotel bed that I had just shared with my old man, I hopped in the shower, careful not to step on any stranger-hair with my bare feet. I wanted to head downstairs and take advantage of the continental breakfast and free WiFi connection for as long as possible.

It’s a bit embarrassing, I know. I must be  the world’s only blogger that doesn’t have a WiFi connection at home. I usually go to Starbucks or the McDonald’s across the street from my condo and steal their connection. Forget Coolest Uncle, my post should have been titled the World’s Cheapest and Most Dedicated Blogger. But my respite from paying that annoying cable bill is coming to an end: Opening Day is next month and the Dodgers will finally have their own 24/7 network, sort of.

After leaving the hotel, my step mom wanted to stop by a store aptly called, Buy Buy Baby and grab some gifts before we headed to see the little one.

I never realized  how much money was in the baby business. I saw cribs that cost more than my Ford Ranger (they probably drive better too). I bypassed all of the ridiculously expensive baby gadgets and went straight to the bathroom. The three containers of Activia yogurt that I had scarfed down at the continental breakfast were catching up to me.

I chose the cleanest looking stall and went about my business. I whipped out my iPhone to see if Buy Buy Baby had their own WiFi connection so I could check my Facebook without using all of my data (life isn’t easy for a blogger without WiFi… the struggle is real). Nope. Cheap bastards.

Suddenly, the bathroom door opened and I heard the unmistakable  sound of “some dude wearing sweat pants” walk in and choose the stall right next to mine. I remembered that my Dad had jeans on when we left the hotel so I knew it wasn’t him. Buy Buy Baby had spared no expense on their bathroom construction and had about 5 toilets, so this guy’s decision to sit right next door had me quite annoyed.

My annoyance quickly transformed into disturbance when Mr. Sweat Pants decided to knock on the stall wall in a soft, almost flirting gesture.

“No way.” I thought.

After a few seconds of silence… there it was again. It sounded as if the weirdo was knocking with the back sides of his fingers, so that the flat side of his finger nails were tapping against the stall wall.

I had read about this kind of thing… public encounters in bathrooms. You haven’t? Think Sea Bass and Lloyd Christmas in Dumb and Dumber.

I was in a bit of a quandary. The old adage, “being caught with your pants down,” came to mind. I did what any reasonable person would do in the same situation… I carefully lowered by head between my knees to take a peek at the “Sweat Pant Knocker.”

I was wrong!

This guy was wearing jeans. But his blue loafers, were definitely not my dad’s style. My old man was more of a jeans and tennis shoes type of guy on road trips. Was I really being propositioned by a strange, homosexual man in a Buy Buy Baby bathroom? I mean, I’m not homophobic or anything, but no thanks man. Especially when I’m pooping.

When I heard the tap of finger nails again, I responded with a fist pound on the wall that clearly said, “Back off dude!”

That’s all he could take. I heard a screeching laugh erupt from the mysterious knocker that I recognized immediately as my father’s. I could hear him gasping for breath in between howling episodes of laughter as I stormed out of the bathroom.

Filled with embarrassment, all I could manage to say on the my way through the door was, “When did you get those damn shoes?” He really got me.

By the time I caught up with my step mom, the embarrassment had subsided and I was laughing to myself. I recanted the story and she told me that she had bought my Dad the blue Top Siders for Christmas. When my Dad found us in the onesie isle, he was wearing a shit-eating grin AND a windbreaker. Damn it.

My Dad looked at me, still smiling, and said, “You passed the test man. You don’t have a girlfriend, you never wear socks, and you’ve been spending a lot of time in Long Beach. I’ve been getting worried about you.”

Thanks for looking out Dad.

One happy family. See... a windbreaker.

One happy family. See… a windbreaker.

Finally a Dodgers Post… Sort of.

Sometimes we got lucky and Tata would take us to a game.

Sometimes we got lucky and Tata would take us to a game.

As the days grow longer and the snow begins to melt…who am I kidding?

I live in Southern California. I’m pretty sure the average temperature in Huntington Beach this “winter” was like 78 degrees.

We pay no mind to prognosticating groundhogs in the Golden State.

But do not mistake our lack of harsh winter weather as indifference toward the beautiful season that is spring. Spring means one thing… baseball.

Dodger Baseball.

Saturday marked the commencement of Dodger Spring Training in my home state of Arizona. And I must say, it feels good. The knowledge that Clayton Kershaw is getting that big, Texan left arm loose under the Phoenix sun brings me much comfort.

Even my ears start to get happy around this time of year. They know that in just over a month, they’ll be taking in the silky smooth voice of Vin Scully.

I know what you’re thinking. “Happy ears? This guy is weird. It’s just a game.” For this kid from Arizona, Dodger baseball is much more than that.

I was born during the off-season, the time of year when the boys in blue let their bones rest and minds clear after a long season of sore arms and doubleheaders.

The first thing I ever wore was a Fernando Valenzuela onesie. There I am, red-faced and presumably still shaking from the traumatic experience of being pushed out of my comfy studio apartment, aka my mom. The onesie is white with elegant blue letters sprawling across the chest. The number “34,” in a contrasting bright red, flashes just below my tiny ribs. I keep the picture in an old shoe box on the top shelf of my closet. Proof of my lifelong loyalty to the greatest team that ever graced a baseball diamond.

During the middle of the ’91 season my mother packed my brothers and I in her Nissan Sentra, jumped on the 10 freeway eastbound and didn’t stop until we had arrived in Chandler, Arizona. Well I’m sure she stopped for gas. Probably in Blythe. Ewww. I hate that city.

I was four years old and about to start Kindergarten. Brett Butler was leading off, Mike Scioscia was our backstop and the Diamondbacks were still just snakes that slithered in the Superstition Mountains.

I missed my Dad, I missed my Nana and Tata (by now you should know who they are) and I was sure that the heat was slowly killing me.

As time progressed, we adjusted to life in the desert. My aunt had made the journey from Los Angeles as well, bringing my two cousins with her. The two mothers worked as a team, taking odd jobs with alternating schedules that enabled one of them to be home with the kids while the other worked. With six kids between them, I’m certain they struggled financially, but their children would have never known.

When it’s a 120 degrees outside, there are only a couple of places you can take six kids that doesn’t cost half a month’s rent. Needless to say, we swam in a lot of public pools and saw a lot of movies. My mothers would cram all of us into one of their cars and we’d head off to the local dollar theater. Equipped with two of the largest purses you can imagine, they would let us pick whatever movie we liked, as long as we didn’t go alone.

One of the most regrettable moments of my childhood came when I chose to see “Homeward Bound” instead of “The Sandlot.” Talking dogs over Benny the Jet Rodriguez? The damn movie is about a kid who grows up to play for the Dodgers! Are you kidding me Aaron?

I’m so ashamed.  But in my defense … I never saw the trailer.

Once the lights were turned down, out came those gigantic purses. Homemade hot dogs wrapped in foil and soda pops went down the line of kids like car parts in a Ford assembly line. We would stay all day, sneaking from movie to movie, soaking up as much air-conditioning as possible. Not a bad day for eight bucks.

When I played T-ball, my mom coached the team. On Halloween, we always had the best costumes. My mother and aunt volunteered at our schools. Like I’ve said before, I can barely keep my fish alive.

As promised, I made the drive to my Nana’s house this weekend to try and clean out her hard drive.  I failed miserably, but Nana didn’t care. She just wanted to see her “Mijo.”  She had an envelope set aside that she was dying to show me. Inside was an old newspaper clipping folded in half, yellowed with age. I unfolded it as Nana held her breath and tried not to pee her pants from excitement. There we were. My Momma and I, front page news. I was a Cub Scout, she was my Den Leader and we were watching my car race in the Pinebox Car Derby. The expression on my face is priceless. I don’t know how my Momma did so much for us with so little, but she did it well.

The day after she passed away, I got a phone call from her favorite Dodger… Mr. Steve Garvey.

As you can imagine, the women needed a break. Every summer, they would send the kids back to L.A. for a few weeks. My siblings and I spent the time with my Dad, and my cousins usually went to Nana and Tata’s house. Crunched for quality time with his kids, my Dad would take time off of work and take us to places that Mom couldn’t afford like SeaWorld and Olive Garden and wait for it… baseball games.

It never failed. Dad would ask us if we wanted to go to Anaheim and see the Angels or L.A. to see the Dodgers.

Like he had an option.

For three brothers who spent most of their time in the desert, Chavez Ravine was an oasis.  Mike Piazza, Hideo Nomo and Raaauuuuuuuul Mondesi were our heroes. We cheered until our voices were hoarse and ate enough Dodger Dogs to satisfy our pallets until the next summer. Dad made sure we never booed the opposing team, not even the Giants.

When our time in Los Angeles neared its end, we would spend the last week at Nana’s house. Reunited with our cousins, we wreaked havoc on our grandparent’s neighborhood. We climbed trees, rode bikes and played baseball with the local kids until we got hungry. Sometimes after lunch, my Tata would bring out a huge tarp from his garage and steal a bottle of dish soap from my Nana’s kitchen. Water hose in hand, my grandfather would keep the tarp wet as we perfected our head-first slides until the sun set. All the while, Vin Scully’s voice could be heard through the window of my grandfather’s room. Smelling like Palmolive dish soap, I would pick oranges from the tree in the backyard and take a break from my pop-up slides to listen the game.

Twenty years later, Vin Scully’s voice still smells like oranges.

Ray Charles, an avid listener of Scully’s broadcasts, was once asked what man he would most like to meet. Mr. Charles quickly responded, “Vin Scully.” Blind since the age of seven, Ray went on to say, “You’ve got to remember that for me the picture doesn’t mean anything, it’s all about the sound.” I feel you Ray.

I could write another 5000 words about my upbringing and how the Dodgers were always there, Mr. Scully’s voice permeating through the scenes as if he was my own personal commentator.  I can tell you about how I met Sandy Koufax and Vin, sat with Tommy Lasorda, made fun of Giants fans with Matt Kemp and served Andre Ethier unlimited bread sticks and salad. I can describe the beautiful smile on my mother’s face when she lie in her hospital bed, pumped with chemo, going through the box of memorabilia that Steve Garvey had sent her. I can share  hilarious stories about my Uncle Carlos and our adventures at Dodger Stadium. He was schizophrenic and had no social filter, whatsoever. The coolest dude I’ve ever known. I’ll tell you about him one of these days.

The point is that baseball is more than a game. The Dodgers aren’t just a team. The Dodgers are summers back home with my father and grandparents. They are precious memories with my brothers, cousins and uncle. They are my Momma’s childhood crush on Steve Garvey. For a poor Angeleno family living in a desert that finally had their own baseball team, the Dodgers were an identity.

So maybe it’s not weird that my ears get happy in February.

It still is?

That’s okay, I’m fine with it. Opening Day is just around the corner.

Namaste

I know… I know. A week into his blog and the dude hasn’t even written about the Dodgers once. Patience young Jedi, my first Dodger post is in the works. In the interim, I’ll fill you in on my latest craze…

Yoga.

Hot… sweaty… fast-paced… weight lifting yoga.

Naturally, as a member of the “I Was a Fat Kid Club,” fitness is an important aspect of my life. The implementation of regular physical exercise into my weekly routine has paid large dividends. If nothing else, my time at the gym or running in the Wetlands or surfing the Cliffs gives me an ample opportunity to unwind and “de-stress ” from the work day.

For one whole hour, my mind shuts out the world and synchronizes with my body. The results are euphoric.  The caveat of course, is that I must leave the world at the door. We all know how easy it is to bring your worries with you wherever you go. Worries are like body odor. You must make a concerted effort to rid yourself of them through positive action (sometimes we must  give them up to God and have a little faith… but that doesn’t fit with this simile). You can’t just keep putting deodorant over your stinky arm pits, you have to take a shower. No one likes the neurotic, stinky kid in class.

Another benefit, and at first glance the most superficial,  concerns aesthetics and confidence. Obviously, I feel much better about the way I look now than I did in say…

photo

Junior High.

This aforementioned confidence gained through physical exercise benefits me in all aspects of my life.

Let me explain.

Much research has been done regarding the strength of the mind and the amazing ways in which it effects our bodies. Mind over matter. It’s science. We know and accept this, but the the relationship is reciprocal. Even simple acts such as smiling or having good posture or holding a “power pose,” as highlighted in this informative piece from TED Talks, creates and promotes positive chemistry in our body.  This chemical shift in our body equally changes our thinking, behavior and reactions, even the reactions others have toward us! The results are limitless.  As the research says:

Our bodies change our minds,

our minds change our behavior,

and our behavior changes our outcomes. 

So it’s more than just an ego stroke. Much more.

All of that aside, the goal is to have  a well-balanced, sustainable and healthy lifestyle right? Pumping weights six days a week until I have no neck and look like a brown Arnold Schwarzenegger is neither sustainable or well-balanced. I don’t have the genetics for it anyways. All I get from doing bench press three times a week like some of the Arnolds I see at the gym is a nice set of man-boobs. Thanks Dad.  Man boobs just aren’t a good look. Then I’m definitely not getting married by 35 and Becky is going to be stuck marrying a dude with a C-cup.

It’s always a good idea to differentiate your regular exercise. As we have learned, the human body is an amazing specimen that can adapt to anything. Hitting your “plateau” is not only discouraging, but damn boring. The feeling had been haunting me in gym for quite sometime when my yogi-friend, Adriana, invited me to try some yoga. I was all in.

I was familiar with the basics… Downward Facing Dog, Happy Baby, I even had a pretty solid  Tree pose that I was eager to show off.

Adriana told me to meet her at the studio at a quarter past five. She also mentioned that there were showers there.

Cool story bro. I’m not about to take a shower in some public bathroom. I get pretty skeeved out when it comes to showering in gyms or hotels, even a friends house. I think I’m traumatized from a childhood of sharing bathrooms with four women. There’s nothing nastier than stepping out of the shower and having long black hairs stuck to the bottom of your feet. Or finding a swirled-up clump of hair conveniently placed on the slide of the bathtub.  Thanks for halfway cleaning up your hair pollution sis. Ewww. But I’ve left worse behind in a community area, so if you’re reading sisters (emphasis on you, Lizzy)… we’re even.

When I walked into the studio I was immediately impressed. The facilities where pristine and smelled like a Buddhist temple. Not that I’ve ever been inside of a Buddhist temple, but I’d imagine they smell of incense and jasmine and what not. The locker room and shower area were equally impressive.

I changed quickly and hurried off to Yoga Room 1 thinking to myself, ” I could shower in there. And the guys in there didn’t look like the type of dudes with Athlete’s Foot. Should have brought a change of clothes. Next time. I don’t sweat that much anyways.” Wow. I can be an idiot sometimes.

I should have known. As I approached the door to Yoga Room 1 I saw a young guy  in decent shape, sitting just outside of the classroom, red-faced,  sweating, seemingly out of breath. Class hadn’t even started yet.

When I opened the door I quickly realized why that wise young man was taking his sweet time to get back into that room. I felt like I had just stepped off of a plane in Vegas in the middle of August. You know that feeling, well multiply it by ten and add a couple of zeros.

I thought, “We’re going to exercise in here? I can barely breathe,  let alone hold a damn Lotus pose for thirty seconds.” (I found out later that Lotus  is  a relaxing,  seated pose). Like I said, idiot.

And where do I find Adriana set up with two mats and four sets of weights? You guessed it. First row, front and center. The perfect position to display my incompetence to the entire class. Half way through the warm up and breathing exercises I was already sweating like a wildebeest. By the time we had done a few Chaturanga push-ups I was just trying to make sure my puddle of sweat didn’t leak over to Adriana’s mat.

She looked over with a wry smile and whispered, ” Only 45 more minutes to go.” What a pal.

Before class, Adriana told me that she had brought her husband  to this particular class once and he had to leave the room, twice. That’s all the motivation I needed. Put a pretty woman in front of a man and his tolerance for pain almost doubles. It’s science. I wasn’t leaving that room until that instructor said the magic word.

As the intensity of the exercises progressed, my heart began to race and my breathe shortened. I stopped caring about my sweat encroaching on my neighbors’ personal space. The entire class could drown in my sweat for all I cared.  At least if they drowned there wouldn’t be any witnesses to the walk of shame I was about to take. Cool, fresh oxygen was all that I could think about.

Fuck that.

I calmed my mind and controlled my breath. I imitated Adriana’s Ujjayi or “ocean breathe,” (yes I had to look that up), and began to relax. When the instructor told us to grab our weights I had fully regained my composure and felt oddly comforted. I didn’t know how to hold a one-legged King Pigeon pose like these other kooks, but I sure as hell could do some triceps-kickbacks.

I escaped into that beautiful space where body, mind and soul are one, absent of ego and worldly concerns.  Before I knew it  I was in Lotus pose, hearing the instructor say the word I was so eager to receive 45 minutes earlier.

“Namaste.” I replied.

Adriana gave me a wet pat on the back and said, ” Good job dude!”

Obviously, Adriana’s not a mind reader and had no idea that I had fantasized about murdering the entire class with my sweat and was two breathes away from quitting. She was in disbelief however, when I told her I that I  hadn’t brought a change of clothes.

As we walked across the street to re-hydrate with some coconut water, she was freshly showered and I looked like I just jumped in a pool. Lesson learned.

Update: I went back two days later for another class, solo this time. I had to take the “walk of shame,” twice. At least I haven’t plateaued.

The best comment from my last post goes to none other than Ms. Becky Kokoruda herself: “Well done Polanco! Even though the word ‘porn’ still made it’s way into the post.”