Christmas 2023

Welp. Content update is beyond sporadic. But I'd be remiss if I didn't post the Christmas letter here. So here goes!


Christmas 2023

Dear Everyone:

We just got our twentieth Christmas ornament last month. Not in total -- we have a lot more than twenty, including the Big Bird that hung on my childhood tree and the probably haunted jingle elf that hung on Jennifer's. I mean that it's our twentieth art glass Christmas ornament, hand-blown (mouth-blown?) by Terry Bloodworth and Springfield Hot Glass Studio.

Many of you know Terry. The rest of you are impoverished, and while I pity you poor jerks, you're going to have to settle for the basics for now. He is, for those of you who are bereft, a glassblower, an artist, and was the elder statesman of the downtown Springfield, Missouri independent arts scene for many years.

Then he decided he had done his time running a shop, closed it up, and spent the next few years making things and selling them in shops and art shows here and there. This was sad, because it meant an end to visiting his shop during the holidays, walking from a near-freezing street into a place warmed by furnaces that were running at what I'd estimate to be 46% of the operating temperature of a fusion reactor. You'd walk in bundled under three layers and leave with a rare case of holiday swampass. It was lovely.

Not as lovely as his work, of course. I said that Terry's an artist, and I meant it. We have quite a few pieces of his around the house: vases, drinking glasses, even the shade for the pendant light fixture over the kitchen sink. His work has increased our home's Aesthetic Charm Numerical Estimate (ACNE) by at least 24%.

And then there's Christmas. Jennifer and I decided, not long after we married, that we'd buy one ornament from him every Thanksgiving to put on our tree to commemorate another year of marriage. We bought more than that, of course, candy canes and penguins and gnomes (gnomes are elf-adjacent) and gifts for family and friends. But the one thing we looked forward to the most was picking out that year's Terry Ornament. Even after the shop closed, we continued to make arrangements to buy them.

We've got 'em in all shapes and sizes. Glass balls, of course, and teardrop shapes, one that's over a foot long and somewhat horn-shaped, and another equally long, twisted affair that came from a gorgeous, chaotic chandelier that he deconstructed and sold the pieces from when he closed the shop.

We used to hang them on the main tree, but then came the Great Gravity Kerfuffle of 2011: too many ornaments on the front side, a tree stand that was too anemic for the job, and...boom.

Two things came out of that: First, we bought an absurdly expensive tree stand that was worth every penny, because it's built like a Sherman tank and an absolute dream to put a tree in. Second, we bought a separate tree-shaped metal table-top stand to showcase the Terry Ornaments, which I backlit with LED strips. When it filled up, we bought a second, less amazing stand. I've seriously considered learning TIG welding just to make a new one that would hold everything and look like something a wizard would use to air-dry his underwear. Terry's work deserves no less.

We got ornament number twenty just a few weeks ago. Twenty-one, I guess, technically. We had to replace one that broke in the fall. But this last one was free. He sent it to us with his love and good wishes, because it's the last ornament of his that we'll ever get.

His retirement is complete, now, you see. He's done. He's earned it. But I haven't forgiven him. That he would cut us off like this is selfish bordering on cruel, mitigated only somewhat by his coincidental decision to end on a nice, round number.

Twenty years. God, when you say it like that.

Twenty years of kids and dogs, neighbors we'd kill for and others we'd choke the life out of. Twenty years of hiking trails and fording creeks, of fights and holding hands, of funerals, weddings, hospitalizations and bedtime farts. Twenty years.

Our son's driving cars and picking out universities. Our daughter's starting to learn how to traverse the minefield of womanhood. I am still bald. Outside of some musculoskeletal issues, Jennifer's holding up well, and we're starting to look toward new adventures for the next 20 years. But we commemorated the ending of each of the last twenty with melted sand that was colored and forged and inflated and spun and twisted and drawn into something that brings us light every dark winter.

Thich Nhat Hanh, one of my favorite teachers, used to make a point of emphasizing that everything is made out of things that aren't it. Take you, for example. You are made entirely out of non-you elements, he would say. You are made out of your parents, and their parents, and on back past the beginning of our species. You are made of dinners and hasty breakfasts and naps and coffee and other people's exhalations. Hell, it's almost a statistical certainty that every time you breathe in, you are inhaling at least one molecule of Julius Caesar's dying breath. You're partly made of Julius Caesar, or at least his bloody, dying coughs. Merry Christmas!

And I think of that when I look at these ornaments. Some probably have his (arguably cooked) skin or hair cells folded into the glass. They contain his literal breath, preserved for us like a mosquito in amber. But more than that, they're made out of his eagerness, his frustrations, his worry, his sleep, his need to forget whatever was whirring around inside his brain that day and focus on the work. They're made out of his wife and children, some of the finest people we have ever had the good fortune to love. So every year, for twenty years, we'd pick out a piece of Bloodworth to display in our dining room and say goodbye to another year of that terrifying lifeline we call Family.

Then he cut us off, the selfish bastard. But no, it's fine, we're fine, it's all fine.

FINE.

It's another reminder from my teacher. Nothing is permanent, but nothing ever dies either. It just transforms into something else. The leaf on the tree becomes the leaf on the ground becomes nutrients in the soil that make new leaves. And in the same way, because Terry is now dead to us--

I'm kidding. Seriously, though, it means that we will find a new way to mark another fall's end. I have no idea what that will be, but I do know that it will be anchored in our lives and in the people we love, the people who change us, the people we are made from, because we are made from the Bloodworths, as we are made from all of you, and you from us. With a little patience, we'll find what pieces of you we want to hang from our tree.

But not in a weird way.

Happy Holidays. And, as always, we are here.

Jeff, Everyone. Everyone, Jeff.

Jeff the dog is so cute
LOOK AT HIS FACE

My wife found Jeff at an apartment building near the University Target in Little Rock. She was, in keeping with her character, helping a homeless couple get moved into an apartment when she spied a tiny little furry baby with no home to protect him from heat or traffic or an oncoming storm, and she thought well, that won’t do. So now Jeff is here with us.

He is skin and bones and covered in sores. He is a baby. He still has puppy breath, my favorite smell on the entire planet. And he is as sweet as he can be.

We are only fostering. Among many other practical considerations, Mugsy is NOT HAPPY. We have talked to a few rescues, and they are all understaffed and overextended. We have stressed that we will care for him and pay for everything, we just need their websites, full stop.

So I’m spreading the word here too. If you are anywhere near central Arkansas and would like a very sweet baby boy with puppy breath who has so much love to give to a cruel and uncaring world, hit me up at the gmail.

Christmas Letter 2020

Dear Everyone,

Well. It's certainly been a weird one.

There is a popular hypothesis that you and I are part of a simulation, that we are not "living" in the strictest biological sense, but are artificial intelligences running in some kind of software. This idea has a lot of adherents and a fair number of compelling arguments behind it, but the whole thing sounded kind of goofy to me for a long time. Then I lived through 2020.

This past year was like a staggering, drunken distant relative that battered its way through the front door, slopped Four Loko all over the rug, shouted some things about UFO conspiracies and the gold standard, and now appears to be mercifully passing out in the carport after weeing itself. It's upended everything. It's caused a lot of collateral damage. And it has, it bears repeating, been weird as hell.

I've heard people say things like "you can't make this stuff up" a lot this year, but the thing is, not only can you, I almost feel like you'd have to. Nothing as insane and farcical and interminable as this year, nothing with the sheer body count, nothing that includes not one but two stories involving Philadelphia-area landscaping companies just happens, surely.

At this point a plague of hamsters would surprise no one, so giving the simulation hypothesis serious consideration doesn’t seem like that much of a leap. So I started thinking about it. Imagine that you and I are someone else's program code, and that the utter lunacy of the past several months was someone's design. Imagine that whoever booted up this application watched me type these words and is now watching you read them. Are they smirking? Wincing? Watching with a sympathetic but knowing smile?

Thinking about all of this reminds me of the single best book dedication I have ever read, one that I discovered somewhere around, oh, maybe the fourth year of 2020. It reads: ”Dedicated to my fictional characters: I'm so, so sorry."

Because that's how you write a story, whether the fiction is printed or interactive. You create people who you love, and then you do bad (and sometimes crazy) things to them to make them grow. You throw a divorce at them, or an evil space wizard, or a plague of hamsters, and you watch how they change. It's how stories work because it's how life works. We don't grow from contentment. We invent coats because it's cold out.

And that's where we come to the only thing about this year that seemed to go according to expectations. No matter what unexpected twist the news brought, and it brought plenty, absolutely no one's reactions to those twists surprised me.

This year amplified a lot of questionable character, it’s true. The vicious dug deeper into their vice and declared it virtue. The corrupt found ways to profit. The loud got even louder. But the rest?

Those who could, they rolled up their sleeves and got to work. The industrious fired up sewing machines and 3D printers like their grandparents once fired up victory gardens and war bond drives. The kind cast their kindness out into the darkness like a searchlight. The honest hollered for reform. And I don't want to get started on the sacrifices of healthcare workers, service workers, and teachers, because we don't have enough printer ink on hand to send out a six page letter this year. Suffice it to say that we owe them all big. I continue to draw my hope and strength from them. They, and you, are my handle on the world, the one thing I can nearly always count on. By your fruits, I know you.

Don’t get me wrong, whether this is a simulation or not, I still have a long list of questions for its designer. But either way, for better or worse, it’s my home, and I’m grateful you’ll be here with me when floofy rodents start raining from the sky.

Here’s hoping for a more restful 2021.

We've No Less Days

It was about 18 years ago that I walked into what is now my kitchen. My wife's parents owned it back then. It still showed its 1960s pedigree, from the brown wood paneling to the off-brown electric stove and wall oven that barely contained a Thanksgiving turkey. I loved it immediately.

I was there to charm her parents on the off chance that I might marry her, which was still a somewhat surprising turn of events for me. We'd started out friends who were supposed to be having a secret-and-therefore-twice-as-good fling before she moved away to a new job. A long distance relationship with a woman I intended to marry was an experience I'd done once before, and not one I cared to repeat.

Yet here I was, in a foreign land, Arkansas, which I usually only saw the top of during the nightly weather forecast. I attended Sunday services with them that weekend, and upon meeting me, a family friend actually said "Oh! A Yankee!" Which is the only time I've ever been called that in nigh onto 45 years.

Her parents made it so easy, though. They welcomed me into that kitchen as if I'd been coming for years. Her mom beamed and made me a standard meat-and-three dinner salute. Her dad offered me his hand and a seat.

He was a tall man, somewhat lanky but for the old-man potbelly, which lent him a whimsically dignified air. The body of a man who took excellent care of himself but would not suffer a life without pot roast and pie. His accent was pure thick hill country, a high baritone that leaned hard into its r's and lilted its way up to a high hee-heave, almost a giggle, when it laughed. He had the proper nose and ears of a grandfather, though he had just begun his practice when we met.

He stood by his daughter when we wed, and when the preacher asked who gives this woman to marry this man, he did not say I do. He said ARR FAMLEH in that grand Searcy County baritone of his, and stepped back to watch his eldest girl hitch herself to a skinny Yankee with a bad goatee and a fresh tattoo.

We continued to stand by each other as he stood by her that day. Through a whole passel of grandbabies, including two of my own making. Through birthday candles and disputes over silverware. Through flooded basements and tornado damage and, most notably, the absolute gutting of losing his wife to cancer.

He was determined to hang in after that. To be with his family. To be of use. He got more sentimental. He cried more. He beheld, and understood, what it was that he and his wife had built. The tragedy was that he didn't get more time to marvel over it with her.

We arranged to buy the house from him when his mind started to go. He did not insist so much as ask that we please, please continue to make the house be the gathering spot for holidays. We assured him that that was half the reason we wanted to buy it.

Now the kitchen is swathed in cooler modern neutrals, a mottled grey quartz countertop and white penny tile backsplash. The fridge and stove have swapped places. The oldest grandbaby is about to take the bar exam. The others are scattered across the continuum from college to fourth grade. Jim was there to beam and brag every step of the way.

He closed up shop on the last Sunday in March. It was a long and difficult path out, as it always is when you've been dealt dementia as the last great challenge of your life. It seemed unfair, and still does. He made the best of it for as long as he could, understandably railed against it harder than was probably wise. But he had always been of use and could not envision a life in which that was no longer true. It pained him to be bound to a chair and struggling to find a handhold on the world.

We got really lucky and found an actual house for him to live in at the end. Not a facility, a home with home-cooked meals and people to talk with. Just down the street from us, in fact. The next best thing to him coming home and a fine place in which to let go of this world. My wife sat by his side and held his hand when he finally did.

We buried him yesterday in the Ozarks clay that birthed him. Under a cottonwool sky in the same tiny cemetery just outside St. Joe that we all travel to religiously every Decoration Day. There could be no church service in the midst of a pandemic, and he wouldn't have wanted it. Just two men from the funeral home, a handful of Bible verses, and my boy leading us in Amazing Grace. We laid roses on his casket. I whispered my thanks to him for giving me my family. And then it was done.

His passing has been an agonizing relief, and bearing witness to his death has been packed full of life. It seems both just and criminal that a story such as his should have an end, but I remind myself that it is not really over. That even if there is nothing beyond the reach of our senses, no Heaven or Nirvana, he lives on in the people whose lives he irrevocably altered. I have his eldest daughter and two of his grandchildren. I have his home, the creek that runs past the giant crape myrtles, nearly two decades of stories. He left all of this and more, all that remains of him, in our care. We are his stewards, and we will honor him by giving him away.

Who gives this man? Arr famleh.

Love in the Time of Corona

This happened last Sunday:

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So we're pretty much under full quarantine. We were waiting for the nurse to test negative, but COVID-19 seems unlikely in her case. But now my wife's lymph nodes are swollen and she's feeling off. I got a week's worth of groceries bought, and we could probably limp by for three more days on leftovers, peanut butter and Trader Joe's frozen veggie samosas.

We have things to keep us occupied in our pest tent. Games, books, a 3D puzzle of the Weasley house. My daughter and her stuffed dog and I made friendship necklaces. Screen time rules are suspended. While my kids watched some Disney zombie thing, I made and stained laptop riser for my home office setup, depicted here:

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Not bad. I'll start work on the keyboard/mouse tray once the sliders have shipped. And of course there's my new job, which started Monday. Bit of a bumpy start, what with no work laptop, but it'll be delivered, and I have things to learn while I wait.

Meantime, we're doing as we have been instructed. Handwashing, minimal touching, nuts and chips go in bowls. I should probably stop kissing the dog. I'm gonna feel that one.

My wife's dad may be dying soon, though not from the virus. She's dealing with that, plus her sister's mounting anxiety, plus going from working at home alone to having a full house 'round the clock. It's a lot, and it's only the first few turns of a Tilt-A-Whirl that shows no sign of stopping. The vertigo of that is still fresh and harder to navigate with everyone constantly sliding around and bumping into one another.

I'm providing plenty of challenges, despite my best intentions. I have what could be termed a robust voice, and so when I'm on conference calls, she's using noise canceling headphones. At one point she wandered in to my office asking why I was playing the fuck out of some castanets, only to realize that it was my mechanical keyboard. I did warn her about the keyboard.

Our coping mechanism is Dammit Rodney. Dammit Rodney is our invisible coworker. He's the one that's screwing it all up, far as we're concered. Just yesterday, Dammit Rodney made too much noise, forgot to close the storage room door, and microwaved a melamine plate, which stunk up the house and probably gave us all cancer. Dammit, Rodney.

So there are going to be adjustments, probably for a long time. But mostly I'm getting a deep sense of how lucky we are. There is no better yardstick for your social and economic standing than seeing what would happen if your entire house gets infected with a pandemic. We're pretty damn wealthy by that measure, both in resources and friends. I can't imagine how many are completely isolated right now, or wondering how they're going to survive.

It's people like them, those who can't work from home, who don't have a backup, who get laid off. Who are self-employed and watching their livelihoods teeter on the edge of ruin. Who have to live in crowded spaces where a virus can spread like a brush fire. Who can't not care for the sick. Those are the people I'm worried for today. Not us. And certainly not those who are intentionally congregating and putting people at risk to make their precious, precious point.

This pandemic is showing us the best and worst of ourselves. My greatest fear is that we'll watch that unfold for weeks and learn nothing from it. I know the worst will. I hope the best get loud.

Christmas Letter 2019

Dear Everyone,

I've struggled to figure out what to tell you this year. And I think the main reason is that I don't want to tell you anything.

There's a temptation to put a tidy little bow on the year. To write something charming or witty or Hallmark. There's nothing wrong with those things, but I don't want to be in that business. Not with you.

We've been through some things, yes? We've been through hirings and firings and babies and graves. There have been trick elbows and coffee stains and pontifications around a fire. Sunrises over the pines and long nights making faces out of the bumps on the ceiling. That isn't a tidy package. It's a beautiful, glorious, sometimes heartbreaking mess. As it should be. As are we all.

That heap of contradictions is reality, and reality is what lies beyond the reach of our concepts. It's what persists in the face of belief or a lack thereof. And it, this reality, this life, does not exist to be understood. It exists to be lived.

2019 gave our family and our world countless examples of that truth. Beauty in tragedy, oneness in disconnection, impermanence while nearly nothing seems to change. You can't put that under a microscope, though lord knows I have tried. I have to remind myself that my job is to sing to it. To sing to those to whom it has brought joy, and especially to those it has broken and burned.

The more I experience this life, the less I know about it, except maybe for one growing certainty: it is dead set on mocking my understanding. It doesn't want me to take the water's temperature. It doesn't even want me to dive in and swim. It wants me to know that I am already one of its waves. When I really know that, then I will be free to dance along its surface, to allow myself to get mixed up in its waters.

So I'll leave you with an offering along those lines, one that I wrote last fall while sitting on an actual beach, watching my children toiling joyfully to stand amid the tide.

To you I give the ocean
To you I give the waves
And how their churning stills my mind
And my boy.

To you I give my daughter's fear of it
And its overcoming.
To you I give her leaping, yelling
"I am God, parting the sea."

You can also have my son's retort
"Actually,
that was Moses."
Enjoy.

My offering, pleasing to you:
The beer drinkers at Bruno's,
The sand on the floor,
The panicked slantwise retreat of the crabs.

Also that second line in the Quarter
I know it was a rich white people second line, but still),
The sweat wrung down my back,
My three showers in a day.

My friends afar are yours, as is their meeting
The footsqueak of the beach
The worrying of jellyfish
And Jupiter, insisting over the sea.

I offer to you
My absurd toenail polish
The despair of seven months of tinnitus
That tick bite from camping.

I make a burnt offering of my fear
And my frailty
My impatience, my need
And evenings in a hammock.

To you I give my names
To you I give my faces and my hands
To you I give the story I call me
That I still pretend is real.

Please take it all.
Leave me empty
Leave me open
And leave the light on when you go.

Love to you all. Love to us all.

Happy holidays, everyone.

Video te iam, nisi

My 11-year-old son just used Google Translate to make the joke that the motto on our family crest should be the Latin for “I see your point, but…”

Pilotless DRONE, SIR?

This baby’s got range. Early on in the video you’ll see that it shoots both London AND France.

Stay for the sweet-ass clubhouse landing.

Them Thar Hills

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The beauty of the Ozarks is nigh on to cubist. It is angle and protrusion, knot and jag. The Ozarks are a broken nose that didn't set quite straight, a tombstone worn illegible, a lover's lips blessing a c-section scar. Theirs is the beauty of use and meaning and scrabbling for a life lived hard.

When the fall comes, the trees go to the bone and the woods are a wake of tottering, knee-walking drunks swaying to a hiss and rattle danse macabre under a corpsewhite sky. Everything is contrast and vacancy.

But in the spring and summer, the hills will rain their life down on you. They will pack it in your nostrils, rub it into your eyes, grind out a shotgun-wedding waltz on the legs of crickets and the bellies of cicadas until you can hear the heat. The hills will not allow you to forget that life only comes in a surge of mess and scent and howling, that sweat is sometimes a wedding ring and walking is often climbing. They welcome you, and they dare you.

I left the Ozarks 16 years ago, but my heart is still buried in their clay, stained orange and still beating, somewhere deep in a bootlegger's cave.

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Christmas 2017

It’s that time again. Here’s my ramblings for another season. Delivered on time, for a change.

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Dear Everyone,

It was Josh who gave me my first Nalgene bottle. Part of a care package he gave me before leaving for upstate New York and the Night’s Watch about one point five decades ago. I covered it with stickers and drank water from it. Fifteen or so years went by. Then I went camping.

Jack's Webelos den leader had planned a cold weather camping trip up in the Boston Mountains in early December. Weather originally looked to dip slightly below freezing, which we'd done before with no trouble.

The trees had gone to the bone weeks before we made camp. The wind was a gossip. We were down in a hollow and out of the worst of the breeze, but the sun left us to heap on clothes and hug the fire. We watched the night scratch and rattle its way down toward 20°, well below what we’d camped in before.

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The boy and I'd planned to string ourselves up in fancy hammock tents, but insulation is always a concern when you're dangling above ground. He asked if maybe he could go sleep in Alex's tent instead? Yes, of course, buddy. If you can't find me in the morning, go check the bench by the showers in the bathroom, okay?

Later that night I got him down and eventually debated myself away from the fire and over to my tent. I had a bunch of blankets, a sub-freezing sleeping bag, a fire-engine-red union suit and a whole lot of worry. Then some random neuron fired and I recalled Josh's Nalgene.

He'd extolled its many features and benefits in the attached note. "Once I was camping in cold weather," he wrote. "Before bed, I boiled some water, poured it in my bottle, wrapped a shirt around it and stuffed it in the bottom of my sleeping bag."

Aha.

Friends, I am here to spread the good news. My toes warmed instantly. I lay there, cozy as could be, and recited a very long gratitude list as I listened to the coyotes summon the moon.

I am grateful for my mummy bag.

I am grateful for my blankets.

I am grateful for my hat.

I am grateful for the lee side of the mountain.

I am grateful for the woman I watched playing with wolves yesterday.

I am grateful for the pot of veggie chili I had for supper.

I am grateful that I am packed into this nylon tube and suspended amid nature's annual death rattle, Dutch-ovening myself because of the chili, with no cell service.

I am grateful for a plastic bottle. A plastic bottle that has warmed me three times: Once when it was given, once when I recalled the gift and its attached advice, once with my toes nestled up against it.

I woke not long after dawn to a well-frosted tent. I made coffee. I dried and packed my gear. I came home. I kissed my wife and daughter and dog. I showered and shaved my head and eased myself back into civilization clothing and civilization eating and civilization life.

Checking out like this is a sheer luxury, I know that. But it helped. It helped with my fear and worry and frustration. But it wasn’t checking out that did it. It was yet again being dragged into the world of others.

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Watching the kids pointedly not swearing while rassling tent poles. Letting my boy show me every natural shelter outcropping he'd scouted out (three of them in total). Gathering with four other men and our children around a fire and sharing our stories. We communed in the death that is December, we passed candy and cocoa and opinions, and our species again seemed possible. Certainly worth fighting for.

I am grateful for this boy. For these friends. For this life. This life in which I got so damn lucky that I almost feel ashamed.

It's been too long since we’ve gathered around you. We need to get together. We need to remind each other. Maybe we'll cast our stories out into the cold, see what thaws.

My coat still smells of fire. I haven't washed it. I know I have to. But not yet.

Achievement Unlocked:

In the last five days, I have:

  • Driven 650 miles
  • Made and blind-baked four pie crusts
  • Roasted and braised a turkey
  • Made sides and gravy for 16
  • Reserved enough broth to make turkey gravy salted caramels (YES I WILL, MOTHER FUCKERS)
  • Waited to hear if my nephew has a brain tumor (he doesn’t, hell yes)
  • Hosted family overnight
  • Run a frankly absurd number of dishwasher loads
  • Hand-washed all the family china
  • Done an introvert-month’s worth of socializing
  • Invented the unit of measurement known as the introvert-month
  • Eaten enough carbs that I feel Confession is warranted, despite my Protestant-bordering-on-Unitarian leanings
  • Made my father-in-law cry

Every inch worth it. Tomorrow, I return to work, so that I may rest.

Good boy

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We found out today that Mugsy has heartworms. It was supposed to be a quick run for immunizations before we leave town to go visit my parents for Labor Day weekend. A sentence from the vet rather changed the tone of my day and the next couple hundred days to come.

I am restraining the urge to get sloppy here. I have written about what he means to us before, so I won't retread that here. Suffice it to say that my mind is currently churning on the topics of fragility and emotional need.

This goddamn dog that I almost didn't want to adopt because I would have preferred a rescue who was house trained, yet here I am prepared to burn your house down to save his life.

We'll soldier through. But today is for spoiling him (more).

Christmas 2016

Dear Everyone,

We got a dog this year. Most of you know we got a dog this year, and half of you are expecting me to say "we got a dog", so guess what, I don't want to disappoint: We got a dog.

He is small, bearded, not-un-Morgan-Freemanish in appearance, if not demeanor. He does not have the bearing of a person who might narrate a jailbreak or try to keep Brad Pitt from opening a box. He prefers a bouncier insouciance and general love of eating poop, two things Morgan Freeman is not known for.

Mugsy has upended things in the best way possible. He forces me out for exercise at least once daily. He demands that we take time to play, that we remember to lay hands on each other as much as we can. And he's a walking object lesson in the fragility of our circumstances.

Let me explain. Yesterday, my son asked me if I thought he would make a difference in the world. "Sure", I said. "Any time you touch a life, you make a difference in the world." I knew what he meant, but I wanted to make him push toward his real question, which was this: Will I be important?

That's an echoing hallway of a question. So I pointed to Mugsy, and I told my son a story he already knew, the story of a bearded baby pup who wandered a graveyard looking for food. Covered in bug bites, gut full of parasites. Someone saw him there, a woman saw him. A woman who cared.

That woman took him home and cleaned him up and fed him and took pictures of him with a ball and a sombrero. She put those pictures on a rescue website. I found those pictures. I texted them to my wife with a photoshopped speech bubble that said "i love u jennifer" in tiny letters, knowing that this was the most reprehensible kind of manipulation. And only because all of those things happened, because that manipulation worked, we brought him home.

"That dog", I said to my son, "lives better than half the people in the world now. Because somebody cared." Then, because everyone loves dad lectures, I pushed on.

I reminded him of Mr. MIchael, his Cubmaster. Mr. Michael got into an argument with a friend on Facebook over Syrian refugees, an argument that led him to get on a plane and fly to Greece. There he met children who had seen their parents beheaded. He raised money to build them a school. Now he's trying to get their camp better sanitation.

People stand on the sidelines and lob lazy criticisms at him for doing this. They want him to stop, but he keeps at it. Because he cares.

That, I said to my son. That is what making a difference means. You pull a puppy out of a culvert. You feed a kid. You touch a life, and you change a life. You change a life, and you hope that that change will be fruitful and multiply. No one will erect a statue of you for this. But many will bear witness to you.

I've tried to tell my children that Important is a pretty coat and Useful is what we reach for when we need to be warm, but I know how well I would have listened to that at their age. Why should they listen to me? I barely do. So I touch their lives, and I hope. Sometimes we parents cling to that.

And then there's that dog. The bug bites are gone, the gut situation mostly rectified. He's gotten comfortable with leaving exuberant chaos in his wake like so many crayon-studded dog flops, as if his own usefulness is to remind us that the current moment is all we have in this world. That the only question worth worrying over is this: What can I do today?

We joke about how lucky that stupid dog is, how well he landed. I've called him Little Arfin' Annie. But I'll tell you a thing: that little dude pulled a third-act Grinch on our respective heart sizes, so he's earned his place. He's a living reminder that there are plenty of others out there, others on four legs and two who haven't had a kind lady happen across whatever cemetery they're foraging in. We can't give them all sombreros, but we can keep our eyes open for opportunities.

We can ask: What can I do today? When we find out, the answer transforms us.

There's a song I can't let my kids hear until they're a bit older. It's full of cussin', which I enjoy. I listen to it at least once a week, and it ends like this:

There is no chosen one
No destiny
No fate
There's no such thing as magic
There is no light at the end of this tunnel
So it's a good thing we brought matches

We got a lot of matches around our place. More than we need. If you need a few, or even just a word, I'll repeat what I told you last year.

We are here.