Wednesday, December 28, 2011

A Band You Should Listen To: Elbow

Trying out a new thing here at (802)zoom called "A Band You Should Listen To".  Basically, I like bands and tell you to listen to them.  Pretty easy.

Band: Elbow
Origin: England
Genre: Rock, indie, progressive
Lineup: Guy Garvey/lead vocal and guitar, Mark Potter/lead guitar, Craig Potter/keys, Pete Turner/bass, Richard Jupp/percussion

Elbow is wicked popular outside the U.S.  Front man Guy Garvey has an incredibly strong tenor voice and is a talented lyricist, and the rest of the band's instrumental and vocal support can be anywhere from solid rock to inspiring to chillingly haunting.  The 2001 song "Newborn" from the album Asleep in the Back got some airtime in the U.S., and I've heard "Grounds for Divorce" from 2008's Seldom Seen Kid on the radio a few times, too.  The clips from live shows that I've seen are outstanding.

Here are some of my favorite songs...

Powder Blue

Mirrorball

Red

Newborn (live)

Okay, that's Elbow.  What do you think?

I'm not a deadbeat dad. I'm a desperate dad.

I'm way behind in child support.  Let's just throw that out there right now.  Thousands.  I've got nothing to hide.

Why am I so far behind?  Because I have to survive.  There are people who don't want to hear it, and that's absolutely fine.  Hell, I don't even want to hear it, let alone say it, because it sounds as much like a pathetic excuse to me as I'm sure it does to you.  But it's the truth.

Here's the story.

In 2005, my friend and I went to a club to meet up with his girlfriend.  She was there with a girl who I happened to have gone to high school with.  We danced together, exchanged numbers, and began hanging out.  We spent a lot of time together, and eventually, for whatever reason we were thinking at the time, got pregnant.  It wasn't a mistake, put it that way.

We moved in together, tried to do the right thing, and pretended to be a family.  Our son, Landon, was born in July 2006 and we stayed together for just over a year after that.

His mother, before we were together, was a partier.  She drank whatever, smoked whatever, snorted whatever.  I know because I saw it.  She cleaned up when she was pregnant, but within a month of Landon's birth she was smoking pot again.  Two months later I walked up to her car (without her knowing) and saw her and a friend snorting percocets off the dashboard.  Within six months, she was out partying until 3:00 in the morning at least two nights a week during the middle of the week and at least one more night on the weekends.

Since I was the only one working, it was all money that I earned going up her nose and paying off her credit card. (Our meals, of course, were taken care of because we "forgot" to tell the state that I was living there and she and Landon received lots of assistance including WIC, EBT, and health insurance.)  Meanwhile, I had to come up with an excuse every month for her father about why rent was late (we rented her parents' house) and eventually I had my car repossessed because I couldn't pay for it.

She began spending lots of time with guys, some of which were my close friends, but told me in no uncertain terms that I was not welcome.  I was obviously pretty skeptical, but already so emotionally unattached that it didn't matter much to me.  Right around the end of August, though, when she and my debit card went to New Jersey for a weekend with a guy and another couple, I threw in the towel.  I called her parents, informed them that I'd had enough, and that Landon and I were moving to my parents' house.

Upon arrival home, she had a meltdown, threatened suicide, and we got a police escort to the hospital where she checked into rehab.  Three months later she and a counselor decided it was time for her to be a mom again, so Landon was, whether I liked it or not, sent to live with her.  Things between us stayed cordial, even friendly at times.  I managed a 60-80 hour work schedule and still made as much time for Landon as possible, and I paid what we agreed was a fair amount of child support every month (read: not by court order).

Then in August of 2008 it all came to a grinding halt.  I had Landon over night on a Wednesday, and Thursday morning -- like we did every week -- I was on my way back to her house to drop him off before work.  With no answer at her phone, I called her mother, who lives four hours away to help track her down.  Finally, at 12:30 in the afternoon, she wakes up at her boyfriend's house.  Justifiably mad, I lit into her a little, though I had to watch my tongue in front of our two year-old.  That day was the end of our niceties (and my freebie child support donations).

Papers were filed with courts from both of us, and a string of seven dates with a judge over the next five months followed.  Lo and behold, I lost almost all of my parental rights, save for visitation, was ordered to pay a hefty amount of child support each month, and was slapped with a huge balance of owed child support from the time I stopped paying to the time of the judgement.

After a rough year working at a job that I liked but one that I was not able to provide what was demanded of me, I decided that the best thing for my son and I would be for me to find something else to do.  I gave my notice and was relieved of my duties at Thanksgiving.

Seven weeks and one burned professional bridge later, I was informed that my son and his mother would be moving to South Carolina in July with her new boyfriend, a guy that she had been seeing -- at the time the news was delivered to me -- for less than six months.

I was absolutely crushed.  I wept openly for two days, and I still remember that moment as one of the two worst things that have ever happened to me -- the other being the passing of my father.

I decided that, while working full-time waiting tables, I would start my own business writing about my passion -- stock car racing and try to make a living at it.  I spent as much time as possible with Landon, including bringing him to a few races (which he thoroughly enjoyed) and soaking it all up while I had the chance.  He moved in late July and I became a workaholic.

I struggled financially, both at the restaurant and with my writing, and bills began piling up.  I was usually unable to meet the full weekly child support payments, although I always paid something every week, no matter if it was the full amount or fifteen lousy bucks.  Needless to say, it wasn't ideal, and my already-strained relationship with my ex only worsened.  I was informed on once occasion that I was "no longer Landon's parent" and another time, while in a hospital waiting room on the night that my father died, that I would never speak to Landon on the phone again.

Things started turning around within a year financially, and the support payments (and everything else) got better.  There was a good stretch, but then the restaurant cut me back to one day a week, the bills took back over, and I desperately began looking for a way out of my situation.  As the racing season wound down, I was for all intents and purposes unemployed.  There was a period, even as recently as November, where the only bills I paid were rent, electricity, gas for my car, and food.  No cable, no phone, no insurance, and yes, no child support.

In the mean time, as punishment I suppose, I was cut off from contact with Landon completely and humiliated online by a few folks after being exposed as a deadbeat dad.  I lived off of odd side jobs and by hounding bosses from freelance jobs who owed me back checks.  I never complained or defended myself publicly, knowing that I deserved every lump I took.  It wasn't an easy thing to do.

I was presented an opportunity to take a full-time job at a race track in October and I jumped at the chance.  Not only was it the type of job I had worked hard my whole life to have a chance at landing, it was also a strong and permanent solution to my child support problem.  I now pay every dime I owe every week, and I'm constantly looking for ways to begin chipping away at the 800-pound gorilla that is my unpaid support balance.  At the same time, I borrow money constantly to pay all of my other bills including rent, which will likely be late this month.

I'm not in any way proud of the fact that I wasn't there for my son financially for so long.  Seeing him is out of the question, since I can't afford to take the time off work or pay for the travel, but at least I'm doing more of my part now.  (Though I did find a way to pay $300 for him to fly to Vermont in May.  I saw him for a total of one hour and 40 minutes.)  I stand by the fact that while I was struggling to simply put food in my stomach that I made the right decisions with the money I did have, as hard as they may have been.

This is a burden I bear every single day.  There is an 8" x 10" photo on my bedroom wall of Landon that I see every day, and another photo of him and I and my father hanging above my bed that I see every day.  There are photos on Facebook and in other places that I look through all the time.  It's not easy, and it never has been.  I talked to him on Christmas -- with his mother coaching him in the background, of course -- and I got choked up a few times.  The worst part was when he asked where his Christmas present from last year was, and I couldn't find a way to tell him that I didn't have the money to send him one.  I borrowed $12 from my girlfriend to ship a cheap -- but sentimental -- gift to him this year.

I want to fight in the courts.  I want my son back.  I want to see him every day.  I want to be with him just like I was for the first three years of his life.  I want him to know that I WAS, AM, AND ALWAYS WILL BE HIS DADDY.  I also realize that I can't do any of that right now.  Any judge in the country would laugh me out of the courtroom if I tried to fight right now.  I need to prove that this is for real.  It is for real.  I'm a firm believer in judging someone not by what they used to do, but by what they are doing.  Right now I'm doing the right thing for my son, but I have to keep it up for a while.  I'm in no position financially or otherwise to have my son live with me full-time right now.  That might be years down the road, even, and I'm willing to tough that out.  But this is a start.

I know that I was there for my son when his mother chose not to be early in his life.  She is there for him now and, as far as I can tell, she and her fiancee -- Landon's stepdad -- are doing a good job.  I didn't choose to not be there for him when they moved away, and I tried every way that I knew how to meet my responsibilities as a father -- as a man -- for a couple of years.  I gave it every effort I had, even if that meant scraping together a payment of $33.12 for the entire month, and I'm proud that I gave owning my own business a shot.  There came a point where I couldn't live with myself any longer, though, and I took care of it.

Now it's my job to keep taking care of it.  To keep taking care of Landon.  I love my son.

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Remembering the ODT

It's funny some of the things you remember better than anything else.  I feel like I'm pretty creative, like I've got a pretty good wit and sense of humor, my I don't hold a candle to my old man.

He was a funny-ass guy, much funnier than I could ever hope to be, and the other night my uncles, a couple cousins, and my sister and I gathered at Uncle Jeff's house and had some beers in the garage.  We dug out a couple of old audio tapes my dad made for deer camp back from about 1988 to '92.

The back story: The Orange Dog Tavern was born in 1970 when a group of sick and twisted St. Louis guys and a few buddies went to deer camp in Worcester.  The "orange dog" part came from a poem my grandfather once told:

Mary had a little lamb,
Its fleece was white as snow.
Everywhere that Mary went
The lamb was sure to go.
It followed her to school one day
And a big orange dog came along and fucked it.

So, that being the premise of the ODT, you can imagine what deer camp was like for about 35 years.

Everyone had a nickname.  Uncle Gene was Goat Lips I, his son oldest son Kevin is Goat Lips II.  Uncle Gary was The Green One, my father Ron was the Reverend RNNN (pronouced "rin").  Family friend Mike is Mr. Lunch, I've always been Skippy.  And so it goes.

Anyway, Dad created WODT, an on-tape "radio station" for deer season, completely packed with original -- and highly offensive -- material.  Highlights from the 1992 tape include a football game between the Steelers and Cowboys with commentary from Howard Cosell and The Hindu Wisdom Giver, an essay by legendary news anchor Walter Cronkite in which he compares the assassination of JFK to his sexual fetishes with his wife, community announcements sponsored by Reverend RNNN's Holy Church Of Latter Day Guys To Whom All Things Are Swell, and an AIDS awareness message so unbelievably funny and politically incorrect that the back of your head hurts from laughing so hard when you hear it.

I hadn't heard any of those skits in years, but we popped that tape in on Friday night and I found myself reciting almost every word verbatim.

"Uh, hi.  I'm the guy at the brain store, um, down the street.  Yup.  And today, we're having a sale.  If you come down today, I'll sell you some brains for... for two dollars."

It wasn't just the tapes, either.  There were written poems, videos, and even "The Book of Bambi" featuring cartoons of Stick Man and Barney, Bible verses from the Book of RNNN.  Birthday roasts with acted-out skits featuring characters like Roy Music, the Mayor of Worcester, and race car driver W.D. Forte involved not just my father, but all of the brothers.

I went to Barnes & Noble last night with Rose, and we flipped through a photography book that the Burlington Free Press published highlighting all of the devastation caused by the weather in 2011.  I was amazed as I looked through the photos at how little I remembered of the horrendous storms that hit this very area in which I live so hard not even a year ago.

But those tapes came on, and I remembered everything so clearly and vividly.  I like that.

We haven't had deer camp (by the way, nobody actually hunted at deer camp) in almost ten years, but I'm hopeful that we do again at some point.  Friday night was awesome.

Long live the ODT.

Thursday, November 17, 2011

This One's For Me... And You, I Suppose

Hey there, I'm Justin.  You may know me from the 1,500 (give or take) articles I've cobbled together covering local stock car racing in the last decade-ish, or the radio programs I've done, or whatever else it is that I do in public.  I've been writing about race cars for a long time, but not really about anything else, and I'm tired of it.

Don't get me wrong here, I love telling racing stories and I don't see that changing, but I need an outlet for all my other ideas.  MySpace stopped being cool before it ever started being cool, and I refuse to go back to that for my blogging needs.  Facebook, meh, I could take it or leave it.  I do like the Blogger software that Google offers, though, and having been pretty familiar with it, I figured it was my best option.  (Wordpress is nice but it just takes too damned long to figure out what all the gadgets are.)

Anywho, this little blog'll be about whatever the hell I'm thinking at any given moment.  It may be about racing.  It may be about how much I love my girlfriend.  It may be about how much I miss my father or how awful the parental battle over my son has been for four years.  It may be about my undying love for this messed up little state that I live in (and I do mean Vermont, not anything else, sickos).  It may be reminiscing over good times, or looking forward to the future.  I may write poetry.  I may steal poetry and re-post it.  Posts might be funny, sad, or laced with swear-words and foul language.  In fact, I can almost guarantee the foul language, regardless of topic.

Balls and farts.  See?  It's started already.

The name "(802)zoom" is something I've been trying to find a use for for about three years now, and I might still use it for some other project down the line.  I mean, first of all, it sounds cool when you say it out loud.  "Eight-oh-two-zoom."  Bad-ass.  Second of all, it obviously means something to me because I'm an unabashed fan of Vermont, my home state (our area code is 802), and zoom infers speed or racing or whatever.  Third, when you use the parentheses as I've done, it becomes a title with a trendy, big-city, designer storefront douche vibe to it that might help it to catch on and get some regular readers who want to pretend to feel as hip as I pretended to feel when I clicked "publish".  Fourth, everything else I wanted was taken.  Fifth, I actually only tried two other titles and they were taken.  Seventh, I forgot how to count and I'd really like a sandwich.  Other seventh, I forgot what I was talking about.

So yeah, this is a start, anyway.  Thanks for stopping in.  If you wanna leave a comment, please, by all means, do it.