Sean O'Brien
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Family

4/30/2024

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No matter how much we fight it, we still look at people as “in” or “out.” We have a lot of words for it–colleague, family, kith and kin–but ultimately, we consider some folk to be “our” folk and others to be, well, “others.”

Some of us limit this designation to “blood,” as in those who share genetic material, but of course this is problematic. Where does one draw the line? Where does one decide “that person is too far distant to be blood related.” Others decide that living arrangement makes a family. Those who live with us are our family, blood related or not. 

Then there are those families that are a result of shared experiences or values. The guy on your football team is your “family.” Or the woman who loves the Dodgers as much as you do is your family. You could even consider those in the same religion as family.

Still others think of family as “those we spend time with.” In this case, co-workers might be family. Maybe even more so than those with whom you live, depending on your situation.
I’ve come to a place where I tend to think of people with whom I have a shared experience as family, especially if that shared experience is somewhat difficult or unusual. I oncer made an impromptu speech after a football game in which I referenced that popular saying, “blood is thicker than water.” See, to my way of thinking, most folk get that saying wrong. I see that as meaning “the blood of the covenant is more binding than the water of the womb.” Or, to be more prosaic, “those who have shared a difficult experience–who have shed blood together–are closer than those people who merely share the same genetics.”

So that’s where I am. I consider my “conventional” family members family (my wife, daughter, son, brother, sister-in-law, father, and so on) but I also consider my fellow teachers to be family. I consider coaches to be family. I consider umpires to be family. And I consider writers to be family.

I just came from a very pleasant conversation with a lovely man at my school who is my brother by profession twice over: he’s a teacher and a writer. I suppose, if some people have “brothers-in-law” I have “brothers-in-job” and “sisters-in-job.”

I want to clarify something here: shared experience does not necessarily mean shared perspective. This lovely man to whom I refer has a very, very different perspective than I do on quite a few things. In many ways, our lives are rather different: we seem to only share the same job. 

Encountering folks who have a different life than you is supremely important (and if you can’t actually meet them for real, read about them. It’s almost as good). Broadening one’s horizons broadens what one thinks of as family.

When you get right down to it, if you believe “family” means “those who share genetic material” then all human beings are family with all other human beings. Sounds good, except that there are a few humans I do not care to call family. Adolph Hitler, for example. 

So no, I can’t go with the “genetic” definition. I suppose I should add “those who share the same core values, no matter how arrived at.” When I say “core value,” I mean very basic ones. Compassion, for instance. If someone is compassionate because they find it warms their heart to be so, that person is my family. If someone is compassionate because their religion tells them to be so, that person is also my family. To a great degree, I care not how a person arrives at the value of compassion. Or kindness, or charity, or integrity, or values of those stripes. 

I am fortunate indeed to have a family. My wife, daughter and son are my triune lights in the darkness of this world. My brother is a beacon of bravery, integrity and honor. My father is a pillar of wisdom and an exemplar of a life lived in service. My mother…I’ve written about her previously, and can’t do it again just now.

But my family is also the lovely man I spoke to today. And it’s the other umpires in my unit. And it’s my high school friends with whom I remain in contact even today. And it’s anyone who teaches or marshals the forces of decency against venal corruption. 

I’ve got a pretty awesome family.

Be seeing you!

​
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Mom

4/19/2024

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Safe. 

I was always safe with her. In the home she made, the food she made, the life she made for me. Gave me everything I needed, including space to become me. And including scarcity. Sometimes people need scarcity. I could come home and be safe, and I was pushed to go outside. I knew she loved me no matter what, and she told me without her voice I needed to show effort. 

Safe doesn’t mean unchallenged. In fact, I’d say safe means a place where you can accept challenges freely, knowing that what you truly need in life is provided and will be provided. Food, clothing, shelter, health, love–these things were free and as abundant. We didn’t live in a big house but we had a huge home. We didn’t eat like kings but had all we needed. We didn’t have expensive clothes but they were clean and fresh and somehow always laundered. I was safe in the best way possible–I knew I could leap into things and survive the fall if I missed the opposite ledge, because my mother had made me able. And she’d be there to patch me up, then put her hand gently but firmly on my back and say, “now, try again, Son.”

I’m sorry for you, Reader, because you didn’t have my mom. 

Knowing what I know now about parenting, I know that when my mensch of a brother and I were playing outside–usually something moderately to extremely dangerous (it usually worked out that Jeff was the test pilot and I was the engineer designing the vehicle: he was the Alan Shepherd to my Werner von Braun) my mother was either watching or preparing the Band-Aids for when we almost inevitably needed them after a failed test run of the wagon that really should have worked. She made the home a place we could come to, regroup, refuel, and then bang outside again to try a new trajectory. 

I was a reader when I was young–I still am. Some of you are also readers: not people who read, but a reader. People who can walk and read simultaneously. People who leave books around the house so that they are never more than a few steps away from a story. When I was young, I would read after my bedtime, breathlessly turning the pages of Ivanhoe to see how Rebecca was going to escape Front de Boeuf’s castle. My parents (sometimes Dad, sometimes Mom) would knock on the door and say, “lights out, time for bed.” And I would turn off the light only to grab a flashlight and read under the covers. As a kid, I thought this was impenetrable. No one would suspect I was still awake, reading!

Of course Mom knew. I always wondered if Mom and Dad talked about it, had little debates if they were going to stop me again, and if so, which one would do it. Sometimes they would tell me an hour later, in firmer tones, “Go to bed!” but often, they didn’t.

They made sure I had change and a few dollar bills when it was Scholastic Book Fair time at school.

When I started writing (way, way back in primary school) they indulged me in it. Another memory I have of Mom is from 1978 when I was 10 years old. I was already a science fiction maniac, even at that time (reruns of syndicated shows like The Twilight Zone or Star Trek, or even when I was desperate, Lost in Space were my main fare) and when a brand-new TV show called Battlestar Galactica debuted right as school was starting up in September of that year, Mom made a special point of showing it to me. She was so excited that she could bring me this exciting new show and indulge my love of sci-fi.

Mom, I suppose this may be too late, but that show was…not great. I watched it mostly because you showed it to me and I wanted to honor you. But my God with the Cylons and the single red scanner eye and especially with Muffit the daggit and the robot replacement and Boxey…

You passed away just before your 78th birthday. You’re dead but not gone, Mom. You’ll never be gone. You’re in your grandchildren. You’re in the turning of a dog-eared copy of Ivanhoe at 11:30 at night on a schoolday. You’re in spaghetti sauce that’s so good I could and did eat it without pasta. You’re in the feeling of a home, of being safe. 

You’re in my brother.

You’re in me.

I miss you, Mom. Even though you’re still here.
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Uninspired

4/9/2024

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Blah. Just nothing is coming. Not from any lack of projects–I’m working on the bonus / reward story for the folks who preorder Beltrunner II: Aftermath (see elsewhere on this website for ordering information), I have a work-in-progress that I have been pecking at for literally years (and which my very good friend and astoundingly brilliant man, Glenn Vogel, has given me some sage advice regarding), and I have the beginnings of Beltrunner III: Legacy written out. 

No, I have a lot of irons in the fire as the saying goes. I just don’t feel like working any of them. 

I’ve given this advice to others, so I suppose I should take it myself: when it comes to art, one cannot wait for inspiration. That wait might be a long, long time. No, as much as one is able, one must just plug ahead, writing or painting or composing or whatever, despite the lack of inspiration. Just keep working. It’s not so much “leap and a net will appear” as much as it is the idea of discipline and habits of mind, I think. I don’t really know the psychology, but I know it works for me.

But damn is it difficult sometimes.

Like now.

What makes it worse is that my time these days is a pretty precious commodity. I have no one else but myself to blame, since I seem to be the living embodiment of the antithesis of Thoreau’s “Simplify, simplify, simplify!” command. Nonetheless, I know that not every day grants me the hours I need to write, so when I get a day with those hours, I should use them well.

It would be very easy to write about how the Puritan Work Ethic is the backbone of American exceptionalism and make some reference to noses and grindstones, but the simple truth is I, like so many others, need some kind of push to work. That’s one of the great things about NaNoWriMo, I guess–it’s a motivator. Never mind that it’s artificial and self-imposed. It’s still a motivator.

Well, I know I will kick myself later if I don’t work now (kick myself mentally–I have long since lost the suppleness of limb to accomplish self-kicking) so I suppose I’ll close this short, pointless blog entry and see what trouble young Collier and even younger Sancho can get themselves into.

Be seeing you!

​
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    Hello to you. Glad to have you here. I'm going to write what I feel in this blog, and while I'm not going to go out of my way to offend you, neither am I going to hold back.

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