Friday, November 29, 2019

Indiana trip - the end




There was snow on the ground when we got to Indiana. It slowly, slowly disappeared each day. My birthday was a good one despite not feeling well that evening with a sore throat. We went to an Italian place I've never been to before, and Susan made a cake for me.

It was also when I found out my daughter had lost her wallet the night before. She dropped it after leaving a friend's apartment. She spent all day Sunday retracing her steps. Nothing. She lost her license, credit cards, debit cards, her dorm key, and a Wawa gift card. The gift card was linked to her app on her phone, and two days later, it was used to buy gas at a Wawa.

Mankind sucks.





Back in Indiana, my brother and SIL took us on adventures. Most of them involved eating. Tom purchased a charcuterie board for Susan, and she and I made that for dinner one night to go with our chicken noodle soup. The soup was in hopes it would cure me of my severe illness.



When we Indiana six days later, the snow was pretty much gone. The weather was supposed to move up in digits, and this time I got to ride an airplane as the sick one. It was an uneventful ride home, and when we exited the airport, it was to find Florida going through a cold spell.

In the fifties.

We laughed.

Thanks to my Indiana relatives for the hospitality. I won the card games. The food, as always, was superior. My SIL is a wonderful hostess who does EVERYTHING. Hopefully, I haven't infected anyone.

Hugs.

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Happy Thanksgiving 2019


My friend SueG had us to her house for Thanksgiving. There were 19 of us and so much food that I didn't even get to the green bean casserole.

I was in charge of the appetizers and the desserts. I did a charcuterie board for the first, planned another board for the last, but since others brought desserts too, we never got to my dessert charcuterie board.


It was a great time. Happy Turkey Day all!

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Indiana Birthday Trip - the game


It was a brisk 35 degrees the day of the Notre Dame and Navy game. Dressed in our warmest Floridian winter belongings (I dug into the skiing container for boots), we were dropped off about two hours prior and hiked through the tailgating fans to the stadium.




My brother acquired tickets twenty-two rows back from the fifty-yard line. Great location. No backs, however, to the metal benches. Did I mention metal? In thirty degree weather? Thankfully, my SIL's friend Tara sent us with an all-weather blanket, toasty and warm on one side and weather-resistant on the other. I wrapped the blanket around my waist to keep my butt warm on the metal bench and to cover my legs. It was perfect.


The first half was good. We had the sun shining. Notre Dame was kicking Navy's ass. The halftime show was entertaining.




Then, the second half arrived, and we were on the side without the sun. The temperatures dropped. The wind picked up. I wrapped my scarf around the lower half of my face. I huddled behind the person in front of me. Notre Dame continued to dominate.


By the fourth quarter, I was cold. I had to pull out the hand warmers my brother had given me for my gloves as the tips of my fingers were aching. I'm from Indiana, where basketball is king. We never leave a game until it is concluded. Fans until the end.

I was ready to leave this game. My brother texted, asking if we were ready for a pick-up since ND was killing it. Tom vetoed that. He was having fun, and the part of me that never leaves a game until it is over was right there with him. The part of me that was freezing to death? Not so much.

About three minutes before the end of the game, I took off the blanket and folded it. Big mistake. The metal seats immediately froze my ass. My thighs froze. Three minutes turned into thirty as the end of the game came and went, and we stood through the respectful ending where each team goes to the other team's end zone to stand through the band's school songs. A nice touch, but I was beyond cold. If there was ever any doubt whether or not I am a Floridian, it was confirmed at that game.

We had to hike to find my brother. I'm going to admit I was not in the best frame of mind by then. I couldn't stop shivering, and we had no idea which way to go, and if there is one thing that drives me nuts, it is walking around without a clue if we are heading in the right direction. I whined. I moaned. Tom got annoyed. Then I got annoyed.

By the time we got to my brother's car, we were sniping back and forth much to his entertainment. It was a long drive back to the house, but my SIL met us with a hot meal, glasses of wine, and a cheery disposition. I then took a warm shower. It took me three hours to get warm.

Two days later, I was sick. 

Monday, November 25, 2019

NFL Monday recap week 12

Steelers: A minute after kickoff, I got an ESPN alert. Cleveland Browns fans, even though they were playing Miami, had a Mason Rudolph dummy strung up where fans could try to hit him with a Miles Garrett helmet while blindfolded. This world makes me sick...

  • And then I saw a picture of Cleveland Browns' owner, Dee Haslam, wearing a Miles Garrett beenie at the game this week. The owner. Supporting what happened? Wow. The NFL is really going down, down, down. I get that she thinks the penalty harsh, but yeah, this isn't the way to go about that. I don't think so. 
  • T.J. Watt with another sack. I am so thrilled with my choice to get a Watt jersey.
  • We're flat. When the offensive can't get things moving, at what point does a coach shake things up? It might be one thing if you're talking about Roethlisberger struggling, but this is a second-year back-up quarterback who isn't getting the job done and who has shown us his frustration level in losing. Sometimes it is better to shake things up.
  • And right after I tweeted that in came Devlin "Duck" Hodges who threw a 71 yard TD pass to James Washington. That's what I call shaking things up!
  • Defense needed more in the second half. I tweeted this, and I had just finished giving Minkh Fitzpatrick a reminder of his greatness and OH MY GOD! Forced fumble and recovery by Fitzpatrick!! Unfortunately, our offense couldn't convert. 
  • But the defense got it done again. Sack and a fumble. Converting for a first down. Game over.
  • We eeked that baby out. I can't wait for this season to be over. Ugh.

Other:



  • The Jets scored. Like easily. But wait... Jets offensive pass interference with two defenders colliding, was not called, so Raiders coach John Gruden threw the red flag, won the challenge, and the Jets had to settle for a FG.
  • Seattle trying a little trickery on their first possession. Wilson to Chris Carson, who threw a lateral back to Wilson who threw the ball right into the waiting arms of Malik Turner in the end zone. A thing of beauty. I love Russell Wilson. 
  • A punt by New Orleans hit the ankle of a Carolina player, recovered by the Saints. Yikes! As the punt returned, if I see the opposition anywhere near me? I'm going to step away. That's just a recipe for disaster. 
  • Redskins Steven Sims bobbled the kickoff, picked it up, eluded a grab on his ankle, and zig-zagged his way 91 yards down the field for the touchdown. 
  • Bad roughing the passer call in the Oakland/Jets game. I'd hate to be a ref this year in the NFL. Damned if you do and damned if you don't. But that was a bad call. Nothing Hurst could've done to prevent falling on Donald as he was being pushed from behind.
  • And nothing was learned by last week's melee in the Browns/Steelers game as Saints Cam Jordan throws an elbow into the head of quarterback Kyle Allen after the play was dead and the Saints kicking ass17-9. A few seconds later, Saints Von Bell attempts to punch out the football from McCaffrey, with a closed fist that looked way too much like an uppercut punch to McCaffrey's helmet. So much for your discipline NFL.
  • Kudos to Tampa Bay's Chris Godwin who had a bombing first half with 151 yds receiving, 6 catches, and two TD's.
  • And a big X to the Bucs kicker Matt Gay who managed to miss two extra points in the first half and another before the game ended. You have one job...
  • Bucs nose tackle Vita Vea scored a TD, and the NFL world went nuts. The worse thing I saw? A discussion about how Vea was the most massive player in the league at 347 pounds. And the point is???
  • Eagles Carson Wentz into the locker room in the last quarter isn't a good thing for Eagles fans. Well, if they'd kept Nick Foles, it might be. 
  • Oh, wait, Wentz is back. False alarm.
  • History made by Frank Gore, former Indianapolis Colt, and now a member of the Buffalo Bills. He passed Barry Sanders for third on the NFL most career rushing yards list. 15,273 by peck, peck, pecking away.
  • Two tied games came down to the wire. Always fun when it isn't my team!

Sunday, November 24, 2019

NFL picks 2019-2020 week 12

Overall - 91-71

I'm really discouraged with football at this point. This week my team is down significant players once again, my fantasy team has more injuries, and the appeals process (with what occurred a week ago on TNF) with the racist remarks added has left a sour taste in my mouth.

However, I'm not a quitter, so here we go...quite a few games this week that are neck and neck.

Indianapolis over Houston - Out of the gate, and I'm already down one.

Atlanta over Tampa Bay - The Falcons came back from their bye an entirely different team. Like, what the hell happened? But, will that streak continue today against a division rivalry? One that is struggling? Ack. What to do, what to do... Tom has picked the Bucs. Maddy and I went with Atlanta.

Buffalo over Denver - I've lost track of who is quarterbacking the Broncos.

Chicago over Giants - I'm not sure why the Bears are favorites, but I went with that. Daniel Jones can't save the Giants this year.

Pittsburgh over Cincinnati - Please, oh, please let's not lose to a 0-10 team, but, dear God, with what we have left of our team, this might not be easy.

Cleveland over Miami - Go Dolphins! I hope this goes the other way.

New Orleans over Carolina - I'll go with Brees.

Oakland over Jets - Another one that I was unsure of. I think my sour taste with Le'Veon Bell forced me to make this decision. Jeez, what would I have done if AB had stayed a Raider?

Seattle over Philadelphia - I hate picking all the favorites, and if ever there was a game to take the underdog, I figured this one was it.

Detroit over Washington - Maybe the Redskins can pull this out??? I didn't have as much faith by the deadline.

Tennessee over Jacksonville - Another good match. I think the Titans have an edge at home.

Dallas over New England - Call me crazy.

San Francisco over Green Bay - Hmm...do the 49ers come back from their loss? At home?

Baltimore over Rams - I'm dreading that the two AFC teams that might be in the Super Bowl are the two teams I really, really hate.




Saturday, November 23, 2019

Indiana Birthday trip - the beginning

When I was young, I thought I might have some seer abilities. My aunt would say this was because I wanted to control my life, and she is probably correct, but I knew most times when the phone was going to ring before it did, and this led me to believe I had powers.

I sort of still think that at times.

When my husband first suggested going to Indiana "for my birthday," really so he could cross off see a Notre Dame game off his bucket list, I didn't jump up and down. A football game in South Bend in November?

Me: "It'll be snowing!"

Tom: "in November? Please. It'll be fall weather."

Me: "You truly don't pay attention to happenings in my life, do you?"

But, I understand wanting things, and for some reason, Tom is a Notre Dame fan, and since he rarely takes off of work to do things, who was I to be a Debbie Downer? We bought the plane tickets, alerted my brother and SIL, and my brother scored the tickets to the game.

A week before we left, I had a bad feeling. Two days before we left, it snowed twelve inches in South Bend, and the highest temperatures for the week were 35. The bad feeling returned with a vengeance, and despite excitement at spending time with my family, it didn't go away.


We woke up at 4:00 a.m. I hadn't gone to bed until way after one o'clock after the Steelers game where all the drama occurred, and that sporting event also did not help in contributing to my feelings. Madison was elected to drive us to the airport. I had suggested someone else because the girl had to work a twelve-hour day, and the drive is across the bridge, and, yeah, I didn't feel good about it.

Tom: "Why wouldn't she take us?"

Off we went. Tom drove to the airport and pulled up at the drop-off. We unloaded, kissed Madison, and headed inside. We had only one suitcase, and I stepped up to the kiosk to register it. I got all the way through the process, giving the bag to Tom, and submitted it only to have it come back with an error. I tried it again. Same thing. I moved to another kiosk and started again. This time I gave the suitcase to myself. Success!

While we waited for the tag to print, my phone rang. It was Madison on the other end. Immediately I knew. My hands shook when I answered. She was crying. She had hit another car in the parking lot.

Frankly, that was a relief as it meant she was reachable, but we had to get our luggage tagged and then wait in line for a human to take it. I had to give my license since the case was registered to me. I told the lady my daughter had hit another car. She processed us quickly, and we went outside to find Madison.

Tom got there first. In events like this, I defer to him. It has more to do with him working and earning a paycheck, I think, more than the whole male/female thing. Or maybe not... He stood and surveyed the cars.

I pushed him out of the way and grabbed Madison into a hug. She began sobbing and apologizing and the woman of the car she'd scraped, because really she'd miscalculated on pulling away and the two back ends rubbed against each other, was saying nice things about mother being there for Madison making me think she'd been kind. Apparently, not the case, but I didn't learn about that until later.

We reassured Madison. She'd done everything she'd needed to do with the woman in exchanging information. Tom watched her drive off. We rode the escalator to the shuttle. I opened my wallet to get my license to pass through the agent to the shuttle. Nothing. No license.

I panicked. Tom rolled his eyes. We tried to find the escalator to take us back to the ticket floor, which was harder than we knew. I rechecked my wallet because I couldn't believe the woman hadn't given me back my license. Turns out, I hadn't put it back where it belonged in my need to get to Madison.

Tom: "Are you kidding me?"

I burst into tears. Tom stared at me. I didn't bother to explain. 
I wiped my eyes, sucked up my feelings, and we head off to security, where we ended up in different lines due to my misunderstanding of something an agent said. Tom rolled through security. I took forever.

Once we got to the gate, I left to get water. When I returned, Tom was nowhere to be found. Which isn't unusual when we travel. I sat down and promptly called Madison, who had just texted that she was back home. She cried some more. She told me the lady was NOT nice after the scraping incident, yelling and saying unkind things. We talked everything through while I watched group A and group line up to the board. Group C was our boarding letter, and I was wrapping up our phone call when my phone started buzzing.

Me: "I still don't see your dad, but now he's calling me. Why can't the man just sit?"

Turns out, I was at the wrong gate. While I was sitting in the area where the podium to our gate stood, the gate was behind me several feet. The only person in that area was my husband. I started crying again. I gave my boarding pass and went through only to get stopped by the long line of people waiting to board the plane. I turned just in time to see Tom get pulled at the entrance. What?

He disappeared. The line moved. Six more people entered behind me. No Tom. I called his phone, and it went to voice mail. I frantically texted Madison that Tom had been pulled. The line moved. I could no longer see the gate entrance. I called again. Texted. Nothing. I panicked. What to do, what to do? Should I go back? Get on the plane?

Tom answered his phone laughing and then I saw him come around the corner. He had been pulled due to a luggage concern. Apparently, at our kiosk with the errors, it still registered Tom with luggage. He had to go to the airline counter where he had to wait in a long line only to be told all was well and to go back to the gate.

We were stuffed into middle seats on a full plane where I sat next to someone who was sick. 
 I cried through the taxing and long after we were in the air. Then, I pulled myself together and thanked the good lord we were off.

Sunday, November 17, 2019

NFL week 11

I didn’t get my picks in on time this week. I made several, picking the Steelers as always, but I was undecided on a couple games and left it for later, missing the deadline. It's been a lousy week beginning with TNF and ending with a trip out of the state.

First, I’m going to address what occurred Thursday night with eight seconds left in the Steelers/Browns game. Three thoughts before it happened?

  1. Are we playing the Bengals?
  2. Three helmet to helmet hits by Cleveland players that have knocked out three major Steelers players? Something is fishy.
  3. The Browns were winning, yet why are they so angry?

Funny enough, during the play, my eyes were on Steelers quarterback Mason Rudolph. I was concerned. Not only was he frustrated, but he was getting late hits that weren’t being called. I saw Myles Garrett take him down before the cameraman cut to follow the ball’s trajectory. 

My thoughts:
  1. Nice, gentle takedown but unnecessary with .8 seconds left and the game basically over.
  2. Probably should have drawn a flag.

Then came the moment. If you follow football—heck, even if you don’t—you’ve seen it. The scuffle between Garrett and Rudolph on the ground, which escalated until Garrett ripped off Rudolph’s helmet and hit him in the head with it. Steelers guard David DeCastro got between the two, pushing Garrett around the field. Steelers center Maurkice Pouncey who had joined DeCastro to help, saw the helmet hit, and he lost it, pummeling Garrett until DeCastro took him to the ground where Pouncey then kicked the man. 

Nothing new when the Steelers play their division rivals. 

But...seriously?

I barely slept, and I had to be up at 4:00 a.m. for an early flight to Indiana. Twitter went wild. The football analyst was shell-shocked. There was talk of charges being levied against Garrett. It went viral. 

Here are my thoughts:

  1. David DeCastro should’ve been more of a topic. He was handling the situation the way it should’ve been dealt with. He got in between the two men to separate them. After the hit, he subdued the abuser, taking him to the ground. He had it handled!
  2. For Maurkice Pouncey to erupt, the way he did is inexcusable. I’m tired of everyone talking about his protection of his quarterback. No, DeCastro’s protection of his quarterback was correct. Pouncey’s anger? Kicking a man when he was defenseless and being held down on the ground? That video is horrendous. Had that been a police officer, we would be calling for his job.
  3. The hit by Garrett on Rudolph? Same thing. Inexcusable. He is so lucky he didn’t seriously hurt the Steelers quarterback. Hit him in the crown, and he’d be facing charges. 
  4. Rudolph isn’t innocent. He took exception to the takedown, and words were exchanged. Garrett refused to get off Rudolph, so Rudolph tried to take off Garrett’s helmet. Childish, sure, but typical in football. Doesn’t make it right, but the BROWNS WERE WINNING. Why was Garrett rubbing it in? At some point, the high road has to be taken. By both sides.
  5. The Browns are the most penalized team this year in the NFL. Browns coach Freddie Kitchens, just like fired Bengals coach Marvin Lewis, is responsible for not nipping that in the bud. It’s a problem. The NFL should be addressing that. Why aren’t they? Before things get out of control. 

I thought the four analysts on Fox on Sunday made the most sense. This action shouldn’t define Myles Garrett. He immediately apologized. He’s now lost his job indefinitely. It was a stupid moment in his life that he will regret and think about forever. 

What hasn’t been discussed? The anger from both sides. My husband reminded me how most hockey games have this type of brawl in each game. Why is that? It shouldn’t be the norm. It shouldn’t be all accepted. Is this how we want our kids to play sports?

I’m glad to step away from the NFL this week while I spend time with family. I got my football fix at the Notre Dame/Navy game, which was full of respect, not only for our military people past and present but for the players and the fans. 

It was the first game I watched that didn’t have a million thrown flags. It was serene. Respectful. Laidback. Nothing happened, but the game. The students behaved. The fans cheered for the opposite teams' band upon entrance into the stadium. 

At the end of the game, one in which Notre Dame dominated, scoring over 50 points, both teams went to Navy’s end of the field and stood while their band played the Navy school song and then both teams hiked to the opposite end where the ND band did the same thing. Every person in the stadium stood in dead silence for both songs, cheering at the end of each. 

That’s the way sports should be. The NFL could learn something from these two teams.