All a man needs out of life is a place to sit ‘n’ spit in the fire.

Category: Family (Page 7 of 16)

Where I express my endless and boundless love for my kids through the stories of their youth. Someday you’ll all be old enough to be embarassed by these. Chuckle. I’d talk about Laura here, but she doesn’t like that… private she is.

Valentine’s Day for that Special Someone: Creating a Video Ringer for the Samsung Rant m540

I just got a new phone, and I wanted to customize it with some of my favorite things: my wife and songs that remind me of her, one being her incoming ring of course.  I don’t care much for any other calls, but when my love calls, my heart skips a beat, so here we go.

First, select a photo.  I choose this one because she’s smiling at me and looks lovely.

­

Next, I took a short video in order to reverse engineer the video format of the Samsung Rant m540.  Turns out the sound is AAC, 128 kbps, and the video is mpeg-4 (reports as DIVX) and the frame size is 176×144 and the rate is 15 fps.

I want to create a video with a still picture along with a song by NEK called, "Laura no está" – the sentiment of the song is that Laura is not there, but in her absence, I am tormented, she is everywhere.  I am unable to escape.  Honey, your feet must be tired, because you’ve been running around in my head all day.  Chuckle.  So I want to loop a 16 second sample of that song (the refrain) along with the above still picture.  Turns out that ffmpeg (in Linux) will help you out tons.  Check out the following gem:

­ffmpeg -loop_input -vframes 240 -r 15 -f image2 -i foo.jpg -i foo.wav -s 176x144 -f mp4 -acodec libfaac bar.m4v

-loop_input causes the image to repeat throughout the clip.  -vframes 240 is 16 seconds multiplied by 15 frames per second to give total frames.  -f image2 is from the man page of ffmpeg and and forces a format.  Specify two inputs -i foo.wav and -i foo.jpg a frame size -s 176×144, and video format -f mp4 an audio codec -acodec libfaac (you have to compile ffmpeg with libfaac support) and the output file bar.m4v.

Take the resulting video file and copy it to the directory /dcim/100ssmed/ of your phone’s memory card.  I think you have to rename the file to sspx000(?).3g2 where the "?" represents a sequential number.  I had trouble getting the video to play properly at first, but I think it’s because I had the frame rate slightly off.  I don’t know, however, because I changed the frame rate and the file name at the same time and the thing started playing, so I’m unsure which was the cause, the frame rate or special sequential internal naming of the Rant m540.  Dunno, maybe I’ll mess around with some more and post my results here.

So there you go.  Now every time my love calls, I am greeted with her smiling face and a song. 

Laura: I Dreamt I Had My Life

Laura had me rolling with this post and I had to share.


Interpret me this: I was having a happy dream. I did not want to wake up I wanted­ to keep the dream going.

I
had just gotten out from hanging out a hotel pool with Javier and
Jaimito. We had been sitting on the steps,  chatting, playing having
fun. I remember thinking I love these two little boys they are so darn
cute. Next thing I know we were out of the pool, kids had gone up to
the room to change and go down for the evening. I was hanging out at an
outdoor bar in plain clothes waiting for Jim to come down and meet up
with me.

(more…)

¡Felicidades y Próspero Año Nuevo!

­

2008 zipped by in record time, so I guess that means it was a good
year. I’m in a reflective mood, so I hope you’ll indulge me while I
try to enumerate the little things that made the year memorable. I
hope these little anecdotes touch you the way they have touched me.

Olaia (10) is growing up so fast. She’s already five feet tall at
ten years old. She’s a bit taller than I was at the same age.
Apart from her physical stature, she’s developin­g into an interesting
and fun person in her own right as well. No longer just a little
girl, she’s become a sophisticated conversationalist, clever,
insightful, and humorous.

­

This morning, Javier and I sat down and were separating the dark
gains from a batch of green coffee beans. I had spread them out and
the two of us picked through them to select only the best quality for
mommy and daddy’s morning roast and brew. The little grains of
coffee have a tendency to roll around a bit if you are not careful,
and I, increasingly frustrated at Javier for his fidgeting, began to
become exasperated.

“Patience, my young padawan,” said Olaia, quoting Star Wars
Jedi master’s famed advice to their apprentice learners.

I busted up laughing and all negative emotions fled. Olaia
exhibits a keen emotional situational awareness that allows her to
deliver individually personalized disarming quips. From Olaia, I
remember that I am loved, noticed, important, and it makes me a
better person.

Jaimito (6) is turning into a little musician. He loves his
guitar and any time he has a few minutes he serenades us with his
repertoire of ten songs from Suzuki Guitar book 1. The other day he
said to me, “Daddy, I’m bored with these songs.”

­

“Well, Jaimito,” I said, “Why don’t you go to the next song,
read the music and figure it out?”

“Okay, Daddy,” he replied and went to work. Plinkety-plink
plinkety-plink plinkety-plonk, and slowly but surely a song emerged.

I continue to be reminded by him that concentration, attention to
detail, and perseverance have measurable results. Bit by bit, if we
put in the effort, we can improve ourselves.

Javier (almost 4) is a little firecracker according to my friend,
Courtney. She likes him very much, and I think I know why. You never
have to guess with Javier. He wears his heart on his sleeve, for
good and for bad.

The other day we were having foot races in the park. Javier came
in last every time, his little red face crestfallen and contorted
with disappointment. With his shoulders slumped forward, he let out
a heavy sigh and a little wail, “Daddy, oh, why? I can’t do it.”
With every fiber of his being, he had left it all on the field, used
up every last drop of his abilities, and it still wasn’t enough.
Why, oh why, wasn’t it enough? I swept him up in my arms and kissed
him.

“Good try, Javier. You ran fast, but you’re little.” He
still ran the next race, so convinced was he that he could do it and
surprised that he didn’t. I like that attitude. Through Javier, I
see that failure should be a surprise every single time. Expect
success.

Little Asier (almost 2) is such a good natured little boy. I call
him my little gongolí (gohng-go-LEE), a word we use in Puerto Rico
for the little millipedes that wander in an out of our houses.
Whenever a gongolí finds its way in to the house, we fetch a piece
of paper and gently gather up our little guest for a trip outside.
The gongolí rolls up in to a protective ball and we set him out upon
the front lawn. Asier is a bit like that, easy going,
non-threatening. The other day he got into an open container of
diaper wet wipes. At first I was ready to scold him, but quickly saw
that he had been “cleaning” various things in our car port. “You
see?” he seemed to say, “I cleaned.” He pointed at the cleaned
items.

­

Mostly, Asier moseys around the house engaging his little Fisher
Price toys in epic battles of “Ohhhh, ahhhh, ooooooo, whoohh,
ummmmmm.” These are epic scenes of flying toys and cars and people
all bound up in an onomatopoeic to and fro.

Whether it’s a tight budget, busy schedule, or difficult
circumstances, Asier reminds me, that like the gongolí, a lot of the
time it’s your attitude that’s important. Slow down, smile, and take
it all stride. Have fun along the way.

Laura and I decided that we had had enough of our ugly concrete slab
in our backyard and resolved to cover it with some nice Spanish tiles.
Laura has been a real trooper, doing most of the tile laying – by
herself. “Are you sure you don’t want me to help?” I ask.

“No, I like doing it… really.” I guess the work echoed her
sculpture days, wallowing in the dirt, shaping, creating, getting
dirty. It is always refreshing to have a new aspect of loved ones
revealed, even after fourteen years of marriage. I’m glad I got to
know that Laura likes laying tiles.

And finally, I got an
opportunity to relearn something important. My prison mentoring
group went caroling (called a parranda (pahrr-AN-dah)) at the
juvenile facility. Our recent weeks have been hard, the kids have
been sullen, rude, and withdrawn. We sometimes wonder why we even
go. It seems the administration doesn’t want us there. The kids
don’t want us there. Why bother? So we decided that one last time
we’d give them a little Christmas cheer and see if the spirit moves
us to come back in the new year.

Cell block one was a bit of a bust. Our singing was off, the kids
didn’t know what to do, many of them not familiar with even their own
Puerto Rican Christmas traditions. It would be like not knowing the
words to “Jingle Bells.” So we sort of lurched forward, put on a
brave face, going through the motions. I tried to sing the songs
(which I really only know passingly), and we muddled our way through.

Cell block two was a bit better. I decided that I would just
throw myself into the group of inmates. I wedged myself in with
them, saying, “I don’t now these songs, who can help me?”

“I know them, mister.” And one of the young men shepherded me
through. We sang together, and as the song went on, our voices
soared, gathering strength. More of the young men joined in, and our
two little groups, merged into one.

We sang some more songs, ate some food, and shared smiles.

Each subsequent cell block (up to four) got better. By the end we
didn’t want to leave, and I’m sure they didn’t want to either. We
were bid farewell to shouts of “¡Felicidades!”, smiles, and
joyous spirits. It was a long way from where we began, and I wished
we could have gone back to cell block one to start over.

There were many lessons, but the one that sticks out more plainly
than the others was this: sometimes you have to humble yourself,
express a need, to draw out someone’s best nature. Laura often
speaks of this and on my parranda I was able to see it first hand.
Once you open yourself to receive, the bounty seems to multiply, and
everyday miracles emerge.

In closing, I leave you with Jaimito’s Christmas season drawing and
words (from a typical folk song with the same sentiment as the Little
Drummer Boy).

­ ­

(1) Listen little boy on the donkey. To where do you
go? (2) With my little grassland donkey I’m on my way to Bethlehem.
To Bethlehem? (3) If you see me, if you see me, I’m on my way to
Bethlehem (4) And with a song in his heart, the little boy formed a
caroling group with the Three Wise Men and continued on to Bethlehem.

­

When Raking Leaves Was Fun

­Propaganda: Workers unite in our socialist utopia

Advertising: JCrew

Movie Quote: ­Now that’s a real shame when folks be throwin’ away a perfectly good white boy like that.

Pirates Say…

­

Javier: Daddy, pirates say, "Ar me hearties."

Me: Really, Javier?  They really say that?

Javier: Yeah, Daddy.  An’ I like Pirates and Cara-beans.

Me: *Falls out of chair laughing*

What Are You Thinking About, Javier?

I noticed Javier quiet in the back seat of the car.  He seemed concentrated on something, his little brows furrowed in thought.

"Hey, Javier, what are you thinking about?"

"A watergun."  He replied without hesitation, and as to open the floodgates to the torrent that is his little brain, continued.  "Daddy, I want a watergun for my birthday… an’ a telescope."

"A telescope?  A telescope AND a water gun?"

"Yeah, a telescope that goes on top."

"Oh, you mean a scope on the gun.  Wow, little boy, that’s some pretty sophisticated hardware.  You need a scope so you can see your target more closely, right."

"Yup, an’ I don’t want a pink watergun.  I want a water gun that is colored like a water gun."

"You mean a dark color, right?  I don’t know if they make them like that anymore.  But anything but pink, right?"

"Yup, ’cause my friend had one that was pink and it had a telescope."

"Who was your friend?  Isabel?"

"Yeah, Isabel.  She had a watergun with a telescope."

"Isabel is your cousin, Javier.  I’ll check it out and see what we can do."

"Okay, Daddy."

Croquetas de Jamón

When our little boys need a bath, I call them croquetas de jamón, little ham filled dough balls rolled in bread crumbs and deep fried.  Delicious.

"Come here, my little croqueta de jamon," I say to Asier.  "We need to give you a bath.  I see crumbs."

Croquetas de jamón are tasty, crumbly little treats that make any occasion all the more fun.

Asier’s First Words

­
Little Mr. Asier Enrique (pictured left below), has been loathe to speak.  He points, shakes his head, demands with his body language and cries, but has up to recently not uttered a distinguishable word.

Over the course of a few days he has acquired the following vocabulary:

  1. Bye – (his first word) which he says repeatedly while exiting the room, reenter, exit, reenter, exit… rinse lather repeat, all for the opportunity to apply his new vocabulary to a relevant and appropriate situation.
  2. Leche (milk) which you can imagine is something he cares about.  I need some leche.  Fetch it papi.
  3. Mama – you would think Mama would be the first word, but mothers always get taken for granted.  The world is unfair.
  4. Dada – I finally have a name.  Wheeee!
  5. Ball – let’s play ball, daddy, so I can say ball over and over and over.  Smile, throw the ball, and say ball.  Repeat until daddy distracts me with something else.

I think that’s it.  I’ll add more if I think of anything else.

You Are Not Your Job – A Clarification

I’m posting this conversation that Laura and I had over IM after my "You Are Not the Sum Total of Your Accomplishments" post.  I wouldn’t normally post things like this, but I found it an interesting window into our relationship.   Bear in mind that my explanation of the p­ost is really me figuring out why I wrote it.

­(8/20/08 4:03 PM) Laura:
nice post

(8/20/08 4:04 PM) Laura:
you went a bit all over the place… so I had my doubts, it gets
confusing… You are not your job, but you made a man reconsider his job
and feel loved.

(8/20/08 4:04 PM) Jim:
thanks, I think

(8/20/08 4:04 PM) Laura:
Did he feel loved because you helped him reevaluate his job…then does
that go against the message

(8/20/08 4:05 PM) Laura:
I am still chewing on this.

(8/20/08 4:05 PM) Laura:
not sure it is clear in your post

(8/20/08 4:05 PM) Laura:
hmmm

(8/20/08 4:06 PM) Jim:
your job isn’t what you are

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Jim:
but HOW you do your job, maybe

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Jim:
it’s realizing that ALL jobs are service

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Laura:
ahhh ok… because HOW you do your job helps you serve others

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Jim:
and it is in service that we touch the divine

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Laura:
yes I liked that part… that sentiment was unique

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Jim:
so it’s a question of thinking your job is the TITLE, when in fact it is
how you serve

(8/20/08 4:07 PM) Laura:
It is rarely said… In service we touch the divine

(8/20/08 4:08 PM) Jim:
that way we can appreciate sweeping floors AND being a doctor

(8/20/08 4:08 PM) Laura:
yes I think you need to somewhere in there… reinforce that people get
down when they focus on their job, the tasks the title, the indignities.

(8/20/08 4:08 PM) Jim:
but too many people think being a doctor is the M.D. rather than healing
people serving people

(8/20/08 4:09 PM) Laura:
They should rather take strength and base their dignity on HOW they do
their job, on their service to others… because in serving others we
touch the divine

(8/20/08 4:09 PM) Laura:
ok got it,

(8/20/08 4:10 PM) Laura:
very cool and unique. Like I said I think the posts has this and loses
it… but ends with a bang

(8/20/08 4:10 PM) Jim:
you know I write these things by the seat of my pants, right?

(8/20/08 4:10 PM) Laura:
yes that is why I am giving you feedback

…And therein lies the reason for of our 14 years together 🙂

Sandy Munchkins

Here are Javier and Asier at Lake Michigan immersing themselves in some great construction project I like to call "The Big Dig."

I think we need to get the engineers in here to make a determination.

Hey Javier, you need to compact that better for optimum strength. 

Oh, I love sand.  Sand in my hair – sand in my mouth – sand in my pants – and sand in my ears.  Love it!

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