Saturday, September 4, 2010

In the End

In the end, this is the eulogy I came up with for my father. The writing was not an easy task.  And I am terrified of speaking in front of groups larger than, say, my three most trusted friends. But somehow—once the writing was done--I was able to deliver this thing with relative ease.

(Thanks for coming etc)

Knowing what to say on an occasion like this has been almost impossible for me. My thoughts have been swirling for weeks. I think fathers and sons have a hard time understanding each other to begin with, and I’ll probably spend the rest of my life mulling over my relationship with Dad. He probably did the same with his dad, a stern-looking man who died when my father was 27. I can’t possibly sum up my father, but I can say a few things about the man I knew. And if none of it makes sense, you can tune out and meditate on the Matt Ryan you knew.

Like most people, my father embodied several contradictions. He was a man of logic, a slide-rule-using engineer who could build a car-top boat rack out of an old pair of skis or test an outboard boat engine in a garbage can full of water. But he could also quote poetry from memory, loved music, and knew Latin, German, and French. He could sometimes be a little awkward, but he wasn’t shy, and he loved to be the center of attention. And I could be wrong, but I think he was unsure about the existence of God, and yet he went to church every week, sang hymns around the house, and studied theology.

He was a serious man who took delight in bad puns and goofy jokes, and loved to sit at a formal dinner table with a spoon hanging from the end of his nose.

Around the house he sang hymns, classical melodies, novelty songs and commercial jingles with equal passion. I can still hear him singing a version of “Chattanooga Choo Choo” that featured backward lyrics. It was called “Ooch ooch agoonatach,” like one of those native phrases that can mean both hello and goodbye. “Ooch ooch agoonatach!”

Dad’s was a life of inquiry, of trying to figure things out—and he instilled in my siblings and me this tendency to wonder why, or wonder how.  Why do chickens come home to roost? What is the purpose of tears? My wife Lauren teases me about this sometimes, gently. She calls us The I Wonder Family.

But really, one could do worse than to spend your life wondering. My father spent his life this way. I guess that’s why he was one of those dads who had a lot of the answers. But it’s the wondering itself that enriches a life, not the possession of answers. Dad taught us to fill our lives with music, to laugh at the absurd, and to wonder at things.

We loved Dad, and he was happy and proud to be loved. But in some ways it made him uncomfortable to hear about it. A visit to see me and my family in Vermont was invariably too short, and invariably ended with my father saying, with a big smile, “Well, we better leave before we outstay our welcome.” The truth is, Dad never outstayed his welcome. He always left too soon. Even after 86 years, he left too soon. Good bye, Dad. Hold onto our love. We meant it. Ooch ooch agoonatach.

Sister Joyce, his dad Max, and Matt

Friday, August 27, 2010

Cage of Sadness

sadgirl

Norah: “ When I get older and know chemistry, I’m going to make a cure for lung cancer.”

Fergus: “And the best part is, that will take you years. And by then they’ll have invented time travel.”

Norah: “And I can go back in time and—“

Fergus: “—You can say, ‘Granddad, drink this, it will make you feel better!’”

(As reported by Lauren)

Matthew George Ryan, February 4, 1924 – August 27, 2010

 Isabel and Matt Ryan

(Isabel and Matt)

 

…When they come out, she is facing him,
walking backwards in front of him
and holding his hands, pulling him,
when he stops, reminding him to step
when he forgets and starts to pitch forward.
She is leading her old father into the future
as far as they can go, and she is walking
him back into her childhood, where she stood
in bare feet on the toes of his shoes
and they foxtrotted on this same rug.
I watch them closely; she could be teaching him
the last steps that one day she may teach me.
At this moment, he glints and shines,
as if it will be only a small dislocation
for him to pass from this paradise into the next.

-Excerpted from “Parkinson’s Disease,” by Galway Kinnell (b. 1927)

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Down to the Essentials

As I helped my nephew care for my dying father this morning—sponge bath, change of shirt, that sort of thing—it struck me that my father has begun to look like a study by Da Vinci or Durer. Here are the half-skeletal legs of a dying man, the loose flesh over his skull, the nose, ears, and even eyebrows showing decades of—of what? Of wear? Of gravity? My father, naked on a rented hospital bed—startling, a little scary, but beautiful, like an old, old master sketch in charcoal or conte crayon, monochromatic, basic, and illustrating something essential.

Da-Vinci-Hand-Drawing8

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Brief Notation From the World of Chicken Farmers

Sometimes I just love the emails that come across the Vermont bird farmer list. To whit:

Just a reminder since it is that time of year:
Sick of hand plucking?
Hesitant to raise meat birds because of all the work and time? Hate pinfeathers?
Make your life easier using our:
Featherman Chicken Plucker
for Rent
$50/day plus refundable deposit
Plucks 4-5 chickens at a time amazingly clean in 20 seconds!
We also use it for turkeys-one at a time!
Featherman Scalder $50/day
Four stainless steal Restraining Cones also on a stand available no charge.
Chester, Vermont
Call or email early to schedule

Monday, July 12, 2010

Friday, July 9, 2010

Clutter Survey, Summer 2010

"Out of clutter find simplicity; From discord find harmony; In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity."

-Albert Einstein







Wednesday, July 7, 2010

The Vast Heart of Steve Perry ('s Keyboard Player)

Okay, so it took like 10 minutes for this video to load with my backwoods internet connection, but this song feels just right for a hot and humid day in New England. Give it a try.

Clem Snide's frontman, Eef Barzelay (one of the great names in show business) covers a Journey song--with ukelele, voice, and whistling:


Clem Snide covers Journey

Sorry if you end up with a Budweiser craving after viewing.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Parade Sysyphus


Parade Sysyphus
Originally uploaded by baseballpajamas
Part of the school float in the July 3rd Montpelier parade: a 10-foot rocking chair. Four of us pushed it for the mile+ of the parade route, kids on board, sudden spins (1x 2x 3x) to please the crowds.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Boy on a Walk

It's always a good idea to put your Periodic Table T-Shirt on when you walk to Sibley Farm.

Boy b/w Heifers

Partly I took this because I like the mostly-white heifer in the background--very pretty girl.

She's a white girl.

But I'm living with a white girl.

(that's a punk rock allusion, people)

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Rainier: Two Years Ago Today

Two years ago I reached the top of Mt. Rainier with Bob Kackman and John Dunn. It was effing amazing.

Rainier: Summit Day
Rainier: Summit Day (Descending)
Rainier: Summit Day
Rainier: Summit Day
Rainier: Summit Day

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Dad, Dad...

This is a little late for Father's Day, but today finds me thinking a lot about by Dad. A Ben Gibbard cover of Pedro the Lion fell into my lap, though, and fits the bill.

Ben Gibbard covers Pedro the Lion's Big Trucks from BlearyEyedBrooklyn.com on Vimeo.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Monday, June 14, 2010

How Did You Celebrate

...your last day of first grade? Norah celebrated hers at a pub
learning to play pool with some friends and one of her teachers.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

The River Rock Campout 2010

Our Kind of Annual Meeting
Another lovely year-end camp-out with the big messy family that is River Rock School has left me suffering from a mild case of Failure To Thrive but a deep appreciation for communal care, deep-into-the-night songs around a campfire, capture-the-flag and, well, the delight of being coaxed out of bed to join a circle of fire watchers, and then riding the night out--bourbon, folk songs, Persian poetry and all--until the banter fades, the sky brightens, and some of us find ourselves a little ragged around the edges.

It was a grand time. If only we could coax Bob, Michele, Zoe and Henry to come to one of these things....

River Rock Spring Camp-Out 2010

Lupins

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Friday, May 28, 2010

"Eric's Written a Sketch"

Actually, not Eric: Rob.

It's a little set-piece of in-jokes I made today for Jimbo.

Jim, are you out there? This is for you.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Pecking Order Problem

Do not place your bets, please, because if you do this video might become illegal.



This is what we get for adopting a new hen into the flock (the charming Silver Laced Wyandotte we've named "Orchid"). Yet another reason that these roosters need to go.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

My Favorite Bad Movie of the Last Six Months

When I first saw "Hoodwinked" (and I've seen it twice now; I'm not ashamed), it was one of those desperate hotel-rentals-for-the-kids.

If you saw the first twenty minutes you would be right to feel incredibly dubious of the whole endeavor. B-grade computer animation! Fairy tale theme! Patrick Warburton! David Ogden Stiers! Andy Dick!

It's got it all.

But it grows on you, and honestly, it's also pretty fun, with some funny banter and silly characters. I dare you to rent it. I think it's well worth the three bucks (or 75 cents apiece for a family of 4).



Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Probably only Svenja Will Appreciate This. Maybe.

Yes, it involves twitter. I'm sheepish, okay?



The link he provided pointed here:

Saturday, May 15, 2010

Too Late For the Ford Administration

I wish I'd come across this song for The Ford Administration mix ("Impeach the President," by The Honey Drippers) (not the Robert Plant band, the 60's / 70's soul band)

1. Impeach The President
Artist: The Honey Drippers


Released: 1973










Source: http://best.complex.com/lists/Kon-Amir-Present-The-50-Greatest-Samples-In-Hip-Hop-History/impeach-the-president

Friday, May 14, 2010

It's Narcissism Friday!






(Actually, it's Eyeglasses-Quest Friday)

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Morning Moose

Coming home from dropping the kids at school this morning I happened upon this moose at one of the ponds around the corner from the house.

Moose, Chappell's Pond, East Montpelier

I would have gotten better pictures but an oversized woman in a hot pink tank top got out of her shabby SUV and walked right up to the water's edge, taking pictures or video with her cell phone all the way. The moose got spooked and took off for the other side of the pond.

He kept his distance after that. Jerk lady.

Moose, Chappell's Pond, East Montpelier

Sunday, May 9, 2010

I Think He Likes the Stage

(The lad as Mr. Darling in "Peter Pan")
(NOT, as some might think, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf")


"Peter Pan"

The kids' school put on a rousing version of "Peter Pan" this weekend (to packed houses), featuring Fergus as Mr. Darling (video to be posted--somewhere--soon) and Norah as Nibs. They both had multiple roles. And here's Fergus as one of Captain Hook's scurvy pirates:

Pirate Fergus