The world through the eyes of an empathetic father

April 28th, 2011

And so I read about the three-year-old girl. The one that died in her sleep after a tree fell on her house. On her bed. Her bedroom. The one place where a child is free and safe and hidden from monsters.

And then I saw the pictures. The destruction of a town, limbs torn from trees, houses cleared like a hand clears away spilled salt, families torn apart. The crying little girls, searching for answers where there were no answers. There weren’t even any questions. The destruction had been so total that no one could figure out what to ask.

And then I thought, “Shit, dude. Where are my kids?”

“I need a hug.”

Because this is what it’s like being a father. I relate to everything. Every child could be my child. Every horrible story could be my horrible story.

COULD BE, I keep telling myself.

But COULD BE always turns into LUCKY IT WASN’T.

There’s no way of explaining the knot in my stomach I get when I read these stories. Except to say that I’m glad those knots show up, because more than anything they remind me how much I love and how much I’m loved.

If they weren’t there, I’d be afraid I didn’t care anymore.


Leave A Comment

Issues Considered: Random

Hersheys 5:14

April 26th, 2011

Easter jokes and candy discussion from work. If this dude ever appears in a tortilla and I’m around to see it, I hope he has a good sense of humor.


Leave A Comment

Issues Considered: On...

On missing your kids

April 22nd, 2011

I spent two days – and, ultimately, three nights – in Minneapolis at a seminar this week. Sierra and Isaac missed me. Missed me for real. To the point that they were asking where I was. To the point that, for the first time I can remember, they were concerned I was never coming home.

My first night back, I had scheduled a content strategy meet-up. I wasn’t home until just before bedtime. Sierra wanted to know if I was coming home.

“Is Daddy coming home?’”

For three days I wasn’t there. It was only natural to be concerned that I wasn’t coming home on the fourth.

This morning, I left early, as I often do on Fridays, to take care of things at work. Sierra woke up and wanted to see me. Had a fit when she realized she didn’t say “goodbye” to me.

“We’re not a family anymore,” she said.

Four days. And we’re not a family anymore.

I was going to write a blog post about how much her “DADDDDDIIIIEEE!!!” means to me, how awful I feel when I let her down – when I’m not there, even for a night, even when we all know I’m going to be back soon – and how it breaks my heart every night I have to try to sleep in a hotel alone, without telling her what my favorite part of the day was, without getting to hear what she learned at school, without feeling like she and Isaac own my life and that I’ve become that sappy dad that can’t handle being away from his kids for even a day or two.

I didn’t write that post.

Good thing I didn’t. Because Merlin Mann did. And holy shit, you guys. He WROTE the shit out of it.

From 43 Folders, “Cranking”:

Many mornings over the past six months or so, at almost exactly 6:00 AM Pacific Time, I was not in my regular bed. I was not even at home. I was sitting in another building, typing bullshit that I hoped would please my book editor. Who, by the way, is awesome.

And, if I noticed what time it was, I’d always wonder whether my daughter had run into our bedroom yet.

I’d wonder whether she had seen my side of the bed empty again. And, when I thought about my empty spot on the bed and how disappointed she’d be to scream “DAD-dy! DAD-dy! DAD-dy!” then see I’m not even there, I’d die a little.

I’d die a little, because as I thought about her, I’d think about my Dad. And as I thought about my Dad, I’d start thinking about hospital beds with cranks–then on to dents, and covered dishes, and rooms full of sobbing outdoorsy guys, and so on.

But, by then it might be 6:10 am Pacific Time. And I didn’t have time to think about my family. Not now, right? No, I had to keep working. I had to stay in that other building and keep typing bullshit that I hoped would please my editor. Who is awesome.

So, I’d type and type. I’d crank and crank. I’d try and try. I’d want very much to go home, make hot milk, and watch Toy Story 2. So much, I’d want this.

I dabbed at my eyes with my sleeve. I sat back and knew I had to say something. I realized it wouldn’t be enough. Because another person already hit it on the head. On. The. Head.

Excuse me. Gotta go hug my daughter, again.


Leave A Comment

Issues Considered: Isaac, Sierra, Writing

Safe at work

April 18th, 2011

There are people who dedicate their lives to taking pictures of dangerous things. Not just inside-the-lion’s-mouth kind of things, but truly life threatening things: war zones and protests and countries that don’t respect the press or any of its trappings. Dangerous things. Things they get killed for. Things they do because you know they’re right, and they know they’re hard, and they know they’re awful sometimes and they know they might die.

And sometimes they do die. Sometimes they’re shot. Sometimes they are caught in the crossfire, to break out a cliché.

Sometimes they are snuffed out.

At work.

They die at work. And they die knowing this was something they’d signed up for.

There are people who do the jobs that I could never do, no matter how much I think I could do it, no matter how often I think I could really take a risk and push myself into the nether regions and do something hard and dangerous and edgy.

I don’t. And I probably never will.

There are people like Sabah al-Bazee, killed during an attack in Tikrit, Iraq – a photographer, cut down by shrapnel, leaving behind a wife and three children. Killed. At work. There are people like Ronald E. Johnson, a guard at the Sioux Falls Penitentiary, a plastic bag tied around his head, his body left to die as two prisoners stole his clothes. Killed. At work. There are people everywhere – not just those who put themselves in dangerous jobs, but their families: their partners and their children and their parents, feeding off of adrenaline but still wondering each day whether their job will kill them.

Then, there’s me. Typing on a computer. Creating spreadsheets. Completely safe, never in danger. Alive.

Always alive. At work.

Not only enjoying what I do, and thankful that I get the chance to do it, but absolutely confident that I’m never in danger. That my wife will never wonder if I’m coming home that day. That my kids will never have to find out their daddy died at work.

Thankful that I’m coddled. Thankful that I can merely appreciate the hard work, without having to ever put my body in harm’s way. And still, constantly, awe-fully, amazed that there are people who will.


Comments: 1

Issues Considered: Career, On..., Web

Thoughts on Twin Towers Circle, Sioux Falls.

April 17th, 2011

Conversation while driving past Twin Towers Circle in east Sioux Falls:

KERRIE: How awful would it be to live on “Twin Towers Circle?”
ME: Well, you just wouldn’t move there. I don’t think they CHANGED the name of the street to Twin Towers Circle. You know going in what you’re getting.
KERRIE: What if it was your dream home?
ME: *thinks*
KERRIE: …
ME: Well, I’d just say it was named after Hakeem Olajuwon and Ralph Sampson.
KERRIE: …
ME: You know. The Twin Towers of the Houston Rockets.
KERRIE: …
ME: Or, Big Boss Man and Akeem. The Twin Towers.
KERRIE: …

SO MISUNDERSTOOD. I don’t know, though. Seems like it would be PRETTY COOL to live on a street named after a late-80s wrestling tag team. Like Demolition Street. Or Legion of Doom Boulevard.


Leave A Comment

Issues Considered: Basketball, Wrestling

Extravert vs. intravert: the 50/50 nature of content strategists

April 13th, 2011

In a month, I’m going to a conference: Confab 2011, a full three days of content strategy nerds milling around downtown Minneapolis.

I’m excited, to say the least. But, I’m also sort of nervous. Meeting people isn’t my strong suit. I kind of hate it. I overcompensate. Then I brood. Then I cry a little and look around for an exit.

It’s why I became a writer and it’s why I morphed my skills for the web and it’s why I still have that aching dread of having to introduce myself to a stranger.

With Confab, though, one thing prevents me from being too put off: these are my people.

These are people who dive into words and spreadsheets and lists of metadata and find themselves at home, up into the time that they feel too disconnected and venture out to meet people.

Meeting people means talking to people. And we talk long enough to remember that we really don’t like to meet people, and then we go back to our rooms and write things and play around in Excel until the whole thing begins anew.

As one very famous content strategist (who we’ll call Christina Halgerson) confided, “I like meeting people for about 30 minutes and then I want to go take a nap. I’m one of those 50/50 split extrovert/introvert people.”

What an awful cycle. We need a support group.

Oh. I guess that’s what Confab is, eh?


Comments: 1

Issues Considered: Content Strategy, On...

What I’ve Been Reading: The Elements of Content Strategy

April 12th, 2011

So let’s not try to tackle an in depth review of Erin Kissane’s The Elements of Content Strategy, because the book itself is very good and we won’t do it much justice other than to say “you should read this if you’re into content strategy and want to get better and need a great little book to keep by your computer.”

What I’ve Read:

The Elements of Content Strategy – Erin Kissane

What we CAN tackle, though, is the process of restraint. The idea that a guidebook doesn’t need to be exhaustive. It simply needs to guide us. Hence the name. Guide. Book.

The Elements of Content StrategyUntil recently, books on internet design and development were usually thick, barely readable tomes, their weight enough to turn off even the most aspiring practitioner. I suspect this is why web development was a smaller field a decade ago: not because the web was just a showdown away from becoming the Wild West, but because no one could bother to read the damned books that helped explain the process.

That’s not the case anymore. Sure, Information Architecture for the World Wide Web continues to double every few years, but for the most part the important books are becoming thinner, their authors rightfully jettisoning the backstory and getting right to the point.

In the case of Kissane’s Elements, two ideals reign over everything:
#1 – The desire to create something small and usable
#2 – The understanding that the “WHY” has already been covered

This book is dense. It took me two hours to read. It’s packed with “HOW.” Enough “HOW” that it really will get a special spot next to my computer, much like how Strunk and White used to sit just within my reach.

You don’t START with this book. You start with Halvorson. Then you read Kissane. And then, if you can handle the excitement, you turn to the most important part of the book: the appendix, where Erin talks about all of the other great resources, and then you get your boss to order all of the books that sound interesting, and then you get excited to read them, and then you realize the hidden benefits of this book.

That it’s a guide for both “how to do the job” and “how to further your knowledge.” And, in turn, the field.

No kissing ass here, and no hyperbole: this book is one of the good ones. Short. Sweet. Fantastic. Some books make you smarter. This one makes you better. Go read it.


Comments: 2

Issues Considered: Books, Content Strategy, What I've Been Reading