Friday, May 27, 2016

                 

           
   

                                                              Very Last
The ^ Daily News

1  Haha! The Rocky theme played the second I began this, and it was by coincidence.

2  It began when I turned the words "Very Last" green!

3  This Rocky film is on, Rocky Balboa, which up to this point was borderline lugubrious, serving essentially as background noise. 

4  But the dramatic workout scene played the very second I wrote those cryptic and lugubrious words. "Very Last" was the play button. I had little to do with any of it.

5  I can't make this stuff up. Go ahead. Don your loudest headphones. I'll wait. Push "Very Last" and then work your way back here in a new window. I dare ya. 

6  I wouldn't make this stuff up. This version of the song is distinctly different from the 1977 original, but it still kicked it all into gear. I smiled big, because it still had the flavor of the original Rocky

7  Yes, it is the 2006 Rocky Balboa which has become the backdrop to my final Daily News. Confirmed. Here it is, for those afraid to click "Very Last." Click the link, not the pic, then open a new window to get back here. Heck, if I could figure out how to rig this all up, you should be able to return, with every version of the song ever made trailing all of this. Have fun wid it! Who cares? Leave in the Netflix ads. It's art. 


And here's the original, at least
some of it:


Well...as good as I could get it, given the DN
deadlines.


8  For the record, none of this was planned. I don't even know how Rocky Balboa ends. Except I predict by his stuff that it is all a dream, perhaps the result of a concussion. I don't know, because I've never seen it. Great fight scene. Life flashing stuff. Lugubrious stuff.  Adrian. Burgess Meredith. Black and white with red blood. Guy in a hoodie running faster than the sidewalk.

9  Heck, I just needed some excuse to throw the word lugubrious around like a rag doll, and here it is, handed to me on a platter. Let's change gears. Let's mix metaphors. Let's mix drinks, for that matter. I'll have a La Croix with a splash of strawberry Ice, and a tangerine-lemon twist, from my very own tree, if you please. Getting strong now. 

10  School's out. How do I have the cajones to throw a vocab word out there on a day when teachers are clearing all their stuff out?

11  Watch me.

12


lugubrious

[loo-goo-bree-uh s, -gyoo-] 
 



adjective
1.
mournful, dismal, or gloomy, especially in an affected, exaggerated,or unrelieved manner:
lugubrious songs of lost love.

13  ROCKY! ROCKY! ROCKY! While I was busying myself bringing in the definition, the fight ended. Rocky fought doggedly, and listened to his own advice about taking the punches that life throws at you. The ring announcer just broke in. Here is what he said:

14  "...a round of applause for these two heavyweight Warriors!" Haha! First thing I thought when I heard it?

15  Uh...these two?

The inimitable Cap'n
Numb Skully.

...And Mr. Schmee,
of the size 3 knee;
a scruvyior knave
ye'll never
see!

16  Gonna Fly Now.

17  I just heard weeping from the TV in the other room. 

18  The things I make up to sell this thing.

19  Nah, I'm out of the biz.

20  I've spent two days mourning about this, and for some reason, I've almost got the giggles.

21  Might be that mini-bag of Ghirardelli Milk & Caramel Chocolate Squares. I see them as a cure for sadness.


22  Think of anything sweet. It will be twice as sweet if you have a few of these.

23  Anybody lookin'?

24  Moving On, Part One: I would like at this time to thank everybody who was ever a part of this nonsense. It began twenty years ago as instructions posted in the Performing Arts building during a run of Guys and Dolls. It made it easier for everybody involved in that Show to know where they were to be, and on which day. 

25  It included everybody involved in the Show, which was pretty much a whole bunch of everybody.

26  So I began adding jokes and commenting on stupid things, pretty much what I have done all the way up to this year.

27  When I retired, I decided to give it one last hurrah: an entire school year, holidays included, only without my being in the classroom.

28  It's interesting, because when I WAS in the classroom, I taught AND got this out each day, usually before 8 a.m., and usually between 7:40 and 7:50 at the latest.

29  If I pushed 7:50, I would often get to school right when the bell was ringing. 

30  Or right when the horn was honking. I never could understand people asking if they heard "the bell," when the damned thing is clearly a fire horn of some sort, and is obnoxious beyond reason.

31  I always enjoyed going a half-second over when giving grammar lessons. Inevitably, some toadstool would wake up from his slumber, and let me know that, "The bell has rang."

32




33  I always remained polite. You never want to be a Grammar Nazi, especially if you teach English. I rarely corrected anyone, but that particular miscreant would have deserved this reply: "Uh, it is 'The bell has rung,' you at-sea dimbulb."

34  I was all over Dictionary.com last night. I looked for synonyms for the word "clueless." There were many, but I couldn't resist, "at sea." I approve of this term. Allow me to continue scolding this lad:

35  "And it's a horn, not a bell. Our school should get a No- Bell Prize, for what it's worth, and yes I have used that on occasion." To incessant groans over the years, undoubtedly.

36  Moving On, Part Two: Any time something we're used to disappears, there is a bit of sadness, and a need for closure.

37  I wouldn't be playing fair if I didn't give some reassurance and a bit of comfort to those who look forward to this stuff first thing in the morning.

38  First, I'm just trying to get on with my summer the same as the teachers clearing their stuff out this morning. Many will be out by noon. I was never that guy. 

39  So clearing this thing out of here isn't coming easily either. 

40  But every year I do, and every year, once I was out for good, I would jot The Rest is Silence on my white board. And then I would turn off the light in my clean room, and leave for the summer, closing the room, and the school year behind me. 

41  I can't leave this without giving a few promises that I hope never go empty. 

42  First, I'm going to leave the DN active. I will use Facebook, specifically to do this. Each Wednesday I will post the link at some point in the day. Wait for it; it will appear every Wednesday.

43  Next, I will slowly work on organizing it as one might a museum, or a non-fiction novel. It shall have some sort of cover page, which I hope can include interesting links. I also hope to include an index. It could lead you to things by simply pressing the month, and the day. That's my hope. 

44  What I won't do is keep this as a full-time job. I do, however, want it all to stay alive, and maybe even include a comment stream. 

45  I will tend it as I would a flower garden, so that it will not just get webs in the weeds. That stuff will take time, but we'll just have to see.

46  In addition, I will write and post occasional articles, perhaps on Wednesdays as well. 

47  Why Wednesdays? Arbitrary. Most people are at work on Wednesdays, and therefore looking for something to goof-off to. The DN always brought that. Exhibits A, B, and C:

Goof-off Exhibit A.
Li'l Maren.

Goof-off Exhibit B.
Li'l Isla.

Goof-off Exhibit C.
Whaaaaaaat? No more DN, G-Pa?
How will you edit without 
my toes?

48  I'm committing to none of this, for the record. It's just a good possibility that I could handle something like that.

49  I'll miss this. 

50  But it has become a huge chore. Editing takes time, lots of time, just to get this all the way I want it.

51  I've reached a point in life where I find time a precious commodity. I've lots going on, and I want to enjoy my later years. I hope to be around forever. I love life, and I cherish all people and things around me. 

52  Some are gone, and some remain. 

53  With that, I now step down from The Daily News, but not away from it. It will always be a part of all of this. I don't really know how to say good-bye, but I'll try by just saying, "Good bye, for now. It's been fun."

54  That's about it. 

55  Gottago.

56  See you again.

57  Live life.

58  Love life.

59  Have a GREAT summer.

60  Peace.

61  The Rest is Silence.

~H~






















fin.






Thursday, May 26, 2016


WOW!!!


The Daily News

1  WOW!!!

2  That was all I could think last night. What an amazing treat for San Jose Sharks' fans!!!

3  I loved it. I paced around the living room most of the night, but settled in late in the game, and I STILL worried it, to the very end.

4  One for the ages.

5   Total team effort.  

6  I had an "Old Guys Rule" hat I was going to post at the final horn, but it just would never have worked. I prefer the picture above, with Joe Thornton looking like Don Quixote, the Impossible Dream finally a reality.

7  They played as a team. They supported one another, and clicked on all cylinders. Young and old. The San Jose Sharks, ladies and gentlemen, are going to the Stanley Cup playoffs, and with lots of love and teal luck, they'll bring it back to San Jose.

8  It's funny, because last night I wanted to go outside and see a sea of teal and black, and people honking and all that. 

9  I stepped outside. I was in Sacramento. Nobody was outside after the game. I booked it over to Target wearing my San Jose hat. 

10 Nobody said a word. I went to Target because it is open 'til 11 p.m. and I had an opportunity to add a few thousand steps to my daily walking. 

11  I'd love to say I ran into a Target filled with Sharks' crazies, but alas! None to be found. I went over to the sports' merch, just to see what stuff they had. 

12  I could have gotten myself a Kings' hat, or even a Giants' or A's hat.

13  No teal, no zeal. 

14  It was all good. I often forget that I'm situated so far from home. It doesn't seem that far when I drive it, but stuff like this?

15  I could get the Sharks' on the radio, but it is all raspy and crackling.

16  So it was REALLY fun to party with all the classic Sharks' fans that I know. 

17  Most of them know and have loved the Sharks since they arrived in San Jose so many years ago. 

18  Silver anniversary.

19  Wanna feel old?

20  Well don't.

21  I felt like a kid! I also felt like a politician, going on Facebook and liking everyone's comments. I felt like the President, walking through a crowd and kissing teal babies.

22  I couldn't even keep up. Every comment was genuine. People got emotional, and deserved to feel that way.

23  I got homesick. As much as I love living up here in Sac, I miss that sort of thing. 

24  Anyway, what a game, and what a night!

25  I hope to remember this for a long time. I hope I could tell my grandchildren about it some day.

26  Hey.

27  Wait a minute!

28  I CAN tell my grandchildren about it!

29  So I'm with you, San Jo peeps.

30  GREAT fun, and now, the real teal deal.

31  I wrote this all in one sitting.

32  Sometimes that works, and sometimes that works. 

33  I never thought I'd hear myself say this but...

34  I secretly don't care that it is the last day of school for the ESUHSD. The Sharks WON, and are in the big event, AND it is the last day of school.

35  There.

36  Much better. 

37  And this is the second-to the last DN, and the last last-day-of school piece. 

38  I never saw all of this stuff comin'.

39  Ah, actually I did. That's why I got a little caught up yesterday. All apologies. 

40  Moving On, Part One: Well! Happy last day of school! The last day is usually somewhat quiet. The seniors are gone, and finals seem endless.

41  The final bell will ring, a few screams and affirmations will happen, but water sprinklers will also go on, and staff will be asked to move everyone off campus. 

42  That's how it all goes down. The real ceremonies are the banquets and assemblies going into the last day. The last day itself is a line outside the bookroom, a few laughs, and sea gulls. 

43   It all becomes a bit unceremonious. Kids pose for pictures, warm smiles everywhere. Teachers will pose with students, and the day will soon slip into early afternoon. And before long, the parking lots will be mostly empty, with a few staff members talking it along, and that will be that. 

44  And the DN will say a few corny good-byes, and this year, for the first time I shall not have to go through all the rigors of grading finals, cleaning up, getting sign-out sheets signed, and all those other things. I will sit, and remember at home, trying to capture things I will never be able to capture. 

45  And tomorrow I will publish my very last Daily News, after hammering it out for twenty years. It hasn't been online for twenty years, but it will still be twenty years.

46  And I shall end my final Daily News with these words: The Rest is Silence. They are Hamlet's last words, and over the years, when I would finally sign out, turn in my keys, and leave for the summer, I would write those words on the board, have one last look, and then close the door behind me. 

47 Sometimes I wouldn't get everything cleaned up and signed for several days. 

48  I don't put those words up until I am absolutely cleared for summer take-off. 

49  Then they go up.

50  Oh, this nonsense won't disappear altogether. I hope to use Facebook to throw some things out there during the summer, as always. One thing I will probably do is to make a cover page, and an index. The articles shall be archived, but it won't happen over night. So. <breathe>

51  I'm not going anywhere, yet I have enjoyed bringing this goofiness to you over the years. 

52  Some of you have read this stuff since its inception. Others discovered it more recently. 

53  I has always been a kick in the pants, at least for me.  

54  Did I ever have certain people in mind when writing?

55



56  Every single day. Different people all the time. If it feels I was thinking of you at certain times, I probably was. 

57  More to come. To the students: I can only give you the words of the great Carlos Santana: Go out and make it better. 

58  Keep in touch with me on Facebook. You are officially a friend, the second school is out. I can offer editing help to you for life, just don't all of you ask at once, or I'll have to charge. 

59  I'd rather hear about you, and how y'all are doing. Feel free to write, or even to email me. I've one email address that is this: harringtonb9999@yahoo.com. I'm not good at checking that one, but at least you can reach me, and from there, I'll send an email address I check more regularly.

60  With that, congrats for getting through the school year. I miss a lot of you more than you'll know. Do well, and enjoy your well-earned time off. You may officially call me "H", or, if you're more comfortable, "Mr. H." You could call me late for lunch, for all I care. Just feel free to stay in touch.

61  Gottago. It's difficult, but gottago.

62  Go Sharks! Go Warriors too!

63  See you again.

64  Peace. 

~H~








































fin.