Friday, December 31, 2021

Nobody Puts Baby in a Lunch Box!

As the last month of 2021 rolled around, I was really close to reaching the 1,600 mile plateau for the year. So I put some effort into reaching that milestone, while turning 46 just before Christmas, with the full knowledge that squeezing in a similar amount of miles in 2022 was not likely with the amount of attention our baby would require when he arrives in February.

Speaking of, our latest digital update on the future baby Russell is that he is the size of a lunch box. And, of course, the example image sent to us is a lunch box depicting the original Space Jam movie from 1996. This comes a week after Russell's size was compared to that of a Care Bear. Yes, the objects are becoming more obscure as the weeks go by.

We get the idea of giving folks tangible objects to better understand the shape & size of the fetus as time moves along, but someone with a lesser grasp of life & reality could easily misinterpret the fact that a tiny human will soon be exiting another human relatively soon (about 49 days). Could they at least put a drawing of the fetus next to the similar-sized objects? I'd rather not see Russ as a Go-Gurt, thermos of tomato soup & bologna sandwich or the monetization of a character created by a Cleveland-based greeting card company.

So 2021 ended with my mile counter reaching 1,600.9 on the last day - New Year's Eve, out distancing 2020 by about 90 miles. And 2022 will begin with the Rear-View Mirror 5k on New Year's Day, the same as 2021. Though, the race last year was cancelled due to freezing rain and subsequent iced over course. L and I then jogged the course since we had already arrived and yes, the course was crazy slippery and I could not imagine having to run on it.  This year, however, I will be doing the race by myself because at this time in 2021 L wasn't 34 weeks pregnant. We are expecting rain, but around 50 degrees...can't complain for an outdoor January race in Central Ohio. 

The return to running for me began in the summer of 2016 and each year since, my yearly mileage has increased: 2017: 1,256, 2018: 1,301, 2019: 1357, 2020: 1,510 and 1,600.9 in 2021. I'm sure 2022 will be a decline, but I will be more than happy to replace those miles with fatherhood. Though, I will be just as exhausted mentally as would be physically - and then some - attempting to care for our coming offspring. And our yearly February trip to South Haven, Michigan for the Ice Breaker Festival and Break the Ice 5k to celebrate L's birthday will have to be put on hold, but as you can imagine we will be excited to visit again in 2023 with the third member of our family.

The Fermented Firefly is all abuzz with what the future holds. Previously up in the air on where we are going, what we want to do and where we want to be...I think we now have a better grasp of things. ROKS is seven weeks away and we are gladly cruising around our forever cul-de-sac....  #MettleMonday 

Forever Cul-De-Sac by Ages and Ages

I came up in a cul-de-sac:
Neighborhood houses evenly placed
And spread out all around until I couldn't see out
And the "world" was a word I picked up in a textbook
I tried to relate, it was hard to embrace
Because it seemed so far away

And I want to have vision
But I can't see out
Caught in this cul-de-sac
Round and round
I want to have vision
But I can't see out
Caught in this cul-de-sac
Up and down
I want to have vision
But I can't see out
Riding this cul-de-sac
Round and round
I want to have vision
But I can't see out
Caught in this cul-de-sac

And no matter how hard
That they try to convince you
They don't approve if it isn't familiar
Because they don't want
What they can't understand

And you're either a target or trying to find one
So why go in circles at all
If it's out of your hands??

(I want to have vision
But I can't see out
Caught in this cul-de-sac
Round and round...)

Always I am only
Going round and round
On this cul-de-sac to nowhere...


Photos 

The beer created to celebrate Russell's
February 2022 arrival

Goofing off at the extended family
Christmas eve gathering. The hat
belongs to my uncle

Adjusted our logo, for L, to celebrate
Russell's arrival

The Christmas ham at the in-laws with
secret glaze, 'twas tasty!

The other side of the mug

L tolerating my goofing off. Russell,
thankful the womb is keeping him from 
this awful display.



Tuesday, November 16, 2021

The Shape of Things to Come

Two trimesters down, one to go. 

You know back in June when we discovered we were finally pregnant, it all seemed so far away and we we would be semi-prepared when everything started getting "real". Well, we are...in a sense. Though, one can't help but feel sorely unprepared because you have made another human who will be arriving when it's cooking time reaches the pinnacle in mid-February. We aren't freaking out, but the constant reminders of what will soon be coming makes you take a step back and try to comprehend the gravity of it all.

Seriously, this was their graphic
We have an online registry for friends and family to peruse as they please and to help us out, the registry will send a weekly update as to what is taking place inside the womb and how your baby is evolving. This past week we were alerted that our child will be arriving in roughly 98 days and baby is starting to develop regular sleep and wake patterns (It might feel like they’re always active while you’re sleeping!). And our little one is also building up important immunities to protect against the outside world after birth.

Oh...and that our forthcoming offspring is about the size of a VHS tape case....hmmm....okay. Our joke was that the newsletter was aware that I'm older than L and they needed to come up with an object they thought I would better understand. Not weird at all. Though, I rue the day I'm forced to watch The Little Mermaid (released in 1989). Some adult "cough medicine" may need to be involved.

For L, she is struggling to keep from attempting everything on her personal to-do list. Her body, of course, is not allowing her to be the superwoman she is and she isn't happy about it. This is where I remind her that the situation is temporary and the simple fact that I exist - so I can do the things she feels she has to do. And, these pleas are regularly ignored. Not frustrating, at all, for either one of us.

She, still though, has been quite active and since running has become an uncomfortable experience, a walking routine has entered the picture. Understandable, but she misses running. In September, and three months pregnant, she bested 160 competitors at the Kilbourne 5K. She then beat 229 other women - and 305 people total - at the Holland Haven Half Marathon in Holland, Michigan. So she isn't a push over, just pregnant. I don't know what that feels like, nor do I want to, but I can't imagine not being able to go for a run as well as being a human incubator.

Our last Michigan photo as two
Speaking of that tiny person, when we returned from the trip to Holland & Grand Haven, Michigan we discovered we would be HAVING A BOY! And that boy's name will be Russell. The name has no other significance other than we like it, though it is appropriate that probably my favorite movie series are the National Lampoon Vacation films and Chevy Chase's son in those films is named "Russ".

Our last night in Michigan, and hanging out on the pier in Grand Haven, we watched the sunset. As we were leaving and before the sun disappeared, L started to cry, but they were happy tears. It was the realization that this would be the last vacation, to our favorite place, as two. 

If there was ever something that could have knocked me down regarding the enormity of reproducing, that was it. The wondering, thinking, imagining and scaring the bejesus out of myself has been non-stop and cranked up to a thousand since.

The process of gathering and preparing for Russell has taken over as we also work around the upcoming holidays. I am still running, much to L's chagrin, though as it begins to get colder, I'm sure she isn't going to complain too much. She did have to return to her former self as a race spectator as I took part in the Nationwide Children's Hospital Columbus Half Marathon in October and the both of us are entering the Grove City Thanksgiving Wattle 5k at the end of the month, though she plans on walking it with a variety of others. 

A mid-November blast of winter took place a Sunday when we decided to run/walk at Prairie Oaks Metro Park. A nice snow fall made the venture quite peaceful as we scared up a number of slumbering deer. The snow didn't last long, but it was a little reminder of what we can also expect in the weeks & months ahead.

As for Russell's arrival, there has been plenty of advice from co-workers as two of them have had new arrivals within the last four months, but at the moment I think we need to prepare our cats for the loud and sometimes smelly bundle of joy. Plastic bags scare the crap out of them now, I can't imagine how they would react to what amounts to a smoke alarm with an inadequate off button.

Soon, I will start making the beer to signify the arrival of the third human member of our family. I created the label over the summer using a photo I took from one of our many trips to that state up north. There will be plenty of time to work on it as I take some time off in December.  This is a yearly break for me as I use the time to celebrate my birthday as well as Christmas and spend time with family we don't get to see much of during the rest of the year. I guess it will also be one last time to reflect and ready ourselves for the stretch run of the pregnancy without work interruption.

It is all coming together, being molded I guess you could say, for the shape of things to come...

The Shape of Things to Come - The Grip Weeds

There's a new sun
Risin' up angry in the sky
And there's a new voice
Sayin' "we're not afraid to die"

Let the old world make believe
It's blind and deaf and dumb
But nothing can change the shape of things to come

There are changes
Lyin' ahead in every road
And there are new thoughts
Ready and waiting to explode

When tomorrow is today
The bells may toll for some
But nothing can change the shape of things to come

The future's comin' in, now
Sweet and strong
Ain't no-one gonna hold it back for long

There are new dreams
Crowdin' out old realities
There's revolution
Sweepin' in like a fresh new breeze

Let the old world make believe
It's blind and deaf and dumb

nothing can change the shape of things [Repeat: x4]

To come

Even on vacation at our B&B, 
I attract the cats

The Holland Haven Half Marathon finish

The Grand Haven Lighthouse

Our B&B outdoor breakfast nook

L, and Russell, at
Branstool Orchards

Finishing the Nationwide Children's
Columbus Half Marathon



After a mid-November walk at
Prairie Oaks Metro Park

Snow run at Prairie Oaks Metro Park

The snow hung around for about half a day


Monday, July 19, 2021

Where the Bioluminescence Shines Brightest

We had been working on it for months without any promising results and L was getting more & more frustrated. She had this routine when taking the tests. She would leave the cover on it as it sat on the counter in the bathroom and when it was time to take a look she would take off the cover, not see the result she wanted, then angrily throw it in the trash. This took place probably 12 to 15 times over the course of time.

On June 8th, on a whim, she bought a test on the way home from work. This time the routine was interrupted by what looked to be a different result, but was it really? Maybe she was just imagining seeing something else or her eager, overanxious mind was creating a mirage to satisfy what she had been yearning for. Trying keep her feelings at bay, she waited till I came home and showed me, "Am I seeing things? Or am I trying to force myself to see something different than the usual result?"

"No, I don't think so. I see exactly what you see," I say - still - with some skepticism because it isn't 100% accurate. To assist her thinking, she sent a photo of the test to a co-worker for her opinion. The co-worker called her right back and as L answered, I could hear "Oh, my god!" exclaimed from across the room.

The indicator was super faint, but it was there - we weren't making it up....right? After a night of examining what little facts we had regarding L's bodily function the last few weeks, she bought a test on the way home from work the next day, June 9th. As a I sat on the floor recovering from a four mile run in the humid late spring weather, L arrives and says jokingly, "This one actually says yes or no and isn't left up to a line or two (that may or my not be imaginary) for you to decipher."  I'm in front of the box fan petting the fat, orange cat Jameson, shirtless and sweaty. Suddenly L jets from the bathroom and slides across the carpeted floor on her knees to me in her best stage performer impression, causing a frightened Jameson to do just the opposite.

She has this giant smile on her face and in her hand is this magic, semi-urine soaked wand that simply reads, "Pregnant". I'm half smiling and half in disbelief. Her mind now in overdrive, L begins rehashing how she has felt the last few weeks and putting together the puzzle pieces. She pauses, "What is the protocol regarding who to tell and when?" Seriously, she's asking me? How in the hell am I to know? "Okay, first of all, I would rather have medical professional confirmation before we start telling people," I say with this weird feeling of how in the world am I the more rational one at the moment.

Excited, and for good reason, she takes a deep breath and agrees. Shortly thereafter, we drive over to Blue Limestone Park (the location of our wedding two summers ago) to take a walk. Thousands of thoughts are running through my head, a few million were sprinting through L's brain. Later that evening I had to ask her to relax as she started to run down a list of things she will not be able to eat, will have to avoid, activities she will have to lessen or stop. I then apologized, but we still didn't have foolproof confirmation. Not that she, or we, couldn't talk about these things, but what I didn't want was to get excited and pumped only to have it wall washed away by a false positive. Yeah, probably me overthinking, but I was trying to be rational....right?....no? Holy crap, did we just reproduce?!??

At work the next day, L drops me a text: July 15th, 2:00 pm, we have an appointment the first day we are back from vacation (the one we are taking with her brother & parents to the Lower & Upper Michigan Peninsula). Along with it is a link titled: How Big Is My Baby This week? Here's Your Baby Fruit Size Chart, which is led by a photo of a pregnant woman weirdly smiling and holding a quarter of a watermelon at a farmer's market. "If you want to read about what's happening...truly bizarre and amazing...", L's follow up text states. 

The first paragraph, "Your due date is calculated from the first day of your last menstrual period. Conception occurs about two weeks from this day, and that's when you're truly considered pregnant. In just 40 short weeks, your baby will grow from the size of a tiny seed to the size of a plump watermelon."  I'm still confused as to why the woman in the picture is holding a quartered watermelon and not a plump watermelon? Are they making assumptions about my 45 year-old genes?? Hopefully, the fruit of our labor will get L's giant brain - that should dispel this stupid article's perceived crass presumptions.

The fun part was about to begin: my brother & sister-in-law are coming in to visit the family from Texas in about two weeks, which is then immediately followed by the Michigan vacation with L's family. How do we stick to our guns, waiting for professional confirmation, when we will be mingling with both sides of our immediate families in consecutive weeks leading up to said confirmation date. Would our secret be detected? Would we be figured out before we told them? Would our eventual news be subdued by the smart women who notice things and simply keep their mouth shut to not let the cat out of the bag and burst our balloon? Or would we lose patience and just tell them?

Maybe all of the above, but we wanted to try.

Post race pic and wearing
the custom singlets I designed
during the pandemic. The COVID
boredom did have some benefits
And off course, we broke protocol, but it made sense. On Father's Day, we spent the afternoon with L's family and gave the fun news. From here we decided only immediate family - for the time being - would be given the details we knew. Though L was starting to feel her body adapt to the pregnancy, she was till able to join me in running the Plain City Four Mile Run on June 26th. I took fourth overall and she finished 24th, even with the added burden of working through a cold passed on to her by her students at work. As a result, I'm not sure I can ever really complain about not feeling well during a race ever again.

When my brother and sister-in-law visited, we broke the news and the following night at my sister's house - with all the immediate family - we did the same. There was excitement, of course, but this was also the next logical step, so it didn't come as too much of a surprise. It was satisfying to make the announcement with everyone at the same time, and in person. 

That weekend we made our annual camping trip to East Harbor State Park to enjoy the Independence Day holiday. A year ago, I jokingly asked L, "Is this the last time we come up here with just the two of of us?"  Well, technically, that did happen to be the case - just not in the out-of-the-womb sense. To add to the weekend, we ran the Boy with the Boot 5k that Sunday morning in nearby Sandusky. A hot, muggy morning along the Lake Erie shore was our running location and it was fun to pick up a victory, despite it not being the most competitive event in the world. Even L pulled out a second place for her age group. All in all, it added to the fishing, swimming, open fire cooking and fireworks over the Great Lake.

**We back EVERY pair with 
FREE Replacements if Lost or Broken**
**Each order also secures 11 meals 
to fight hunger through 



We are an independent sunglasses company for those who don't want to buy from a massive, faceless company that has been operating the same way for decades 

Just a week later was our real summer vacation, L & I went with her parents to the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. We stayed in St. Ignace, but spent five days traveling all over the UP visiting Tahquamenon Falls State Park, Drummond Island, Seney National Wildlife Refuge, Grand Sable Banks & Dunesclimbing to the top of Crisp Point Lighthouse and admiring the Mackinac Bridge - among other things. And, of course, stops at Tahquamenon Falls Brewery & Lake Superior Brewing Company for my personal browsing pleasure.

Funny story, as we climbed atop the Grand Sable Dunes over looking Grand Sable Lake, three women approached us as they were backpacking along the North Country Trail. We were gawking at the surrounding landscape, but thought we overheard them mention Ohio on their way to us. Once there, we exchanged friendly pleasantries and asked where they were from. "We're from Akron, Ohio," they shared as we delightedly relayed we, too, were from the Buckeye State and that I had worked in Akron for several years. Too funny, the bigger the world seems, the smaller it gets.

A whirlwind vacation it was, not to mention exhausting having visited four of the five Great Lakes over a week and a half. 

Once we returned, we had the doctor's appointment the next day. Both of us were excited with L maybe a bit more nervous than I as we were entering a phase neither one of us were familiar with. Within minutes after answering some basic questions and completing some paperwork, this image was brought to our attention:


Despite wearing a mask, I couldn't close my mouth as I starred in awe. This tiny thing was about 63 days old and working on an arrival date slated for February as we watched it squirm. We don't know the sex at this point, but we have been tossing around various fun combinations of male & female names. This was a neat little respite before returning to the real world.

My first day back to work was that Saturday, two days later. A slow day it was, but I did help a female patron figure out how to print screenshots of text messages she gathered from her significant other's phone to prove to him she had caught him cheating. How many screenshots you ask? She spent just short of $10.00 on printing, at $0.10 per page. Yup, just a standard day in public library land.

Though, from this point on, our forthcoming year will not be so standard. Rather it will most likely be unconventional, unorthodox, atypical, strange and peculiar...so...yeah...basically, a standard at The Fermented Firefly...


Stars, they got nothing on us
I don't think you understand
Let's go out and do something we'd never do
'Cause I feel like I can do anything when

My head is spinning and my feet off the ground
And I can't stop dancing like no one's around
And yeah, I think we were born to shine

'Cause the stars are dull when they're compared to you and I
And if people don't like it, then they can close their eyes
'Cause we're not the same and we don't have to try
'Cause we're brighter than fireflies
We're gonna light the sky
Ooooh oh oh
Ooooh oh oh oh
Ooooh oh oh
Ooooh oh oh oh
Light the sky

You and me, we stand out of the crowd
'Cause we aren't afraid to let our light out
So trust in me and just have no doubt
'Cause we will be tearing through the clouds

'Cause my head is spinning and my feet off the ground
And I can't stop dancing like no one's around
And yeah, I think we were born to shine

'Cause the stars are dull when they're compared to you and I
And if people don't like it, then they can close their eyes
'Cause we're not the same and we don't have to try
'Cause we're brighter than fireflies
We're gonna light the sky

Ooh woah oh
Ooh woah oh oh
Ooh woah oh
Ooh woah oh oh
Light the sky

You and me
Me and you
We will shine through
You and me-e-e and you
We will shine

'Cause my head is spinning and my feet off the ground
And I can't stop dancing like no one's around
And yeah, I think we were born to shine

'Cause the stars are dull when they're compared to you and I
And if people don't like it, then they can close their eyes
'Cause we're not the same and we don't have to try
'Cause we're brighter than fireflies
We're gonna light the sky

Ooh woah oh
Ooh woah oh oh
Ooh woah oh
Ooh woah oh oh
Light the sky

Bass fishing

A 5k race win

Open fire, cast iron chicken & biscuit stew

Fireworks from a barge
on Lake Erie





The Mackinac Bridge

From atop the Crisp Point
Lighthouse, looking East

Crisp Point Lighthouse, looking north

L's parents at Crisp Point Lighthouse

Crisp Point Lighthouse

Tahquamenon Falls

My driftwood art masterpiece


L, atop Crisp Point Lighthouse



Us with the bridge & Lake Huron

The bridge, from Mackinaw City at night

The in-laws & L

Grand Sable Lake from the dunes

Hurricane Creek

From the lighthouse, looking west

From Drummond Island Campground

L, atop the Grand Sable Dunes along
the North Country Trail


From Drummond Island Campground

'twas quite tasty

Our Airbnb had the remnants of a
 treehouse or fort in the side yard which
 included a lock on one of the trees.

A neat little place

Would be worth a return trip