Thursday, July 14, 2016

I vow to you to keep writing in this blog - sporadically and with no discernible schedule whatsoever

Hello world! It's me! Sam! You know... Sam? That guy?

I have something interesting to announce here. I bought a new domain and now the extremely popular website www.samterito.com is live and on the internets. As of now, my plans for it are to basically put up a standard GoDaddy template and then awkwardly edit the hell out of it. The first design is a clearly irresponsible accounting firm. Go check it out. NOW! QUICKLY!

I'll wait...

Did you go there yet?

DID YOU?!

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Cheese and Scary Thunder

   This morning at about 6:30, it started raining. I guess I'd gotten up about 6ish to let Kitty out (who was meowing in the living room, right at the folding door) so I turned off the alarm from my phone and went to let him outside. Got back in bed and couldn't sleep, so of course I did the completely logical thing and look at wikipedia entries on everything from US presidents to various historical calamities that have befallen humankind. Twenty minutes later, it started pouring. I assumed it was just a run of the mill rainstorm, but suddenly the loudest crack of thunder clapped outside - scaring me and unfortunately, Cooper. The millisecond the thundercrack stopped, he started crying. Now, it's not easy raising two little kids, but somewhere in the folds of frustration and never ending joy, you always want to comfort them. I ran to him as fast as I could. Mostly to try and make sure he knew everything was ok but albeit, to keep him from waking his baby brother as well. He sat up and tearfully said "I want to go in your room". Normally this is a no-no, but thunder IS scary (even to me) and clearly there was no other solution. I scooped him up, walked into our room, put him in the bed between me and Aim and tucked the sheet and blanket over him. He let out this little gushing sound - one that is an unmistakable sound of his smile that he's made all his life. He makes it when you hug him. He makes it when you hold him. Even in the dark of our room, I knew he was smiling. I will never forget that sound. I'm sure it's one he'll grow out of, because I can't imagine making that sound if I was happy, so I have to do all I can to document it. I'm sure I've recorded it somewhere, on some video I'll have to go find one day, but it's one of the happiest sounds I'll ever hear in my life.
   Conner on the other hand, has briskfully entered the terrible two's. The only good thing about it though is that he's so alert, and even though every other thing is a fit, he's constantly trying to tell you something. Too bad I rarely understand. He's constantly going on these long, rambling explanations that are usually rebutted with me saying what I thought he said back to me, then him saying something like "No, no... bleee bluugrg me um are... Spiderman.. Buzz... WeeWee...". Still he just recently started this incredible thing. When we're putting on his little shoes or tiny pants through gritted teeth or while biting our lips in frustration, he says "Cheese!"to us. It means he wants us to smile. That way, he thinks we're not mad. I don't know if I can speak for Aimee here, but I can definitely say more times than not, it's worked on me.

So whatever I'm doing when I'm reading this. How old I am, or how old you are - "Cheese!" It's not that bad. Life's pretty good. Life is wonderful. Because these tiny little shoes are getting bigger every day.

Cheese!


Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Cars, Bands, and Death.

                In 1993, I was in a death metal band. It was weird, because I didn't really like death metal all that much. At least, not death as these guys liked. I'd rock out to Obituary, Death,  Sepultura, Fear Factory. Sure, there was the occasional Cannibal Corpse song that ruled, but a drummer playing blast beats typically lost me. It's just sort of a personal preference I guess. At the time, there was a lot of other music in my collection of CD's and tapes which got more play. Either way, all that changed when one night after death metal band practice, we decided to go hide under an overpass on Old Hammond Hwy and throw glass YooHoo bottles at cars.
                I was grounded for the summer and my band career was derailed until early 1996. We played 3 or 4 shows in garages full of people with bands we all knew. Later that year, we played our first bar show to familiar faces. Years went by, bands broke up, and bands reformed. Shows were played out in cow pastures on flatbed trailers, in storage rental units, in bedrooms. But one recurring theme was that we usually played with other bands we knew and hung out with.  It seemed like there was some collective of the same people that would always come out, and the shows started to reflect that. After several years of drunken antics, parties, sharing members, caravans to out of town shows, and late nights sitting around a dining room table, we decided to call ourselves Love Affair Records.
                There was nothing special about us. We were just one social circle of college kids from the same couple of old high school cliques and other similar peer groups. A tribe of 20 year olds that went to a few of the same parties as the thousands of other hordes of kids. They all had their bands. Their shows. Their bars. Their art galleries. Their skate parks. I guess they just didn't come up with dumb names for their groups of bands. Either way, we all just kept playing music at different bars and drinking ourselves into oblivion. Looking back, I don't remember a definitive night I can say it all officially started. But there's one recurring event that always swells our group of friends to their rawest and deepest cores: Death. And never through disease or old age. Just tragic, accidental death.
                My buddy Brett was driving down Airline Hwy, coming back from some trashbag strip club in Prairieville, when he lost control of his red, 1994 Pontiac Sunfire. We always kind of assumed he passed out, but I never really asked all that many questions. His car slowly drifted off the road, eventually crashing into a ditch in between the north and southbound lanes, flipping and rolling, and throwing him right through the windshield. The day after, a bunch of us drove out to where it happened. Before Bayou Manchac, across from the vacant state fairgrounds. There were a bunch of dents in the grass, marked by spots of orange spraypaint from the investigation. We found broken cassette tapes, notes, one of his shoes, and some of those little, circular white sticky things the ambulance puts on people they're trying to revive. It was April 7th, 2000. He was 20 years old.
                It was the first time that we'd all had to deal with this wave of emotion.  Suddenly, that guy from your band is gone. That guy you wrote songs with, the guy you talked to about girlfriend problems. He's dead. What do we do now? I remember he had a black Stratocaster with this weird, glittery pickguard. Used a BOSS distortion pedal and a DOD stereo flanger. During practice, he'd always have to borrow somebody's tuner. I remember seeing his guitar leaning against the wall when we were all in his room, after his funeral. His mom was giving away a bunch of his t-shirts. We were all standing there and she was handing them all out. We took this big, group photo in the backyard. We're all standing there, wearing shirts and ties, smiling big smiles. When I look back on all this and where we all are now, that event seemed like the first bookend. Music started with death metal. And music collective started with actual death. An odd way to think about it, but that's pretty much the long and short of it.
                From there on, we were off. Band after band. Beer after beer. We rented storage units to practice in, and tore up every rental house we could get our hands on. I'm pretty sure if you poll everybody in that picture in Brett's backyard - I bet none of us ever got a single security deposit back. Just like every other group of kids in America, we were living the dream. We'd drag around boxes and boxes of 4-track cassette tapes, broken guitar cables, and our Love Affair Records sign from house to house. It was all we needed. It was all we wanted.
                At some point, groups of people and what draws them together start to diminish. Of course, there's a wide variety of factors as to why that is: Marriage, babies, jobs.  We all started to find ourselves at different crossroads. The band I'd always considered my musical home slowly splintered off to Seattle, Shreveport, St Petersburg, Nashville, New Orleans, and Atlanta. Even more broad, the people in that picture started to drift away. From New York to California, some people refused to stop writing songs, but probably more than not, guitars got stashed in people's closets. It's probably the natural order of things, really.

But then one day, the roof caved in.
               
                Getting a phone call at 6 in the morning is never good. Especially when you look and you realize there are a few missed calls from a certain group of people. You just know.  There are really no words to express it, but you'd think that almost a decade later, there would be some internal preparation you could manifest. There's not. You basically count the people who called, and you realize now you know that at least all of them are still alive. But who didn't call?
                Eventually, you  get the bad news. Another vehicle. Another windshield. Nine years later. The world kind of stops spinning and you try to make sense of things. I took a shower and went to work. I called three people to tell them, and then I stopped answering the phone. Justin was in Illinois somewhere when his truck flipped over. Inside were his girlfriend Molly and some guy whom I haven't ever gotten the story of who he was, and why he was in there. Everybody walked away except Justin. I don't know what happened. I have no authority of guessing what happened and it's never been any of my business. All I did know is that we had to prepare. There was going to be a revival.
                In my mind, I think of the things that occurred in those 9 years. There are sounds I have archived, CD's I have, and whole albums available on bandcamp. Sometimes you have to get a little crazy and dig up an old myspace link. But there's whole lifetimes of projects that spanned that near decade. Some songs about dying. In fact, some songs Justin wrote about Brett dying.


Life's kind of funny that way, I guess.

Monday, January 20, 2014

On the day I moved out

My mom told me one day, probably without really thinking about it or really just having it come out in passing, that on the day I moved out of my parents house and into my first apartment, my dad cried. She told me this I think a couple of weeks afterwards. Now, we had an amazing time living in that apartment. It was probably some of the cornerstones of my adult life. That part of life sandwiched between being a kid and being an adult. It was necessary. All of it. It was probably time to do it, but I don't know for sure. Who's to say?

That thought has stuck with me.

Maybe I don't think about it every day, but I think about it probably every couple months. Maybe 2 or 3 times a year. But I think about it. It's part of living - when a baby bird leaves the nest. And I remember really only half leaving. I only moved a couple of things, took a couple of clothes and probably stayed there 3 or 4 days a week. My bed was still at my parents house. My TV. Pretty much all my stuff. But it was more or less this passage that I think all parents have to go through and it pains me so much today, that I made him feel like that. He was 44 years old. Today I'm 35 years old. I'm 9 years from the point he was at when I moved out. His dad, my grandfather, died at 68 years old. My dad is 60 now. He's 8 years from the age HIS dad died. These numbers constantly flicker through my head. And it's sad that I spend really any time thinking about that kind of stuff but it's really just part of life, I guess...

Every day I get home from work, my kids run up to me. "DAAAAAAADDDDYYYY!" They're so excited. Screaming uncontrollably. But I remember being that little boy. My Dad would come home, all dirty from work. And I remember screaming uncontrollably. I guess one day that kinda stops happening. It's why we bottle time up. It's why remembering this stuff is so important.

I need to write in this thing more. I know my kiddos are gonna see it someday. That's the goal. When you're reading it, remember THIS time. It's 2014. I love seeing my kiddos run up to me. It's the highlight of my life.

I hope I don't cry too much on the day that they move out. But I almost tear up thinking about it TODAY. So I'm probably toast for when it happens.

Guess only one way to find out.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

My Kids Are Growing Up. And I don't like it.

   The other day, I set up the swimming pool in the backyard. Cooper of course asked about 10,000 questions while we were swimming. Mostly questions that he knows the answer to "Are we in the pool?" "Are we swimming?" "Am I swimming?" "Is mommy swimming?" I love that kiddo. I try to slow him down as much as I can, and ask for hugs and stuff. Tell him he's a good boy. We're trying to get him potty trained, so that's a hoot. But regardless, I just look at him all the time and I can't believe he's growing up so fast.
   Conner too! He's 9 months old as of last Thursday. We had his 9 mo check up at the doc and he's in all the big boy percentiles (75% for height, 50% weight, 95% for head circum). He's so close to crawling, it's scary. Gonna be mobile soon. He pivots onto his hands, gets up kind of on one knee, and then sorta just wilts back to the ground. I'm worried once that kid is able to get around. He's already a terror in the walker. Lord help us when he's able to get around even easier.
   We went out to MeMe's the other Sunday while Aimee was throwing an Open House at Missy and Patrick's. It was cool to be able to see her and both my babies together. Con wasn't really having any of it, but Coop is so great with her. She had a stroke back in May and she can't really say what she wants to, when she wants to say it. But she gets the point out, and Coop just stands there asking questions and genuinely being loving with her. That's rad. I'm so lucky to be able to see these generations able to interact. I remember my MawMaw Neal and MawMaw Galloway and talking with them. I'm glad my kiddos will be able to hopefully one day say the same.
   Life's great. Thanks be to God.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Aimee's kissing those babies.

I just walked in from watching Adam, Mikey, and Glenn play in their cover bands first gig and I walked in and, of course, having a couple beers makes me super sentimental.
Aimee was feeding Conner a late night, impromptu bottle. He'd waken up 3 hours to the minute since his last bottle. I walked in and talked to her a few minutes while he finished his bottle, and tiredly looked up and down at both of us, nodding off. I kissed them both and walked out, but right as I pulled the door shut, I paused and peeked in the door crack and looked at them both. Aimee was just looking right in that baby's eyes, as he was looking up at her.
She smiled, and pulled him up, kissing his forehead. It was deeply moving to me. She's so awesome. And our babies are so awesome.

Just wanted to write that before I forgot it.

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Conner turns 6 months old today

   It's amazing to me how fast time flies. It seriously seems like yesterday that Aim was going into labor and we were on our way to the hospital to meet our newest addition. Unbelievably it's been 6 months. He's now old enough to pretty much stand on your lap when you hold him, facing towards you, and he just smiles and coos and laughs... The friendliness in his almond-shaped eyes, his forehead and eyebrows kind of scrunching upward as he just has this happy little look on his face. It melts me. It just hits you sometimes, looking at this little baby boy, and watching him start to develop these traits that you know will shape who he is. Watching a personality grow in this baby that, just months ago, was getting his first spongebath under an incubator lamp at 3 in the morning, in a room filled with a very tired mommy and grandparents and sisters and aunts...
   I'm lucky enough to be able to read to these kiddos almost every other night, and I remember rocking and singing Coop to sleep, though now he wants to stand or sit on the floor while you read - and he's getting very good at stalling when it's time to actually get in bed. We've moved onto bigger books, more words, more pages... And his little Sesame Street Beginnings books have inevitably been passed down to his little brother. Conner can now grab the books, and light up with excitement when he sees Big Bird or Elmo, following page to page and using his hands to swipe at the large colorful figures who smile back at him.
   Cooper lately has been taking note of the time when his whole family is in a room, and he'll say "We are all together...". He's said this at least 10 times since we've been at Mom and Dad's while our house is being remodeled. But it's such a huge statement. He's right. We are all together. It brings me back to when we were all together in my family, and when they were all together with their Moms and Dads, and so forth and so on. I know one day these kids will grow up. It's happening right before my very eyes. But right now, we are all together. And that's what matters the most.

I am the luckiest man on the earth, and being a daddy is the highlight of my life. The tears in my eyes are the testament. Thank you, God. So very very much.