Author Topic: Vaunting  (Read 1651 times)

WVastro

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Vaunting
« on: November 02, 2017, 12:58:31 am »
Vaunting.

We all did this together. What a fucking ride.

Where were you? What was your personal experience?

For myself, I had the most trying time of my life starting in late summer. This team was a constant positive influence. This team kept me interested regardless of the results. I couldn't watch every game like I was used to doing but I knew there was something special going on. This result doesn't heal anything... but I was there. It felt amazing. I hope you all had a similar experience. Where were you?


On 11/1 I Vaunted like a motherfucker...

Astros Fan in Big D

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Re: Vaunting
« Reply #1 on: November 02, 2017, 08:11:11 am »
I moved here in 94, got married in 95, and the kiddos started dropping in 2001.  Our first child,  Andrew,  was born at 32 weeks, too weak to breath on his own. He spent a week on a ventilator,  we spent Christmas at home with him in the NICU, and finally after 6 weeks we brought him home.   Turns out the reason he came early is he has a rare chromosomal disorder.  The premature birth/NICU stay were just the beginning.  My wife has worked tirelessly since then to make sure he gets what he needs, and it's far from easy.  He's 15, cannot speak,  has limited self help skills,  isn't potty trained,  and does not travel well at all.  He is sweet and when he's happy its warm-the-soul infectious.   Meanwhile we've had 2 other typical kids,  and my wife has  gone to great lengths to ensure that their childhoods are as rich with experience as possible,  and not limited because w have to spend so much time attending on big brother.

Which brings us to the past year.  Her dad is a sweet guy,  but started showing some worrisome signs.  We took him to be tested,  the psychologist said pre-dementia. That was June 2016.  By November he deteriorated so badly we moved him in with us.   I watched her take him to appointment after appointment,  with him resisting all the while protesting "there's nothing wrong with me".  So for almost a year now she's run this household,  with precious little help from her siblings and the cracks would sometimes show.   So in July I planned a short getaway to Colorado for early November.

My wife is a Ranger fan (she can't help it,  she was born in Fort Worth).  But most of her extended family is from Houston and she is a Texan first and foremost (one of her ancestors got a land grant from the Mexican government) and she pulls for all Texas teams (except the spurs,  or only in special circumstances).  So as the playoffs started she dutifully rooted for the Astros,  albeit from a distance.  The ALDS fell on the weekend of her family annual family reunion held in Surfside.   She sent me down early so I could watch game 2, which I did from the Crawford Boxes,  taking in my very first Astros playoff game in person. As the playoffs went on,  she was more and more invested,  to the point she couldn't watch the games because the tension was too high.  When we won the pennant,  she gave the go ahead for me to go to a WS game.   Between work and Cub Scout duties,  the only game that worked was Game 5.  So a buddy and I banged out our work duties early Sunday,  drove down 45 and took in game 5.  Game 5! Are you kidding me? I got to see that wonderful/ horrible/ amazing/ appalling masterpiece in person.  We got back home around 0500.

Which brings us to 6 and 7. As I mentioned,  she and I were heading to Colorado.  So my parents came in to babysit the kids and watch over her father.  How great would it have been to watch them clinch it with my dad,  who took me to my first Astros game in 1981? Alas, all good things must wait.   So yesterday of we go to the airport,  me in my orange Altuve Jersey and cap.  Well wishes here and there.   Now the first trip we made by plane to Colorado was on oiur honeymoon.   That was June 1995, and we watched the Rockets take games 1 and 2. Even wrote Go Rockets in a snowbank on the highway near Ouray.  We rented a Camry way back then,  and this time the lady at the rental place gave us a free upgrade sent us down the aisle to pick one ,  i spied a Camry and said "This is it."   may be a good time to point out I was wearing the exact same jeans/ Astros T shirt/ jersey/ cap I wore to game 5.  I'm not superstitious,  you are.

We got some things done in Denver and headed west.  Got to the place in time to grab some Fritos and chili for pregame meal.  Let me just say,  going from 700 feet elevation to 9100 feet and watching Game 7 of the freaking World Series with your favorite team involved will get your heart pounding and racing.   And if a certain CF happens to blast a ball into the stands,  you'll probably come close to passing out after jumping up and yelling.

Fast forward to the 9th.  My wife watched/ didn't watch the whole game.  She didn't feel good.  She was queasy,  her heart was racing.   She busied herself rearranging things that didn't need it.  When Altuve tossed the ball to Yuli and I was screaming she appeared by my side.   As the mob formed on the infield,  she burst into tears.   We hugged,  whooped and hollered.  Spent the rest of the night soaking it in.  After a while she observed she was feeling a lot better and was even hungry. The whole point is the trip was to get her away for a short while, and this wonderful,  cathartic event happens.

So anyway that's my 2017 Astros story.   Special for a thousand reasons.

God bless the Houston Astros.
Good bless Orange Whoopass.

And God bless my wife.  I could not have done better.

toddthebod

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Re: Vaunting
« Reply #2 on: November 02, 2017, 08:53:11 am »
I was born in Brookline, Mass.  In the summer of 1974, when I was 5 years old, we moved down to Houston.  My father was a college professor and he got a job teaching philosophy at Rice.

I remember the very moment that I became an Astros fan for life.  Sunday, September 9, 1979.  My father took my brother and I to see the Astros play the Giants.  The Astros were down in the 8th inning 1-0.  With one out, Dave Bergman hit a single.  Cesar Cedeno hit another single.  And then the most improbable thing happened.  Jesus Alou, the first base coach, was brought in as a pinch hitter and hit a double off the wall scoring two runs -- a lead that the Astros would not give up.  Denny Walling came up next and drove in Julio Gonzalez who had pinch run for Alou.  Enos Cabell doubled, driving in Walling.  I had never seen anything like this before and I was a hooked 10-year old.

Coincidentally, that night was the last night that the Astros would hold on to first place in the division in 1979.  The Astros won 89 games that season but finished 1.5 games behind the Reds. 

I cried at the end of the 1979 season.  I cried at the end of the 1980 season when the Astros lost in the NLCS.

In 1986, I left Houston to go to school in Philadelphia.  I met my wife in college and stayed in the northeast.

Being an Astros fan in New York and now New Jersey has been a lonely proposition.  I found a bar down in the village where I would go watch games with a few other ex-Houstonians on Sunday.  But for the most part, I had no one to share my passion for the Astros.  I used to call WFAN (and became their regular Astros fan) just to talk to someone about my favorite team.  And then I discovered this website (actually Kevin & Scott's Astros Connection). 

If it wasn't for the Talk Zone, I don't know if I would be the fan I am today.   You guys gave me the opportunity to make my ridiculous trade suggestions and to just talk about the team I love.  I've only met a few of you in person (Chuck, Alkie) but many of you have become my friends through our shared love of the Astros. 

I cried again last night.  I cried again this morning,  I'm pretty sure that this is the first time I've actually cried about the Astros since 1980 when I was 11 years old,  What can I tell you, I'm an emotional person.  After so many years when the team was so, so close.  After so many disappointments.  After such an up and down post-season.  How could you not cry.  I love this team.  I love its players.  I love you all.  Thanks for listening.       

   
« Last Edit: November 02, 2017, 08:54:51 am by toddthebod »
Boom!

BudGirl

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Re: Vaunting
« Reply #3 on: November 02, 2017, 09:17:25 am »
I was born in Brookline, Mass.  In the summer of 1974, when I was 5 years old, we moved down to Houston.  My father was a college professor and he got a job teaching philosophy at Rice.

I remember the very moment that I became an Astros fan for life.  Sunday, September 9, 1979.  My father took my brother and I to see the Astros play the Giants.  The Astros were down in the 8th inning 1-0.  With one out, Dave Bergman hit a single.  Cesar Cedeno hit another single.  And then the most improbable thing happened.  Jesus Alou, the first base coach, was brought in as a pinch hitter and hit a double off the wall scoring two runs -- a lead that the Astros would not give up.  Denny Walling came up next and drove in Julio Gonzalez who had pinch run for Alou.  Enos Cabell doubled, driving in Walling.  I had never seen anything like this before and I was a hooked 10-year old.

Coincidentally, that night was the last night that the Astros would hold on to first place in the division in 1979.  The Astros won 89 games that season but finished 1.5 games behind the Reds. 

I cried at the end of the 1979 season.  I cried at the end of the 1980 season when the Astros lost in the NLCS.

In 1986, I left Houston to go to school in Philadelphia.  I met my wife in college and stayed in the northeast.

Being an Astros fan in New York and now New Jersey has been a lonely proposition.  I found a bar down in the village where I would go watch games with a few other ex-Houstonians on Sunday.  But for the most part, I had no one to share my passion for the Astros.  I used to call WFAN (and became their regular Astros fan) just to talk to someone about my favorite team.  And then I discovered this website (actually Kevin & Scott's Astros Connection). 

If it wasn't for the Talk Zone, I don't know if I would be the fan I am today.   You guys gave me the opportunity to make my ridiculous trade suggestions and to just talk about the team I love.  I've only met a few of you in person (Chuck, Alkie) but many of you have become my friends through our shared love of the Astros. 

I cried again last night.  I cried again this morning,  I'm pretty sure that this is the first time I've actually cried about the Astros since 1980 when I was 11 years old,  What can I tell you, I'm an emotional person.  After so many years when the team was so, so close.  After so many disappointments.  After such an up and down post-season.  How could you not cry.  I love this team.  I love its players.  I love you all.  Thanks for listening.       

   

Hey, I met you when you ran the marathon!
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Fredia

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Re: Vaunting
« Reply #4 on: November 02, 2017, 09:18:32 am »
Nirvana achieved
forever is composed entirely of nows

toddthebod

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Re: Vaunting
« Reply #5 on: November 02, 2017, 10:37:33 am »
Hey, I met you when you ran the marathon!

Thanks.  I totally forgot (as I've forgotten much of that day of total pain).
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