Saturday, September 29, 2018

Eulogy for my grandfather, Dr. Bernard John Mycoskie

Saturday night, the Rangers lost their 89th game of the season, 13-NOTHING to Seattle. After that, Grandpa said, "I've had enough." He died early Sunday morning.

He and I bonded over the Rangers.

One memory stands out above them all.

It’s not going to Port Charlotte for spring training, splitting time between the ballpark and Palm Island resort.

It’s not Grandpa using his influence to land me the best job on the planet for a 16-year old kid, bat boy in a big league clubhouse.

It’s not seeing him run around with beer and champagne like a 20-year old rookie when the Rangers won their first division championship in club history.

And it’s not when I was working for ESPN Radio, trying to be a serious sports journalist and do interviews in the clubhouse. It was hard to do that when Grandpa wanted to walk me around and introduce me to ballplayers. "This is my grandson. He's a reporter! Do you want to ask him something, Chris?"


 My favorite day at the ballpark was in June of 2005.

I was living in Monroe, Louisiana, and had fallen hard for this girl. I brought Cassie home to Arlington to meet Dad and Diane, and also to go to a ballgame with Grandpa.

Like he did with a lot of my friends when I brought them into town, he wanted to give a behind-the-scenes tour of the ballpark. So we went off to do that before first pitch.

He could tell I was in love, and he wanted to make this tour extra special. We must have seen every square inch of the stadium, and been introduced to nearly every employee. We saw the locker rooms, batting cages… of course the training room and his plaque… the press box, scoreboard, public address, all of the restaurants... EVERYTHING!

By the time we got back to our seats, it was the SEVENTH INNING!

So for Cassie's first game, she saw about two and a half innings of baseball.


Fast forward to December 2010. Cassie and I were living in Baton Rouge. I had gone back to school, and just finished my degree. Cassie was in a job she HATED.

So we decided to leave, and move back to Arlington, on a hope and a prayer that we'd find something around here.

Phil and Diane were set to take us in, but then my dad calls me and says he heard Grandpa wanted us to move in with him.

So I called Grandpa up, and told him I had heard about that and would love to stay at his place. That sounded great.

There was a pause for a few seconds, then I heard, "Chris, I'm sorry about this… but I was kidding."

I think Dad and Aunt Suz twisted his arm a bit, telling him it may be a good thing to have some company and some help. So later that night he called back and apologized, and asked us to move in with him.

We were penniless. He gave us shelter, bought all of our food. So incredibly generous. Never said a word about it, until I finally got my first paycheck, when he made a crack about me finally paying for some groceries.

And we got to spend so much time together. Sharing meals, watching ballgames, and taking him to serve at Mission Arlington.

Cassie never met Grandma, but got to know her by living there. Grandpa talked about her all the time, showed Cassie so many pictures, and told her about the different aspects of the house that Grandma designed.

We ended up staying there for six months. I wish it could have been longer. But the commute back and forth to my job in Frisco was getting really difficult, plus Cassie and I knew we wanted to start a family soon. Living upstairs at Grandpa's may not have been the easiest set-up for a baby.



I was watching Senator John McCain’s funeral earlier this month, listening to President George W. Bush's eulogy. When I heard this, I thought it applied perfectly to Grandpa as well.

“Some lives are so vivid; it is difficult to imagine them ended. Some voices are so vibrant; it is hard to think of them stilled."

Today, Grandpa's basking in the glory of our Lord and Savior.

As much as he loved to tell stories here, he eventually ran out of them, and we starting hearing repeats.

Now that he's spending eternity with Jesus Christ, I can only imagine the amazing new stories he'll have to tell when his fellow believers join him there.

Saturday, March 11, 2017

ASN Ceasing Operations

Many of you have sent notes, making sure I saw stories about American Sports Network's demise during my busy week at the basketball tournament. We found out a few days before it hit the wires thanks to Jeff Watts. They had some awesome people, and I hate the shutdown most for those men and women. Here's hoping their next opportunity is an even better one. I enjoyed working with them behind the scenes, and appreciated their trust in letting me in front of the camera from time to time.

Although ASN is no longer an option, there are many good ones for Southland programming. I'll continue working to ensure great coverage for the league going forward. #SouthlandStrong

http://awfulannouncing.com/local-networks/american-sports-network-reportedly-cease-operation-end-month.html


Monday, December 05, 2016

50 States Update - November 2018


State
Chris
Cassie
Alabama
Yes (LSU-Alabama game 2008)
Yes (grandparents live there)
Alaska
NO
NO
Arizona
Yes (Grand Canyon trip in high school)
Yes (visited dad at Honeywell school)
Arkansas
Yes (Hot Springs and Little Rock trip in elementary school)
Yes
California
Yes (San Francisco as newborn)
Yes (Los Angeles trip in 2013)
Colorado
Yes (many ski trips as kid)
Yes (visited friends as kid)
Connecticut
NO
NO
Delaware
NO
NO
Florida
Yes (spring training trips as kid)
Yes (Disney trip as kid)
Georgia
Yes (Atlanta Olympics 1996)
Yes (Craig and Amy’s wedding)
Hawaii
NO
NO
Idaho
Yes (sunrise in Coeur d'Alene during UCA-EWU playoff trip in Dec. 2016)
NO
Illinois
Yes (Rangers road trip to Comiskey as kid)
Yes (visit to Cyn and Chapman)
Indiana
Yes (Notre Dame Summer 2018)
Yes (same)
Iowa
Yes (accepted job at WOI sight unseen in 2000)
NO
Kansas
Yes (Mizzou-kansas basketball game in 1999)
NO
Kentucky
NO
NO
Louisiana
Yes (drove through a lot as kid, but may not have stayed overnight until I visited James Adair in 2003)
Yes (born in Baton Rouge)
Maine
Yes (Lobster and Portland Head Light 2012)
Yes (same trip)
Maryland
Yes (Orioles game 1995)
Yes (lunch during DC trip 2013)
Massachusetts
Yes (Emerson College visit, Red Sox game 1997)
Yes (New England trip 2012)
Michigan
Yes (South Haven Summer 2018)
Yes (same trip)
Minnesota
Yes (2014)
Yes (same trip)
Mississippi
Yes (Vicksburg cemetery 1996)
Yes
Missouri
Yes (College visit 1997)
Yes (Mizzou-Miami OH game 2011)
Montana
Yes (Incarnate Word-Montana State game 2018)
NO
Nebraska
Yes (TCU-Nebraska game with Kevin 2000)
NO
Nevada
Yes (Las Vegas 30th b-day)
Yes (same trip)
New Hampshire
Yes (Dartmouth 2012)
Yes (same trip)
New Jersey
Yes (flew into Newark on NYC trip with mom)
NO
New Mexico
Yes (Santa Fe trip as kid)
Yes
New York
Yes (Baseball HOF trip with dad as kid)
Yes (New Year’s Eve trip)
North Carolina
Yes (Biltmore visit pre-Craig and Amy’s wedding)
Yes (same trip)
North Dakota
Yes (2014)
Yes (same trip)
Ohio
Yes (Cleveland and Canton trip with mom)
NO
Oklahoma
Yes (several times as kid)
Yes
Oregon
Yes (summer 2015)
YES (same trip)
Pennsylvania
Yes (honeymoon)
Yes (same trip)
Rhode Island
Yes (New England trip 2012, visited Brown)
Yes (same trip)
South Carolina
Yes (Clemson driving range pre-Craig and Amy’s wedding)
Yes (same trip)
South Dakota
Yes (2014)
Yes (same trip)
Tennessee
Yes (Memphis St. Jude’s trip 2004)
Yes (Opryland as kid)
Texas
Yes (born here)
Yes
Utah
Yes (ski trips)
Yes (Blake and Heather’s wedding)
Vermont
Yes (New England trip 2012, quick stop for coffee/tea)
Yes (same trip)
Virginia
Yes (Arlington National Cemetery as kid)
Yes (DC trip 2013)
Washington
Yes (Rangers-Mariners trip as kid)
Yes (summer 2015)
West Virginia
NO
NO
Wisconsin
Yes (flew in, toured Miller Park before Chicago visit)
Yes (same trip)
Wyoming
Yes (summer 2015)
Yes (same trip)
STATES REMAINING
6
13

Friday, June 17, 2016

Not My First Father's Day

My wife and I lost our first child. We’re not exactly sure when (although we have been told the baby measured at eight weeks and five days), but we found out about a week short of the first trimester ending.

An ultrasound showed there was not a heartbeat. It was February 28, 2015, and I was on my way back home from working a basketball game in Lake Charles, Louisiana. When she told me the news, I had the most terrible sensation overcome my entire body. I felt like I was on fire from the inside out. I was on the verge of bawling and throwing up at the same time.

Cassie woke me up in early January 2015 and handed me a positive pregnancy test. After two years of us trying to have a baby, it had finally happened. And I immediately fell in love with that child. Instantly, I loved that baby more than anything on this planet. In the weeks that followed, I talked to the baby every night that I was home. I filled many pages of a journal, writing letters I hoped he or she would enjoy reading some day. Every entry was signed “Love, Dad.”

Journal Entry

Over the weeks following the miscarriage, I had constant “flash forwards.” I kept thinking of all those moments I wanted to share with that child. I saw a faceless person grow up in my mind, imagining events that included birthdays and graduations, plus little moments of us laughing together.

Cassie and I grew tired of calling the baby “he or she” or “it.” No matter what happened in the future, whether we aren’t able to have any other kids or if we have 15, this baby will always be our first. And since it was too soon to know if the baby was a boy or a girl, Cassie suggested Angel. Angel Mycoskie. Perfect.

Eight-week ultrasound: Only time we saw Angel's heart beating

On Father’s Day 2015, I celebrated my dad and grandfathers. But it was easily the toughest day for me in the immediate aftermath of losing our baby. Hearing “Happy Father’s Day” over and over again at church was really difficult. Right after the first song, I completely lost it. Big ugly cry.

At that point, Cassie would have been six months pregnant. Had Angel still been in the womb, it would have been a very different day. No doubt most everyone I came across that morning would be referring to the upcoming birth and how excited I must be on Father’s Day. “So close!” “The baby’s almost here!” Instead, when people turned to me and said “Happy Father’s Day” during the service, I found it hard to reciprocate.


This Father’s Day will be very different. I will hold my three-month old baby boy, Austin Thomas Mycoskie, in my arms. I will kiss his beautiful face over and over again. I’ll have a huge smile and he’ll smile back at me. It will be an awesome Father’s Day, but it will not be my first as a dad.