Requisite Day After Shots
November 28, 2025
Breakfast of champions….

Lunch of champions…

And, our first departure. Chris and Pam were last to arrive (Wed) and first to leave (Fri). Here’s a nice just-about-to-part shot of Chris…

I will say this about Chris: Since mom started going downhill .. (heart surgery in 2009 and then 8 more years of pretty challenging health), Chris has been on the scene. He’s always been on the scene (if unconventionally and on his own terms), but he really stepped up and became ever present in those years. The importance of family really clicked in for him and we noticed, and appreciated it. He has become somewhat of a family spark plug, a Jay whisperer, someone who seems not to hold grudges and floats among all the difficult family members without the complicated burdens some of us can’t seem to shed. After mom died in 2017, he remained family-committed, in fact his urgency to be a regular part of the clan increased. He has become sort of the spokesperson for tradition, and upholding our parents’ legacy (a term he uses a lot with loads of sentimentality) now that they are both gone. He had his own health scare in 2020 with a heart attack (while surfing, of all things), which intensified his need for connection. Pam’s coming on the scene (I want to say sometime around 2019?) has formalized his role in the family. She is the consummate in-law (though they aren’t officially married just yet), ensuring that not only do they show up, but they do it with a hot dish (or two), a bottle of wine, flowers… and then help clean up. She has introduced social protocols to his world and I think he actually likes it.
I’m just amazed and grateful they agree to come all the way up here every year for Thanksgiving. He thanks ME for being the one to make it all happen. His toasts about us kids needing to hang together because that’s what mom and dad would want are from the heart and emotionally delivered.
And that’s what Thanksgiving and family should be all about, ya?
One more.. this one with Pam (I wonder if I’ve mentioned that they have been engaged since last Christmas?):

The Perfect Combo
November 27, 2025
I was pleased about two things today (among dozens of things, actually): smooth logistics and warm vibes.
As a host person, the logistics are always on my mind. It is important to me that the day is well orchestrated: that our house is comfortable to be in and festive; that there is food when people are in a mood to eat, well spaced out throughout the day, but not too much; that the dinner is full of yummy dishes, all ready to serve at the same time, hot and beautiful. Those kinds of logistics..
Exhibit A

This was one of many lists that kept me on task from Monday to Monday of Thanksgiving week.
As fastidious as I am about all that, I have to remember that the reason for the season is the other part… the feels: good conversations, flowing gratitude, love, fun, laughing. I feel like we had a ton of that this year. And the table toasts were just the best.
Yay for all of that.
A few pics on the day:
Those are green beans I’m holding up.. and Matt’s mashing pototoes.

Annual photo just before eating.. (Janet took this one):

Serving it up…

P and J:

About to consume…isn’t this nice?

Chris and Pam..
Conversation with Michael who wasn’t here…
Chris and Peter have been playing chess together a long time…


And… dessert that few had room for, but scarfed down anyway..

Truly awesome.. the whole day.
Thanksgiving Visitors, Part One
November 26, 2025
Tuesday is Birthday Cake Baking Day..
November 25, 2025
It’s the Calm Before the Thanksgiving Storm
November 24, 2025
Matt’s coming, so’s Chris and Pam, also Betsy, Paul and Janet..and of course our wonderful Peter. We’ll have a week of guests, lots of meals and I hope some fun times together.
Matt’s already here… somewhere… maybe still on the last few miles of I-80, but on his way. We’re having dinner with him downtown somewhere. P and Boo arrive tomorrow. C&P on Wednesday and P&J on Thursday. I’m done with all the menu planning and shopping, the fridge has been cleaned out and a bunch of stuff’s been relocated to an ice chest. I’ve drafted a cooking and baking plan for the next three days and it seems totally manageable.
We’re doing something new and easy this year: In addition to the the usual Honeybaked ham that we get, I also ordered (and picked up today) a Honeybaked smoked turkey breast and plain roasted breast.. we’ll see how that turns out. What are we going to do with ourselves if we aren’t stressing about how to finally roast a tasty, moist turkey after decades of failures? What will we do without a huge, greasy, nasty carcass to deal with?!
Boy, am I excited about this!
And… Miguel and Mary worked their magic on the house and garden today.. and everything looks clean and spiffy.
Mary planted some welcome flowers…

I’m so looking forward to the week. And will be thrilled when Monday of next week rolls around. Bring it all on!
Now, That’s a Power Couple
November 23, 2025
This is our niece Maia and her life’s partner Tim. They own a Brazilian jujitsu studio near Washington, D.C. and not only do they teach and train others, they train together and both compete in international tournaments. This is a photo taken seconds after Maia won her final match to place first in a very big competition this past week (we understand that she is now ranked #13 in the world in her weight class). Tim is also Maia’s trainer.. both were extremely stoked.
When not jujitsu’ing, they are raising a darling daughter, Diana, who’s a very plucky pre-schooler.
Not sure who to credit for this photo. It was passed along to me by Maia’s mom, who’s a wee proud.
That Fall Sky
November 22, 2025
Chris Turns 66
November 21, 2025
At 60
November 20, 2025
Who’s the Piggy?
November 19, 2025
Oh my aching eye-rolls. Here we go again.. our petulant, man-child of a president who just can’t seem to control himself and must lash out — oh so predictably — at a woman reporter whose simple question challenged his fragile ego.
He called her piggy. Told her to be quiet.
Rick Wilson’s column on this today was long, a bit redundant and sometimes over the top, but, as usual was a very satisfying read. Here are some choice snips of a pot calling the kettle black:
Donald Trump’s jowly countenance, greased in tawdry orange makeup and shining with the light of a thousand McDonald’s deep fryers, has in his declining years taken on a squinty, grainy aspect, a man who exists somehow in our plane of reality and in some cartoon dimension simultaneously.
As he’s grown older, meaner, and fatter, his cruelty has expanded to meet the decline.
There is a special circle of hell for men who look like Donald Trump and still think they are qualified to grade anyone else’s body, but he most certainly does and will always. That infernal neighborhood smells like the greasetrap of a cold McDonald’s deep-fryer, burnt steak, and flop sweat, and it sounds like a wheezing old man yelling at the TV in all caps.
On Air Force One, which is far below the standards of his upcoming gilded Qatari bribe jet, Trump pointed his finger at Bloomberg reporter Catherine Lucey and snapped, “Quiet. Quiet, Piggy,” because she committed the unpardonable sin of asking about the Epstein files and what he knew.
Not “Catherine.” Not “Ms. Lucey.” Not “you.” Not even the usual “fake news.” He went for “Piggy.” Again.
This is not a one-off, not a bad day, not Grandpa getting cranky before his Adderall kicks in. It is the purest expression of who he has always been, and it is especially grotesque coming from a man whose own body is a monument to sedentary malaise, seething resentment, and deep-fried denial.
[removed a bunch of paragraphs about his obesity, diet and his perfect medical reports]
Trump’s relationship with food is not that of a gourmet or some Epicurean enthusiast.
It is grotesque.
It is defensive, compulsive, and entirely on brand. Fast food is his safe space. It is predictable, wrapped, processed, and served in a cardboard box that never asks him hard questions about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein. His doctor can proclaim him “fully fit” until the end of time, but we all know the truth: he looks like a man who lost a fight with a Golden Corral buffet and then blamed the salad bar.
[..]
The sin is that Trump weaponizes other people’s weight and appearance to shut them up and shut them down. He does it to women, constantly, and he does it from inside a body that would, by his own crude standards, be the jiggling, roundboy punchline.
[..]It is always the same move: find a woman who will not yield, will not sleep with him, who will not flatter him, who will not pretend his lies are truth, and then hit her in the place he believes will hurt the most. Her body. Her face. Her sexuality. Her “value” in the cheap, cruel market inside his head, where women are either decorative whores, usable political tools, or enemies.
[..]
The hypocrisy is not subtle. A man who lives on a diet that would make a cardiologist faint, any objective medical reports would consider him as obese or overweight, who waddles on and off golf carts like a seal being coaxed back into the ocean, is out here assigning barnyard nicknames to women.
But here is the deeper, darker truth: it is not just about hypocrisy.
Trump’s body insults are part of his dominance game. He is telling that reporter, and every woman watching, that the price of challenging him is public humiliation. He is sending a message to every young woman in journalism who watched that clip: ask a hard question, and the President of the United States might turn you into a meme, a punchline, a target for his howling online mob.
[..]
So when he says “Quiet, Piggy,” it is not just a personal insult. It is a signal to the Hate Machine that the next phase of this is not argument, not persuasion, not debate. It is humiliation and degradation as political weapons, focused on women who do their jobs too well.
[..]George Washington understood that the new presidency would teach Americans what power looked like, so he wrapped it in dignity on purpose. In one letter to John Adams, he wrote that a president must “demean himself in his public character, in such a manner as to maintain the dignity of Office, without subjecting himself to the imputation of superciliousness or unnecessary reserve.”
It was a choice, a conscious tension between majesty and republican modesty.
He rejected monarchical titles like “His Highness” in favor of the simple “Mr. President,” yet carried himself with formality, restraint, and a careful sense of decorum, knowing every gesture would set precedent for those who followed.
[..]
For Washington, the dignity of the presidency wasn’t ego; it was a civic responsibility, a shield for the republic against the drift toward either the royal abuses they’d fought to end or the shabby demagoguery to which we’ve succumbed today.
If there is a polar opposite of Washington’s dedication to country, service and dignity, it is Donald John Trump, President of MAGA.
So, no, Donald Trump does not get to call anyone “piggy.” Not morally, not aesthetically, not on any plane of existence where the physics of mirrors operate. He is a walking case study in what happens when you feed resentment, ego, and fried food into the same human being for fifty years and then give him nuclear codes.
Catherine Lucey did her job. She asked the right question. He reached for his favorite slur and said the quiet part loud: women who challenge him will be punished, mocked, and reduced to meat.
No man who lives on a diet of corruption, cruelty, Big Macs, Filet O’Fish, KFC, and burnt steaks and spite gets to call anyone “Piggy” ever.











