Busy Times

It was a memorable week.  First we hopped on the Amtrak train and went down to Seattle to see the Rolling Stones at cavernous Lumens Field, home of the Seattle Seahawks.  We met up with my sister and niece there, and they had an Airbnb rented near the venue.  I was always of the opinion that the Stones were crappy in concert.  Every so often you would hear a live version of one of their songs, and it would not sound good at all.  So my expectations weren’t high for musical quality.  It turned out that they were actually pretty damn good!  And no band on the planet can come near them for the depth of their catalogue of tunes.  They played around 20 songs and without using Google I could probably name 100 more they didn’t play, and many of those would have been great to hear too.  They did a “vote a song” promo for the concert, and Seattle voted to hear Wild Horses which, it turns out, they rarely play live.  Mick had tons of energy for a guy of 80, and Keith looked pretty spry as well, possibly aided by the fact he quit smoking a few years ago.  Mick took a little break and let Keith sing a couple songs – You Got the Silver, and Little T&A – which was my favourite part of the show.  For some reason I’ve always loved Keith’s singing voice.  It’s sort of flat and atonal, but in a good way.  I wished he had picked Happy as one of his songs to do, but hey, you can’t always get what you want.

A great vantage point to see a concert if you happen to have a Hubble telescope 

By the way, despite the testy caption, the seats were just fine! Who wrote that?

The train trip down was a throwback to an older time, sort of a nod to the Mt Rushmore of rock oldsters we were going to see.  It’s a beautiful part of the world to go clickety clacking past the window.  There were conductors and little towns’ stations and the wooded corridors into every town, and then endless miles of beaches and boats and trees.  We only got a couple hours of sleep the night of the concert, so staring blankly out the window was infinitely safer than having our hungover asses careening toward home down the crowded I-5.

After the trip south I worked as an arbiter at the Keres Memorial chess tournament,  Paul Keres was from Estonia, and he is a national hero there.  He is widely regarded as one of – if not the – best chess player who never became world champion.  He came close five times to being world champion, but got thwarted by the outbreak of WWII and by coming second four times in tournaments that would have given him a shot at the world title.  In Estonia, he is sometimes referred to as Paul the Second.  In 2000 he was named Estonia’s Sportsman of the Century.  In 1975 he came to Vancouver and played in the Vancouver International chess tournament, which he won.  On the way home he died of a heart attack, aged 59, and the tournament was renamed in his honour.  Every year it is the biggest tournament in BC, and this year I got to be an arbiter which gives me my second of four required FIDE arbiter norms.  There were 205 players, of which we had a Grandmaster from Romania and several masters.

 

2024 Keres Memorial underway in Surrey, BC

The next week I had a gruelling two days of work, then I attended a retirement seminar Thursday and Friday.  I knew of the existence of the seminar, but I sort of thought it would be like two hours one Tuesday night, not 16 hours of info packed into two long days.  There were 14 of us there, grey haired and ready to take the plunge into obsolescence.  The guy doing the seminar was 80 and an aged-spot speckled old fellow who knew more about the ins and outs of paperwork and legal matters than anyone should almost be allowed to know.  In fact they say a person should take the seminar twice: once about five years before retirement and once again when you are near enough to peer into the abyss – that’s how much info was jammed into the subject.  Well, I got my pre-emptive seminar out of the way, and the real goodbye one is about six years off.  I expect those six years to go streaking by.

 

Post #100: Down Time

Welcome to Post #100!  It’s been a little over eight years – 99 months in fact – since I started this blog.  It doesn’t seem like I’ve written one post per month, but I guess I have.  The first month or two was a few per week, so soon it will be less than one per month unless I get motivated.

Spring is in full bloom now, and the days are warm and bright, but a couple months ago I was depressed.  I feel as though I was misled about some things at work, my writing had completely dried up, my biggest hobby – chess – had become more work than fun, and frankly I think the lack of sun was affecting me.  I remember thinking once or twice, that it would be cool if someone asked me how I was doing, or observed that maybe I wasn’t my chipper self, but no one did.  I am no better.  When I come across people who look sad or pissy, I often steer clear of them.  I direct my little parade away from the rain clouds whenever possible.  I guess this is how others feel, too, so I certainly don’t blame anyone.  It’s hard enough keeping yourself happy without exerting a lot of energy trying to cheer other people up, especially ones you don’t have any tangible connection with.  So I pulled through it all in the end, not that things were all that dark.  I wrote a little bit, chess has brightened up again, and the weather has helped.  At work, I still feel underappreciated and misled, but I’m not stewing over it night and day.  As for anyone who had to bear the brunt of one of my many whiny tirades: I am sorry.

Next week we’re taking the train down to see the Rolling Stones in Seattle, followed by a few days off in which I hope to golf at least once.  This is the sort of therapeutic week I need to charge up the batteries!  The weekend after that I am being the arbiter at a huge chess tournament where I will get my second (of four) norms toward getting my FIDE Arbiter title.  In June I am going to arbiter the BC Seniors Chess Championship for the second time.  Last year I had a lot of fun doing it, as the oldsters are well behaved and friendly.  If you happen to see me coming, you needn’t dash the other way, you can engage me in conversation, knowing I will (probably) be my self again.

*Note: I wrote this, then didn’t feel great about talking about being depressed, so I put off publishing it for a while.  In fact, some of the things I wrote about coming up have already happened, and they will be the subject of much more upbeat post soon.