Wednesday, February 4, 2026
Dry January
Sunday, February 1, 2026
Powerless
The Great Freeze continues as almost 100,000 are still without power one week after the ice storm. It's crazy but according to Nashville Electric Service, our zip code will not have power restored until February 5, 2026. That will be almost two weeks with no power for our neighborhood.
On the way home from work on Thursday, I drove through my old neighborhood, between 10th Avenue and 8th Avenue. It was eerie, as there were blocks and blocks of houses in complete darkness. No lights. No streetlights. No human activity. Very few cars. It looked like everyone had vanished. Truly, the mass desertion of entire blocks made it look like a pandemic had wiped everyone out or that there had been a zombie apocalypse. Really, really strange.
Our street is still largely without power. Somehow, though, and I hesitate to say it too loudly, we have managed to keep our power on throughout the entire ordeal. Last night, Jude saw one house on the other side of Linden Avenue, a few houses down from us, with power on. Other than that, no one.
Ms. Rachel was at Vanderbilt hospital for a few days. Her grandson stopped by to pick up some of her things earlier this week and told us she had been moved to a rehabilitation facility.
On our other side, Maureen has had a terrible go of it. No power for a week. She stayed at the Thompson Hotel in the Gulch for a few nights, then was able to get a spot at the Gilmore, a new boutique hotel in 12South, walking distance from our houses. Thursday night, her daughter's car alarm started going off at 4:30 a.m. every five minutes. Unfortunately, when she got back into her house for the first time on Friday morning to check on Erin's car in the driveway in the back yard, she discovered a water pipe had burst and caused massive flooding. I can't even imagine. I am so sad for her.
Maureen has had a remediation truck at the house all weekend long trying to remove the moisture and, I suppose, limit a potential mold problem. Again, I can't even imagine.
Jude and I have been scrambling, trying to find someone to cut down our trees that have fallen into Ms. Rachel's back yard and on her telephone line. We also need someone with a bucket truck to cut down the dangling leaves at the top of the large elm in the middle of our backyard. We have a large branch of the elm tree that fell on the roof of our in-progress screened in porch that needs to be removed. Who knows when anyone will be able to get to those projects.
All of the arborists have been in triage mode, trying to take care of the most dangerous and serious tree removed projects first, or so it seems. Maybe they're simply making themselves available to the highest bidder. For sure, there is some price gouging going on. I also suspect there are some fly-by-night, "non-arborist" arborists springing up all over town.
This ice storm seems to have been so much more damaging than the one that hit Nashville and surrounding area in 1994. Maybe it's recency bias, but it feels like there are a to more sustained power outages with this storm.
Freddie O'Connell, a bit of a bumbling, absent minded professor on his best day - the accidental Mayor, if you will - has come across as unprepared, non-responsive, and ineffectual. Fair or not, the city doesn't appear to have been prepare for the ice storm, although I am not altogether sure how you prepare for a disaster of this magnitude. What is more unforgivable, though, is how poorly he has communicated with the people of Nashville in the aftermath of the storm. It's like he's been in hiding, other than one or two press conferences and the occasional Instagram video as he walks through his neighborhood at night. O'Connell will be a one-term mayor for certain.
Nashville Electric Service has looked even worse, if that is possible. Still, what do they care? N.E.S. in the only game in town. It's not like a Nashville residence can decide to switch to Middle Tennessee Electric. It just doesn't work that way.
Jude, the boys, and I are fortunate, so very fortunate. Everyone is safe. We have power. We have some cleanup to accomplish, with help from professionals, but that will be taken care of over time. So many other neighbors and Nashvillians are hurting. It's hard to see.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
The Last of Us
Zombie apocalypse is probably too strong a phrase for what Nashville has experienced the last three days but it's not far off.
As I sit here in The Well on Music Row - my first time to sit down in a coffee shop and take a breath since Saturday (3 + days ago) - Nashville is crawling out from under the worst ice storm since 1994. Well over 200,000 people were without power starting Sunday morning. Many, including our next door neighbors on both sides, are still without power. Almost 200 poles snapped. Trees and branches are down, literally everywhere. Many roads are completely blocked, including Portland Avenue at 21st Avenue.
It's like a tornado hit the entire city at the same time. I have never seen anything like this. Never. So many trees lost. Entire neighborhoods are to look entirely different when this is over. The damage and the cleanup costs will be well over 1 billion dollars, I am sure. So many people, including those in our neighborhood remain without power. Everywhere, many old growth trees split right down the middle under the weight of the ice Sunday morning. It looks like a bolt of lightning struck the crown of so many trees, cleaving them in half.
From next door, Maureen and her dog, Clio, are in a hotel nearby with what seems like all of 12South. Ms. Rachel, on our other side, is at Vanderbilt Hospital. When she lost power, she switched to her portable oxygen tank. At 89, she doesn't have family nearby. As her oxygen supply dwindled late Sunday afternoon, Jude called an ambulance at her request. We ran an extension cord from one of our outside outlets in front of our house into Ms. Rachel's house, so she could plug in her oxygen tank. Like MacGyver, it worked!
When it became clear the ambulance wasn't going to be able to get to her anytime soon, JP and I helped her walk up her sidewalk and over to our house. We had cleared her sidewalk and ours, too, but not the sidewalk in front of houses. It was slow going, as she held onto her walker, JP and I on each side of her with Jude close behind her in case she fell. We made it and settled Ms. Rachel into the reading chair in our living room, covered in blankets because she was so cold.
Jude warmed up some pasta I had made the previous evening, so Ms. Rachel was able to eat a hot meal. We talked for a while, then she called her grandson and her sister to check in, before falling asleep in the chair. The fire department arrived at our house to check on her just past midnight. About 1 a.m., the ambulance arrived, and Ms. Rachel went to Vanderbilt Hospital.
The temperatures have been in the single digits at night and not much higher during the day, as a result of which the trees are still covered in ice. A lot of the ice on the streets - particularly the main streets - melted or was salted and plowed by Monday afternoon. The neighborhood streets are still dicey in places. JP and Joe have been out of school all week and not in remote school - much to their delight - because so many are without power and internet access.
Because our internet has been out, the last two nights we watched old movies on DVD's! JP was able to figure out how to operate the DVD player, which is more than Jude or I could have done. Two nights ago, we watched Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy. Quite funny, as the boys love Will Ferrell. Last night, we watched Point Break, the ultimate "good bad movie." Awesome.
There is more to tell and photos to be posted but I've got to get back home and get to work. Hopefully, the tree company will arrive this morning to take a look at the trees in our back yard. The one that fell into Ms. Rachel's yard has to come down. There are large branches broken off and caught in the crown of the biggest tree in our backyard, one that hovers over our house. There also is a large branch on the roof of our new screened in porch. It's a mess.
Still, we're safe. We have power, for now. Jude's parents have power. Blessings everywhere.
Saturday, January 24, 2026
Portland Brew Blues
Friday, January 23, 2026
Life360 Knows All
In so many ways - really, in every way - it's harder to be a teenager today than it was when I grew up. It seems like it's virtually impossible for a teenager, today, to have any sense of privacy or to go off the grid, even for a few minutes.
How can you figure out who you are if someone is always watching?
If I want to, I can look at JP and Joe's classroom performance and grades on a daily basis simply by accessing MBA's portal through my cell phone. Maybe I'm not the most attentive parent but if the boys are doing well academically - and they are - I don't feel like they need me looking over their shoulder every day to see if their homework was turned in or what grade they made on the last quiz or test.
Mid-quarter and Quarter or Semester report cards are different, of course. I look at those. But I feel like the boys need, and have earned, the freedom to budget their time and manage their academics on their own, unless and until their performance indicates otherwise. Is that laissez faire parenting? Perhaps. To me, though, I think it's giving the boys a sense of responsibility and independence, which is something they need now and will need more later.
It's a fine line as a parent, I think, between over-parenting or helicoptering or giving a child too much rope. I think the line is in a different place with every child, even and especially siblings. I also think the line moves from time to time for a child, depending on the decisions he or she makes and the judgment, good or bad, he or she shows in making those decisions.
Early yesterday evening, at the end of a long two day mediation, I called Jude on my way home. With "Snowpocalypse 2026" set to hit Nashville tonight and tomorrow, she had been to the grocery store to stock up earlier in the day. Nonetheless, she told me that JP had just left to go to the grocery store to pick up a few things.
That's weird, I thought. JP never goes to the grocery store, especially on a school night, when free time is at a premium. Clearly, going to the grocery store was pretext for getting out of the house. No question about it.
How did I know that? Because I was 17 years old a long, long time ago. Every thought or feeling JP has I have had, as well, albeit 40 + years ago. Plus, I know my son. And I would have done the same thing. In fact, I did the same thing, many times, in 1982 or 1983.
The difference is that I could take a slight detour to see a friend, maybe even a girl, while I was running an errand and nobody would be the wiser. Why? Because my mom didn't have Life360. Hell, she didn't have a cell phone. I was able to move around Brentwood without my mom knowing where I was at every minute. The point is that I had more freedom that JP has, or Joe will have.
Did I do some things I shouldn't have? Sure. Did I make mistakes? Of course. But I also developed a sense of independence and self-reliance. Today, it's harder for teenager to develop those qualities under the ever watchful eye of Life360, Find My iPhone, etc.
When I got home and JP still was not there, Jude and I raised our eyebrows. I pulled out my cell phone, looked at Llife360, and immediately saw where he was. Not at Publix. He made another stop for less than a half hour. Good for him.
He's 17. He's driving. It's time for him to test the boundaries and rules we set for him. That's as it should be. It's what I want him to do, within reason. He's growing up, maturing, and he needs to space to make decisions, good and bad. He's earned that space with how hard he works, how responsible he is, how mature he is, and the kind of person he is. All of those things.
We talked about it when he got home. My thought was that if the worst thing he does as a teenage living at home is to take a slight detour to go see a friend, before or after a trip to the grocery store, then Jude and I are raising a pretty damn good boy. I told him precisely that, too.
It's the same thing my mom said to me in the late summer of 1982 when my Caroline Blue 1966 - with a friend driving it - was impounded by the Brentwood Police Department after Greg Westfall and I almost got caught rolling (w/toilet paper) a house in our neighborhood. She was somewhat amused and unperturbed by the entire event. I felt the same way last night and I feel the same way this morning.
Jude and I are so lucky to have the boys we have. I wish the ride would never end.
Sunday, January 18, 2026
Weekend at Joe's Place
Jude and JP are in Texas, taking a look at Rice University in Houston and the University of Texas in Austin, so Joe and I are spending the holiday weekend together at home. It's rare that Jude or I get a few days alone with one of the boys, so it's always an enjoyable experience when it happens.
It's not like Joe has tons of down time, of course, because school is back in full swing and there is always studying to be done. Still, we've managed to find some leisure time this weekend in between school work and various sport activities.
Friday night, Joe and I ordered takeout from Postino's - one of our favorites but not Jude's, for some reason - and watched the first half of Creed 3. JP watched it on a flight a couple of years ago, so Joe and I have been trying to find a time to see it on our own.
Saturday morning, Joe's Bucket Squad drew the short straw, so to speak, and had the early game (8 a.m.) at J.T. Moore. Ouch. They soundly defeated another team, the Bucket Boyz, that had three MBA seventh graders on the roster. I kept the scorebook and, as always, enjoyed interaction with the boys on a more personal basis in the context of a basketball game.
Before the game started, I pulled Rex Waddy aside and told him how proud I was of how hard and consistently he had played lately. I also told him I loved the fact that he was upset after MBA lost to Ensworth last week because that meant he cared. It's supposed to feel like that when you lose to a rival.
Joe had a 3-pointer in the first half and a couple of other buckets, one on a nifty no-look past from Carson on a fast break. Overall, the boys played well, although I continue to wish Cole would play with his back to the basket more and use this size to establish an inside game. I think it would expand his game tremendously if he would establish himself inside, especially against smaller players, then work outside and shoot from distance. But, what do I know?
The highlight of the day was breakfast after the Bucket Squad game. Joe and I drove to Mr. Aaron's Goods on Gallatin Road, deep in East Nashville, a place I had read about and tried unsuccessfully to get to over the holidays. To our delight, Joe and I had the best breakfast sandwiches we've ever had! Joe had a bacon, egg, and (white cheddar) cheese on a plain bagel. I had a sausage, egg, and (white cheddar) cheese on an everything bagel. OMG! Literally, to die for! We will most certainly be back.
Yesterday afternoon, Joe had a pitching workout for the Redbirds at Ezell Harding Christian School. They have a small workout facility in an out building near the track, behind the school. The school is near the old Hickory Hollow Mall, so it's not particularly easy to get to. Still, a baseball workout is a baseball workout.
Joe has a decision to make about baseball, I think. He was accepted for a Wilson Grant at MBA to take a week long trip to Washington D.C., a trip JP was lucky enough to take, too, in the summer after his seventh grade year. So, Joe already will miss a couple baseball tournaments. On top of that, Joe has spoken, somewhat longingly, of how much he would love to go back to Sports Camp at Woodbury Forest. This would be his last year of eligibility, age wise, to go to camp there.
The problem, of course, is that he really can't play travel baseball this summer and go to camp at Woodberry Forest. We talked about it a bit over dinner and playoff football (Seahawks-49ers) at Edley's BBQ last night. I told him it's not what he needs to do but what he wants to do. I don't want him to think he has to play baseball this summer. However, I did tell him that I suspected it might he harder to make the Redbirds travel team the following year if he quits this summer's team. It's a big decision for him and I will be curious what he decides to do.
After dinner at Edley's, we turned off the Seahawks' blowout of the 49ers to watch part of the 30-for-30, "June 19, 1994," which is a 1-hour documentary about the day of the OJ Simspon car chase in the White Ford Bronco. While listening to a Bill Simmons podcast earlier in the day, I told Joe about the car chase and how crazy it was. He was interested and I remembered the 30-for-30, and off we went last night.
Today, it will be church at St. Patrick's, another baseball workout, and more studying. Probably a little NFL playoffs mixed in, too.
(8th & Roast)
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Hardwood Joe
I've enjoyed watching Joe play basketball for MBA's seventh grade ("C" team) team the past few weeks. He was supposed to play this afternoon, but Valor canceled the game. He only has four basketball games left, three of which are next week. I'm reminded of how short the middle school sports seasons are, which I had kind of forgotten since JP is in the back end of high school.
As I predicted before the season, Joe is starting, playing point guard, and in many ways running the team for better or worse. He knows the offense, knows where everyone is supposed to be, and competes his ass off every play. He turns the ball over too much, though, in part because his handle is not where it needs to be and his size limits his ability to pass over defenders. This is especially true when he's double teamed.
Still, he plays with heart and he's scoring the basketball more than he has in the past. In a tough 44-34 loss to Tuesday Monday night, he scored 10 points and easily could have had 15. He hit two 3-pointers and had a couple more buckets in the paint. He missed a gimme layup at the end of the first half, though, and had a good look at a 3-pointer, late, that looked it was going in before it rimmed out. He made some nice defensive plays, as well, including a late steal that led to a layup by his teammate, Rex Waddy.
I've coached, and known, Rex since he was five years old or so. His father, Alex, is an old attorney friend of mine, as is his grandfather, Jack. Believe it or not, Jack Waddy and I used to play basketball at the Uptown YMCA, now defunct, at lunch when I clerked at Manier, Herod in the summer of 1992 and, later, when I went to work there. Yes, that is more than 30 years ago. Alex and I used to play law league softball together. A decathlete in college at Virginia, he's one of the best athletes I have ever known.
Rex is a sweet, kind hearted kid whom I love to death. He's one of my all-time favorites out of JP's and Joe's groups because he's so funny, quirky, happy, and big hearted. I think I identify with him in part because he lost his mother, Alex's wife, to colon cancer a few years ago. Having lost my dad at a young age, we share in common that experience, although no two situations are the same.
What I love about Rex's game this winter is that I can see the light bulb beginning to come on for him. He's competing consistently and, clearly, how he plays and how the team performs is starting to matter to him. In games, he's never scared. He uses his length and athleticism to rebound, defend, and get to the cup. Now, he misses layups - a lot - but that can and will be corrected. As his dad, Alex, told me, Rex is starting to love the game of basketball. That's a beautiful thing to see.
Joe, Rex, Bennett, and Sawyer, three of whom are from USN (Joe, Bennett, and Sawyer) are starters and tone setters for the team. I love that, of course. Joe is a natural leader and has the ability to connect with anyone and everyone. I know it and I need him to know it. I think he's starting to figure that out.
This weekend, Jude and JP are traveling to Texas so JP can look at University of Texas and Rice. Wow. It's all happening. I'm looking forward to having a long weekend at home with Joe.
(Herban Market)















