Sunday, March 1, 2026
The Big Hurt
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Joe at 14
Joe turned 14 years old yesterday. It's hard to write that sentence because it's a reminder of how quickly time is slipping by. Inexorably.
On the way home from work yesterday, I called our dear friend, Roseann Maikis, and left her a long voicemail. I always call her on February 20 and March 28, our boys' birthdays, because she delivered both of them. In addition to being our longtime friend, Roseann is Jude's OB/GYN. She brought both of my boys into this world and for that, I will be forever grateful.
Joe's delivery was more difficult for Jude that JP's, which meant I got some extended one-on-one time with him while Jude was in recovery. I held him in my arms for what seemed like hours and sang softly to him. Made up verses from Elizabeth Mitchell's "So Glad I'm Here." Over and over, I sang to him, as much to calm my nerves as to comfort him, I think.
I was a little worried about Jude at the time because I knew the surgery had been more difficult than expected. As I recall, too, Joe was making a noise when he breathed that worried me a little bit. The nurse told me everything was fine - with Jude and Joe - but still, I worried, as I often do.
Those shared first moments with Joe, though, were special. To know his first moments on this earth were spent in my arms, quietly singing and talking to him, means everything to me. It's a memory I carry with me every day and one that will never leave me.
Just the other day, Joe and I were reminiscing about "Joe Time," the 45 minutes or an hour we spent together after Jude had left to take JP to school and before I took Joe to Children's House. Sometimes, we watched "Daniel Tiger" on PBS. Other times, we had "second breakfast" at Bongo Java, and watched a Thomas the Train video on my laptop. We often went to Belmont U. and played nerf football, one-on-one, in the atrium outside the Curb Center. We reenacted "Dude Perfect" trick shots, with the football, all over campus.
One memorable day shortly after the Bird scooters descended on Nashville, I drove Joe to school at Children's House on a scooter. We drove straight into the drop-off line, much to the amazement of the teacher handling drop-off that day. No one really knew what we were doing, as scooters ubiquitous as they are now. Joe and I still laugh about that morning.
As always, Joe is a good hang. We have so much in common. A love of music and good food. We like to try new restaurants together. Last night, for example, we had an amazing family meal and birthday celebration at The Optimist, in Germantown. Joe is always up to try new food and new restaurants. Some of our fondest memories are of restaurants he and I found when we were on the road for baseball or soccer or, lately, while Jude and JP have been out of town looking at colleges.
Joe and I share a love of music. I love the fact that he plays the saxophone and I hope he continues. He has improved tremendously from last year to this year. Playing an instrument is not something JP has ever done, so the saxophone is a bit of a separator for the two of them, which I like.
Recently, Joe and I went for a run together. He got a two miles in with me and I was impresses with how easily he ran compared to runs in the past. As I told him afterwards, I think being in basketball shape really helped him in his run with me. I'm not going to push it but my hope is that we can run together more often this spring.
Joe's first year at MBA has gone smoothly or so it seems. It's helped, of course, to have Bennett and Sawyer there from University School. It's also helped that he made the soccer, basketball, and baseball teams. Basketball, in particular, was fun for me to watch, as Joe, Bennett, and Sawyer all started the entire season and were three of the key players on the team.
As I have written before, though, Joe's group of boys at University School of Nashville seems to have been a little closer, and larger, than JP's group. Joe and JP are different, of course. Once JP left USN, he never looked back, only forward. Joe, however, misses some of his close friends who stayed at USN like Sam, Rory, and Walker. He still stays in touch with them, which is nice to see.
Joe continues to be a natural leader, although he doesn't see that yet as much as I do. We're working that from a confidence standpoint but, as I've also written before, Joe ends up leading every team he plays for. This year, he was a goalie on the "A" soccer team and starting point guard on the seventh grade basketball team, as is the case with his Bucket Squad team, too. I suspect he'll lead the seventh grade baseball team, too, once they're up and going and Coach Martin realizes what he has in Joe.
Continuing Joe's birthday weekend, Pike is sleeping over tonight. We're going to go to the Belmont basketball game. It's the second to last home game of the season, which is a little sad. It's been an unexpectedly successful and entertaining basketball season, one I don't want to end.
There's so much about where we are now, as a family, that I don't want to end. JP and Joe at home, enjoying each other's company. The four of us together.
Thursday, February 19, 2026
Saying Goodbye to Scott McRae
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Trust Your Hands
Every now and then, through nothing more than serendipity, someone comes into your life and leaves an indelible impression on it.
It's not anything you can plan or make happen, of that I am sure. What I think it is, though, is God's hand at work in your life. For reasons forever unknown to you, God places someone in your life - or in your children's lives - during a time when he or she will have the most impact. It just happens.
The hard part, of course, is when a person like this leaves your life too soon.
I met Scott McRae on the baseball fields at Warner Park which, if you know either one of us, should not come as a surprise. Our boys, Daniel and Joe, played on competing teams, the Braves and the Diamondbacks. Scott and I were competing coaches. And, man, did we ever compete against each other! Again, if you know either one of us, that should not come as a surprise.
If memory serves, the boys were ten years old at the time. Daniel's Braves and Joe's Diamondbacks played each other two or three times a season, then again in the tournament, because their teams were two of the most most experienced in the league. Evenly matched, the games were always very, very competitive. There was a lot of talent on both teams. It was a real rivalry, to the boys, the coaches, and the parents.
A big part of what made the rivalry special, especially for recreational league baseball, was the quality and dedication of the coaches. On the Braves' side, there was Scott McRae, Mark Erdman, and Mike Lalonde. On the Diamondbacks' side, Oliver Davis, Ryan Stout, Matt Singleton, and me. Men that loved baseball and more than anything, loved coaching baseball and teaching our boys and their friends how to play the game the right way. The quality and depth of the coaching staffs on each time was very unusual for recreational league baseball. Scott McRae and Oliver Davis were dedicated head coaches and the rest of us followed their lead.
As I write this, I'm smiling, because at the time, I don't think Scott and I really knew what to make of each other. Two hyper competitive fathers raising young boys, both with a burning desire to win. It was intense, to be sure. I loved the competition and I think Scott did, too.
What I learned later and why Scott and I became friends is that we have so much in common. A deep, abiding Catholic faith. A bottomless wellspring of love for our families. A sense of humor. A shared love of coaching and mentoring young men. And a love of baseball, the greatest of all games.
I am, roughly, 10 years older than Scott and most of the rest of the coaches. I traveled the same route for over a decade, coaching baseball with JP, now 17, and his group of WNSL Dodgers. It was the time of my life. Because of that, I knew the time with Joe's group of Diamondbacks (Dodgers, too) and Daniel's Braves group was special. I had been through a very similar experience with the Dodgers - Dirtbags, after which Pat Lawson (Dirtbags) and I became good friends.
I also knew, too, that those baseballs seasons together with the boys, spring and fall, were fleeting, ephemeral even. I never wanted it to end.
Looking back now, those were halcyon days, to be sure. Before travel baseball. Before middle school baseball. Before real life intruded on all of us, especially Scott and his family. Those were days filled with love . . . for baseball, for competing, and for our boys.
The first time I coached with Scott was in WNSL all-stars, after one of the spring seasons. Scott was the head coach and, along with Mark Erdman and Mike Lalonde, I helped out, as needed. I played a bit part, honestly, and was there to support Scott in any way he needed, at practice or games. I was grateful for the way Scott accepted my son, Joe, and his teammates - Ram Chitale, Trey Glenn, Huck Phillips, and Bennett Lusk - into his group for all-stars. Scott made my boys, Dodgers to the core, feel like they had played for his Braves forever.
That was one of the many gifts Scott had, I think. He had the innate ability to make you feel comfortable and at home in his presence from the very first moment you met him. Like you had known him forever or, in Joe's case, like you had played for him forever. Joe idolized Scott.
Scott also had the unique ability to bring out the best in every boy he coached, another thing I think Scott and I shared in common. In many ways, both us were born to coach and the baseball field, with our boys, was a sanctuary of sorts for us. Everything made sense there.
Things evolved organically from there like all of the best, most natural things in life seem to do. I coached the fall baseball team, the Dodgers, and Scott's Braves, including his son Daniel, Keaton Erdman, and Big Mike Lalonde, played for me. Truthfully, I think Scott enjoyed not having to be in charge of the fall baseball team. Still, he hopped in at every practice and game, as needed, always willing and eager to give a boy a word of encouragement or instruction. We often discussed how this boy or that boy was playing and what we could do to help him improve.
When spring rolled around, the Dodgers became the Braves again, and Scott ran the show. I helped out, if he needed me, and on occasion I stepped in when he was out of town for work or had a conflict. Later, I jumped in and coached during all-stars as the boys competed at various baseball parks around Middle Tennessee.
A year and a half ago late in June or early July, we coached the boys in unbearable heat in Mt. Juliet in their last all-star tournament of the season. We ran out of pitching and in 100 + degree heat, the boys lost to a good Franklin team in the semifinals of the tourbamnebt. It had been a long and hot weekend of baseball - with all of the coaches wearing those ridiculous baseball pants that Cal Ripken Baseball insisted we wear - so I was properly prepared for what I figured would be our final game. I had a six pack of beer iced down in a cooler in my truck.
After the game and after all of the parents and boys had left - in the comfortable silence of an empty ballpark in Mt. Juliet - Scott, Mark Erdman, and I sat in the fading July sun and drank a cold beer together. It was a special moment that all three of us wanted to hold onto, I think.
We were exhausted and a little let down, since another baseball season was over. We discussed the tournament and the final game in great detail, as coaches tend to do. We talked about the entire baseball season. We talked about plans for fall baseball. We talked about how much we loved coaching our boys. Mostly, we shared a quiet few minutes together.
Looking back, it was one of the best and most memorable beers I've ever had.
Not too long afterwards, Scott got sick. When I saw him at our first fall baseball game, he didn't look good. He'd lost weight and he wasn't sure why. As the fall baseball season progressed, we touched base from time to time, often after I drove Daniel home from baseball games. When Scott was formally diagnosed with a rare form of peritoneal carcinoma cancer, the St. Henry's community and so many others rallied around the McRae family.
Because he's Scott and because of his love for life and, especially, his unquenchable love for his family, he underwent rigorous rounds of treatment and valiantly fought his illness for a year and a half. He never gave up.
Scott, Tina, and the children have been in my prayers on a daily basis. Jude and I have talked a lot about Scott at home, especially with our boys, JP and Joe. I've thought about Daniel so much, too. My heart breaks for him, for all of them. Life can be so damn hard sometimes.
In our last text message exchange, shortly before he died, Scott mentioned the great memories he carried from the WNSL days. He also told me he loved my family and me, a sentiment I will treasure forever. As Scott's time in this life was nearing the end, he was selfless enough to tell me he loved my family and me. That's just Scott McRae.
I was having coffee at 8th & Roast one morning recently, when Mike LaLonde texted me the news that Scott had died. My first thought was for his wife, Tina, and the children. Initially, I was overwhelmed with sadness and grief for them and, to a certain extent, I still am. My next thought, though, was an overwhelming sense of gratitude. God put Scott McRae in my life and, more importantly, in my boys' lives, and all of us are the better for it.
While one part of Scott's journey had ended, another part is just beginning. Scott will be greeted by our Lord, whom I am certain will say, "Well done, my good and faithful servant." I believe that with all of my heart.
If ever there was a life well lived, it was Scott McRae's.
When I finished my coffee, lost in my thoughts and reminiscences about friendship and baseball games past, I walked outside and got in my truck to go to work. After I started it and began to pull onto Eighth Avenue, I heard a noise beneath my seat, then felt something roll against my feet.
I stopped, looked down, and to my surprise, there was a baseball.
I pulled over, stunned. When I carry the bucket of baseballs in my truck so Joe can take batting practice or get a workout in, the bucket is closed and in the back of my truck. Even if a baseball fell out, it couldn't possibly roll past the back seat and into the front, because I always have the third row of seats up. In the seven or eight years I have had my truck, I have never had a baseball find its way into the front floorboard of my truck. Never.
How? Why?
As I continued to sit in stunned silence, I smiled. I believe in signs. Maybe you do, too. They're rare but they exist. To me, anyway.
I believe God sent me a sign that morning. Scott is with Him. He's fine. Tina and the children are going to be okay. In fact, everything is going to be okay.
Later that week on Friday night, in advance of middle school baseball tryouts at MBA, I took Joe to D-bats for a workout. As always, it had been a relatively crazy week at work. It was so nice to be with Joe, throwing the baseball, doing what I love and what he loves, together.
As I was throwing batting practice to Joe, I noticed he was early, swinging way ahead of my pitches. As a result, every ball he hit would have been a foul ball on a baseball field. I stopped, stepped out from behind the protective screen, and walked toward Joe. He met me halfway, batting helmet on and bat in hand, looking up at me expectantly, waiting for instruction.
I put my arm around Joe's shoulder and said to him, quietly, "let it travel." He smiled, looked up at me, and finished my next sentence.
"Trust your hands."
I nodded, smiled, and held Joe's gaze for a long moment. We were thinking the same thing. It was a moment I will never forget. Then, I walked back to my spot behind the screen and took a deep breath.
This time, I heard it in my mind, in Scott McRae's voice, plain as day.
"Trust your hands."
That's what Scott always told the boys during batting practice or a game, if they were anxious and out in front of the ball. Those three words reassured whichever boy Scott was talking to at any given time. They carried so much weight for the boys in all of the best ways.
"Trust your hands."
Don't be nervous. You're good enough. Trust your instincts. You can find a barrel if you wait on the pitch just a split second longer. You're ready for the moment.
As I've said many times, it's not about baseball. It never was. Baseball is life. What Scott and I taught the boys on the baseball field are lessons and traits we want them to take into life, and they will. Confidence. Competitiveness. Resilience. Attention to detail. How to be a good teammate. All of those things and so many more.
What I want Tina to know, and what I want Daniel and the girls to know, too, is that Scott McRae will live on in our lives long after he's left us. Why? Because I will hear his voice, talking to our boys on the baseball field, quietly instructing them, encouraging them, teaching them. Because those boys will hear his voice, throughout their lives, on the baseball field and off, instilling confidence in them to do whatever it is that needs to be done. He taught them to believe in themselves, especially in challenging times.
"Trust your hands."
Friday, February 6, 2026
A Morning to Remember on the Hill
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.

