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Posts Tagged ‘moms’

As a new school year looms, three Wolf moms got together and crafted a message for Coupeville’s students. (Barbi Ford photo)

Positivity through artwork.

With a new school year on the horizon, Wolf moms Christi Messner, Morgan White, and Sarah Stuurmans crafted a bold, vibrant message for local students.

And, before you think those are red Solo cups, they’re not.

They’re actually special, reusable ones specifically made for just this kind of fence-related activity.

So, now you know, and knowing is half the battle.

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And yes, we already had library cards.

I grew up in libraries.

My mom was the children’s librarian in Kelso when my sister Sarah and I were younger, and we spent a lot of time in that two-story building stashed on the corner of a street next to the post office.

She got us our first library cards not long after we started walking, which made sense, as she spent her life reading.

Everyone in the family had a story about how if they wanted to find my mom when she was young, they would go searching only to find her every time, stashed away, face in book, lost to the world.

As Sarah and I were growing up, our dad was a carpet cleaner/window washer, and each year the Kelso Library would shut down over the winter holidays and our parents would clean the joint from top to bottom.

While they did that, we got the run of the locked-down library, eating at 2 AM in the librarian’s kitchen — a magical place normally off limits to anyone not an employee — and I got to read piles of Mad Magazine and Sports Illustrated while camped out in a carpet-lined bath tub that sat downstairs in the kid’s section.

This was still a time of card catalogs and before DVDs and other electronic doodads infiltrated a kingdom dominated by the written (and published) word.

Librarians working downstairs, like my mom, used a dumbwaiter to send books upstairs, an old-school touch which still fascinates me.

Even after we moved to Tumwater when I was in the sixth grade, and then Oak Harbor when I was a high school senior (my mom finding new libraries two minutes after each arrival) we continued to go back for the holiday cleaning adventures.

The final trip came in 1990, when the first season of Twin Peaks, the defining TV show of my life, was in reruns.

By that time the Kelso Library had a TV behind the upstairs counter, where the librarians could watch it (Why? Good question…), so, in between hours of reading (and trying to do as little work as possible), I watched an episode unfold in surreal fashion.

Slouched in a chair in the dark of a closed-down library, as an eerie train whistle sounded nearby, staring out on deserted streets which looked a lot like those in the original Twin Peaks, it was one of the great TV experiences of my life.

Normally, when I watched the show at our house out at Cornet Bay, it was followed by me walking up a dark, winding gravel road next to our house to where my sister was babysitting.

As I went up that road, the same type of trees you saw mysteriously swaying on Twin Peaks were moving in the wind all around me.

Then an owl would hoot, and I would curse David Lynch, that twisted, magnificent son of a gun, as every hair on the back of my neck exploded.

Watching the episode in the shuttered-up library was just as creepy in its own way, the image of a maniacally laughing Killer BOB reflected on the window, as the train whistle crawled up my spine.

I haven’t been back to the Kelso Library since that trip, and yet, 27 years later, I can close my eyes and perfectly see every nook and cranny of my home away from home.

I’m sure a trip back there would reveal that it, like my childhood home (which I have seen) are no longer the same. Probably better to let it remain suspended in memory.

That library, and all the others I have lived in, offer deep connections to my late mother, who gave Sarah and I a love of reading and sent us on a writer’s path.

This is all coming to the surface right now, because my second book, Bow Down to Cow Town, is in the process of landing in local libraries.

Any day now the Sno-Isle library system will officially stock two copies of my collection of small town sports stories.

One book is headed to Coupeville, another to Oak Harbor, and they’re “in transit” as of this morning.

They will join Memoirs of an Idiot, which looked up at me from the biography section, sharing shelf space with a book by Nelson Mandela(!), as I strolled through the Coupeville Library yesterday.

The world has changed, certainly.

Computers, DVDs, CDs and other stuff share space with books and magazines at libraries, while card catalogs (and dumbwaiters, probably) are long gone, though Twin Peaks is back(!) and as mystifying as ever.

I know people consume a lot of their reading in non-printed form (this blog, for one), but it’s still special to me to see my book land in a library.

I don’t make any money off the transaction, and who knows how many times it will be checked out. Neither part of that really matters, though.

It’s there, words on paper, a book, and it’s in a library.

My mom isn’t with us anymore, but I know she would be immensely proud of what Sarah (who has somewhere around 237 books in print) and I are accomplishing with our writing.

Libraries are life. It’s nice to be a small part of keeping that alive.

 

Seriously, my books are in the library system:

https://sno-isle.bibliocommons.com/item/show/1579442121_bow_down_to_cow_town

https://sno-isle.bibliocommons.com/item/show/830979121_memoirs_of_an_idiot

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Just a small fraction of the moms who make Wolf Nation soar. (John Fisken photos)

   An incredibly small fraction of the moms who make Wolf Nation soar. (John Fisken photos)

There are no sports without moms.

That’s true on many levels, from the fact they gave birth to all the athletes, to the fact that, if it wasn’t for them, day-to-day athletic life would likely collapse into something resembling a stinky pile of forgotten gym clothes crammed in the corner of a locker.

They wash the baseball pants. Even when they’re disgusting.

They make the snacks.

Always remembering who’s lactose intolerant and who really, really, really likes Skittles.

They drive the car pools.

On the ferry, off the ferry, back on the ferry, back off the ferry, in an endless loop.

They cheer through good times and bad.

They are there to congratulate their kids (and all the other mom’s kids who they consider their “other children”) when they win, and comfort them when they don’t.

It’s not the same in every case, and there are certainly a lot of dads out there who do a lot.

But, today, on Mother’s Day, dads get to sit this one out.

Because, as a group, we’re sending all the moms, Wolf moms in particular, into the Coupeville Sports Hall o’ Fame.

Yep, the 46th class inducted into these hallowed digital walls is the mother of all classes.

After this, you’ll find them up at the top of the blog, under the Legends tab.

We’re not going to list all their names, because, one, I don’t want to type for the next 247 hours, and because even the internet has space issues some time.

Suffice it to say, if you are now or have ever been a mom of a kid who has played a sport for CHS or CMS, you’re a Hall o’ Famer.

You let me use your photos. You slip me info on the sly. You answer my questions.

Sometimes you’re happy with me, and say nice things. Sometimes you chide me a bit, and most times you’re right.

You gave us the athletes and now you are the support crew that makes everything hum along.

Without Wolf moms, no coach, no athletic program, and certainly no idiot writing a blog, would be able to function the way we do.

Raise a glass to yourself, Wolf moms, past, present and future.

Too often you are the unsung heroes, but know that today, and every day, we all sing your praises.

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Luke Merriman

Luke Merriman is just here to sign autographs. (John Fisken photos)

Ashlie Shank

   Ashlie Shank (left) and Ema Smith are happy to see that their personal paparazzi has shown up once again.

Hoagland

Jim Hoagland, man of mystery.

Christine Wright

   Christine Wright gazes into a bright Wolf sports future which includes her two youngest, multi-sport stars Sarah and Genna.

mom

   Baseball moms enjoy the sunshine, since a week or two back they were all huddled under blankets and umbrellas, dodging rain, wind and bitter cold.

Lauren Bayne

  Wolf track star Lauren Bayne spends a few minutes of down time taking in a ballgame.

Hunter Downes

CHS quarterback Hunter Downes ponders the meaning of life.

Genna Wright

Genna Wright’s own athletic future is so bright, she has to wear shades.

It wouldn’t be the same without the fans.

Sure, you could play the games, keep the scores, hand out the trophies, but, without people hollering, things would feel off.

As he clicked away at recent CHS baseball and softball games, wanderin’ cameraman John Fisken let his lens slide into the stands and snapped these glossy pics for us.

Proof that fans can hold the spotlight just as strongly as the players they’ve come out to watch.

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band (John Fisken photos)

   “Nervous? Do I look nervous? Please. I’m here to blow this joint down, baby!!” (John Fisken photos)

babies

   Moments later, these four small children took the floor and beat Port Townsend. Ooh, you’ve been zinged, RedHawks.

cowan

   Kalia Littlejohn tries to bribe her CHS soccer coach, Troy Cowan, with candy, but he has a laser focus and will not be deterred from the on-court action.

moms

   Wolf moms (l to r) Eileen Stone, Kristi Etzell and Kristin Hurlburt threaten to get rowdy in the stands. It wouldn’t be the first time.

Jamar Jenkins: "You're not ready for this beat, but I'm going to lay it down anyway."

   CHS band teacher Jamar Jenkins: “You’re not ready for this beat, but I’m going to lay it down anyway.”

Dalton Martin

   Dalton Martin, always the center of attention, even when he’s just here to drink some milk.

Katrina

   Wolf softball sensation Katrina McGranahan swings by the gym to root for her classmates, and, possibly, sign autographs.

"I swear, these are the hardest bleachers known to man. I can't feel either of my legs right now ... and I may be stuck."

   “I swear, these are the hardest bleachers known to man. I can’t feel either of my legs right now … and I may be stuck.”

Basketball is not the only game in town.

The games bring out a bevy of other side shows, from band to cheer to coaches from other sports stopping by to show their support (and possibly recruit players) to fans busy in the stands.

Wandering around, in between the action Friday night, travelin’ photo man John Fisken was nice enough to snap us some pics of the whole wide show, and the pics above are courtesy him.

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