[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H1Wi26C9ggU[/youtube]
Grace sings “Here I Am” on Friday morning, 5/22/09.
Here is the Mayo Clinic’s take on CMV. CMV is a common and widespread virus that causes symptoms similar to the common mononucleosis virus. I got a call this morning from the Dr.’s office and was told that the blood they drew on Friday tested positive for CMV and that is why I’m sick. The good news is that this virus is only serious in adults with compromised immune systems and children. The bad news is that it is knocking me for a loop symptom-wise. I am tired and while it is important to get rest I’m told that it’s also important not to do nothing for 2 weeks. That is what makes it difficult since every time I try to do something as simple as working at the computer I wind up needing a 2 hour nap.

Morgan, Bench, Clooney on Ellen
Today was Martin Luther King Day so Heather and I were home from work. This morning while we were having coffee we watched the “Ellen DeGeneres Show“. She has a schtick where she has been trying to get George Clooney (He’s Mine in ’09!) on the show and today she finally succeeded by bringing 2 of my all-time favorite baseball players on, Joe Morgan and Johnny Bench. George is a huge fan of the Big Red Machine. When I grew up in Kettering, Ohio, I followed the Cincinnati Reds and the Reds in the ’70′s were called “The Big Red Machine”. George Clooney grew up in the Cincinnati area because his father, Nick Clooney, had a daytime show in Cincinnati. Watching the show reminded me of my childhood and how important baseball was to me. Being a baseball fan in southern Ohio in the 1970′s meant following future Hall of Famer’s like Joe Morgan, Johnny Bench, Tony Perez, and their manager Sparky Anderson. Not in the Hall of Fame but still baseball’s all-time hits leader Pete Rose (Charlie Hustle) was also on those teams. I became a life long baseball fan as a result of those memories. I was such a huge fan that on any day of the regular season I could tell you what any player on the Red’s statistics were, their batting average or RBI’s or ERA. This was because every day I would pour over the boxscore from the previous night’s game and would look at their statistics for the season too. I was such a math geek
. All of this work paid off for me in a big way. At the end of the season in the early ’70′s the Red’s had “Fan Appreciation Night” for their fans from up the interstate and the local TV station, WHIO-TV, had a contest. The entry was to write in 25 words or less why you should be the Red’s batboy for one night and that was the prize. Stay tuned for Part 2 of this story!








