Tag: Photos

  • Han Solo and Chewbacca Birthday Cake from Yesteryear

    Young boy wearing a Hercules baseball cap and Georgia Bulldogs shirt sitting behind a Star Wars themed Han Solo and Chewbacca birthday cake.

    This Han Solo and Chewbacca decorated birthday cake was one of many Star Wars themed cakes I’ve enjoyed over the years.

  • Remembering My Friend Greg Doke

    Jason Ellis on the left wearing a Boy Scout uniform and Greg Doke on the right wearing a scouting t-shirt. Other people in the image have been removed using Stable Diffusion and inpaint+lama.

    The photo above shows me (left) and Greg (right) as we’re about to leave for the 1989 National Scout Jamboree in Washington, DC. By that point, we had spent a lot of our early life together–same elementary school, Cub Scouts, Webelos, and then, Boy Scouts.

    On the long bus ride to the Jamboree, he assembled a plastic model kit of the USS Enterprise USS-1701-D. Imagine his determination to build that model while the bus is bouncing around on the roadbed and young boys are shouting and carrying on around him. He laid out his sprues in the flimsy cardboard box–full color lid inverted to hold the plain cardboard bottom–and applied bits of modeling cement from a metal Testors tube to bind and hold the bits together. I thought that he was out of his mind to build that model on the trip, but he wasn’t out of his mind–he was focused. It meant something to him. It gave him an escape and outlet from everything else going on around him. It channeled his love of Star Trek: The Next Generation into something tangible and real–bringing the utopian world on the screen into a moment of his real lived experience.

    Some years before that trip, I spent an afternoon with Greg at his house. We pulled out his older brother Jeff’s precious Star Wars toys–carefully preserved in their original boxes and meticulously stored in his bedroom closet–for otherworldly battles in outer space. We assembled the Kenner Death Star playset and strafed its villains with an X-Wing and the Millennium Falcon.

    Greg was an aficionado of great toy lines based on children’s cartoons. He had an extensive collection of action figures from He-Man and the Masters of the Universe, and he proudly showed off the Miraj with a full compliment of heroes from Silverhawks. I can safely say that I’m as impressed now as I was then. And, I was awfully glad we got to play with them together.

    Even earlier, I remember being sick in elementary school. I might have missed a week of school. When I returned to classes, I didn’t have a lot of get-up-and-go. Greg became my companion during PE–we would walk the track beside Glyndale Elementary School. While we walked, we talked about all sorts of things–things that I can’t recall but feel like something important, meaningful, revelatory.

    An even earlier memory is of Greg, me, and a bunch of other boys pretending to be Transformers in the expansive field behind Glyndale. Sideswipe was my preferred character. Greg, however, took it to the next level as Megatron–nailing his character’s raspy electronic voice and striking an imposing silhouette with his arm canon raised.

    The last time that I saw Greg was June 16, 2018. I had visited his parents Wayne and Faye–my Boy Scout Scoutmaster and Cub Scout Pack Leader respectively. Greg happened to be home, so I got to catch up with him some, too. Our lives had diverged in significant ways, but he was still the same determined and playful guy I had know in my youth. However, I also sensed there was a gap between who we were and who we had become that couldn’t be bridged in a brief visit.

    Greg passed away last Monday on 1 Jul. 2024–about six weeks shy of his 47th birthday. Looking at his LinkedIn profile, it seems like he was still moving forward–starting his own company and getting certifications in cybersecurity, which makes the unexpected news that much harder to bear. Even when the bonds of friendship have frayed with time, we still can’t help wanting our old friends’ dreams come true and feeling heartbreak when they don’t.

  • Blue Atlas Cedar Tree in Green-Wood Cemetery

    Y and I know this blue atlas cedar as “Big Tree Friend.” It grows somewhere in the middle of Green-Wood Cemetery. We walk around–turning here and there–until we eventually find it.

    It has been growing in Green-Wood Cemetery for over 100 years–assuming it was planted soon after the death of the person it memorializes, Joseph Kinyoun (Nov. 25, 1860-Feb. 14, 1919). Its circumference is so large that I don’t think Y and I could join hands around it.

    When you stand beneath it, it complete envelops you.

    On a hot day, it’s a good friend to have shade you.

  • Michelle Angela’s Nuestro Andar Florece (Our Journey Blooms) Mural in Brooklyn

    Michelle Angela's Nuestro Andar Florece (Our Journey Blooms) mural near the corner of 23rd St and 5th Ave in Brooklyn

    Artist Michelle Angela’s Nuestro Andar Florece (Our Journey Blooms) is near the corner of 23rd Street and 5th Avenue in Brooklyn. It inventive use of colors and gradients, figures and hands, and symbolism make it a work worth seeking out. More details about it being a celebration of Mexican immigrant women’s stories and how it came to be are on the artist’s website here.

    Michelle Angela's Nuestro Andar Florece (Our Journey Blooms) mural near the corner of 23rd St and 5th Ave in Brooklyn
    Michelle Angela's Nuestro Andar Florece (Our Journey Blooms) mural near the corner of 23rd St and 5th Ave in Brooklyn
  • F-Train Pulling into Ditmas Avenue

    F-Train pulling into Ditmas Avenue above-ground station in Brooklyn.

    The above-ground Ditmas Avenue subway station is a nice place to watch the trains come and go because the track extends into the distance in both directions. At the underground stations, you tend to only see the headlights reflected off the tiled walls before the train pulls into platform. We saw this F-train from a long distance away at dusk before it finally pulled up for us to board.