I should have swung.
I should have tried harder.
I should have paid more attention.
I should have gotten laid more in college.
I should have been a beginner more often.
I should have not been so serious all the time.
I should have gotten over my fear of ostriches.
I should have struck up more conversations with strangers.
I should have brushed more thoroughly and flossed once in a while.
I should have made enough money to buy my aging parents a house.
I should have made enough money not to have to hit up my aging parents for a loan that one time when my year in the cabin came to an end with me in abject poverty.
I should have made better use of my year in the cabin, becoming pure or something instead of just a little lonelier and poorer and maybe a little more aware of the silence at the heart of everything.
I should have given up the world of what if, the world of someday, and worked as hard as I could every day, like my immigrant ancestors, those short gray toilers who sacrificed themselves for the future of their family, i.e., dreaming, lazing, napping me.
I should have just started writing whatever came to mind and pushed it as far as I could and discovered undiscovered lands within or something instead of trying to mimic my literary heroes with every timid word.
I should have volunteered at the homeless shelter or participated in voter registration drives or taught some fatherless kid to shoot a jump shot.
I should have become a teacher early on and taken my lumps and hung with it.
I should have just left Marv Albert alone that time at the airport.
I should have not said all the stupid things I said.
I should have said other things.
I should have said nothing.
I should have sung.
(love that card, remember it well)
"Which pitcher sang National Anthem at '73 World Series?"
Also, there's some commenter activity on some older posts--Mike Tyson (Cardinals), Bobby Valentine (Padres), Bruce Bochte (Mariners)--and some comments continue to trickle in on the recent Pentz-related posts.
http://www.baseball-reference.com/c/colucbo01.shtml
What I love about this site is how many times you (Josh) point out the bizarre images that sometimes made it onto baseball cards. Not always the action shot showing the player in full glory, or a smiling, posed shot, but some moment showing the half-hearted, the bleak, the wincing moments for a player. Like, that was the best photo Topps had of Bob Coluccio?
Sure, the reality is that Coluccio doesn't have a chance to say "no, no, use that one of me sliding into second base... it's much better of me". And, Topps had 500+ players to get their own photos of, and....
But still, that's what this reminds me of.
I should have said other things.
I should have said nothing.
Man, don't we all have those shouldas.
"I shoulda exercised daily
I shoulda brushed after meals
I shoulda gone to church Sunday
I shoulda learned some ideals
I shoulda counted my blessings
I shoulda lodged an appeal."
And yeah, you shoulda gotten over that fear of ostriches.
I love the Mark Harris books -- great stuff. And DeNiro was amazing as Bruce Pearson. I'm so glad that Mark Harris wrote the screenplay. Michael Moriarity tearing up the clubhouse was probably the high water mark of the film for me. Something about that raw energy and frustration just grabbed me.
-Mike Birbiglia
rgds
will
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