Saturday, November 3, 2007

To Whomever Killed My Dog.

Dear anonymous,

Words find it very hard to come to my brain and out my mouth of what I'm feeling. But I know for sure it was not the feeling I wanted when I arrived home this morning. Let me paint a picture for you. I came home to my mother crying and my father saying, "We have some bad news." My mother than explained to my that my dog Tyler had been hit by a car and died. I was dumbfounded. I couldn't believe it.

I learned that our gate had been open and Tyler wondered out. But the fact that you couldn't see my dog questions you, and particularly your competence in driving an automobile. To hear that our neighbor had to come to our house and tell us that our dog had been killed makes you not only a terrible inattentive driver who has committed vehicular homicide but a coward. A yellow bellied coward without any class or decency. Right now on your life's movie you are playing the role of the Cowardly Lion.

I didn't expect to come home with a family member dead.
I didn't expect to dig a grave for my dog, and bury him this afternoon.
I didn't expect that the perpetrator would remain in the shadows.

All I hope is that you feel a terrible weight chained to your heart for as long as you stay anonymous, and I hope the guilt keeps you awake when you try to fall asleep to forget that feeling of killing a loved member of my family.

Tyler may have not been my favorite pet I've ever had, but he was a member of our family none the less. There were many things I did not like about him, but the jingle of his collar, the patter of his feet, the tilt of his head when you tell him something, the way he sat up on his rear end, and mostly missed will be his presence.


Dear Grandpa,
Our loss is your gain. Keep him busy while he's waiting, I'm sure Shiloh is more than excited to see him.

love, Stephen

Tyler, December 14th, 1998 to November 3rd, 2007.

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Beauty and the Beast the Musical Starring Me

Over the past 2 months approximately, I have had the privilege to be a part of my high school's musical production of Disney's Beauty and the Beast. I tried out with the best of my abilities for a lead but fell short to people more older, wiser, and in most cases more suitable for the job. Which I'm so glad were picked because looking back in retrospect that everyone chosen is best fit for the part, and they all did excellently. The entire show was cast perfectly. The show was a huge cost on everything from the budget to time and more importantly energy, but well well well worth every penny.

As some of you might know I was casted as an ensemble member and played the role of a town villager and a cheese grater. I was included in the numbers Belle, Gaston, Be Our Guest, and Human again, along with the Castle Battle scene towards the end. Being both a human villager and a kitchen specialty item was at times a challenge, more so when you are a drunken village man singing all hail Gaston, and four scenes later you end up a fully dressed in a spandex unitard, silvery vest pieces, full make up, a stark white whig, and to top it all off a dance belt (its better if you don't know what this is)...ready to welcome the girl who could break the spell to dinner.

The week of dress rehearsals started like a kindergarten production of Beauty and the Beast, but with tremendous strides made by the entire cast over 3 days made our show and I quote, "I've have seen lots of Broadway shows before, and this was just as good as Broadway." Granted it probably not as good as a Broadway, but I'm glad that from what it looked like on that Monday to hear that it was just as good as Broadway than that was really really awesome to hear.

Our performances were on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday night, along with a Sunday matinée, all of which sold out our 900 seat auditorium, and on Sunday afternoon bring folding chairs to put in various places around the theater. My personal feelings over the show is we did good on every one but my opinion to rate the shows from best performances to worse, the order would be Saturday, Thursday, Friday, and than Sunday. I had the most fun on Saturday as well as preforming the best. The audience was amazing on Saturday and they were very alive and active participants. The applause, laughter, and smiles made Saturday my favorite and best performance.


I'm grateful that I had this opportunity to be apart such a great show with great people, and look forward to being in more theatrical productions.