
The end of last week was a trip down Nostalgia Lane.
On Thursday, I rode with one of my closest friends to Clyde, TX, to watch his daughter play in her second playoff basketball game. As a starting varsity sophomore, she’s got a knack for blocking shots. It’s not that she’s built like a shot blocker; I think she has a unique ability to time the release of an opponent’s shot.
As long-time readers know, the namesake of my firstborn was raised in Clyde and later returned as a math teacher and coach. I asked him to be my best man, but tragically, a week before my wedding, he died in a drowning accident while saving his girlfriend. In his memory, his mother created a scholarship, and all his close-knit college friends, including me, serve on the board. Since we were going to be in town, I reached out to her in case she wanted to watch the game with us.
As soon as we parked, it hit me that the last time I was there was three days before my wedding, June 2003, when I had the honor of giving one of the eulogies at his funeral. The high school gym was the only place that could hold all the folks who wanted to attend, and it was packed. Chairs were brought it and it was still standing room only. His very large family took up all one half of the court. If memory serves me correctly, the high school was just finished being built, and his funeral was the first event. As I walked in, a flood of memories from that day hit me. It was rather surreal.

My late friend’s mother did make it to the game to watch the team we were rooting for dominate. She sat between me and my friend (also a scholarship board member), whose daughter was playing. Interestingly, she shared that the last time she was in that building was the same time as me. I told her, at least we now have a happy memory of being in this place together.
A funny thing happened with less than three minutes left in the game. Somehow, the opposing team put six players on the floor, and the refs didn’t catch it. Thankfully, no one scored. I bet the refs were embarrassed, and I couldn’t help but wonder if there was a way for them to “make it right.” I guess if the score was close, and if our team had lost, it could have been easily contested. This was for an area championship, afterall. Today his daughter has a game in nearby Aubry, and I’m pretty sure I’ll be able to make that one as well.


Speaking of my friend with the basketball-playing daughter, he’s a pastor in Mineral Wells, following the footsteps of his father. His brother is also a pastor in a neighboring town. Well, their father got married on Saturday, and both officiated the wedding. Their father, a widower, who was married for over 50 years, was marrying a widow who was also married for over 50 years. At the wedding, it was mentioned that the two already had over a century of combined Christian marriage. My childhood pastor didn’t have a best man, but a best person, the sister of his deceased wife. The bride’s son, who was also in my youth group, walked his mother down the aisle and gave a much longer than expected, war m hearted answer on how proud he was to give his mother away and grateful to now be a part of this family his family have admired for so long.
Oh, I guess it’s worth mentioning that my friend’s father, who baptized me on Easter Sunday 1993, also officiated my wedding. I’ve been told by them multiple times that I’m considered family and they always invite me to every Thanksgiving, Christmas, and other holidays since my family fell apart. As a matter of fact, my friend was the only person I could depend on to drive me to all of my spinal surguries over the past five years, coming all the way from Mineral Wells to do so.
That morning, for the heck of it, I decided to text DaughterGeeding to see if she’d be interested as my plus-one for this wedding that was two hours away. To my utter astonishment, we went. Since she’s a 15 year old, it was also a great opporunity to get some long distance and highway driving experience in. Over the past five years, I don’t often get a chance to show off either of my kids, but especially DaughterGeeding. This was the first time most of these folks have seen my daughter, and they greeted her warmly. Without any prompting, so many of them were kind enough to immediately share heart warming stories of how I impacted their life. The wife of one of the pastors even told her that I was responsible for getting her her first job. Heck, another friend who greeted me by name gave me a hug, and when I told him I was surpised that he didn’t forgot about me me, he would he would always remember me because I helped him get his first job. All of that talk made me laugh on the inside pretty hard. It turns out I can help get other people employed, just not myself, lol. Oh, speaking of which, I didn’t get that job that I had to drive and interview in Austin for.
Because I haven’t attended a wedding in well over a decade, and since I don’t get to dress up often, I decided to really lean into it, going for something dapper. It seemed to work, because as soon as I walked in, the first thing everyone said to me was that I was looking quite dapper.




I almost failed to mention that everyone at the wedding thought DaughterGeeding was beautiful and well-mannered. And many took the opportunity to sit next to her and take some time to genuinely get to know her. Heck, I found out a lot of stuff about her I didn’t know about. Words can’t adequately express how much this warmed my heart. Not only their actions, but just the type of bonding that can happen during a car trip as you gently coach some driving skills.
And here’s something for your cityfolk. When you’re at a small town in Texas, you’ll often see things like this to hold your cowboy hat.

On Friday night, I met at date at Texas Live to eat and watch the Olympics. It was my first time visiting the venue. Parking was a little difficult because of the setup for the upcoming F1 race. Bleachers are everywhere. As a matter of fact, I got a chance to drive down some of the roads with the barricades, so I have just a tiny idea of what it will feel like.

That date went ok, but my mind was mostly preoccupied thking about a date I had planned on Sunday with someone I’ve been wanting to get to together with for a long time. There’s something about the one I had plans with on Sunday that just me giddy. But as soon as I arrived at my destination, I looked at my phone and saw this.

NBC averaged 24 million viewers across its prime afternoon coverage (2-5 p.m. EST) and Primetime in Milan (8-11 p.m. EST and PST) through Friday, according to Nielsen and Adobe Analytics. That is a 94% improvement over the 2022 Beijing Games.
— The Associated Press (@apnews.com) February 22, 2026 at 3:15 PM
MIKE TIRICO’S ALL-TIME GREAT OLYMPICS SIGN-OFF:
“All the young people out there, those dreams are formed now. Go chase them, our country loves sports, it brings us together unlike anything else. And if you didn’t know that: you saw it in Team USA Hockey” pic.twitter.com/TFWiqAu2Za
— MLFootball (@MLFootball) February 22, 2026
A little Monday motivation for you.
Yay, I did it.. pic.twitter.com/mie5yIGcGL
— o̴g̴ (@Yoda4ever) February 22, 2026
I don’t follow hockey, but this had me tearing up. They brought their teammate’s (who was killed by a drunk driver) kids out onto the ice with their dad’s jersey to celebrate the moment.
— Ben (@MrGoodlyCooks) February 22, 2026









