The Time Machine

On showing up, shared laughter, and the moments we keep

A couple of months ago, a flyer came home from school.


Caleb’s band would be traveling to a local amusement park for a music competition. They needed parent chaperones. The students would perform, then spend the rest of the day enjoying the park.


Before I had even finished reading the flyer, Caleb told me he wanted one of us to chaperone.


I hesitated.


Not because I didn’t want to spend the day with him. Because I knew exactly what the day would ask of me.


In 2021, I developed a condition called POTS, a disorder that affects my body's ability to regulate things like heart rate and blood pressure. Heat is a trigger. Standing for long periods is hard. Walking all day can leave me exhausted. From the outside, I look perfectly healthy. Most people would never know that things that seem simple can take a lot out of me.


I worried about the heat. I worried about spending an entire day on my feet. I worried about loading and unloading instruments and babysitting a group of kids I didn’t know.


Mostly, though, I worried about whether I could physically make it through the day.


For months, I looked at the date on my calendar and dreaded it.


But Caleb wanted me there.


So I signed up.


And I went.


His band played beautifully.


There is something special about hearing those songs performed by the full group. At home, we hear fragments. A few measures repeated over and over while someone learns a difficult section. The songs become familiar long before the concert ever arrives.


But when the whole band plays together, those scattered pieces finally come to life.


After the performance, our group headed into the park.


For the next couple of hours, I mostly watched.


The kids ran from ride to ride while I looked for benches whenever I could find them. The sun climbed higher. My legs grew tired. I could feel the familiar soreness settling in.


Somewhere along the way, I paid an outrageous amount of money for a giant souvenir slushie cup and watched Caleb proudly carry it around the park with bright blue lips.


Eventually, our group split up. For the last couple of hours, it was just Caleb and me. 


And suddenly, sitting on the sidelines wasn’t really an option anymore.


I used to love amusement parks. Years ago, I would have been the first one in line for every ride. But these days are different. Heat, dizziness, and exhaustion have a way of changing the experience.


But Caleb wanted to ride.


So I rode.


Twice in a row, we climbed onto the Music Express while Justin Bieber’s “Baby” blasted through the speakers. We whipped around the track while I sang along badly and Caleb laughed.


Then he decided he wanted to try the Time Machine.


He wasn’t sure he could do it. He stood there debating, looking up at the ride and working up his courage.


And then he did it.


We were launched into the air, spinning in circles. He was terrified and delighted all at once. We screamed. We laughed. We got off the ride grinning.


And for the rest of the afternoon, I followed wherever he wanted to go.


Even when I was dizzy.

Even when I wanted to sit down.

Even when my muscles ached.


And somewhere along the way, I stopped thinking about how tired I was.


I was too busy watching Caleb.


He’s always been a little more serious than most kids his age. He likes rules. He likes plans. He likes knowing what’s expected. He’s usually thinking three steps ahead, taking everything in, figuring things out.


So getting to spend a day watching him laugh freely felt like a gift.


For a few hours, he wasn’t thinking about a performance. He wasn't stressing about a test. He wasn’t worrying about doing things right.


He was just... a kid at an amusement park.


And then before I knew it, the day was over.


I felt a wave of relief as we made our way back to the car. I folded myself into the driver’s seat and headed for McDonald’s, already thinking about the large Diet Coke I’d been craving all day.


We got home exactly as I knew we would. I was sunburned. Exhausted. Sore. My face was red and my hair was tangled and all I wanted was to sit down.


But the funny thing about days like this is that those parts never seem to last.


Years from now, neither of us will remember how many times I needed to sit down. We won’t remember the heat. We won’t remember the aching muscles or how tired I was when we finally got home.


We’ll remember singing along to Justin Bieber on the Music Express.

We’ll remember Caleb deciding he was brave enough to ride the Time Machine.

We’ll remember laughing so hard we forgot to be afraid.


And I hope, years from now, that’s what stays with him.


Not that the day was hard.


Just that we laughed.


Just that we were brave.

Dinner, and Then Yours Too (One Minute Memoir)


A Memoir of Taco Bell, Cheese Theft, and the Boy Who Never Says He’s Full

Setting: August 2025 — Sharing food with the unofficial family taste tester

We walked to Staples and Taco Bell with my mom and Caleb one August evening, setting out for school supplies and also ending up with dinner.

Holden, as usual, kept one eye on his own tray and the other on mine.

He ordered cheese potatoes and a quesadilla. I had a burrito, nachos, and cheese. Before he’d even unwrapped his quesadilla, he was angling for a bite of my burrito. Then he spotted my nachos.

“Just one,” I said, then watched as he scooped up enough cheese to coat a small pizza.

Seconds followed. Then thirds. All this before his quesadilla had so much as been opened. My cheese was disappearing faster than my patience.

“Alright,” I finally told him. “Eat your own quesadilla.”

I didn’t finish my burrito, and of course, he happily claimed the leftovers. He polished it off after eating all of his own food.


Apparently, my dinner had been part of his order all along.

During the course of the evening, he sent me twice to fetch more hot sauce, as if the quesadilla were just there to hold it. When I warned him to be careful, that it might burn his lips, he asked what that would feel like.

“Are your lips tingling?” I asked.

He nodded yes.

Then poured on more.

Some kids clear their plate.

Mine clears the table.

This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.

Recent Reads: May + June 2026

May and June were thriller-heavy reading months, with all three books landing in that twisty, unsettling, page-turning corner of my reading life. I read three books total over the two months, and while they were all very different, each one gave me some version of what I wanted: moral dilemmas, unreliable characters, trapped contestants, and secrets refusing to stay buried. One was a five-star standout, one was a really fun ride, and one was entertaining even if it got a little tangled along the way.

📖 Reading Snapshot

📊 By the Numbers
Books Read: 3
Average Rating: 4.0 stars
Rating Distribution:
★★★★★ 1
★★★★☆ 1
★★★☆☆ 1
🎯 Yearly Progress
Yearly Reading Goal: 16 / 100
16%
Reading Pace: 34 books behind schedule
Average Time to Finish: 11.3 days
Average Pace: 0.62 books/week
Projected Year-End Total: 32 books
🏷️ Reading Mix
Fiction (3)
Thriller (3)
📚 Formats & Sources
Formats
eBook (3)
Sources
Kindle Unlimited (2) For Review (1)

📖 Book Reviews

Book Cover

The Privilege

Author: A.R. Hollowell

Genre: Fiction · Thriller

Publication: 2026

Format & Source: eBook · For Review

Time to Read: 6 days

Rating: ★★★★★

A therapist is caught in an impossible moral dilemma when one patient confesses to a fatal hit-and-run, and the victim’s mother becomes her patient just days later. Bound by confidentiality but haunted by what she knows, she has to decide how far duty can stretch before it becomes its own kind of harm.


The premise of this one grabbed me immediately. A therapist knowing the truth about a death but being legally unable to say anything? That is exactly the kind of moral dilemma that makes me want to keep turning pages. And this book delivered on that setup. It was compelling, tense, and genuinely hard to put down. I liked that the suspense came not just from what happened, but from the impossible position the therapist was trapped in. Every option had consequences, and that made the whole story feel even more gripping.


This was a strong psychological thriller with a fascinating premise, and I’m already excited for the upcoming sequel.


Quick Take: A tense, addictive moral-dilemma thriller that completely delivered on its premise.

Book Cover

Drowning in Paper Flowers

Author: E.L. Westbury

Genre: Fiction · Thriller

Publication: 2024

Format & Source: eBook · Kindle Unlimited

Time to Read: 16 days

Rating: ★★★☆☆

Ruby Powell appears to have the perfect life, but beneath the polished façade lies a troubled marriage, family secrets, and a past that refuses to stay buried. As the line between truth and deception begins to blur, everything around her starts to unravel.


This was a solid thriller with an interesting cast of unreliable characters and a few twists that genuinely caught me off guard.


There was almost too much happening at times, with so many subplots that the story occasionally felt convoluted and a little difficult to follow. Even so, it kept me engaged throughout. It may not be the most memorable thriller I've read, but it was an entertaining one.


Quick Take: An entertaining thriller with plenty of twists, even if it occasionally gets tangled in its own story.

Book Cover

Stay

Author: Zoe Cross

Genre: Fiction · Thriller

Publication: 2026

Format & Source: eBook · Kindle Unlimited

Time to Read: 12 days

Rating: ★★★★☆

Ten strangers enter an underground bunker to compete in a reality show for a $2 million prize, but when something goes terribly wrong, they're trapped inside with no way out.


This was a genuinely fun thriller. I always enjoy stories with a reality TV angle, and pairing that with a locked-room survival scenario made for a really engaging read.


Watching the contestants slowly unravel as the days passed was one of my favorite parts, and I was desperate to find out what had happened to leave them trapped underground. The story kept me hooked with a few surprising twists, and I'll definitely be reading more from Zoe Cross.


Quick Take: A tense, entertaining survival thriller that kept me guessing until the end.

🏆 Favorite Book of May & June

The Privilege by A.R. Hollowell

A gripping moral-dilemma thriller that completely delivered on its fascinating premise.

That’s a wrap on these two months of reading. Here’s to finding another story worth staying up too late for. 📚

We Still Went

On memories, mess, and the traditions we make on purpose


I’ve been thinking a lot about traditions lately.

Not the ones you grow up with. The ones you have to build yourself.

The kind you have to create on purpose. The kind that don’t just happen unless you make them happen. 

And that part is exhausting, if I’m being honest. Most days, I come home from work and want to crawl straight into bed. I don’t have extra energy just sitting around waiting to be turned into meaningful moments.

But we try anyway. 

That’s why we ran together last year. Partly for the exercise, partly because I had something to prove to myself… but mostly because I wanted something that was ours. Just me and my boys, out in the evenings, moving forward together and getting ready for our yearly Turkey Trot.

That’s why we go to Bingo. We make them go. They complain about it. Some nights, when we aren’t winning fast enough, it ends in frustration or tears. But I still see it. The way they stand up from their seats and spin for luck. The way they immediately try to claim my prizes. My mom’s prizes. By the time we leave, they’re carrying an armful of candy like they earned every piece of it.

That’s why I take them to the movies when something comes out they want to see. We go on Tuesdays because it’s discount night. We sneak in candy and drinks, but we always buy the popcorn. I sit through movies I don’t even like, like the Mario movie, just hoping it becomes something they remember fondly later.

And the funny thing is, the memory they're making and the moment I'm living are seldom the same. 

It's me sitting between them so they don't fight. Maybe what they'll remember is that we always sat together.

It's me whisper-yelling at Holden when he gets too loud. Maybe what he'll remember is laughing through the movie.

It's me getting up halfway through to refill the popcorn. Maybe what they'll remember is that we never ran out.

It's chaos in a dark room with a sticky floor.

And somehow, that's the memory we're making.

There are days when it feels more like effort than memory-making. It isn't always what I pictured for our lives.

But years from now, I don't think they'll remember the chaos, the fighting, or even the sticky floors.

I think they'll just remember that we went.

Five Ninety-Nine (One Minute Memoir)


A Memoir of Cheap Pizza, Unreasonable Enthusiasm, and the Best Part of Dinner

Setting: April 2026 — Somewhere between “cheap dinner” and “core memory.”

I got home from work one evening and was immediately greeted by Caleb.

“Do you know what I want for dinner?”

I didn’t.

“Little Caesars. Pizza and breadsticks, okay?”

I asked Holden. He agreed instantly.

So I opened the app to see what kind of cheap, greasy situation we were getting into. They had a Mix & Match deal. Two items for $5.99 each.

We went with a large Slices-N-Stix for $5.99. Half pepperoni pizza, half bacon breadsticks. I added garlic parmesan wings, eight for $5.99. Dinner for all of us came in under thirteen dollars... which felt like a red flag.

When I got home from my pizza portal pick-up, they didn’t wait. The box was open immediately, and Caleb did this thing he’s been doing lately, touching the piece he wants so no one else takes it. Claiming it. Holden followed suit, selecting his slice and breadstick the same way.

Ownership was established.

We dug in.

The wings were… fine. A little rubbery. Kind of small. Decent sauce, at least. We live an hour from Buffalo, where wings are taken seriously, so my standards are probably higher than necessary.

Still, Holden took one bite and lit up. “These wings are AWESOME! If this was prison food, I’d try to go to prison!”

They kept going back for more. Slices. Stix. Grease.

At one point, they said it was better than McDonald’s. I disagreed.

“Why?” Holden asked.

“Because I love nuggets.”

They didn’t argue. They just kept eating. I managed half a slice, one bacon stick, and a couple of wings before I was done.

They kept going. From the kitchen, I heard Holden shout, “these chicken wings don’t even stand a chance against me!”

By the time I went back in, most of it was gone. They stood over the empty box like it had been something special.

Maybe it was.

Not because of the pizza. Not even because it was only $5.99.

Because sometimes the best part of dinner is having someone to laugh with across the table.

This post is part of my One-Minute Memoir series — short reflections on small moments that still manage to say something big.

What I Watched: June 2026

What I Watched

June kept me firmly in documentary mode, with stories that ranged from unsettling neighborhood disputes and true crime to bizarre internet rabbit holes and cases that challenged my assumptions. I also continued with one of my ongoing rewatches, making for a month that was equal parts thought-provoking, heartbreaking, and completely bewildering.

Shows

Grey's Anatomy
Netflix · 2005 · Rewatch · S:2, E:8-9
These two episodes focused heavily on relationships. Addison continues trying to win Derek back, Cristina and Burke go on their first real date, Burke gives her a key to his apartment, Izzie and Alex grow closer, and Meredith has yet another one-night stand. The most memorable patient was a man who woke up after spending 16 years in a vegetative state. His name was Holden, which immediately caught my attention. Aside from the character in The Catcher in the Rye, I'd never heard another fictional character with my son's name.

Documentary Films & Docuseries

Tell Them You Love Me ★★★★★
Netflix · 2024 · Documentary Film 
This documentary explores the controversial relationship between a married professor and a nonverbal man with cerebral palsy, raising difficult questions about communication, consent, disability, and who gets to tell another person's story. The case itself is fascinating, but what makes the documentary so effective is its refusal to provide easy answers. Nearly every assumption I made early on was challenged as more information came to light.

This was one of the most thought-provoking documentaries I've watched in a long time. It tackles an incredibly sensitive subject with nuance and restraint, allowing viewers to wrestle with the complexities for themselves. I found it compelling from beginning to end and couldn't stop thinking about it afterward.

The Perfect Neighbor ★★★★☆
Netflix · 2025 · Documentary Film 
This documentary examines a years-long neighborhood dispute in Florida that ultimately ended in tragedy. Told almost entirely through police body camera footage, it offers a front-row seat to the escalating conflict and the repeated attempts to manage it before everything unraveled.

I was a little late to the game with this one, but I can see why it generated so much discussion. I wasn't sure I'd like the body camera format, but it worked remarkably well, revealing the story piece by piece instead of simply recounting events. Sad, infuriating, and often difficult to watch, it's a powerful documentary that stayed with me long after it ended.

77 Minutes ★★★☆☆
Tubi · 2016 · Documentary Film
This documentary examines the 1984 mass shooting at a California McDonald's that unfolded over 77 minutes. Through interviews with survivors, law enforcement, and archival footage, it reconstructs the tragedy and its aftermath. The story itself is heartbreaking and fascinating, and I learned a great deal about a case I knew very little about beforehand. Unfortunately, the documentary felt amateurish at times, and the director's own opinions often overshadowed the storytelling.

Maternal Instinct ★★★★★
Netflix · 2026 · Documentary Film
This documentary generated a lot of buzz when it was released, and I can absolutely see why. It follows a woman who builds her life around increasingly elaborate lies, including repeatedly claiming to be pregnant. When those lies begin to unravel, she takes unimaginable steps to convince others they were true.

The story is both bizarre and horrifying, and it held my attention from beginning to end. Featuring interviews with people close to both the victim and the killer, this was a fascinating and exceptionally well-made documentary.

Tickled ★★★★☆
HBO Max · 2016 · Documentary Film
This one was... quite something. A journalist stumbles across a series of competitive endurance tickling videos and begins investigating the people behind them. What starts as an odd internet curiosity quickly spirals into something much stranger, with threats, intimidation, and increasingly bizarre revelations.

I spent most of the documentary wondering what on earth was going on, and every time I thought I had it figured out, another twist sent the story in a different direction. A genuinely wild watch.

By the Numbers

  • Total Watched: 6
  • Shows: 1 (rewatch) · 2 episodes
  • Documentary Films: 5
  • Five-Star Watches: 2
  • Average Rating: 4.2★
  • Most-Used Streaming Service: Netflix (4 titles)
  • Oldest Release: Grey's Anatomy (2005) · Tickled (2016)
  • Newest Release: Maternal Instinct (2026)

Superlatives

Favorite Watch: Tell Them You Love Me
Most Fascinating: Maternal Instinct
Biggest Disappointment: 77 Minutes

June continued my streak of documentary-heavy months, but what stood out most was how many of these stories dealt with deception, obsession, and people living in completely different realities than those around them. Whether it was neighborhood conflicts, fabricated pregnancies, unusual internet subcultures, or difficult ethical questions, these documentaries consistently left me with more questions than answers. That's usually the sign of a month well spent in front of the screen.