About Me Archives - Sean McCarthy https://seanmacc.com/category/about-me/ Freelance Writer | Copywriter Wed, 17 Jul 2024 14:39:25 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 https://i0.wp.com/seanmacc.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/cropped-Sean-McCarthy-Logo-1.jpg?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 About Me Archives - Sean McCarthy https://seanmacc.com/category/about-me/ 32 32 213241108 The Result of Throwing a Banana Peel Out the Window https://seanmacc.com/2023/01/11/i-threw-out-a-banana-peel-at-mile-marker-115/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=i-threw-out-a-banana-peel-at-mile-marker-115 Wed, 11 Jan 2023 20:01:18 +0000 https://seanmacc.com/?p=444 The consequences of our actions. The word consequence to me always seemed negative. Whenever I think about it, rarely do people say, “Think of the benefits of your actions.” It always seems to be more about being careful about what Read more…

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The consequences of our actions.

The word consequence to me always seemed negative.

Whenever I think about it, rarely do people say, “Think of the benefits of your actions.” It always seems to be more about being careful about what we do in life. Whether it’s the decisions we make or the company we keep.

There’s a consequence.

Breakfast

I had just finished eating a banana as I was about an hour into my four-hour road trip. Look at me…being all healthy and sh*t.

When I was done with it, I found myself dangling the peel over the empty passenger seat like it was a pair of Grandma’s dirty underwear.

Come on, whenever we talk about Grandma’s dirty anything, it’s funny. Plus, it’s not like I mentioned Gram’s boob sweat or Vajayjay, relax.

I wasn’t about to drop it on the seat. Gross. I knew if I tossed it on the floor, in about an hour I’d be traveling with the scent of warm, rotting fruit as the heater in my truck gently blew down on it at the lowest setting for the next few hours until I arrived at my destination.

Hold on

The Sunday morning traffic was really light. I knew as soon as I rounded a few more interstate corners this wouldn’t be the case. I had to act, and act fast. Plus, I had one hand on the wheel and I’d just seen a big highway sign that read, Hands-free Law in Effect.

Upon seeing the sign, I was immediately transported back to my childhood during a bike ride home from my friend’s house. He lived at the top of a long, steep hill. I thought it’d be cool to ride down it without holding onto the handlebars. In less than a hundred feet at 30 miles per hour, the handlebars started to wobble, followed by the entire bike shaking, until I proceeded to go ass-over-tea-kettle and tea-kettle-over-ass repeatedly until I came to a whimper of a stop after what seemed like fifty feet of the worst road-rashing I’d ever received.

At least it was only on one arm…and leg…and only one side of my face. I cried like a baby for the next quarter mile as I tucked my ego between my recently dropped balls and pedaled my sorry ass back home. The total trip was about a mile. The last half of it consisted of nothing more than the occasional sniffle along with the painful burning of the tiny pieces of asphalt impaled in my youthful skin.

Consequences.

Sign language

The sign- I was eager to go all in and take advantage of this obviously well-thought-out public service announcement. I couldn’t very well be completely hands-free with both hands off the wheel and one still holding the peeling of a fruit.

Can you imagine? The assumption that everyone on the road today who doesn’t realize that texting while driving is dangerous to our habit of living will understand such a generic message is pretty presumptuous- Hands-free Law in Effect.

Companies had to add warning labels to tell kids a few years ago not to eat laundry soap because of a few rogue taste testers. If the suggestive nature of this sign were to even cause one soap-swallowing new driver to pull my wise bike stunt from back in the day, the bike’s banana seat going up their ass as they flail out of control on a quiet suburban street could be the least of their worries.

Consequences.

My plan in action

I came up with my plan. Familiar with this stretch of highway, I knew that a half-mile straight was coming up in the next 10–15 seconds. I had to time the sequence perfectly, and everything had to fall in line.

  1. There could be no cars in either direction. If anyone witnessed any of this, they’d think I was littering, and the .0001 percent chance that they’d tell someone had a bead of sweat forming on my brow.
  2. Once the desolation was confirmed, I’d pull double-duty with my right hand, maintaining my grip on Grammy’s dirty peel while sliding my fingers atop the steering wheel to hold steady at a few miles per hour above the speed limit, but not fast enough to draw attention to myself.
  3. Almost simultaneously, with my left middle finger, I’d open the passenger side window. I was choosing my middle finger because I like the way it naturally sits on top of the window control button to effortlessly guide the window down and just as smoothly slides down and underneath the same button to quickly raise it back to the fully closed position. Since it was winter and pretty frigid outside, the down-up motion of the pain of glass had to be flawless in order to maintain the internal vehicle temp. I also have a habit of keeping loose napkins all over the place (don’t ask). I pictured one of them blowing up across my face, causing a brief blinding moment that could derail this entire operation. I knew a larger traffic flow was coming between here and my final exit and this opportunity was a one-time offering. Taking any pleasure at all in this was an added and unexpected bonus.
  4. The three-punch succession of getting my left hand back on the wheel, flinging the peel the distance of the vehicle’s interior width and out the window while bringing it all back around to get the window closed again, required perfection. The chance of blowing it all by an early release of the right thumb and index finger would cause the still-currently-yellow wrapping to slap against the right side of the windshield and come to an instant screeching halt on the dash. This would no doubt leave a spooge in both places that based on the still-existing dashboard dust from the prior season, would remain at least until we sprang our clocks ahead and it got warm enough for me to even consider wiping it off. Premature ejection was not an option. A late release and I’d be dealing with a hidden gem that would eventually be found by whomever I overpay to clean this beast.

Batter up. The coast was clear. Deep breath, fuck…slight wheel jerking…get it together, man!

As I witnessed the slow-motion rotation of the brunt of all slippery jokes of the last century as it expertly threaded the needle of the adjacent window, the potential consequences of my actions became more clear to me.

Just then, out of the corner of my eye, it appeared. Time almost stood still. The scene was just like driving by a nightclub and seeing someone who told you they were too tired to hang out with you standing among their group of new best friends on the sidewalk- mile marker 115.

I made a mental note for my future story. It seemed key at the time. Now? Not so much.

Sure, I had the mile marker, but due to my excessive speed, I missed the chance to see specifically where the protective housing of the best thing I’d eaten all morning ended up, despite my superbly executed delivery. I pictured it resting quietly in the cold snow, potentially flash-freezing long before any fur-bearing or feathered creature would ever find it. What if it got hung up in a dangling tree branch? With the exception of the elusive red or gray squirrels, this would for sure hinder the efforts of anything with a fluffy tail from getting it.

I settled myself down and convinced myself that the best thing would be for a murder of crows to share in my waste. I’m not even fucking with you right now, a group of crows is called a murder, ask PBS.org. I literally learn something new every day.

Maybe it sinking into the melting snow and staying hidden from predators until it composts into fertilizer for the upcoming flower season would be best. For some reason, that seemed almost romantic.

Consequences?

What are the actual consequences of my actions for throwing out a banana peel at mile marker 115?

Does it really matter?

Not a clue. It’s a fucking banana peel. The amount of mileage that I got out of it should make you wonder what the rest of my life is like.

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The Musical Trauma of My Childhood https://seanmacc.com/2023/01/05/the-musical-trauma-of-my-childhood/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=the-musical-trauma-of-my-childhood Thu, 05 Jan 2023 14:39:09 +0000 https://seanmacc.com/?p=413 I honestly have no idea how I was even allowed to become a musician. I was a seventies kid who liked to play in the dirt. When I was eight years old, I was at a pool with tons of Read more…

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I honestly have no idea how I was even allowed to become a musician.

I was a seventies kid who liked to play in the dirt.

When I was eight years old, I was at a pool with tons of other kids during the summer while I was on vacation. The age range of kids frolicking was anywhere from mine to 16 or so. Some of the teenagers had a boombox playing some music that I didn’t recognize. You know, because my well-established, fresh-off-the-training-wheels mind was privy to the latest musical trends.

Allow me to share how completely off base I was.

Yeah, I said it, boombox. It’s like an iPhone, only different, with a handle and sh*t. Keep up.

Back to my story…

For no other reason other than me apparently needing to speak rather than just keep my mouth shut, I suggested they play something else. As if I knew anything about music. To this day I still can’t tell the difference between David Bowie and Ziggy Stardust or Lady Gaga and…Lady Gaga.

One of the guys replied with, “Like what?” Me, in all of my pre-pubescent wisdom replied, “I don’t know, something good.”

He asked if I liked Van Halen. Having absolutely no idea who he was talking about, I said, “Sure, he’s pretty good.”

What a fucking moron. I instantly felt half of my body sink into quicksand and was praying for a lifeline. Instead, I got an anchor. I wasn’t about to sink further, but I sure as fuck wasn’t getting out of this without him milking it for all of the embarrassment I was about to endure.

That prompted his follow-up question, “What’s your favorite song?”

He was referring to my new favorite band as of 15 seconds ago. See, me saying any band was pretty good with the wealth of musical knowledge that my 99.5% unused brain contained at the time was just as good as calling them my favorite. The amount of clues that I had at the time equaled the dollar amount I had in my makeshift cut-off jean swim trunks- zero.

“Anything, I like them all.” As if he didn’t already know that I was completely full of sh*t a minute ago.

The look on his face seemed to acknowledge that he could either bury me while I was surrounded by his friends and possibly even bring them into the Colosseum to throw a few stones themselves, or step out of the way and allow me to tuck my tail and go back with my Puff-the-Magic-Dragoning friends that were my own age.

He chose mercy. I was grateful. It was me and Jackie Paper for the rest of the afternoon. Which leads me to another question, what was that song actually about? I’m not sure myself, but at the time, I know my Dad and his girlfriend sure liked it.

Turns out, the joke’s on him and his pool-hustling pals. When I got older, I learned that Van Halen actually was good. Sure, I had no idea it wasn’t a “he” back then, but let’s face it, Eddie Van Halen himself turned out to be pretty great.

Stick that up your boombox, pool boy.

(Somewhere deep inside, the single-digit me is secretly hoping that boombox-pool-boy didn’t just hear any of that.)

I grew up with 4 older sisters and a younger brother. The three oldest sisters pretty much controlled what was on the radio. We had a stack of records that ran the gamut from Singing Along with Mitch to that Beatles album that had the song with everyone singing underwater on a boat eating a yellow sandwich or some sh*t. You know, the one with the album cover that has those four guys playing hopscotch while making sure they don’t get nabbed for jaywalking and that dude at the back of the line is blocking my view so that I can’t see if that VW bug has a busted tail lite or not?

I wish we’d had another one of The Beatles’ records. Maybe that one with the white cover. It had the cover version of that Eric Clapton song about his guitar crying and the song about the guy with two black eyes, or a mask or something. I can never remember the name of the album. It was white. You think they could have come up with something simple so it would have been easier to ask around about or borrow from a friend. Maybe it would have helped sell a few more copies and people might still be talking about it today. Their rip-off cover of that Charles Manson song probably didn’t help their case in the record stores, either.

Don’t punch me in the face, but I never really liked many Beatles songs. Were they rock? Were they country? Were they blues? I had no clue. Sure, I can appreciate what they did for music as a whole, but Jesus, Paul, George, and for fuck’s sake, Ringo- can I get a decent drum fill somewhere? Anywhere? Can we please come together on this one?

I just thought of something, I never actually did Sing Along with Mitch. Too young, I guess. I do remember blasting out a 45 of Chuck Berry’s My Ding-A-Ling, though. Yeah, that’ll leave a mark on a young boy’s life. Who the actual fuck didn’t pre-screen that before letting it loose in the house?

Because of my older sisters, the first decade of my musical life was riddled with everything from Olivia Newton-John to Stevie Wonder, to some guy singing about how some girl named Brandy was a fine girl. She must have been, he said it like a million times in that fucking song. I also remember a song about some dog named Shannon who’s gonna hurt while he drifts out to sea. How the? It’s a dog. Drifting? For fuck’s sake. C’mon now. I swear my sisters were trying to brainwash me.

My next-door neighbor had my back, though. As we’d all wait outside in the morning for the school bus to pick us up, he’d point a speaker out of his second-story bedroom window blasting The Cars or Electric Light Orchestra albums. Good stuff. I knew even back then that The Cars had the potential to eventually release a masterpiece like Tonight She Comes.

There was a song that used to come on the radio that to this day brings me right back to the nostalgia of my childhood whenever I hear it. The haunting sound of every bit of it reminds me of sitting in front of our Telefunken stereo console as a kid at night. The song was called I’m Not In Love. It was apparently released in 1975, which meant that even at my ripe young age, I was very “current” with the musical times when this came over the airwaves. So there I’d sit, completely mesmerized by a song sung by a band called 10cc, which was named after the amount of semen in an average male ejaculation.

Punch me in the face, AGAIN.

Apparently, snopes.com refutes this claim, but let’s face it, wherever the name actually came from can’t hold a candle to that story. Don’t even get me started with Michael Jackson’s song Beat It.

So that’s it. I’m not sure how anyone comes back from all of that and has a successful music career, but it happened. Not to me specifically, but I’ve done okay with performing and releasing a few records of my own.

“And…I’d like to thank…”

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The Jewish Christmas Tree https://seanmacc.com/2022/12/31/mom-and-the-jewish-christmas-tree/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=mom-and-the-jewish-christmas-tree Sat, 31 Dec 2022 20:25:47 +0000 https://seanmacc.com/?p=344 More love than money. It’s been just a few years since my Mom passed. She squeezed my hand and looked into my eyes as I told her that it was going to be okay, and she took her last breath. Read more…

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More love than money.

It’s been just a few years since my Mom passed. She squeezed my hand and looked into my eyes as I told her that it was going to be okay, and she took her last breath.

With the exception of two years in the last 25 or 30, we always celebrated the holidays with her. The moments and memories still fill my heart.

The Star of David was cut out of two pieces of cardboard from a cereal box and wrapped in aluminum foil. This topped the Christmas tree each year all through our childhood. As we were sifting through my Mom’s belongings the day before the house was to be sold last year, my wife came across the box where she’d kept the star safely stored away for 11 months each year. A day or so after our tree was decorated this year, I noticed that she’d hung it from the tree at eye level. The initial few seconds of joy thinking about the memories were quickly overshadowed by the fact that she was no longer here. It hurt, deeply.

I wrote these words to speak at my Mom’s funeral service. They’ve been tucked away in my email ever since, sort of like the star in that box. Knowing how I felt seeing it proudly displayed in a slightly different context, I thought I’d do the same with my memories of her.

___________________________________________

Our Mom would wait until the hottest summer day, turn on the oven to what may as well have been 500 degrees, and proceed to bake chicken breasts for supper.

We ate ketchup on bread, lathered butter on Matzos, and built the tallest stack of peanut butter on crackers that we could fit in our mouths.

She would use powdered milk to turn one gallon into three…or four, to always make sure that we got our calcium. She would serve us liver that we could never get enough ketchup on to actually eat, to make sure that we got our iron. She wouldn’t let us leave the table until we either ate our vegetables or fed them to the dog while she wasn’t looking. She sewed on patches to our pants so that we wouldn’t have holes in the knees, but they always had some sort of creative style to them.

When I needed a haircut, when I actually used to need haircuts, I always felt like my Mom had my older sisters hold a secret session to see who would actually hold the scissors, while the others hovered around and gave advice on what would be the next appropriate cut.

We woke up one Christmas morning…in our Jewish household….to presents wrapped in the comics section of the newspaper because wrapping paper was too expensive to buy.

We never had the newest anything. Hand-me-downs were handed down, and then down again. Financially, things were tough, but we never knew it when we were so young. We never knew it, because our Mother made sure that we had everything that we needed. She raised 6 kids- by herself.

Always too proud to take a handout, there were times when she simply couldn’t help but have to. Still, she would never forget and repaid whatever was lent to her, even if it was never considered a loan.

I remember every kid on our street being at our house all the time, almost every one of them calling her “Mom”, and she treated them all like they were her own.

There were donuts, loaves of bread, cookies, and cakes surrounding us when we were growing up. I’ll admit that I got stung by a wooden spoon or two. I’ve always said that my Mom used to break so many wooden spoons on us that she’d buy them by the bagful, she was quick to clarify that she bought them in bulk because she had a bakery, but I still beg to differ.

My phone rang one day. She was asking me how to start my chainsaw that I’d left on her porch after doing some work because she had “just a few small trees” that she wanted to cut and didn’t want to bother me. I told her that I’d be right over, and to please not touch anything…at all.

I stopped by to see her one time in the summer, only to find the door wide open and blood on the floor from the kitchen to the bathroom. There was no note, no anything, her car was in the driveway and she was nowhere to be found. It wasn’t any of those things that made me know that something was terribly wrong, but the fact that the peroxide bottle on the bathroom vanity was sitting there with the cover off. If there’s one thing that she taught us, it was to NEVER leave the cap off of the peroxide. After a few calls down a list of friends, I tracked her down to the emergency room where she was safer than I’d feared, and I proceeded to clean up the carnage, first replacing the cap on the bottle. Just a bad cut that happened when the local clinic had already closed for the day.

In the wintertime, she would climb out of a second-story window and proceed to shovel off the porch roof. Except for one time, when she somehow enlisted my best friend to take on the task himself. Unfortunately, he managed to do something that she never did- fall off the roof in the process. I need to be honest, I’m so glad that he wasn’t hurt, but I would still love to see the video of that episode. After that, she didn’t dare seek outside help again for roof shoveling.

We celebrated everything. We didn’t miss any holidays, She baked cakes for every birthday, Thanksgiving was always a feast, and Hanukkah was eight nights of what we thought was magical while we each took our turn lighting a candle and watching anxiously as our Mom blessed the menorah. To this day, it’s the only Hebrew that I know, but because of her, I know it well.

My Mom was the best person I knew.

We were so loved, and we loved her so.

Thank you, Momma, thank you so much.

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Freelance Writer | Speaker | Storyteller https://seanmacc.com/2022/12/09/content-writer-copywriter/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=content-writer-copywriter Fri, 09 Dec 2022 18:04:36 +0000 https://seanmacc.com/?p=148 You want someone who can communicate with your customer base in a voice they can relate to and appreciate. That’s me. My 35+ years in the Music Industry and 20+ as a Technology Consultant allow me to write for you Read more…

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You want someone who can communicate with your customer base in a voice they can relate to and appreciate.

That’s me.

My 35+ years in the Music Industry and 20+ as a Technology Consultant allow me to write for you from either a creative angle, a technical angle, or both. They’ve also provided a platform for me to become a Public Speaker engaging audiences and sparking the Creative Thinker in everyone.

If you know there’s a great way to get your message out, but you’re not quite sure how to do it yourself, shoot me an email at sean@seanmacc.com, and let’s talk!

My services page also has a more detailed list of what I can provide.

Talk soon-

Sean

Freelance Writer for Hire | Speaker | Storyteller

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16-year-old Filled in for Rock Band on a Whim, and the Rest is History https://seanmacc.com/2022/05/04/8084-hairspray-and-me/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=8084-hairspray-and-me Wed, 04 May 2022 15:58:35 +0000 https://seanmacc.com/?p=70 When opportunity knocks. When I was 16, I walked into a popular nightclub in Vermont on a Friday night and witnessed a band that instantly became a huge influence on me for years to come as I began to claw Read more…

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When opportunity knocks.

When I was 16, I walked into a popular nightclub in Vermont on a Friday night and witnessed a band that instantly became a huge influence on me for years to come as I began to claw my way into the music business. No, I shouldn’t have been there, yes, it was a different time. I was in awe of the entire show- the sound, the production, the level of performance. It was inspiring.

The next night, I was in Canada about an hour north when the venue owner had tracked me down and called me up telling me that the same band needed someone to fill in because their bass player’s wife was having a baby. He said, “I know you’re a guitar player, but you can play bass, right?” I left immediately.

When I arrived, the manager of the band that I was in was sitting at the bar because the owner had reached out to him while trying to track me down. He ordered me a shot of Jack Daniels, figuring I’d need it. Again, 16, but no one knew it except for him & me.

I was rushed into the dressing room to get ready for the set and quick introductions were made. This was in fact, the “80’s,” and stage clothing was key. I had none. Someone handed me a jacket to wear. The singer (Randy) was trying to figure out what to start the set with and mentioned something about the Dokken song, “In My Dreams” (remember…80’s). I immediately sang the falsetto part of the intro and he said, “That’s it! That’s Frank’s part!”

We quickly went over a 3-part harmony and Randy realized it had been a while since they’d performed it. I remember him grabbing a walkman for about 30 seconds to get a refresher of the 2nd verse. That was the entire “rehearsal” for the night.

I asked if anyone had any hair spray. The guitar player (Andre`) handed me a bottle and I spent the next 10-15 seconds pumping it into my hair while working on max volume. Less than a minute later, the drummer (Gary) holds up a bottle of actual hairspray, looked at me, and asked, “Is this what you were looking for?”

I had previously been handed a bottle of Martin guitar polish.

We all walked out and onto the stage. The place was for sure at capacity. I remember Andre’ giving a quick guitar note for the key, Gary giving a four count, and us starting the song off with nothing but the 3-part harmony. Then, we were off and running. I looked across the stage to my left at the keyboard player to see the biggest smile on Charlie’s face. I’m sure he was probably thinking, “What’s the worst that can happen here?”

As for my bass playing? I quickly realized that the guitar parts for some of the songs that I knew were nothing like the actual bass lines, and that it had in fact been a while since I played bass. It was mediocre at best and for a couple of songs, less than that. Andre’ turned around a few times to keep me on track when it seemed like I might be straying from it. Randy even asked if I wanted to sing a song. Sure, why not?

For a night, I was a teen-aged kid in a place I had no place being, on a stage with rock stars.

Over the years, I got to know the guys in the band as we crossed paths on the New England circuit. As I continue to push forward in my music career, I still vividly recall that night- a completely unexpected opportunity to see how it’s done, the right way.

8084’s dedication to “the show” is second to none. The band’s hard-earned and well-deserved 40th anniversary show is coming up. If you don’t have plans yet, get tickets.

8084rocks.com

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