Dear Oliver

So it’s already been two weeks since you’ve been born! I’m sorry I haven’t written sooner; your mother and I have been quite busy at home with you, and it’s been an absolute blast.

Anyway, I’m happy to report that you reached two major milestones yesterday: You played with your first toy, and your umbilical stump fell off, so you now officially have a belly button!

First, let’s talk about your belly button. It’s an innie, and after realizing it was there, we immediately pressed it, but sadly, nothing happened. Kayli and I had hoped that if we pushed it perhaps something good (cake or pie maybe) would appear, but alas, that was not the case. (Our own belly buttons remain stubbornly inoperable.) This belly button setback notwithstanding, we remain convinced that someday a belly button will live up to its potential.

You also played with your first toy yesterday. It is a rabbit toy, and like all rabbits, it is slightly terrifying. I don’t know why people think rabbits are cute. They have oversized teeth, they’re smelly, and they reproduce far too quickly. In this respect, they are like certain patrons at the local Walmart.

Not only did you play with your first toy, we also read you your first book last week. As I need to dig out a bunch of my children’s books, I went out and bought you a bunch of them, including some standards, Curious George, Babar, The Slightly Irregular Fire Engine, and a whole bunch of others. You now have your own bookshelf, which we plan on adding to in short order.

I purchased one book—Edward the Emu—based on the title alone. As you might expect, it is about an Emu. (He lives in a zoo.) We read it to you, but every time I said “emu,” you cried. We took this as a sign that you didn’t like the book. As a sign of solidarity, your mother and I both pledged to try to find, and eat, emu-on-a-stick at the upcoming Minnesota State Fair.

Right now, however, things are emu-free and you are more content. You are currently sleeping on a pillow next to me. You are lying on your back with your hands straight up into the air. I think you are either having a dream about being arrested or you are practicing to be a football referee.

Your mother is sitting here, too, and we’re all watching the 2012 Summer Olympics, which are being held in London. The Olympics have been a lot of fun to watch, though your mother and I think we would be better commentators than many of the folks that NBC has hired. (They all seem like pretentious jerks.)

Your mother, and I, however, would have more unorthodox comments. For instance, while discussing the dominance of the U.S. and Australia in swimming, we agreed that the U.S. is good likely because we are pretty wealthy and have access to lots of pools. I mentioned that Australia is probably good because they have the ocean to swim in; your mother looked at me, shook her head, and said, “No, Brett. It’s the sharks. Their swimmers are good because they are chased by sharks.”

Your mother and I also agree that the medals could be improved. As I understand it, the actual medals themselves aren’t actually as advertised—gold and silver medals are both mostly silver, but the bronze medals are actually bronze.

If we’re not going to go with the actual metals, let’s get a little more creative. We think it’d be great if the gold medal were an oversized version of one of those chocolates covered in gold foil. The silver medal could be a Peppermint Patty, and the bronze medal could actually be bronze, but we think it’d be great if the third-place finishers didn’t know it wasn’t candy before they bite into it. That’s what they get for placing third.

Finally, you might be wondering what your first few weeks of life were like.

The best way I can put it is: living with a newborn is like living with a tiny frat boy: they sleep all day, they’re obsessed with breasts, and they’re practically guaranteed to puke on you three to four times a week.

With that said, it’s been an absolute blast. We both wish we could simply stay home with you all the time. (I already had to go back to work. It was pretty hard.)

As a sign of our how much we like you, your mother and I have already given you a bunch of nicknames. The most popular ones right now are:

 

Ollie McGolly

Sir Wigglington

OllieBollie

Fuss-Fuss-McGus (when you are fussy)

You haven’t been awake all that much, but you are a hungry little guy. And when you want food, you want it now. You make this abundantly clear because your fingernails are like little eagle talons. And when you’re crabby, you’re even more aquiline: you make a bunch of squeaky bird-like noises and dig in your claws into whatever—or whoever—is nearby. I am covered in scratches.

When you cry, you waive your arms around like the Robot from the TV show Lost in Space. You probably don’t have the slightest clue what I mean. Let me explain: It featured a robot that waived his arms around a lot whenever he sensed danger and said “Danger, Will Robinson! Danger!”

I suppose he doesn’t seem like a very impressive robot to you. You live in the future, and you probably have robot friends. For all I know, we may even have a robot President.

In any event, I’ll try to keep up with the letters, so you can have an idea of what your early days were like.

With love,

 

Dad (and Mom)

 

 

 

 

So earlier this week, I posted an attack ad against cats (created by dogs). Why? Well, I hate political ads, as they are absolutely fallacy-tacular, so I wanted to make fun of them.

Well, the anti-cat ad proved popular, so I’ve now produced the feline response.

Let me know what you think, and please share it if you like it.

You can now show your canine/feline support to @VoteDogs2012 and @VoteCats2012 on Twitter.

Proof that Math is Cool.

 

 

 

A Funny Letter to the Higgs-Boson

Dear Higgs Boson:

As I’m sure you’re aware, you were recently discovered by the folks at the Large Hadron Collider. So, now that we’ve found you, my first question is a bit obvious: You’re a hermit, right? If so, do you live in some sort of particle shack?

Anyway, given your hermitage, I bet you’ve missed out on a lot of the news. First and foremost, the media somewhat inexplicably dubbed you “the god particle.” Scientists tried to correct them and say that you were important, but not that important. I mean, it’s not like that you’re flying around and bringing things into existence on a Genesis-like schedule. (You’re not, right?)

The journalists ran with it, so now the scientists just cringe when they hear it. I’m not a scientist, but I agree that the “god particle” is a really silly name. It’s not like there weren’t other options. I mean, if they wanted to stick with the religious metaphors, maybe the media could call you the Blessed Pope John Paul II particle or the Very Reverend Higgs-Boson.

Given that you’re a pop-culture phenomenon already (you have your own iPhone game), I think we should give you a rap name instead. Here are a few options I came up with:

H.I.G.

H-Boson and His Crew of 125.3 gigaelectron volts

BigHiggy

The Dawg Particle

Needless to say, the “god particle” name has to go. What if we discover some particle more befitting of the name—say, a bearded world-creating particle—when the LHC eventually revs up to full power? I know that’s not particularly likely, but I certainly wouldn’t want to be the one to inform the deity particle that its proper name is already taken. Two words: Particle wrath.

By the way, I’m sure the PR people at CERN are pretty darn careful about their spelling. After all, one wouldn’t want to refer to the Large Hardon Collider. That sounds like a terrible, terrible project. And painful. (Yes, that joke was off-color, but it had to be made. When such jokes present themselves like that, you have to take it. Just like free cake.)

Dirty jokes aside: Higgs, you probably missed all the hilarious drama about the whole LHC facility to begin with. Long story short: A couple of know-nothings sued in an attempt to prevent the Large Hadron Collider from commencing operation. They made a number of wild accusations, most notably that the LHC would create “strangelets” or “micro black holes” that would lead to the destruction of the planet.

The funny part is, in their legal brief they said the following about the particle collisions at the LHC: Various competing theories of physics predict various outcomes from these collisions, with no agreement amongst physicists as to what the outcome will be.

Almost immediately after this, they make a number of very, very specific claims about what could happen. Their argument is, in effect: Stop the LHC because we don’t know that it won’t cause these really bad things to happen.

Higgs, if this is the standard of proof necessary to stop a scientific experiment, we’re in trouble. After all, it’s not impossible that the LHC could produce other equally improbable (but good!) results: onions that don’t taste awful (I hate onions), porcupines that give pain-free hugs, or pop songs with meaningful, thoughtful lyrics. So I say, we must keep the Higgs going because it might produce these awesome, but wholly improbable, results.
Clearly, Higgs, one needs evidence to substantiate one’s claims, and fear alone is not evidence. While the plaintiffs had a very basic point—we don’t know what’ll happen!—it wasn’t the point they thought. While there are certainly competing theories about subatomic physics, that’s exactly the reason the LHC was built in the first place: to figure some of this stuff out.

Besides, we have a pretty good idea what we are doing. We’ve been smashing atoms for decades, and higher-energy collisions happen all the time in outer space. If they did create micro black holes or strangelets, you think we’d notice.

Not surprisingly, the silly lawsuit was thrown out post-haste. (My favorite part was that they filed their suit in Hawaii, though the LHC is located in France/Switzerland. That’s like suing Mexico to get the Canadians to stop playing hockey.)

Anyway, now that you’re discovered: Welcome! We look forward to getting to know all about you.

Take care,

Brett Ortler

 

 

Dear Oliver,

Well, I haven’t written as often as I would have liked, as we’ve been pretty busy lately. You’ll be happy to know that we completed your astro-nursery last week, and we’re getting the remaining items in place for your arrival.

When we completed the nursery, I gave you the tour, but since you are still inside your mom, you probably couldn’t see much, unless you have x-ray vision. If you have x-ray vision, please don’t use it to judge my physique. I’m not exactly proud of it at this moment. While I have managed to stay in relatively good shape, your mother and I have gained some weight. This is often referred to as “sympathy weight,” but I think it should be referred to as “the inevitable caloric outcome that arises when one consumes an absolutely staggering amount of ice cream in the space of nine months.”

You see, your mother has been eating fairly healthy food during your development, but if she has one weakness, it is ice cream. We have had ice cream of all varieties: malts, milkshakes, sundaes, Dairy Queen cakes (the giant birthday kind as well as the smaller log-shaped ones), ice cream sandwiches, and even some gelato. (Gelato, by the way, is the Italian word for “expensive.”)

Most of ice cream has come from Dairy Queen, an establishment I view with a combination of trepidation and desire. Desire, of course, because their ice cream concoctions are absolutely delicious; trepidation, because I have a rough idea of the many miles I’ll have to run to get back into good shape after you’re born.

In fact, I am thinking of writing Dairy Queen a letter and asking them to make a line of products specifically for pregnant women.

Some of those product names could be fun. You could have Sondaes, Third Trimester Toffee Treats, maybe Dirty Diaper Dilly Bars. (OK, that last one was kind of gross, but I couldn’t help myself.)

Speaking of Dairy Queen, a piece of advice: On the rare and lovely occasions when we get a Dairy Queen Cake in the house, never try to steal your mother’s portion of the chocolatey/fudge part at the center of the cake. I once made the mistake of trying to do this, and she tried to stab me with a fork. That was when she wasn’t pregnant. I’m pretty sure if I tried that now, I’d end up a quadruple amputee.

Since we’re speaking about food and pregnant women: a quick note. Despite all that you’ll hear to the contrary, in my experience, pregnant women do not crave pickles. That is a myth. They certainly do not like hearing jokes about pickles, either. Anytime someone mentions these alleged pickle cravings, your mother becomes visibly upset. I’m fairly confident that if such a would-be pickle wit continued with the cucumber-related comedy, your mother would attack.

This is unlike your mother. Unless she is watching the Vikings lose, your mother is not a violent person. Nevertheless, she is pregnant. That means she’s constantly hungry, pretty much always in pain, and jacked up on hormones like you wouldn’t believe. In this respect, she is like a mama bear. (Of course, she doesn’t have fur, claws, or weigh 800 pounds. Still, you get the point.)

Moreover, her motivations are decidedly ursine. As the bear expert Lynn Rogers said, the lives of bears “are ruled by fear and food, in that order.” If I were to get hit by an ice cream truck and were trapped beneath it, I have no doubt she would spring into action, lifting it off of me in one monumental move. Then she would eat all of the ice cream inside it, and if she were still hungry and we were in a post-apocalyptic scenario where cannibalism was more socially acceptable, perhaps the driver as well.

Of course, I’m joking about that last part, but watching the whole process has been quite surprising, and your mom has gone through a lot of trouble to hatch you. I therefore think it’d be nice if your first words were “thank you”; when you say it, you should say it directly at your mom.

Your first words to me could perhaps be “DINOSAURS!” or “Fire the photon torpedoes, PEW PEW PEW” or something similarly awesome. (OK, I realize that you’ll likely start with one-syllable words, but a father can dream, right?)
I can’t wait to meet you, little dude.

Take care,

Dad

 

 

Dear Mars Science Laboratory/Curiosity Rover,

It’s been fun to follow your Twitter feed and Facebook posts, and I’m pretty stoked for your landing in August.

My favorite part of your mission is the ChemCam, as I’m rather interested in the geology/chemistry of the planet (I’m a rock geek). Oh, who am I kidding, I’m really just excited that you’ll be carrying a laser(!) and will be vaporizing rocks on another planet.

I can’t believe I just typed that. It’s incredibly awesome. It’s a pretty good thing that I’m not in charge of the rover. I’d probably just drive around blowing stuff up. It’d be like a Sylvester Stallone movie. By the time I was done there wouldn’t be much left of the planet.

If I may ask, does the person who is in charge of the ChemCam laser have a special title? If not, they deserve one immediately. After all, they have the coolest job imaginable. Not only do they get to work for NASA, they also get to vaporize things on another planet on behalf of NASA and all mankind.

Of course, there’s only one suitable nickname for the operator of a laser on Mars: Marvin. An important question: can the laser operator do a good Marvin the Martian impression? If so, when they fire the laser for the first time, they should do so while doing a Marvin the Martian impression. You should record this and post it online. This would be huge on Twitter, I’m sure.

If they don’t do a good Marvin impression, mine is passable. I’d be happy to record an MP3 for them to use, either for that or for their ring tone/entrance music to a room.

Speaking of music, maybe you can resolve a dispute for me. My father and I often chat about space missions, as we’re both fans of astronomy, and I mentioned the other day that the Opportunity Rover has driven over 21 miles on Mars. He immediately said, “Well that’s a long time to be alone, I bet it’s humming as it’s driving along.”

While we both agree that this is likely, we disagree what it’d be humming. He thinks it opts for the dramatic: Strauss’s Thus Spoke Zarathustra from 2001 or Gustav Holt’s oh-so-appropriate Mars: Bringer of War. Given that the Mer Rover is relatively small, the size of a golf cart, that seems a little dramatic. That’s sort of like blasting heavy metal as you tool around in a Geo Metro.

I bet the rover is humming along to something more playful, like the “Manama” song from the Muppets or the theme to Super Mario Brothers. Which do you think is more likely?

Finally, I wish you the best of luck with the landing. I know landing on a different planet is a pretty tricky business, and I know you’re trying out the new landing approach—the sky crane. (By the way, that sounds a lot like a professional wrestling move.)

I hope all goes well and look forward to your dispatches from the Red Planet.

Take Care,

Brett Ortler

 

Dear Collodictyon,

First of all, welcome to the family! As I understand it, you are humanity’s most remote relative and your genus has been around for a billion years, give or take. Naturally, I want to respect my elders, so may I call you Grandpa Collo? Given your general inability to communicate, I’m going to assume your answer is yes.

Well, Gramps, you don’t need to live in lake sludge. If you want, you are welcome to live in my sink. While my sink doesn’t have any plants or (living) fish, when it’s full of dishes for a week or so, it develops a thick layer of detritus and sludge that resembles the muck at the bottom of a lake. I hate when that happens, but you’d probably love it.

Anyway, you’ll always have a place to live in our sink, as my wife always “forgets” to empty the dishwasher (it’s my job to load it), so dishes pile up. I think she’s forgetting on purpose though; I think she’s actually interested in DIY biology and science. This is probably why she asked for an eight-hundred dollar microscope for Christmas this year and buys Petri dishes by the pallet.

Speaking of science, a couple years ago, my wife got really interested in radiation and x-rays, and after much pleading, I let her use her homemade x-ray machine on our cat, Cation. A few weeks later, when we were at the humane society looking for a new cat, I told her that x-rays were no longer allowed.

If you don’t like the option of living in our sink, you can always live in our yard. Of course, if you choose to live there, I may accidentally hit you with the lawnmower. I did that to a toad that was living near our air conditioner, and I felt pretty bad about it for a week. Now, when I mow the lawn in toad territory, I yell, “Watch out, toads!” though I’m pretty sure they don’t hear me because of the lawnmower. Given that I mow the lawn on a regular basis, I bet the toads have worked the lawnmower into their toad mythology. I’m guessing that the lawnmower is something like Shiva, a destroyer, but also a creator.

Wherever you prefer to live at our place, you’re welcome to bring along your family members. Wait, how does your species reproduce? Update: As you are no doubt well aware, you are asexual. I just had to google “Collodictyon sex” to find out. It was far less scandalous than what I expected. It was kind of disappointing. I didn’t even get a salacious image on Google Images. Maybe I should have typed “Collodictyon sex naughty redhead” or something like that. Maybe I will try that when I’m done with this letter.

Anyway, given that you are essentially microscopic, you are hereby invited to bring all of your relatives along, as we certainly have the room.

We look forward to helping you move in!

Take Care,

Brett Ortler

Dear Oliver,

I’m sorry for the delay in writing; your mother and I have been pretty busy lately. We’ve been organizing the house for your eventual arrival, and we’re getting ready for a whole bunch of baby showers in your honor.

We also signed up for a couple of parenting classes. One of them is a day-long class, and I’m assuming that it will be like a parenting version of basic training. But instead of drill sergeants ordering us to do this many pushups or peel so many potatoes, the drill sergeants will be actual infants and they will not be quiet until they get a good burping and you give them their nooky-nook.

I also expect that instead of running and push-ups for physical training, there will be fathers practicing wind-sprints to get ice cream for their screaming wives, and we’ll practice pulling up Pull-Ups and diapers on mannequins of small children. Like in basic training, there will also probably be exposure to chemical weapons, but instead of being exposed to actual chemical weapons, they will probably make us change a really, really smelly baby raised entirely on breast milk from a mother who eats only cabbage-filled bean tacos and washes it down with pickle juice. (OK, that actually wouldn’t cause gas in the baby—just the mom, but still, you get my point.) And of course, there will no doubt be lots of practice marching around, but instead of the “You will love your rifle! You will care for your rifle!” you might hear in the U.S. Army, we will march our sample-babies to the crib, to the floor for tummy time, and so on.

If it’s like any of the marching I’ve seen on TV, we’ll no doubt be marching and singing. In fact, I’m already preparing for this—and for your arrival—I’m already trying out songs to sing to you when you get here. One of my current favorites is “Ollie, Ollie, Ollie, get your adverbs here.”

About the singing: You can blame your Grandpa Ortler for this. He is always walking around singing songs he makes up on the spot. (And he wonders why I ended up liking writing and poetry.)  For instance, just the other day, he and I were talking about one of the rovers that has been cruising around on Mars, and I mentioned that it has survived for years and driven over 15 miles. He said, “That’s a long way to go without talking to anyone. I bet it’s humming as it’s driving along.” Now every time I think of it, I think of a Mars rover driving along and doing a little dance, probably holding some sort of umbrella drink.

Anyway, you should know that your mother looks absolutely adorable. Because her center of gravity has shifted, she carries her weight differently. When you combine that with her now-noticeable belly, she looks something like an adorable umpire. And when she’s on the couch and attempts to get up, there’s a moment in her ascent where she’s essentially in a half-crouch, as if she’s standing behind a catcher. And sometimes, her attempts to get up aren’t entirely successful, so she’ll hover in that position for a second, and it’ll look like she’s calling a game and can’t decide on what her call should be (continue getting up, or return to the couch). Usually, this results in a return to the couch and a request that I go get whatever she needed.

Of course, I don’t have much of a problem fetching her whatever she needs, especially since I’ve been reading about the biological processes at work. It’s like a construction site in there. Her hips are moving, her organs are shifting around, and all the while, you’re whirring about, like some sort of adorable dynamo. Most of the time at the ultrasounds, I expect to see orange cones all over the place and all of her organs in reflective vests and wearing hard-hats. (I wouldn’t quite know what to make of a “Men at Work” sign, though.)

While my organs haven’t moved much, a lot has changed for me too. I mean, everyone says how much a child changes your life, but they never tell you how. I never realized how often I lived in the present tense. I’d decide to go to a movie or I’d go camping on a whim. If anything, I planned things out one weekend in advance, or a few weeks at most.

When you have a kid, that kind of planning will no longer do. Suddenly, everything switches to the future tense—where you want them to grow up, what schools to look into, all that. Your mother and I have had more conversations about the next four or five years in the last few months than we had in the years we’d been together. Until you, everything else in the future had been hypothetical and tentative, like a report of a spate of beautiful weather on the horizon, but when we saw you on the 3D ultrasound, you were concrete, imminent.

It’s a good change—and one that we are ready for—but there’s no real preparing for it, I can tell you that. One day, it just sets in. For me, I looked at your mom’s belly and I said, “Yep, I think it’s about time we finish that bedroom.”

Take care,

Pops

 

 

 

Dear Oliver,

This week, you are roughly the size of a banana. Given that you probably don’t know what a banana is, let me explain. It is a yellow fruit that grows in tropical regions (tropical is just a big word that basically means “nowhere near Minnesota.”) Bananas have a thick yellow peel that surrounds the soft fruit inside. At first, this peel is bright green, but over time, it yellows. Eventually, a banana peel begins to have brown spots, which get darker and darker. When I was a child, I thought that such bananas were somehow turning into cheetahs. Sadly, I was wrong. Bananas are kind of funny looking (you aren’t, of course), and people occasionally show up at sporting events or other gatherings dressed in banana costumes. I don’t know why, exactly.

Appearances aside, bananas are quite tasty and healthy, and other than milk, they’ll be one of the first foods you’ll get to enjoy. Of course, you won’t get to eat the entire banana, but you’ll get adorable little baby-sized portions of food that cost approximately $400 per container. I don’t know why baby food is so expensive, because smashing up bananas isn’t very hard or expensive. I do it all on the time on accident at work. My lunch will be sitting in a brown paper bag and then a pile of books will fall over and voila: smashed banana. To be fair, I never have looked at the mushy banana remnants and said to myself, “You should put that in tiny jars and feed it to babies. You could make millions.” I guess I’m just not an entrepreneur.

Anyway, there are a bunch of types of bananas, including the Grand Nain, the Dwarf Cavendish, and the Gros Michel, to name a few. If you’re a banana, you apparently have to have a funny name. While I’m assuming that you are a Dwarf Cavendish banana at the moment, perhaps you should adopt a silly name to fit in, just in case. I’d suggest Elbert Weeblewellington. In any case, I’m glad you’re not a Grand Nain (which just sounds like a really presumptuous way of saying “no!”) or a Gros Michel, because that sounds like it translates to “gross Michelle” and I knew a few girls like that in high school.

Anyway, bananas are pretty great, but there are a few things you should know this week, just in case. First of all, monkeys (a kind of animal) love to eat bananas. At first glance, that might not sound so bad. Monkeys are goofy-looking, loud and sometimes wear funny hats. In this respect, they are like your dad. But unlike your dad, monkeys can be pretty mean. There are some cities in India where troupes of monkeys (that’s the group name for monkeys, really!) have caused some serious problems; the monkeys steal food from passersby, intimidate people and there are occasional attacks, especially when food is involved.

In essence, monkey behavior can be summarized by a slogan from a commercial for an ice cream snack, which asks, “What would you do for a Klondike Bar?” When it comes to monkeys, the answer is, “Pretty much anything, including biting people.” I know you’re pretty protected in the womb, but if they knew there was a banana in there, monkeys might go after your mother. So just in case, I’ve been training Truffles and Bullwinkle to attack monkeys on sight; recently, I gave them this monkey toy that had these long arms, and they proceeded to each latch onto an arm and pull the plush monkey apart in a matter of seconds. Now Bullwinkle will occasionally run up to me with an unattached monkey arm and want to play fetch, which feels a bit morbid.

So even in the rare event that a monkey shows up at our front door (it’s still winter, it’d at least have to be wearing an adorable hat/coat), there’s really nothing to worry about. As always, your mother and I will make sure you are safe. Besides, next week, you turn into a carrot, and I don’t think monkeys like carrots all that much.

With love,

Dad

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