Good evening. Due to recent personal events, in lieu of our usual frivolity, we bring this piece. My grandfather (aka Grandpa Weaselo) passed away in his sleep early Thursday morning. He was 88. Also, I’d be remiss to not say I lovingly stole chunks of the biographical details from Hermana Weaselo, with her permission or at least her “I’m glad it resonated well enough to use it” acceptance.
It’s easy to say if not for X, Y, or Z, I wouldn’t be doing what I’m doing right now. Sure, there’s chaos theory, butterfly effect, and all that. But I can definitely say that about my grandfather (and no, not because of direct ancestor). Because of Christmas 1995, where he gave me my first violin, and I’ve been playing ever since. Or Christmas 2007, where he saw I had been downstairs playing around with his violin from Romania and finally passed it down to me, a Christmas present come full circle.
He was born to an affluent family in Bucharest, Romania. His father was an architect who built churches still standing today, and his grandfather had one of the largest tanneries in Romania, I believe after one day going to a local Macedonian swimming hole, coming back home, and seeing that his entire family had been murdered due to local Greek/Macedonian skirmishes.
They lost everything once the country fell under Soviet control. His parents (my great grandparents) were imprisoned for refusing to forfeit traditional gold coins from his and his brother’s baptisms. He and my grandma married in 1958, and eventually they decided it was for the best to leave the only home they ever knew and start a new life in the US. They had to take the scenic route since there was no direct path to the States at that point. 9 months pregnant and political refugees, they made it to Beirut, Lebanon in November 1962 to a diaspora of Armenians and Romanians, where my father was born shortly after.
They didn’t have much when they left, especially because Grandpa was barred from finishing university due to being very vocally against the Communist party. (He would remain staunchly anti-Communist for the rest of his days, and you shouldn’t have gotten him started on his thoughts on Stalin.) One time, he was blindfolded and taken to tune a piano. Ceaucescu’s piano. Fortunately he did a good enough job.
He was also an excellent violin player and made ends meet freelancing with orchestras and ensembles, first in Bucharest, then in Beirut. The day my father was born, my grandpa won a job playing with the orchestra in Beirut, on a loaner violin. (His violin didn’t make it to Beirut, and didn’t come back to him until he was in the States—it has the customs stamp to show it.)
The young family made their way to the US in August 1963 and faced a very different type of life. They didn’t speak English, so they took classes to help them learn the language and assimilate while he took hard jobs. One day, he met up with his friend who was a dishwasher. While helping wash and dry the dishes, he was told to scrub the toilets instead, and that hurt. They made 15¢ a day or so (1962/63 amounts), and he’d walk dozens of blocks to save a few cents on the train fare every day (even if he then spent it on cartons of cigarettes—that he shockingly decided to quit cold turkey one day and never went back).
Eventually, Grandpa got a job at Steinway & Sons, the piano company, where he put his studies of engineering to good use, built and tuned pianos, and developed multiple patents for them, while my grandmother, a mechanical engineer, went on to have a successful career of her own, working on things such as the lunar module. They traveled extensively with my dad and, once he was born, my uncle (his younger brother), and then later on took me or my sister to places such as Hershey Park, Lake George, and time and time to our “usual” areas, Hunter, Tannersville, and Kaaterskill Falls, in the Catskills, home to mini-golf, fishing, and hotel pool swimming.
There are dozens if not hundreds of absolutely fantastic stories. Stories my sister and I weren’t around for, like the “pigeon story.” Stories we were around for, like not liking ice in his water and casually taking them out of the glass and tossing them… on top of a vent. In a multi-story restaurant. The people downstairs, who the ice was melting on top of, thought it was raining or there was a leak. Or getting pulled over by a Quebecois cop for speeding and never paying the ticket and possibly not being allowed back in Canada (the ticket was eventually forgiven by the powers that be and it should have been an easy dismissal—the cop wrote down the wrong thing as the car model). Or saying really dirty things under his breath at a Turkish restaurant visiting my sister. In Turkish. My grandmother was appalled and convinced they were going to spit in their food, because Turkish has some damn good swears.
Yes, if you couldn’t tell, he was a bit of a wiseass. Juuust enough to keep him out of serious trouble. Barely. With both the powers that be and with my grandmother.
We’re lucky to have gotten more time with him—after my grandmother died it seemed like he wanted to follow suit. He went to their apartment in Pompano Beach, FL one time to “clear his head” and, in true Weaselo family fashion, when I went to pick him up from the airport his phone was picked up by a police officer (a Port Authority PD officer letting me know that he had complaints of shortness of breath on the flight and they were there to check on him and then take him to the hospital). In his later years, he tried to educate my sister and me on our family tree, and I can only regret that I retained nowhere near enough of what he said and the accompanying pictures, no matter how many times he’d call me over from the couch in the last year plus that I’d spent with him in Apartment Weaselo. There were a lot of names very quickly, and a lot of architects, artists, and doctors, as I previously mentioned. The good news is that no, I am not mandated to know this as the eldest, plus Hermana Weaselo’s the one more into going through all the lineage. (She did 23AndMe or Ancestry one year for Christmas.) I was requested to try and take care of things with the grandkids in terms of support, but I’ll admit due to youth orchestras when younger and then actual work now that I’m older, that’s been more of a soft “power,” at best. I don’t know if my cousins actually care about what I have to say, I’d say it’s a maybe. At most. I’ll live. In terms of being the oldest, I feel it more with myself and Hermana Weaselo, and that’s what counts.
As for now, he’s at peace, finally reunited with his beloved wife of 60 years, no longer in pain, no longer heartbroken. As for now, if I still had any trepidations or unsureness about it, I’ve officially taken up the mantle of Buhai’s keeper, the instrument that’s been in our family for over a century, his violin from Romania, customs stamp and all, to keep and to pass down someday.
His favorite composer was Fritz Kreisler, and Kreisler’s been what’s been playing in my head the past week or two as a result. To the man I owe two-thirds of my name… thank you, and rest well.
Te iubesc.
So the U.S. swapped the arms dealer Victor Bout for Brittney Griner. It sucks that Russia took an American citizen hostage, but I’m amazed at how many people are acting like some dickhead criminal just has a warehouse full of laser superweapons tucked away that are somehow going to turn the tide of the war in Ukraine.
Late to the party, but this was a fascinating read about a very fascinating person. Condolences to you and your family Senor.
Welp, I almost nuked my computer by trying to install pirated software instead of coughing up money for a proper license. What am I doing now? Trying out a *different* version of the pirated software!
Huh? Well what difference does it make what kind of jeans I’m wearing?
When’s the next time you’ll be in Haiti?
The first and only time I ever visited Pearl Harbor was in 2000. I had just got off the USS Arizona memorial and was still in the launch when suddenly the sky was full of Japanese planes. Turns out it was the first day of shooting the movie Pearl Harbor. I got ashore, took a bus out to the USS Missouri (which is berthed right next to the Arizona) and shot three rolls of film. I stood on a battleship at Pearl with Japanese planes overhead.
It looked just like it was supposed to, except in color.
That was good timing! Gumby’s Uncle Ross was stationed at Pearl in 1941. Aunt Audrey was standing at her kichen window doing her breakfast dishes when the shit hit the fan. The housing units were up on a hill overlooking the base, she had a front row view.
https://vimeo.com/779127443
But is that the San Pedro Home Depot or the Torrance Home Depot?
Inglewood!
Ah, the Home Depot of Champions!
Was hoping to see you clothesline some dipshit loitering teenager with one of the crutches, but, otherwise, slick video!
In honor of Uber Padre Weaselo here’s another outtake from this morning. It’s a trip around the Palos Verdes peninsula, starting in the harbor at 13th & Gaffey in San Pedro (hi yeah right!) and ending at PCH in Torrance on Santa Monica Bay.
Along the way we can see the Trump National Golf Course at Portuguese Bend; this is notable because it and Portuguese Bend are slowly sliding into the ocean. You can see the barren rolling road section that has a flexible steel above-ground water main on the left. This whole canyon is continuously sliding in very slow motion right into the sea, just like Sunken City in San Pedro and several sections of Pacific Palisades and Malibu. It’s what the California coast naturally does and it doesn’t care what you think.
Palos Verdes is where the really rich people live in L.A. Most of it is gated communities, so you know there is a lot of dirty money involved here. Beverly Hills is for people who can’t get into Palos Verdes. Ladera Heights is the black Palos Verdes.
I only shot this because the camera was still mounted but I didn’t reset the shutter speed so I can’t really use it for anything so I’ll let you see it unlike the night stuff I did just prior which is awesome and you have to pay me just for me to describe it to you.
https://vimeo.com/779077027
Fun fact: there is a public park right next to Trump National Golf Course that has trails that lead to the beach which is, of course, public.
You don’t know how much it pisses Trump off that the park is there. 🤣
Fun fact 2: If you had started filming on 11th and Gaffey, you would have shown us the Omelette and Waffle Shop which has really good waffles including one with bacon bits added to the batter.
Condolences to your family Senor. Say not in grief he is no more – but live in thankfulness that he was. Be well Sir.
Leave it to Soldiers to fill up down time going into the holidays productively. Coming on post this morning for PT I see we now have a Christmas tank.
it’s camouflage
Seasonal too… they have been trained well.
Senor’s family brings over a classic violin when they come over from the Old Country.
Meanwhile, the Cornblower ancestors stagger out of 3rd-class steerage smelling like potatoes and Guinness and blaring this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnG1oUkWBa8
Since Space Karen fucked up Twitter, I’ve been spending way too much time on Zuck’s insta. I need to stop using all this shit but in the meantime in honor of the weaselo familia, i bring you my favorite orchestral insta
https://www.instagram.com/reel/CkZinlPgzBo/?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=
Holy shit, Ceausescu’s Piano should be a short story or short film.
It really should.
As long as it ends the same way overall, because fuck that guy.
Thank you for sharing. May his memory be a blessing.
Don’t mean to be disrespectful, but I guess this is the evening thread?
I was reading this week about how some bartenders are reviving that old 90s staple, melon liqueur, for some holiday cocktails named The Grinch. I’m fiddling around with my own version tonight. Right now it’s:
absinthe rinse
1 part gin
1/2 part melon liqueur
1/2 part lemon juice
Rinse a glass (I used a rocks glass because I’m lazy, but for company I’d probably use a coupe) with absinthe. Shake the other ingredients over ice and strain. Garnish with a maraschino cherry.
Maybe you can focus your mixology skills on repairing this.
https://www.skrewballwhiskey.com/recipes/skrewed-up-dalgona/
My daughter and I made this a couple of summers ago. It took us a half-hour of messing around with blenders and saucepans, and it was nasty. That bottle of peanut butter whiskey is still in the cabinet, and I don’t have the courage to drink any more of it.
Yeah, I’m gonna give that one a pass. Don’t have any of the ingredients, and not really my kind of thing.
If you like a dessert-oriented cocktail, I like a little coffee liqueur (Kahlua, or Mr. Black), some Licor 43, and a little creme de cacao and/or Frangelico.
Are we not just calling it Midori?
Most people probably have midori. I have a generic brand, because I was a cheap bastard in the 90s I guess
That is a great tribute to Grandpa Weaselo, but this was the part that caught my attention:
A woman engineer in the 1950s, getting that level of success. Wow.
there weren’t many women MEs even when I was in engineering school (1991-95). My department was like 50/50, and my ME roomates were astounded. In their thermodynamics class off 100, they had…three women
Yeah, it should be noted that yesterday was the anniversary of the Montreal Massacre, when an asshole who today we would recognize as an incel, murdered 14 women engineering students at the Ecole Polytechnique in Montreal. He was specifically targeting the women.
Same here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_Collier_Township_shooting
My mom’s friend died in this.
Ugh. I remember that one.
I went through a fairly standard, whiny “why don’t women like NICE GUYS like me” phase in my late teens. Fortunately I never went too deep and grew out of it pretty easily, but I’m often thankful that I’m a shade too old for the toxic “manosphere” to have been around for me to fall into.
Not that I ever would have become a Lepine or Sodini or other violent jerk, but I might have wallowed in shittiness longer and deeper than I should have.
The same probably would have happened to me.
Back when I was a teenager, when dinosaurs and rotary phones ruled the earth, if you whined about not getting enough nookie because it was the girls’ fault (or your own fault or nobody’s fault) you’d just get made fun of. These days if someone signs on to their CptNeckbeard666 account and does a little reddit searching they can hook up with like-minded idiots all over the globe who are more than willing to blame a girl for not giving it up.
This is the root of a lot of our social media woes. Shit that would cause people to get made fun of at the corner bar is now sequestered and amplified by choice. People that marinate in that shit end up believing that JFK Jr. is alive and coming back to run the USA.
//Old man stops yelling at clouds
It’s a bit of a balance though, isn’t it? Because while social media (and the internet in general, really) opens the door to validation of shitty attitudes and viewpoints, it also opens the door to the realization that it’s *okay* to be weird in other, nondestructive ways.
Yeah, the internet made it possible for minority/fringe/weirdos to find each other. Which is great if you’re the only atheist in your Bible Belt town, or a fan of an obscure genre of culture, etc. But it also means that the folks who used to be the cranks writing letters to the editor of the local paper every week about how the communists are poisoning our precious bodily fluids have now found each other.
Me thinks that grandpa Weaselo would have fit in well in the clubhouse
That violin is a kickass family heirloom and can’t wait so see/heard what you do with it
RIP Grandpa Weaselo
Fucking outstanding, both the storytelling and the life very well lived.
Wow, what a fantastic story, it sounds like he had a rough but ultimately great life, and it sounds like you and he really enjoyed the time you spent together.
Well written Señor, even if I am now pretty convinced you’re some sort of descendant of Vlad the Impaler.
Beautiful and touching tribute, Senor. What a rich and rewarding life.
Great writing Sir Weasel. RIP
Thanks for sharing.
Welp, I’m bawling. You are a good egg, Senor. Treasure your memories, and that violin.
Great stories. Thanks for sharing.
This was beautiful. You were very lucky to have him.
This story is such a wonderful tribute. Your grandfather lives on through you, and now all of us.
This is outstanding work. Fantastic tribute to a life very well lived.
Lovely tribute.
RIP, Abuelo Weaselo.