Archive for the 'friends' Category

knocked flat by chemotherapy…

Posted in cancer, friends, travel on February 10th, 2008 by admin

Happily, the chemotherapy seems to be continuing to work. Unhappily, between the latest round of chemotherapy, and the hardships of my Michigan trip (cancer boy isn’t used to to the cold and snow anymore, and clearing out my storage unit, in spite of the army of friends helping was three days of pretty hard work in sub-zero temperatures), I got knocked totally flat to the point where I’ve been doing not a whole lot other than sleeping the last week.

There’s a great webpage put up by Kevin Siembieda, who was the Toastmaster for the evening, about my epic 57th Birthday Party in Detroit, along with some wonderful pictures: http://www.palladiumbooks.com/press/erick_b-day.html

Erick (San Rafael, California)

my fifty-seventh birthday party

Posted in friends, travel on January 22nd, 2008 by admin

Erick in Paris 1994

This coming Saturday, January 26th, 2008, will be my 57th birthday, and I’m celebrating with a big, big party in the Detroit, Michigan, area. It’ll take place at a local Armenian Church. Not for religious reasons, although my beloved maternal grandmother was a member of the congregation, but because it’s the very best place to put on a spread of terrific Armenian Food for a hundred or so of my favorite relatives and friends.

I’m posting an old picture here, taken by my good buddy, Patrice Mermoud, in Paris, back in the summer of 1994, because we’re hoping that the people coming to the party will bring along old pictures of myself.

If you’re reading this, and you know me, and you’re going to be in the Detroit Area, post a comment and I’ll see about getting you into the birthday bash.

If you’ve already got an invitation, see if you can dredge up any old photographs and bring them along for my Aunt Mary (who has been doing an epic job of arranging this whole thing: I love you, Mary!) .

If you’ve got old pictures of me, whether from games, gatherings or Gencon (or wherever else), please get in touch.

Thanks!

Erick (San Rafael, California)

pace of chemotherapy, round the third

Posted in cancer, friends, role-playing on January 22nd, 2008 by admin

BILIRUBIN, TOTAL: 0.4
Normal: 0.2-1.3 mg/dL
Collected: 1/19/2008 2:30 PM

For those of you keeping score on these things, this is a sign that my liver is responding with astonishing speed to the ‘aggressive’ chemotherapy. Just seven weeks ago the Bilirubin was a horrific 3.4 (and believe me, it didn’t feel good). Now I’ve got a number (0.4) that would be happy in a person half my age. I’ve got a couple of other test results that aren’t quite so rosy, but my health professionals assure me they’re all improving enormously, and that the chemotherapy is definitely a success. What can I say but, ‘cool,’ and I’m happy to be looking healthy!

Again, I really want to thank everyone for sending so much positive energy in my direction. I feel like I made a very lucky ’savings throw,’ but I don’t want to discount all the prayers that went into tipping the dice in my direction!

Speaking of role-playing metaphors, I’ve been lucky enough to be Game Master three times in the last week. Twice for a super-secret play-test where I work, at Totally Games.

The other role-playing event was Wednesday Night, at the GameScape game shop in downtown San Rafael, California, with six incredibly talented role-players, including the store owners and operators. I threw then an interesting challenge; to each create a character who is older than they appear, who would be introduced on New Year’s Eve, 1899, and to also invent two abilities for the character that ordinary humans do not possess. Each of the players came up with awesome characters, incredible backgrounds (everything from a wayward time traveler to an immortal Native American, from a eternal vagabond to an 18th century drug lord, from a Fairie-abducted Medieval Lord to a beautifully twisted Southern Belle) and wonderfully well composed eldritch talents. It was my pleasure to meld all this into a (somewhat) coherent storyline. My thanks to the players; I’m really looking forward to our next session, set New Year’s Eve 1924!

Erick (San Rafael, California)

my big wish: writing a book called ‘on role-playing’

Posted in experimental games, friends, role-playing on January 15th, 2008 by admin

Kind of crazy, but my biggest, most audacious wish is to create a book on my life’s greatest passion; the pursuit of role-playing, about the design and production of role-playing games, and the pursuit of excellence in the practice of role-playing and Game Mastering. If all goes well, the result will be a thick volume titled, “On Role-Playing.”

Success, if I can achieve it, requires that I make a wish, and a pretty big wish. A wish that can only be granted by many of you reading this blog.

You see, a huge portion of the book will be the description of many of the experiments I’ve conducted in role-playing. Far from finished or completed role-playing games, or even completed role-playing systems, my experiments have been just that; wacky experiments. The gathering of friends, or strangers, and the playing through of my of my little ‘notions’ of one odd role-playing scenario or another, often in direct violation with the accepted wisdom of what constitutes role-playing, or at very least interesting twists on the role-playing possibility space.

Those who have participated are the ones I need to find because the biggest thing I need is their participation in the creation of the book. Bottom line, if you’ve ever participated in one of my experimental gaming events, I’m soliciting your help.

What kind of help?

I need player-level descriptions of the characters, events, backgrounds and experiences from my various role-playing experiments. They can take the form of character diaries or logs, of player recollections or reflections, or plain old essays on what happened in the course of a bunch of people getting together to role-play one of my strange ideas.

The first step is getting in touch. So, if you are someone who has played in one (or more!) of my experiments, or if you know of someone who has played, please e-mail me and get in touch. The more people I can contact, and the more background notes, recollections and memories I can collect, the closer I’ll be to fulfilling my fondest wish.

Thanks!

Erick (San Rafael, California)

pace of chemotherapy

Posted in cancer, friends, role-playing on January 14th, 2008 by admin

Theory of Everything Role-Playing Group

I’m coming to discover my own personal pace of chemotherapy. It seems that the day following, likely because of the use of steroids in the overall mix, I’m strong and high energy. Unfortunately, the following three days are marked by weakness and a non-stop need for sleep. The treatment was Monday, and it wasn’t until midnight Friday that I felt myself recovered to my usual energy level.

Happily the weekend was marked by a visit from old friends, down from the Seattle area, and Kate and I had joyous times (and meals, yum!) together. Sunday was even better since I had a chance to try my new ‘Theory of Everything’ role-playing experiment. Awesome game, mostly because the players were aways a couple of steps ahead of the Game Master, creating a truly remarkable set of theories (based on entirely new classes of particles, including ‘Entropons,’ ‘Observons’ and ‘Enigmons’). Thanks guys! See the picture for the whole group assembled.

Erick (San Rafael, California)

my first funeral

Posted in friends, personal stories on December 25th, 2007 by admin

As you may have noticed from previous postings, one of my best friends is Dan Kurtycz. Among his many contemporary august honors are his titles as Medical Director of the Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, and Professor at the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine for the University of Wisconsin, Madison, School of Medicine and Public Health. An amazing doctor, teacher, trainer of technicians, executive and tech guy (Dan was also one of the first people in the world to cut a chromosome with an electron microscope, and to this day is alway a step ahead of the technological curve), Dan is also husband to the wonderful Tina Iyama, proud father of two amazing boys, David and Jonathan, a fun-loving Role-Player and Game Master, and a superb friend.

Of course, our friendship goes back to the dim and misty days of 1969, when he and I were both undergrads at Wayne State University (at which point, I should also point out, that we were both card-carrying UAW members and veterans of the Detroit Auto Industry, he at Ford, and me at G.M.). We both gravitated to the new science fiction group on campus, the Wayne Third Foundation, and we had a lot in common, including dating the lovely Paula Layton (I got the first date, and she was the first girl I ever kissed, but he won the long-term relationship).

By the autumn of 1970 we were good friends. Good enough friends to have some great arguments, and to badger each other from time to time. The conversation in question when like this:

Me: “Dan, you can’t know when you’re going to die.”

Dan: “Maybe not. But I know when you’re going to die.”

Me: “What?”

Dan: “Yeah, I know when you are going to die.”

Me: “What are you talking about?”

Dan: “I know exactly when you are going to die.”

Me: “When?”

Dan: “April 24th.”

Me: “What?!?!”

Dan: “Erick, you are going to die next year, on April 24th, 1971.”

Seeing he had hit a nerve, Dan didn’t give up the certainty of his prediction. To the contrary, he enrolled most of my friends, and for a time wearing an ‘April 24′ button was quite popular.

Eventually, of course, as with all fads, the craze died away, and things returned, more or less, to normal.

Until Saturday, April 24th, 1971 rolled around.

At that point I was living in the back of a grocery store, operated by myself, and my senior partner, Dan LaFleche, recently retired USMC Sergeant, fellow WSU student, fellow science fiction fan. Dan LaFleche and I rented the place from Dan Kurtycz’s mother, and kept it open all hours. So, naturally, it became a favorite hang out for all our friends (snacks were always available!), and where we could play board games to all hours (this being long before role-playing, we just inserted role-playing into Risk, Diplomacy and whatever other games we could find).

So it was mid-morning in west-side Detroit, on a slow Saturday (school days were much busier, since we were directly across the street from the O.W. Holmes Elementary School), and I was happily reading a science fiction paperback whilst tending the quiet cash register.

In walks Dan Kurtycz, both hands full, right past me, back behind the counter, and down the trap door to the basement.

Not a word to me. No ‘hello,’ no nothing.

A few moments later I hear banging.

“Dan, what the hell are you doing?”

“I’m building your coffin.”

So began the strangest day of my life.

Sure enough, Dan was building a coffin. Eventually it would be painted black with a nice lining. It was only the first of many, many elaborate preparations. And Dan was only the first of many, many participants in the day’s events.

When evening fell the place was packed, refreshments were flowing, and there were several interesting costumes.

By far the best costume, and maybe the best costume I’ve ever seen, was worn by my roommate, senior partner, great friend, and mentor, Dan LaFleche. He came out in full executioner’s rig. Black boots, tight black pants, bare chested (and the man had muscles, a wide chest, and the biggest wrists you’ve ever seen), with a perfectly fitted executioner’s hood, capping his head down to the nose, leaving his solid jaw and malicious grin for all to see. I’d never seen a better period outfit, and I’d never seen LaFleche filled with such glee.

I immediately fled the house.

Well, then, or when someone put a target around my neck and started a rubber dart game with me as the target, or when the pall bearers showed up with the finished coffin, complete with the finished effigy of me (how they’d managed to duplicate my signature hat, jacket and boots I’ll never know!), or maybe there was something else that tipped the balance. All I know is that my courage only went so far, and from that point I watched the following proceedings from a safe distance, generally outside the fence of our back yard.

The next events included some kind of formal proclamation of my various crimes and misdemeanors (arrogance and being mouthy come to mind, but I can’t recall exactly), followed by a trial, sentencing and a verdict (death, of course), and then a very elaborate multi-stage execution. It seems everyone wanted a piece of the execution. After the dummy Erick was nailed to the back wall (ouch!), there was a firing range involving bows and hunting arrows, various axes and swords, and our gentlest, largest friend Randy Bathurst wielding a medieval morning star, plus the mandatory wooden stake to the heart.

I came back into the house around the time the funeral had turned into a wake, and the coffin became the repository for innumerable empty cans and bottles.

Definitely one of the most vivid, most memorable events of my life. My first funeral.

Many thanks to my good buddy, Dan Kurtycz!

Erick (San Rafael, California)