Wednesday, October 12, 2016

Thank you

Dear Sweaterans,

Thank you all so much for contributing to, reading, and generally supporting Homage to SweaterWeek. Together, we filled three full weeks with memories of Robert and helped stitch together a portrait of his effect on our lives.


So many of you told me that sitting down to write and process his passing was terribly difficult. Some of you were grateful for the opportunity, the informal assignment, to remember and honor Robert. And most of you said you had been comforted-- in some small way--by this collection of memories. I hope this project helps us remember that we are part of a large community of people who miss, grieve and love Robert.

We hope that Homage to SweaterWeek continues next year and five years from now and twenty years from now as a creative outlet, a catharsis, and a joyful fall tradition. We know that it will evolve as our lives evolve, but we have to imagine that Rob would have kept the tradition going in some way. Homage to SweaterWeek can be serious and silly and irreverent and poignant. It can be all of these things because Robert was and we are.

Thank you all, again, for participating so fully.

Homage to SweaterWeek 2016 has been a great success for everyone involved.




Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 21- A Father's View


SweaterWeek - A Father's View
By, Jerry Hoffman

It’s impossible to be clever when it’s our child we’re talking about – so I won’t try. But the family so much appreciates the tributes and kind words that keep showing up each day that we wanted all of you to know that we love hearing what you are saying about Robert and about your own unique relationships with him and his world. We know that he would appreciate all the humor and the love coming from each of you as well as the pain you are all going through.  For he meant so much to all of us.  

While it is true that the terrible feeling of missing him so much and knowing we will never revel in his company again is hard for all of us to bear the pain is lessened somehow (at least a little bit) by remembering him and being inspired by how truly special he was. All of your kind loving words and thoughts help us to clearly remember what it was like to hug him and laugh with him and be loved by him. And as much as it tears at us to be reminded of the impact he had on all of you, the survival of his spirit in you is comforting.   The outpouring of your heartfelt emotions makes it clear that his essence lives on in all of you great kids (everyone’s a kid compared to me) and that should inspire us all.  Still, while all the words in the world will not bring our boy back and that is sad  ... we should all take what comfort we can from these touching words and pictures and from our memories (which provide no small measure of solace) and try to move forward.

So with that being said, and recognizing that I am simply not fluent enough with computers to imbed too many images and do gif’s and create dissolving images and song overdubs I will try to give you some sense of the origins of the Sweater Week perspective – the early years – remembered as best as I can.


Lest anyone think that Sweater Week is something that appeared full blown one day you all should know that Robert was a unique boy long before the first appearance of SW. The slightly off kilter and certainly unique world view was inchoate for a long time before it made its official Sweater Week appearance. But everyone who grew up with him knows that.  Robert's mind set was always impressively dis-oriented in seeing the humor and value in situations.

Robert loved what he loved and was always true to himself. He loved TV (Survivor, American Idol etc. etc. and so forth ad infinitum), movies (again etc. etc. forever), and tennis, the Olympics, Glenmont Elementary School, Bethlehem Middle and High School, Adirondack Camp, and Dartmouth College. And Christmas.


He loved Monica Seles and Gwen Stefani and hip hop dancing (where did that come from and who ever thought he could be that good at it) and he loved going to the US Open with us and others– eclectic tastes for sure, but just scratching the surface.

Robert loved collecting - all sorts of unusual stuff (a quick glance through his closet verifies this). T-shirts (he actually has more t-shirts than sweaters), pennants, cds, books, trophies (he won dozens), rocks, shells, soda bottles, and, of course, the inimitable sweaters - again I’m just itching the surface (note the “itchy” sweater reference). Top of mind as I write this though is his "coin “collection - actually pressed flat pennies from Disneyworld each with a different character or ride image. Family visits there would end up being park wide scavenger hunts because he had to have every one of the roughly 50 million commemorative pennies found throughout the park. He wanted no mouse ears or other souvenirs one classic year– well maybe just a sorcerer’s apprentice wand and wizard’s pointed hat - just flat coins at 51 cents a pop. C’est Robert!



And most of all he adored his brother Jesse and his sister Julia and his nephew Brady and his cousins and his uncles and aunts and grandparents and the rest of his family and all his dear beloved friends (who are so numerous and important in his (and our) lives in so many ways that I dare not try to single anyone out. You know who you are).












He loved his mother and me and ignored our flaws – an eye roll maybe, some comment, but always deep down a real abiding tangible love for us that we could feel– no matter what we said or did.  …



Those who knew Robert know he was never condescending to anyone - despite his brilliance -he always (unlike most of us) always looked not for the weaknesses of people but for the best in them– laughing at their idiosyncrasies (maybe even sarcastic at times) but always looking for their core goodness. And… I could go on and on but all of you who knew him and experienced him in your own special way know how truly special and generous a boy he was. Multi- talented both athletically and scholastically and musically but never letting you know he was smarter than you or a better dancer or a better tennis player.  Plus he tried. He could not throw a baseball and was not much of a basketball player and he was just okay at soccer - but he always tried. Through little league and youth basketball and youth soccer... he soldiered on:


Worst player on the team sometimes but he tried as hard as he could and his disposition was as positive as when he was the best player on the high school tennis team. You couldn’t tell from his behavior toward other teammates whether he was the best or the worst - or if they were the best or the worst. Because he simply wasn’t judging people by their physical skills – only what was in their hearts. That’s why all of you out there – regardless of what you do now or how much money you have – loved our Roberto. Because he didn’t care – I mean really didn’t care - what you did or how much money you had – only who you were – and if you were kind and honest and true to yourself - then you had a friend in Rob.  That why all of you who knew and treasured him feel the way you do – because he found the positive and good and value in all of us – even if we couldn’t always see it in ourselves. And that’s why we all miss him so – because as the realization sets in that he is gone for good (and I still have trouble believing it) we know that it puts the burden on us to treat people the way he did. We all now see how fleeting our time here can be. We were all touched by Robert in some direct or indirect way and feel him in us and that challenges us to live up to his memory – all the time and not only when it’s easy.

We miss our Robert more than our hearts can take I think. But that doesn't mean that your words and thoughts don't lighten the burden. Knowing how truly spectacular people you all are in your own way – and how you and our son were bonded means that at least there is a little bit of Rob remaining and that is way better than nothing. So what this has to do with Sweaters is beyond me (and I know I veered a little off course here) but we love you all and thank you all. And please don’t be strangers. Our home is always open – even if you just want to look at Rob’s penny collection.

And so let me close by saying that your homage to Sweater Week and Robert was a great success for everyone involved. 

Thank you all again.  – The Hoffman Family.




Monday, October 10, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 20 - Barney, The Big Slouchy Sweater

BARNEY, THE BIG SLOUCHY SWEATER
By, Tyler Quinn


I found Barney in a Goodwill in Bellingham, Washington. I was with my mom and she was in the mood to buy me things - a mood that reliably strikes her in thrift stores. Thus the “acceptability threshold” for Barney was low. But I liked the sweater. I liked it well enough that I might even have bought if for myself.
Barney was big. Big enough to make me, someone undeniably big, feel small. And that’s what first attracted me. Maybe this big purple sweater, with its chunky knit and three-button henley style collar was the answer. Maybe swathed in its sizable indigo embrace my bigness would be less noticeable, for a while. I didn’t mind being big all the time, but an occasional break would be nice. And maybe Barney was it. Maybe I, Tyler Quinn, could pull off a big slouchy sweater (BSS).


How I thought I looked in Barney:
This dream didn’t make it far.
One weekend in early January, I pulled Barney out of my still packed suitcase. I was back in Brooklyn, in the apartment I shared with Willa and Rob. I donned the BSS in the privacy of my bedroom, before confidently stepping into our common space.
“HA!”
The laugh escaped from Robert like a crow cawing. Unbridled. Undeniable. It filled our little apartment, shaking the walls and my generally unshakeable confidence. My face and my spirits fell.
“What?” I asked, tugging at Barney. “Not good?”

“Um…” 
Rob didn’t say anything else. He knew this was a fragile but important moment. His barked laugh and the ensuing silence had said plenty. In a flash I saw both Barney and myself through Rob’s eyes. I was not pulling off the BSS.


How I probably looked in Barney:

Was I happy to have this new perspective, Dear Reader? No, I was not. In this moment, did I appreciate Rob’s candor, his one-of-a-kind ability to keep me humble? Not. One. Bit.


So many of you have shared memories of Robert in which he was quietly kind, seriously silly, or a shining example of friendship and loyalty. That wasn’t always my Robert. Sure, my Robert was kind and silly and loyal. But he also had a few hard edges. A bit of snark. A side of sass.


My friendship with this kind, silly, loyal, snarky, sassy Rob grew slowly, and often at my insistence. My big blonde emotional availability flew in direct opposition to his dark, sinewy skittishness.


***Side note: Robert hated cats, but was he a cat? And was I a dog? Maybe not, but imagine a golden retriever trying to befriend a house cat and you’ll sort of get the picture. Also, I know that wherever Rob is, he’s very mad I just called him a cat.***


At Dartmouth, our interests and activities placed us in closer and closer proximity and brought to light some of our overlapping weirdness. We discovered a mutual love for bad movies, obscure pop culture, and Whoopi Goldberg. The friendship that formed was one-of-a-kind. It was special and specific and belonged to just him and me.


(Before you stop me, Dear Reader, I know I wasn’t the only person with whom Robert had a one-of-a-kind friendship. If his passing and the community that’s formed in the year since have taught me anything, it’s that one of Robert’s greatest strengths was his ability to create those magical, one-of-a-kind relationships with so many of us.)


But a very real part of the unique friendship we shared was that Robert could (and very often would) tell me things I didn’t want to hear. He took it upon himself to bring me back to reality. One of his favorite things to say to me was, “Get off your higgghhhhhhh horse.” True, this dynamic was just a small part of our one-of-a-kind friendship. But, in the last year, I have realized that this element of our relationship was the rarest part. It’s what I’ve missed the most.


A year without Rob and I wonder, How many Barneys have there been? How many times would Robert’s candor, his momentarily painful but always helpful advice, have saved me? What will happen to my unruly self esteem without Robert to intermittently knock it down a peg?


After The LaughTM, I returned to my room, pulled off Barney, and stuffed it into the file cabinet I was keeping my clothes in at the time (Hi Brooklyn!). I picked up a sweater that actually fit me and quickly pulled it on.


There wasn’t time to dwell on the failure of the BSS.

Rob and I had a movie to see.

Sunday, October 9, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 19 - A Typical Exchange

A Typical Exchange
By, Dan Abrams

I can't remember meeting Robert. As far I'm concerned, Robert has been in my life as far back as I can remember any memory. Perhaps one of the earliest was that time at the bus stop I asked him what kind of gel he used to get the hair on the front of his head to stick straight up like a wall. "It's a new kind of product - it's called 'H2O,'' he said as the doors to the bus opened and he climbed the stairs. Quite a witty response for a third grader. 

See, when people have been in your lives as long as our high school group has with each other, at some point there is a transition from friends to family. We can go weeks or months without seeing each other but pick up like nothing's changed the very next time. Robert, of course, was a driving force behind maintaining the "nothing's changed" mentality.

That's why this text, one of the last text exchanges I had with Robert (not forgetting some gems like the photo of an unsuspecting bystander in LA wearing a most awful bright pink bucket hat that Robert sent to me, Julie and Sue and warned of an impending state of fashion emergency in California) makes perfect sense:
  1. I am yelling. I usually am always yelling.
  2. Robert regularly made drastic life changes that I rarely heard about right away.
  3. Robert: known for his blog and youtube video skills, yet not much for his social media skills.
  4. The source of this information came from my mother, who likely heard it from Robert's mom at the neighborhood's book group (which I (in love!) feel the need to point out that the Hoffman's have not lived in since approximately 2005).

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Saturday, October 8, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 18 - RugWeek

RugWeek
By, Julie Munro

It took me a long time to write this. As I sit here on my twelfth flight since Willa originally sent out the invitation to write, I can't help but think that I've had plenty of time where there was not much else to do. Yet, here we are on Day 12 of the Homage to SweaterWeek, and this is the first time I've typed a single word. 

Was anyone else just completely dumbfounded when they realized it was the one year anniversary of Robert's death? Like, absolutely astounded? I was. I still think maybe we're all misremembering the date. Or maybe the calendar is wrong. We must have skipped a couple of months. Did March or April ever happen? I forget who wrote the first Facebook post that I saw mentioning the anniversary, but I remember my first reaction ... "This person is incorrect. Dead wrong."  I clicked back the 52 times in my google calendar to actually look at the date that I took work off to drive to Albany for the funeral. The "monthly view" wouldn't have been convincing enough. 

I'm thinking back to the last month for inspiration on what to write here.  You might say it’s been an uninspiring month filled with a million conferences and small-talk conversations and pieces of gum to chew when my ears pop on the airplane's descent. There have been a lot of hotel basements. It's been pretty dim, except for one thing that Robert would have gotten a kick out of. Luckily, I documented these this thing. Rob and I always had amusements that were fairly well aligned.


And that thing is… carpets. Basically, the sweater of the hotel industry. 

Sheraton Denver Downtown


This is the one that started the whole shebang. Bright green leaves and vines of flowers intermixed with stripes in alternating directions. I can imagine Urban Outfitters selling a bed comforter with this design to millennials. I think they make removable wallpaper in this style.  

The leafy pattern reminds me of the time we visited me freshman year in college. We literally took out a map, closed our eyes, and pointed a finger. Our destiny was the Smithsonian National Zoo. (Looking back, not the grandest adventure given it was a mile from American University in a city that stretches 100 square miles – but it felt like a trek. At the time, I still didn’t know my roommate Caitlyn all that well – she was quiet and nice enough but preferred to smoke weed and talk in some sort of secret code language with her friends from Columbia, Maryland than hang out with me. We co-existed well. But when you came to town, that changed. You asked her if she wanted to join us at the zoo, and she said she was in. I shouldn’t have been surprised … you had that impact on people.


We explored for a couple hours and swore we had only walked uphill the entire time. But, we were always decent at math – how could that possible if we were back where we started? We talked about it for the rest of the weekend. Unsolved mystery.

East Avenue Inn and Suites Rochester



A quick wedding weekend in between western work travels. A disgusting overlapping of beige and light blue circles made up of threading that smells like what I had imagined a budget hotel carpet in Rochester would smell like. They’re remodeling. But for now, they’re still living in the 70s. Vintage.

Speaking of vintage, it’s a wedding full of throwbacks - high school friends, but not really our high school friends. I remember we used to joke about how my cousin Cameron and I couldn’t have had more different friend groups, even though we graduated in the same class of 450 people. There were a lot of names matched with faces I’m honestly not sure I ever knew. Scott Sonne and I talked about LA. He mentioned Santa Monica, and in my head I have the same thought I’ve had the past year when someone mentions Santa Monica – I can’t ever go back there. My last hours with you were the only few I’ve ever spent there. Scott and I talked about you, how much we miss you, and then I changed the subject because the idea of crying at a country club surrounded by random people of the past was not appealing to me.


But still, I couldn’t help but think how much you would have loved the stories from this wedding. It’s like the time in college when you, David and I went were back home and went to the truck stop Stewarts on Route 32 (completely unclear why..) late at night. We played that game where we went around in a circle just naming the most random people we could possibly think of from high school. We went around until we couldn’t think of anyone else. We didn’t have a year book, and I think using one might have been considered cheating in your mind. Julie Hooper. Bobby Nickles. Tristan Fritz (he was at the wedding..). I’ll never forget it. 

Hilton Parc 55 San Francisco



A dizzying jumble of connected shapes. I have to stop looking down shortly after snapping this photo so I don’t pass out, but the intricate design and pop of color tells me someone cared … 30 years ago I bet they were given the option of something much more boring and instead some person on the carpet selection committee thought, “this one’s it .. it’ll brighten someone’s day”. It reminds me of the patterns on the clothing of the St. Francis Academy students’ when they ripped off their robes and broke out in sing and dance to “Joyful Joyful” at the end of our favorite movie.

San Francisco: for most, the city of sourdough and good tacos and technology companies. For me, the setting of Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit. True fans of Whoopi’s second time around as a nun are few and far between, so if not for any other reason it was important for me to keep you in my life. So many open questions remain: Does Jennifer Love Hewitt credit this movie for her entire career? How was Mr. Crisp not able to escape that room they locked him in given that it was only “locked” together with a dessert sausage? How has Maggie Smith looked the same (old) age for 25 years?


You used to e-mail me pictures of Whoopi through the years wearing weird outfits. It should come as a shocker to no one that there were many examples – both from films and IRL Whoopi. I’ll always take comfort in knowing that someone as well-versed as you in film blessed something with a 7% on Rotten Tomatoes.

Le Meridien Indianpolis Downtown


This place was classy. I even some some hardwood peeking out from behind the carpet at one point. To some, the filet of hotel carpets. To others, boring and almost not even worth mentioning in a post filled with so many other gems.

But still, we’re in Indiana – so class is relative. My Uber driver from the airport is an engineer who in this case doubles as an incredibly monotone city ambassador. His voice is so low it reminds me of the incredible base you used to drop when you were singing. He points out everything to me, including the bowling alley. I think about how unappealing bowling is to me these days, but how there’s nothing I would have rather done every Wednesday night in high school. One dollar games, one dollar shoe rentals, endless opportunities to request that the employees (not DJs officially, but DJs to us) play “Butterfly” by Crazytown. I’m sure they loved that. I remember how serious you looked every time you stood up to bowl and how frustrated you got when we didn’t take it as seriously.  Instead, most of us participated in what we called “controversial bowling”, where we would shout obnoxious things at whoever was up to bowl. One time Dan bowled a 35. I blame it partly on his miserable non-skills and partly on the fact that we would wait until the second he threw the ball to start shouting names of STIs, a nod to his legendary mother Jan, OBGYN practitioner to most of our mothers. Sorry Dan. Sorry Rob.

Not that sorry.



Hyatt Regency Orlando


There are a lot of old people here in Florida. It feels like the interior designers maybe thought, “oh well, everyone is near blind ... let’s go with this one.” There’s really no other excuse. It’s the biggest eyesore I’ve ever seen. Someone else even says to me, “did you notice that carpet?” I pay $5 for a bottle of water at the gift shop and convince myself, “Surely that money must be going directly into the re-carpet fund.”

I don’t know why, but Florida makes me think of bereavement leave. When you died, I had never taken it. I wasn’t quite sure what it was even. So, as I went into ADP to indicate that I’d be taking a couple days off I hovered over the little question mark that explained “for immediate family only”. I scrolled down and read “Immediate family" includes the employee's spouse, domestic partner, parents (including step parents, foster parents, parents-in-law and domestic partner's parents), grandparents, siblings, children, children of a domestic partner, step child, adopted child, a child for whom the employee has parenting responsibilities, and a relative or friend who resides with the employee.”

 It had been a rough couple of days, mostly filled with sadness, but I recall this just making me feel pissed off. Who are they to tell me when it’s appropriate to bereave? And, is that even a verb? I decided I wasn’t going to care, and – on the off chance I was questioned – I even formulated an elaborate story about how you were my half-brother, proven by my mom’s last name being Hoffman. For my oldest, 25-year friend, “paid time off” just didn’t feel right.


I love you Rob. And, I think upon looking at these hotel sweaters, you might say it’s been a success for everyone involved.


Friday, October 7, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 17 - Because Sweater Weather

Because Sweater Weather
By, Lauren Vogelstein


When I became an oh so very sophisticated and mature college student (who filled her dorm freezer with as many frozen Kashi pizzas as were humanly possible because that is all she ate/could cook and really pissed off her roommates for taking up all of the freezer room like the mature adult she was (I still don’t know how my noodle arms managed to drag 20+ frozen pizzas from the Gristedes back to my college dorm room at a time)), I declared that fall was my favorite weather. Because sweaters. Wrapping yourself up in the coziest of sweaters, while drinking hot chocolate and pretending it’s grown up coffee, and taking a walk through the leaf piles in central park made me feel like the most grown up of ladies Sex and the City style (hint, if you need to make yourself feel like a grown up lady, you probably aren’t, even though I hear some people never actually feel like grown ups, which will probably be the story of my life). Fall meant feeling like the grown up New Yorker of my dreams, wrapped in the knitted poncho and oversized scarf of my mother’s nightmares. 


This is a grown up (questionable) 20 year old feeling her Magnolia Bakery Fall Sweater Fantasy aka feeling like a grown up and eating like a child
As I began to theoretically grow up (because time goes on and we age although not necessarily in a direct relationship to our maturity levels) I still declared a love for sweater weather, but more so because it meant wearing hipster thrift shop treasures that felt like you were essentially bringing your cozy comforter burrito experience with you everywhere you went. And to my mother’s horror (she eventually made me get rid of this treasure, although it resides it my best friend’s closet in Philadelphia, because it needed a loving home where it was not in danger of being thrown away) I sported this gem around and it made me feel like sweater weather was invented only so that this magnificent piece of fashion could be shown to the world.


Yet again I loved consuming sugary confections in my coolest threads, feeling like such an independent woman (am I right Destiny’s Child?)

When I really started to grow up (no really, this time it was for real) and began dating Jake, I bought this sweater to wear on our first camping trip. This sweater screamed, “I’m a cool hip cozy lady who can do outdoorsy things like pee outside and likes it and you should want to date me,” projecting my expertise in both shopping and camping (possibly lack of expertise in this department, but who cares because it worked, Jake is still somehow dating me, proof that sweaters really do have magical powers). 

Picture of me in said sweater on said camping trip looking like a non-crazy person in her element (can’t you tell how out doorsy I am?)


Dating Jake didn’t just come with excuses to buy cool gently used cozy sweaters, it also came with being introduced to a new world of amazing people, including the one and only Robert. Rob possessed many magical powers that immediately convinced me he was the coolest person on this planet. Rob could spout pop cultural references faster than Mindy Kaling being dragged by Usain Bolt, hopped up on Red Bull (which one of these beautiful people is hopped up on Red Bull, Mindy? Usain? both? I don’t know, I probably should have used better grammar and maybe not the phrase “hopped up”). He could pack away bagel bites by the package akin to Liz Lemon inhaling night cheese in her bright blue snuggie. And thanks to Rob the birthday cake made of ice cream sandwiches that I made one summer for Jake was quickly consumed and saved from being brutally maimed by freezer burn in their freezer. Most importantly, Rob accompanied me to the fantastical Broadway theater experience known as Side Show (the only person I didn’t need to convince that this musical revival about conjoined twins would be the best $50 anyone could spend) and enthusiastically scarfed down street pizza together on our way to the theater like the classy adults we were. The more I got to know about Rob and the more time I spent with him, the more I became a Robert fan girl. And then he told me about sweater week. Sweater week people, an entire week (or more or less depending on the season) of witty musings about everyone’s favorite article of clothing and the weather that goes along with it to make you want to wear it. This was the most brilliant thing I had ever heard of (even more brilliant than Lin Manuel Miranda hosting SNL this week). Here was someone who captured the magic of sweaters and shared it with the world in the best way possible, through his unique and feisty way of seeing the world. Through reading everyone’s incredible SweaterWeek posts this year, I can tell that we are all trying to recapture the magic of Rob through our memories and through our sweaters.








Sweater wearing at its best and most delusional

So maybe it’s the delusion of awesomeness that gives sweaters and their accompanying weather their magical powers when they embrace you in the coziest of hugs. Or maybe it’s just that Rob always knew the right combination of sugary foods and warm clothing made for the best of everything.

A success for everyone involved (including baby Lauren rocking this baller sweater)


If only this sweater still came in my size…



.  


Thursday, October 6, 2016

Homage to SweaterWeek: Day 16 - Serious Business

The Serious Business of Being Silly
Or
A Christmas Miracle
By, Willa Johann
For this story, Dear Reader, there are a few things you need to know. You need to know that I am married to Tyler Quinn. That for a time, Robert and Tyler and I all lived together in a tiny apartment in Brooklyn. That even when we didn’t live together, we often comprised a weird (and wonderful) little trio and each took turns being third wheel to the other two. You need to know that my mother is equal parts huge-hearted and unfiltered.  And finally, you need to know that my father’s dominant quality could be described as professorial. He is a steady, contemplative, intellectual man and he is zero parts goofy (unless he is making crazy wide-eye faces to babies, but I haven’t had a chance to observe that much, so we’ll say zero parts goofy). That should be enough to get us started.
Let’s begin in September 2009, when Robert and I and the rest of Lodj Croo were dancing and prancing and Salty Dog Ragging our days away. We had neon hair and wore sparkly lycra and we were trying our damnedest to convince the incoming Dartmouth Freshmen that they were home. We were zany and silly and weird, so they could relax. They didn’t have to hide their own nerdiness, or zaniness. At Dartmouth, they could be themselves. That was the dream we believed in and that was why we danced and pranced and sang. Be you. Be youer than you. Be unapologetically yourself. (Robert, of course, was an incredible ambassador of this message).

(Very tired. Very haggard. Not our most attractive moment, all things considered.)

My parents came up to the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge to visit. They’d never met Robert before, but they saw him on the road, welcoming guests, his yellow/green hair glowing, his long, lanky limbs waving this way and that, beckoning them in, pointing the way down the path and into the Lodge. They stayed for dinner, which, of course, was not just dinner, it was also a show. A turn-the-volume-up-to-11, never-stop-jumping, never-stop-shouting, dance-party musical spectacular.
Afterward, as they prepared to leave, my dad pulled me aside. “You know what is so important about this,” he said, “These kids are this country’s future lawyers, and doctors, and bankers, and presidents. But right now they are standing on benches dancing like fools.”
And he was right. That is the important part. No matter how high we climb, no matter how serious our goals, we must remember to stand on benches sometimes and dance like fools.
In the years that followed, my parents fell in love with Robert. I grew up in Montauk, NY, the last town on Long Island, and my parents are the permanent caretakers of a sprawling property there. We keep horses, goats and chickens and part of the charm of going home is that it flings me (and any guests) back into my girlhood chores: Go collect the eggs from the hen coop, hay the horses, water the goats. When Robert and Tyler lived together in Brooklyn, they often came out to visit, sometimes with me, sometimes without. “I don’t know why,” my mom said this week, “but that boy went straight to my heart.” She wasn’t talking about Tyler, my longtime boyfriend, now husband (although she adores him too). She was talking about Robert.  
Tyler and I quickly learned that if we wanted to do something thoughtful for my mom, we shouldn’t pick up flowers, or a gift; we should surprise her by bringing Robert out with us. Tyler and I would get out of my tiny Honda civic and greet my parents, and then my mom would spot Robert folded up in the back. She’d yelp excitedly and say, “Oh! I was secretly hoping you’d come! I made you a brownie cake!”
Instead of feeding Tyler and me, who are always obnoxiously on some diet or another, she fed Robert. After a lifetime of rolling her eyes at picky eaters and refusing to tolerate allergies or preferences, she eagerly and loving accommodated his. She learned that he’d eat just about any type of bar cookie, and although she could tempt him with an apple cobbler, she’d shouldn’t waste her time making her specialty, lemon bars. For Robert, lemons were a No Go. Also a No Go: most non-apple fruit. Blech. Coconut was acceptable, but not preferred, so she stopped baking with it altogether when he came out. What he loved most was a brownie cake, or a cookie cake and she’d make him a whole one and cover it in foil and write Robert on the top and if anyone, including my dad or siblings tried to touch it, she’d say, “That is ROBERT’S! Leave it alone."
It was always the three of us in Montauk. Riding horses. Going to the beach. Sleeping in my childhood bedroom. Going on long nature walks with my father, the “professor”, who would pause mid-lecture about the dangerous creep of the invasive phragmite reed to hear a yellow-throated warbler call.
Rob’s last visit to Montauk was at Christmas 2014. I came home early from Portland, OR and Rob was still in NYC, so I told him to come out for as long as he wanted and help my mom with her Herculean holiday baking efforts. We painted sugar cookies and made pasta and we took the dogs for a walk on the beach.
We had a lovely visit. And then one night, Rob announced that he had brought a present out for my parents. “Actually,” he said, “it’s for you, Ed.” So with the Christmas music playing and the living room strung up with colored lights, he placed a package on my dad’s lap and watched expectantly.
My father slowly unwrapped and unwrapped and finally pulled out what was inside: an adult sized chicken suit. A chicken costume! “Wow!” my dad exclaimed. And then he leapt to his feet and rushed from the room without a word.
We hardly had time to laugh or wonder where he’d gone before we heard a clucking in the hall. Bawwwwwwk—bawk—bawk--BAWK!  And then, I kid you not, my father, the steady, studious, zero parts goofy man,  came back into the room as a six foot chicken. He flapped his wings, clucking and shuffling his way around the Christmas decorations, and my mother and I sat flabbergasted.  Was it possible? Was my father wearing a chicken suit and doing a silly little chicken dance? It hardly seemed real.
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You can see in the photos that he is really serving up some poultry realness—no one forced him to put on the suit. He did not perform an obligatory lap and then take it off. He danced and pranced and flapped around the room and none of us could quite believe it.
“Robert,” he said, “this is really spectacular. This is something I’ll treasure.”
But, Dear Reader, if I’m honest, I still think it was such a bizarre gift. Who would ever give my dad a chicken suit and expect him to enjoy it so much?
Robert. Robert would. He had a way of elevating others into silliness and it was certainly a reason I loved being around him. But I also so admire his ability to recognize who needed an extra push toward goofiness. Robert took silliness seriously, as someone said last year, but he didn’t exist in an isolated bubble of goofiness: he gave others a way into silliness, into laughter. He was able help my father, who had come to the lodge, stood at a distance and made an accurate though academic assessment of a situation, actually take part in the fun. He pushed my father up on a bench and made him dance like a fool.

And it was a tremendous success for everyone involved.