
When New Year's Eve 1965 turned into New Year's Day 1966 at our house, we didn't celebrate.
My father had a heart attack and died. He was 49 years old.
I was six, and the memories I think I have may really just be sweet dreams.
All I think I recall is Jackie Gleason on a black and white TV, a small fish, saved in the freezer, and a dropped, broken jar of peanut butter that Dad cleaned up before Mom came home.
If those are real memories, they are sweet, indeed.
I turn 49 today, and I've thought about this day, this number, all my life.
When I was young, I'm sure I mocked it, with a punk's sense of invincibility. As it's approached, I've sometimes dared it, and now that it's here, I respect it.
I don't know enough about my father to write much about him, but I know just enough to know that if I work at it, I might be able to someday be as kind and as loving as I've been told he was. If I can grab just a little bit of that, I will forever thank my lucky stars.
He was a gentle man who loved his family, and felt most himself, I guess, when it was just between him and the trout. He was a fisherman--a solitary endeavor--and he kept journals about his days in those streams. He loved baseball, too, and I wish I'd have had the chance to throw him the side-arm screwball I threw when my arm was rubber, and I begged anybody to play pitch-and-catch with me, from sunrise to sunset.
I'll bet he would have been game, and he probably would have called even the bad ones "strikes".
My brother Bobby wrote the following poem, in honor of "49", but mostly in honor of Dad.
(A river really does run through it...)
It’s somewhere around the middle,
On the way to somewhere
Having been anywhere
Pausing now to go to stay to leave
But not to go back.
Painful for remembering
What it didn’t lead to
How it swooped in
And took him away
From what was to be.
Leaving behind
The fearful ones
Staring wide-eyed at it
Breathing shallow
Ducking the doomsday blade
Reaching for another try.
Yet know this, after all
That’s happened and will.
Around the edges up the hill
And around the bend that
After all is past and over up and down…
It’s, it’s, it’s…just a number.
Happy Birthday to the Newest 49 (John) from One Who Slipped Through (Bob)
In Memory of our Dad.
May 23, 2008




1 comment:
Happy 49th!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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