Showing posts with label new. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

Maybe someday I’ll be able to say goodbye, but not today



It was the first time I’d seen my son play baseball. Little League; the summer before he started middle school. Just a practice, not a game.
We’d never been sports guys, my son or I. Nothing against sports, the topic just never created much of a blip on the Taylor family radar. To the best of my recollection, the closest we ever came to sports was tossing a Frisbee at the beach. Which made it all the more impressive that Jordan was good. Real good.
His coach took me aside prior to the start of practice to complement me on all the work I’d put in with my son. He was surprised when I asked him what work he was talking about. Jordan was a natural. He could pitch, he could hit, he could run like the wind. None of that came from my side of the family.
But like I said, he was good. I stayed the entire practice. As the team ran through its exercises, Jordan kept watch on me from the corner of his eye, gauging my reaction, making sure I was paying attention. I was. I was about as proud as a father can be of his son.
I was proud of him long before that, though. Not for his sports prowess, but for something far more important: Jordan was a genuinely good kid, a good person. He had a big heart, a giving nature, empathy that stretched for miles. If the people around him weren’t happy, Jordan wasn’t happy.
By way of example, I began giving Jordan and his sister an allowance when he was six or seven. Just a couple bucks; a fortune to kids that age. That first week, he and Aubreii walked to a little gift shop two blocks from our front door. He came home with a small, plastic statue of a puppy. For me. He’d spent the first real money he’d ever had on a gift for me.
I still have that puppy and I hope to one day be buried with it.
Many years later, while working in New York City, Jordan risked his life to buy me a knock-off Rolex from a shady-looking guy in a truck parked in a back alley near Canal Street, home of shady-looking guys selling bootlegged luxury items. His phone went off while he was making the deal and the shady guy pulled a gun on him, thinking he might be a cop, or working for the cops. Jordan managed to convince him otherwise and purchased the “Rolex” for $45.
Why would my otherwise intelligent son do something so stupid? Because when he’d asked me if he could pick me up a souvenir from the Big Apple, I’d said, “Sure, get me a Rolex!”
It was a good knock-off, too. Even fooled the jeweler who resized the band for me. But it was nothing for which I was willing to risk my son’s safety. It was that important to Jordan, though, because he wanted to make me happy. He cared what I felt, what I thought of him.
He was like that.
Last Sunday, I listened as weeping friends and relatives shared similar stories. About how much he’d meant to them, how much kindness he’d shown over the years, how many people he had helped, how many lives he’d made better just by being the kind of guy he was.
The next day we buried him. He’d just turned 37 and the world is a poorer place without him in it.
His sister, younger brother and I perched on metal folding chairs in the cold, grey morning light of the cemetery as they lowered his casket into the frozen earth. The best of me went into that hole with him. I’d always thought of Jordan as the me I should have been; kinder, less self-absorbed, more caring. What sort of universe takes someone like him while someone like me lingers?
It’s not fair and I’m mad as hell. I don’t want to hear about faith, a “better place,” being called home … any of that. Maybe someday, not now. Now all I want is to see my boy again. For a day, an hour. A few minutes.
That’s not going to happen. Ever. And I just can’t come to grips with that.
I want to tell him, one last time, how much I love him. How proud I always was of him.  How much I’ve always cherished that plastic puppy statue, the video I shot that day at Little League practice, that damned Rolex.
But he’s gone where I can’t follow, that place where phone calls, texts, emails go forever unanswered. He’s gone. He’s gone. I could write that a million times and I still wouldn’t believe it.
I’ve had friends over the years who have lost children. I’ve never understood how they manage to go on. Now I know. You go on because you must, because you have no choice.
If you have little ones, even if they’re 37, don’t wait to tell them — to show them — how much they mean to you. We are, each of us, allotted only so many days on this green earth and when they’re gone, they’re gone for good. All we’re guaranteed is now, and even that is as ephemeral as an early morning’s mist tenuously clinging to a cornfield.
For my part, I plan to be better than I’ve been. Kinder, fairer, more loving. My son’s passing has left the world a little short on goodness. I hope to do my part to pick up that slack, in his memory. I don’t know how successful I’ll be at the task — God knows it doesn’t come naturally to me — but I want to try. For my boy.


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Monday, January 7, 2013

I’m another year older, and maybe, a little wiser


The party was going full tilt New Year’s Eve. Great food, dry martinis, amazing band playing songs I actually recognized, beautiful woman by my side, good friends across the table.

Sweet Annie glistened and glowed in her New Year’s Eve regalia; no Hollywood superstar strutting the red carpet at the Oscars has ever shone brighter.

It should have been an evening for the record books.

Instead, I found myself repeatedly checking my watch and waiting impatiently for the ball to drop so I could honk my little noisemaker, guzzle my champagne, and head home where I could change into sweats and finish reading Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol.”

There was no logical reason for me to be having anything other than a fabulous time. Yet … I was kinda bored.

For one thing, it was too loud to carry on anything resembling a normal conversation. I used to LIKE my parties loud. The louder the better. As recently as a few years ago, if my ears weren’t ringing by the time a wing-ding broke up, I considered the evening a wash.

What, I wondered, had changed? Here I sat with Annie, my friend, Calvin and his girlfriend, Shirley — three of the most interesting people I know — and communication was possible only through lip reading, wild gesticulation and the deployment of those small flags they use to guide jets onto aircraft carriers.

Why did this suddenly matter? I have no idea. 

But, for Annie’s sake, I did my best to appear as though I was having a good time. I danced (with all the rhythm and natural grace of a rabid ferret on powerful amphetamines), I laughed, I lustily sounded my noisemaker.

Sweet Annie had put a lot of time and effort into gussying up for the event — going so far as to buy a new gown and matching shoes — and I wasn’t about to ruin her fun by being a party-pooper. 

And, in truth, I really was having an OK time, kind of. It’s just, I dunno, I would have preferred to be home with my feet up, watching an old Bing Crosby movie or finishing the Dickens. Earlier in the month I was excited by the possibility of the world ending, but since that didn’t happen, the passing of 2012 and the start of 2013 meant nothing to me.

I’ve seen a lot of non-apocalypse years come and go and the novelty has pretty much worn off.

Dick Clark is as dead as Guy Lombardo, so I have no idea who hosted this year’s feté in Times Square, but the televised ball finally did drop, everybody sang “Auld Lang Syne,” I kissed Annie, Calvin kissed Shirley, other couples around the room kissed, we all downed our complimentary bubbly and the band went on break in order to be first in line for the free midnight hor’deurves. 

“Are you having fun, baby?” Annie asked. Other women have called me “baby” over the years, but for some reason when Annie does it my knees get a little wobbly and I have a hard time breathing right.

“Um, sure,” I lied. Like I said, I wasn’t going to be a party-pooper and drag my sweetie away from what, for her, was obviously a fabulous, glamorous time.

But all parties must end and this one did, too. We shuffled our uncomfortable, shiny shoes over the icy parking lot and — breath billowing in white gusts — shivered into the waiting car.

Annie was quiet for a few miles, then said, “Well, that was fun.”

“You bet,” I said.

She was quiet a while longer. “I know you love stuff like that,” she ventured.

“Well … sure,” I said.

“Oh, yes, me too, me too,” she said, hurriedly. Then, tentatively, “But maybe next year, we could just stay home or have a couple friends over for a few drinks or something.”

We talked. Turns out Annie had been putting on a show of having a great time for my sake while I was doing the same for hers. Both of us would much rather have been ringing in the New Year at home, fireside, over a nice glass of Jameson and a game of Scrabble.

I guess no matter how many New Years you witness, you’re never too old to learn something new.

Mike’s book, “Looking at the Pint Half Full,” is available from Robbins Book List in Greenville and in ebook format at Amazon.com. Contact Mike at mtaylor325@gmail.com.