The Day I Walked Away From 1967
Book of memories! |
Everything that happened to me from birth through high school occurred
for a reason and mostly with the guidance and urgings of my parents, teachers,
relatives and other older folks . I learned the things you are supposed to
learn. I learned to love, share, play, work, grieve and pray. I went through
the normal trends of friendship from childhood playmates to schoolmates, from
teammates to running mates. There were relationships made up of family, close
friends, casual friends, acquaintances and those who, even though I knew their
name, I didn't really know.
There are a lot of things that I remember from those days. It's really
funny that a lot of the things I remember best are some of the more trivial
things, things that make me laugh, things that make me feel warm inside, things
that make me feel a little sad because they are so far gone. I can remember
setting by the radio at nights doing my homework and listening to Riney Jordan
on the radio waiting for a dedication that involved someone I knew and
occasionally getting up the guts to call in a dedication myself. Of course the
next day I would deny that it was me that called it in when approached by
friends that had heard it the night before.
I remember Teen Timers held at the old Community Center. I loved Teen
Timers and could hardly wait from week to week in anticipation of going. I
really don't know why I loved it so, I was scared to death of asking a girl to
dance, even though Mom had done a pretty good job of teaching me to dance. I
would live for the "Lady's Choice" announcement and hope that a girl
would ask me to dance and that it would be a slow song -- "Blue
Velvet" would be fine.
There are other things I remember: my first car (1956 Nash Ambassador),
tight white Levi jeans, Cross Trainer running shoes (black with white stripes
on the side) and butch haircuts. I can remember making the drag to see who was
out and about, sitting at the "Maid" having one of the best chocolate
milkshakes or malts in town and the orange plastic giraffe stuck on top of the
shake. I don't know why a giraffe, but I bet I had a hundred of them hanging
from the netting over the sun visors in my car. Mr. Cole and his son Peewee ran
the Dairy Maid and even though Mr. Cole appeared to be an old grouch, we knew
he loved us, why else would he have put up with us as long as he did.
I can remember camping out with my buddies at the Country Club grounds,
water skiing on Lake Brownwood in the summer and going to the Midnight Matinee
with my friends, when my folks would let me. I can remember climbing to the top
of the huge concrete water tower in Camp Bowie and hearing the old farmer out
in his field yelling, "Get down from there you crazy idiots!"
Thinking back, I think I agree with the old farmer, we were idiots.
Then there was good ole Brownwood High School itself. I can remember the
smell of the grass as we went through football practice after school. I recall
the sounds of the band as they went though their practice rounds and the sight
of the drill team going through their paces. I remember hearing the last school
bell of the day and seeing my fellow students filing out of the building and
toward the parking lot, some walking and visiting and some in a dead run. I can
still hear the roar of some of the 'souped up' cars cranking in the parking lot
and hearing them leave a little rubber as they made their departure.
There are so many things that I still remember about high school; the
loud chatter of the lunchroom before the start of school and again at lunch,
Miss Mac's choir class where we learned more than just music, the assemblies
(the fun ones, and the not so fun ones), the bustle of the locker rooms between
classes and the sound of books hitting the floor because someone had rigged
someone else's locker, sitting in the classes with the glass wall facing the
walkway outside and watching fellow students walking by during class and
wondering why they were heading to the office, I can remember the library but I
don't know why -- I really never used it that much and I can still hear the
roar of the pep rallies. I can still remember the smell of cigarettes as you
walked into the bathroom and a fellow student standing there with a halo of
smoke over his head as he tried to look innocent. I was always amazed at how
well and how fast they could hide a burning cigarette.
Some of my fondest memories involved Friday night football. The noise of
the full stadium, the sounds of the band, the cheerleaders, the drill team and
the fans all made this night magical. I remember the huge Mums that the girls
wore, some looked more like parade floats than a corsage, but all the girls
always looked extra pretty on Friday night. I fell in love with many a
Brownwood girl but most never knew it. Oh yeah, the Victory Dances, can't
forget them, seems like we had a bunch of those.
Then 1967 came around and the day I walked
away from all these memories came as well. I wish I would have realized what I
was leaving behind. I wish that I had known then how many special, talented and
intelligent people I had the good fortune of sharing my early life with. We all
grew up in the same town, drank the same water, shopped at the same stores,
prayed to our God and listened to the same radio stations. Those are some of
the things that will forever make us connected.
My regrets are few. I regret that I had good friends that I thought
would be close forever and we haven't been. I regret that there are those of my
youth that I didn't get to know better based on what I know of them now. They
say you can't go back, but I take that trip on a regular basis and I take a
different road each trip.
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