***An Old Geezer Sighting-Another 50thAnniversary
–A Run For The Roses
I first met my old friend Peter Paul
Markin down at the Surf Ballroom in Hull in the summer after we graduated from
high school (he from Hull High) when we chased the same girl on the dance floor
(who eventually dumped both of us, me first). Recently when I told him one
afternoon over lunch the story of my 50th anniversary “jog” around
the old North Quincy cross-country course in the fall of 2013 I insisted on his
writing something up about the event like he had done with other stuff I told
him. Until now it has been a book sealed with seven seals but I thought this site
would be an appropriate place to tell the gruesome tale. Here’s Markin’s recollections
from that afternoon:
Writers, or at least people who like
to write, know, know deep in their souls, or hell, maybe only know by instinct
that some things should not be written. Or if written then discarded (and in
the age of cyberspace one can just press the DELETE button, praise be). That
was my initial response when my old friend from the end of our high school days,
Alfred Francis Johnson (hereafter just Al which is what everybody except nerdy
girls called him refusing to play to that three-name thing like he was
descended from Mayflower people or
something), asked me to write a little something celebrating a 50th anniversary
that he was all exercised about. I figured that the subject would be, knowing Al,
some political event, the historic civil rights March on Washington, the fall
of the Diem regime in Vietnam that led to all hell breaking out there, and
here, or the anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s assassination that brought about
a sea- change in American culture, brought down the “nights of the long knives”
that we are still fighting a rearguard action against. But no Al had nothing so
exalted in mind. What he wanted was to commemorate, if that is the right word
here, the 50thanniversary of the last year that he ran the storied
North Quincy cross-country as a member of the North Quincy team. Jesus.
Yes I know, although these days the
media and others on slow news days are prone to commemorate all kinds of
anniversaries of events including odd-ball years like 30thand 40th,
this was a weird request. But Al argued his case as he does when he is
exercised about something and I had to hear him out. It seems that he had
actually run that course this fall [2013] after 50 years of statutory neglect
and so had wanted to tout that fact to all who would listen. He said that he
had taken up jogging a few years previously to while the time away and keep the
extra pounds off and somehow expected that would soften me up. That explanation
however left me non-plussed even though I personally would have a hard time
running one hundred yards (or meters, whatever the short distance is they run
these days) without crying out desperately for oxygen and many other medicals
services. So I was ready to give the devil his due with a pat on the back, see
you later and move on, especially that move on part.
Al then went into high gear. He
mentioned that a few years back, it must have been 2010, he had written a
sketch about his current running prowess to commemorate the 50thanniversary
of when he began to run as a sport. He had run a mile over at some practice
field, the “dust bowl” he called it which gives you an idea of the condition of
the track, then and now, to prove that he was not over the hill, or something.
Yes, I know again, like this was some fleet-footed ancient marathon feat worthy
of notice. His point was that the sketch was well received by the AARP-worthy
audience in need of elderly care he was addressing thus throwing down the
gauntlet about my ability to match that result. No sale, brother, no sale.
That negative response on my part
set him off, had him seeing red. He went into his classic “you owe me” rant.
That “you owe me” stems from way back in the summer of 1964 when we first met
down in my hometown of Hull which is about twenty miles south of North Quincy.
We had met at the Surf Ballroom where there was a weekly live band dance (rock
and roll, of course, now called classic rock, damn) and I “stole” a girl from
him that we were both interested in. The girl eventually faded but our
friendship began. And with that little tidbit he won his argument. Not on the
merits of his case, and not even to shut him up, but because I told him that if
I wrote something now about his silly anniversary then next year, next summer,
I would get to write the real story about the 50th anniversary of the night
that I supposedly “stole” that girl from him. And that would not be pretty,
brother, it would not be pretty.
Al spent the better part of an hour
telling me the story of his “mock heroic” run, including some back story
information about that “historic” mile run at the dreaded “dust bowl” in 2010
to add, what did he call it, oh yeah “color.” Mostly though what he had to say
was filler, you know, stuff, supposedly profound stuff, about memory, aging,
mortality and other such lofty sentiments as he jogged along. After all how
much can one write about an old geezer going at snail’s pace, sweating,
swearing and huffing and puffing. Maybe a quick paragraph and done. As usual I
only listened half-heartedly once I saw where he was heading so some of the
material I jotted down may be off but here is the gist of it:
The year 2010 was decisive for Al ’s
return to the running roads and fields. One day, one January day while he was
walking along the Charles River in Boston he remembered that it had been 50
years before that he had first started running, running to get out of the
cramped tiny single family seen-better-days house that he shared with three
brothers and his parents, running to chase the blues away, running to get rid
of about sixteen tons of thirteen year old teen angst and alienation, hell,
running just to hear the sound of his feet setting a beat on the road and his
breathe becoming steady after the first huffing and puffing. That angst running
for the heck of it eventually led to a high school career in cross-country and
indoor and outdoor track where he had successes and failures like a lot of
others who pursued sports at some level. The up and downs of that career need
not detain us except to give reason to why he was commemorating some
woe-begotten anniversary. After high school he had given up running and went on
to pursue more natural things like wine, women and song, including “stealing” a
couple of young women on his own, a little dope (actually sometimes a lot of
dope when hippie-dom was in high flower, some counter-cultural things, a tour
in the army, work, seven kinds of work, some marriages and other relationships.
You know an ordinary life, lived well or poorly but lived as time marched on.
Later that month Al had an epiphany.
He had been back in his old North Quincy hometown on some unrelated business
when he decided to walk around some of the streets adjacent to the old high
school. While doing so, while taking this memory walk as it turned out, he
walked past the old track (that “dust bowl” of blessed memory) where he had
practiced long ago and that is where the idea of seeing whether he could still
run a mile took form. A couple of weeks later, weeks when you and I and any
rational AARP-er would be in sunny Florida or sunny some place Al was ready to
run for the roses out in the frostbitten air.
Naturally he had picked a day and
time when every dog-owner in the area was walking his or her day so he was to
have no private agony as he ran his laps. From his description of the thing it
was clear that he was foolishly ill-prepared to do a mile having not practiced,
or even run except for a wayward bus in twenty-five years, and it was a close
thing that he actually finished the distance. I will spare the reader the
medical details and just note that the one funny thing Al said when I asked him
his time for the mile was that information was top secret in the interest of
national security. But enough of ancient filler.
That haphazard run got Al back to
running, or rather jogging is the better term on regular basis. Jogging to get
out of the cozy single- family house in the leafy suburbs that he shared with
his third wife, jogging to chase the blues away, jogging to get rid of about
sixteen tons of sixty plus years of angst and alienation, hell, jogging just to
hear the sound of his feet setting a beat on the road and his breathe becoming
steady after the first huffing and puffing. Now you have to know this about Al,
despite his quirky nature he is intensely committed to a sense of history, to a
sense of memory whether for large events or small. For example, when he talks
about John Brown and his heroic raid in 1859 (date provided by Al as I did not
remember it) at Harper’s Ferry you would think he had been there as an
eye-witness he gave so much detail, stuff like that. So naturally when the
small anniversary of his last year of competitive cross-country running came up
of course he was going to commemorate it, although this time be better prepared
than that ill-fated mile on the dusty old track.
Al had mentioned to me before, maybe
several years ago, that this North Quincy cross-country course was storied,
although not his story. The reason for that distinction was that his best
friend, his running mate in both senses, running around the track and running
around town, was Bill Cadger. Bill was a great runner who over his career won
many races on the course and for many years held the course record. Al stood in
his shadow, stood deep in his shadow. That fact is neither here nor there now,
except that this course of two and one-half miles which they had run together
in practice many times was laid out along the streets of old North Quincy in a
way that Al had not noticed back in the day when running the thing. There were
many landmarks of his youth as he ran it this time, this time when he was running,
oops, jogging slowly enough to see things. To reflect on things, to remember.
And those recollections, that filler, is what I will finish this sketch with.
Except to tell anybody who will listen, anybody who wants to know, that yes Al
finished the course, and did not, I repeat did not need medical attention,
none.
The first part of the course started
on the side of the high school, the East Squantum Street side. Just seeing the
old high school reminded Al of the tough times he had getting through the
place. Not academically, not even socially, except a little, a little shy and
unknowing about girls (now called young women, thank you), no knowledge shy
with four boys and no girls in the family to ease the way. And a deep-crusted
Catholic studied ignorance of things sexual, how to deal with the subject,
okay. He was moreover, and Bill too, which is why they got along, filled with
all kinds of teenage angst and alienation, feelings of being isolated, and
feeling out of sorts with the world. He said he laughed as he thought about
that, thought about how someday, now someday he might get over that angst and
alienation. Yah, he said he had to laugh about that, about how they all said
back in the day he would get over it when he got older. The only thing better
now was that he had a small handle on it, and some helpful medication.
The second leg of the course went down
Bayfield Road, a road strewn with house of relatives, some that he liked and
some, who later when he joined, joined with abandon (as did I), the “youth
nation” that was a-borning in the late 1960s shut their doors to him, called
him renegade, called him in the parlance of the times, “red,” “commie,” and
“monster.” Jesus. But that street also had houses filled with budding romances,
or flirtations in that close- packed community, romances and flirtations.
Flirtations that he, girl-shy, had trouble picking up on when the boys’ “lav”
Monday morning before school bull- sessions (emphasis on the bull) and he came
up on the radar as someone that Sally, Susie, or Marie “liked” on that
preternatural teen grapevine that had Facebook
beat six ways to Sunday. He wondered as he passed some cross streets off of after
Bayfield what had happened to Sally, Susie, and Marie. Did they too fade from the
town’s memory like he had, Had they, like many in their nomadic generation,
shaken the dust off of the town unlike their parents, his parents, definitely grandparents
who stayed anchored to the town and took a certain pride in that fact. He had
to laugh again, why not, he was moving slow enough to laugh and look and feel
about things, and about that dog ahead who for a time was moving faster than he
was, that even now it always came down to girls, oops, women, even after three
marriages and a million short- haul things. And he still was trying to figure
them out. Jesus
The third leg brought him along what
is now Quincy Shore Boulevard, along the ocean, along the one piece of
geography that had defined his life; the old days remembrances of running along
in the sand, a task too tough now with those wobbly knees and aching ankles,
with Bill running a mile ahead, him getting all red from the sun; summer
afternoons spent on the beach between the Squantum Yacht Club and the Wollaston Boat Club the
“spot” to hang in waiting around for, what else, that certain she you had had
your eye on in school, or just what came in on the ocean; Saturday night
parking steamed cars with the roar of the ocean drowning out love’s call; end
of night stops at Joe’s for burgers and fries to placate a different hunger.
Later, later walks (not runs, hell, no) along Pacific beaches, Malibu,
Carlsbad, LaJolla, Magoo Point, with love Angelica, Angelica from Indiana and
ocean-deprived, her almost drowning in some riptide not knowing the fierceness
of Mother Nature, Uncle Neptune when the furies were up; solo walks, lonely
walks when the booze and dope almost broke him (and he called me, desperately
called me for help, and I said “I’ll meet you in Malibu and we’ll get you dried
out, brother”). Much later solitary walks along endless Maine beaches trying to
figure out what went wrong with that second marriage, and right with the third.
Simple stuff that the rush of the foam-flecked waves called out for serenity.
As he made the turn for home, the fourth leg down Atlantic Boulevard heading back to the school he laughed again,
twice laughed, first that he was going to finish running the whole course and
secondly that no matter what somebody better make sure that he was not buried in
some place like Kansas when his time comes. He had come from the muck of the sea
and let him lay his head down there.
As Al travelled that last leg, the
leg that brought him to the corner of his old neighborhood he cringed, cringed
at the thought of all the misbegotten things that had happened in that vanished
shack of a cramped house and of his estrangement from his family, a shame, a
crying shame (and I, Hull–born twenty miles away from the same kind of
neighborhood, with the same family grievances will not go into detail here -see
we do not “air our family linens in public,” got it). But he also had a certain
nostalgia, a certain sadness as he remembered the various generations of cats
that helped make life a little bearable when cursed mother got on her sway,
father silent, silent as the grave. Joy Smokey, Snowball, Blackie, Big Boy,
Sorrowful, Grey Boy, Calico, and many others making him think of later long
gone beloved Mums who had helped him get through drugs, booze, depression,
angst, a bad marriage and about seven other maladies, and recently gone and
still filled with sorrows and sadnesses his companion shadow Willie Boy shed a
tear for him, and them all.
Then past Atlantic Avenue and many
miles walked getting up the courage to talk to Lydia the first girl he fell
hard for, and wonder, wonder too what happened to her, doing well he hoped. And
last stop before the finishing hill and kick to the line Grandma’s Young Street
house, savoir sainted (everybody agreed, sainted especially with devil Grandpa)
Grandma who saved his tender teens from total despair, from starvation too and
blessed memories. And regrets, regrets too that he had not been better at the
end for her. Sorrows there, joys too.
Ah, streets, all known streets, all
blessed streets (not church-blessed but still blessed), all ocean-breezed
streets, all memory streets, as he chugged up that hill. A hill where in memory
time, fifty years ago time, he would put a rush kick to the finish. That day he
ambled across the ancient imaginary finish line, fist in the air like some
Olympic champion. Done.
********
After Al had finished his story, his
ordinary man down memory lane story, I asked him how long it took him to
complete the course. (Al had told me at an earlier time his course times from
the old days and I suspected that he had kept the time. I knew my man.) He
replied that in the interest of national security that tidbit shall remain top
secret. Some things don’t change. We both laughed.
Well I suppose since I wrote this
sketch that I should wish Markin a happy 50thanniversary and I do so
here. But remember brother that other 50thanniversary coming up next
summer, and that story will not be pretty, no not at all.
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