***Sometimes There Really
Ain’t No Cure For The Summertime Blues-Hats Off To Mr. Eddie Cochran
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
“Hey, school is going to be out for
the summer next week Billy (or you fill in the name, the1950s billy/johnnie/jimmy/bobby
name, or betty/joann/connie/linda name if you prefer), What you gonna do?”
yelled girl magnet Frankie Larkin, Francis James Larkin, king of the North
Adamsville Junior High School corner boy night and a guy who has his card
filled for the summer. And if you are a billy/johnnie/jimmy/bobby teenage boy,
maybe just made it to teenage boy (or girl but this is strictly a guy thing and
the girls, well, the girls can speak for themselves and from what I hear they
do every Monday morning at mandatory girl talk what happened over the weekend
pre-school “lav” world-historic session) then your answer, my billy answer, is
mope. Yah, you heard it right (and you secretly knew it was coming,
sledgehammer coming, once I started talking about teen boys, or that Monday
morning girls “lav” line-up). Mope.
Mope, maybe mope plus. Reason: one
betty/joann/connie/linda, hell, let me just say it and get it over with,
connie, did not give me encouragement number one at the last dance of the last
school dance. And so mope, more mope, and maybe leave my sweaty humid room for
a drink of water once in a while, is what summer has in store for me to while
away the summer until school gets back in session come September and back to
the connie wars. Until then I will just dream trance that we, billy and connie
we, are one (and more, importantly known as one, known as one that netherworld Boys’
AND Girls’ Monday morning before school “lav” talkfest), down at the seawall of
old Adamsville Beach. Yah, you know the spot right between the toney Adamsville
Yacht Club and the broken down North Adamsville Boat Club. And where billy
mind’s eye can already see Frankie holding court with some bevy of Monday
morning talked-out junior high high order pecking order chicks (okay, okay
girls).
But let me back up and give you the
details, the gruesome details of that last dance school dance and mope. I got
kooky about this connie (alright Connie) when she sat next to me in art class
and we started, as things like that happen in junior high, spatting. Yah,
spatting back and forth about this and that, the subject matter is not
important but the meaning, the significance, the world- historic significance
(did I say that before, oh well, I like the expression) of those exchanges, for
those clueless about how 1950s boys and girls relate, is that spatting, you
know, if you say this, she says that, and then you say that and she says this,
is we are, well, interested in each other. Otherwise why go to all the bother
of being contrary. Jesus, do you guys need a diagram? Well all this this-ing
(sic) and that-ing (double sic) led to my asking her to the last chance to
dance end of school dance to be held on a Friday night. I was happy, and I thought
she was too.
I won’t kid you. I was sky high
getting ready for this dance, got a new shirt, double- showered, put on some
sticky deodorant, and some father’s bay rum concoction on my hair. And I looked
okay (and she said I looked okay). And she looked great when I went to her
house to walk her to school (come on you know as well as I do these junior high
school dances aren’t going to be held at the Ritz or someplace like that. And
that would be a waste anyway because what matters is who you are with, or not
with, not where the damn thing is held. Christ it could be in an airplane
hangar for all we cared as long as the certain hes and shes were there and the
music was loud (except that last chance dance, then you wanted it dreamy).
But enough of this, Let me get to
that last dance and why I am moping, maybe moping plus. Things were set; the
last song was The Dubs Could This Be Magic? Home run, right? Well,
usually right. But the problem with the slow-mo last dance is that you can hear
enough to actually talk. So when Connie asked me “Will you miss me this summer
when my parents take the family for a vacation until mid-August?” I answered
“No.” Wrong answer, way wrong answer. See I was still playing she says this and
I say that. Kids’ spat stuff. When the dance was over she just walked away, and
she hasn’t spoken to me since. So when Mister Eddie Cochran says in his song
about his mopes that just finished on the radio “There ain’t no cure for the
summertime blues,” he’s got it right, damn right. Excuse me; I have to go for a
drink of water.
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