A Story Out In The 50th Anniversary High School
Class Of 1964 Sweethearts Night
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
A while back, maybe in early 2104, I wrote a little sketch
for those in my North Adamsville (Massachusetts) High School Class of 1964 who
had met in high school (or in a couple of cases earlier, in junior high if you
could believe that in those hormonally-driven days when we could hardly think
straight never mind think forever thoughts) and remained sweethearts, through
thick and thin, for the past fifty years. Our class, or the reunion committee
of our class, had recently put up a class website and so I placed that sketch
on the Message Forum section there as a heartfelt tribute for all to see.
I tried to honor those fifteen couples with that tribute to
their steadfastness, and love, for all that time noting that my own marital
status, three marriages, a fistful of affairs, and more than a few flings had
ebbed and flowed like the tides and that even a recent affair that I really
tried, by my lights, to make work had faded out without a flicker after a short
while making me finally realize that I am not a forever man. But my romantic
troubles are not what I am concerned with today. As part of that class
sweethearts sketch at the end I placed a “challenge” to any of those couples
which read like this:
“Well I have done my part. I have written a tribute to the
Class of 1964 sweethearts that are celebrating 50 years together here. So the
ball is in your court. Now you have tell us all about how you met (your version
anyway), or anything else you would like including those bumps in the road
during your time together if you like. We have all been there so just write
away. Later Frank Jackman”
As such things go, and given that we were of a generation
that was on the edge of the technology revolution as well as the vagaries of,
ah, old age, I did not necessarily expect any response to what is essentially a
private matter. But a few weeks later Jeff Turner wrote a little something
using the points raised in my sketch as talking points. He, and his lovely
bride Kate (nee Kelly), had been one of the couples that I mentioned that met
in junior high school (North Adamsville Junior High) and so he wanted to say
that he appreciated some of my remarks, and differed on others. But the big
point that he wanted to make was that he was a “forever guy,” a forever guy
even back then although he sympathized with my “plight,” my marital ebbs and
flows. So here is what he wrote:
Frank-Thanks for the nice piece that
you wrote about some of your old fellow classmates who have stayed together
since high school. Kate appreciated it as well (and my comments here reflect a
little her own thoughts but mostly this is my slant). It seems funny to be
talking now about how long we have been together since really the time went by
very easily. I never could figure out, no disrespect to you or other classmates,
why more guys didn’t find their fate mates early for it may have saved them a
lot of heartache. I agree with you that those teen times, especially in junior
high (funny how they changed it and now call it middle school as I thought
junior high sounded more grown up like you were almost an adult) when you said
those years were something unbelievable with all the teen distractions and anxieties.
That is why when I grabbed onto Kate in
eight grade and we got along, found we liked each other I was ready to plan a
future with her (liked and grabbed each other by the way partially because both
of our home lives were so bad, her father a drunk, and mine skirt- crazy and
gone before I was ten). We did survive those awful trials (mainly our mothers
trying to break us up because we were “too young” to be serious, thinking we
should see other people before committing to one person, etc., etc.),
tribulations (me never having dough and worrying that some guy with a few bucks
or a line would sweep her away), traumas (both of high school romance, high
school Saturday nights down at the beach or up at the quarries, high school
anxieties over the prom, graduation, and just how to survive in the world) which
in comparison made us staying together for fifty years easy.
Funny about how you said a lot of guys,
seventy-six other guys I think it was, hitting on Kate because I know that was
true, maybe not seventy-six but a lot of guys were always around her in the
cafeteria so I would go cruising in and sit right down beside her, even in
junior high, and that tended to stop some guys, for a while. If I recall your
best friend in junior high, Frankie Riley, tried to hit on her with his beatnik
line of patter and his arcane knowledge of a million odd-ball facts but she was
wise to him from the beginning. First of all she was wise to his so-called
knowledge, probably knew more that he did and corrected his factual mistakes
for him. But more important and this is where Frankie made his fatal error, all
big king of the hill corner boy over you guys at Doc’s Drugstore up the Downs
or not, Kate was best friends with Frankie’s girlfriend then, Janice Murphy,
and so she duly reported his transgression to her as quickly as she could get
on the telephone and he caught hell from her. If it had been me who found out
though Frankie and I would have mixed it up, no doubt about it. So you can see
why I grabbed onto such a smart girl early and held on for dear life.
By the way Kate says that you tried to
hit on her in high school, well not hit on her maybe but you used to give some
meaningful glances in her direction in class and in the corridors from what she
said. Or from what Kathy Craven told her a couple of times when Kathy noticed
that after you passed Kate you would turn around to see if she turned around.
All is forgiven now though although you know I would have been swooping down on
you if you did more that some foolish glances. Frank, what I can’t figure out
is how you thought some sideways glances were going to get you anywhere with
any girl then. You know you had to actually talk to them. That’s what I did
with Kate after I stopped getting moony-eyed over her and realized that she was
taking her peeks at me in class too. I don’t know if this information would
help you now but I thought I would mention it just in case.
I don’t know exactly what attracted me
to Kate at first, those times when she disturbed my sleep before I talked to
her. Or what attracted other guys to her, guys like you if Kate is right about
that glance stuff. It wasn’t because she was beautiful although she was (and
is) but she had (and has) such a pleasing personality, winsome smile and was
(and is) smart as a whip that I think guys figured if they rode her star then
she would do their homework for them or something. And in the course of that
some spark would jump out, I really don’t know.
Funny, going the other way, Kate told
me once in high school when I asked her if she thought a girl in our class was
looking at me, you know, with the look, never thought that other girls would be
bothering me. Although one time later
Kate said if they had they might have seen a very different personality that
what they were used to in the class “Miss Personality” but mainly she would say
when I mentioned some girl and I said a kind word about her and that maybe she
was “hitting” on me (although we didn’t use that word then but something else
that I can’t remember but the grandkids use it all the time and it sounds
right) she would say “yeah, you wish.”
The worst thing though Kate said when
we talked one night last week, after reading your piece on the website about
class sweethearts, about how we met and
the stuff we went through was, you know, Sally Smith telling a tale to her
about how she saw me looking twice at a certain girl in Math class. Sally was
always doing that although she was going steady with Tim Conroy, the football
player and expressed no interest, none as far as I know, in me. That night I am
talking about I made her laugh when I remembered Ben one time telling me who Kate
was seen in the school cafeteria, Jesus, the cafeteria, talking to over lunch. That
is when I would do my thing and get there and sit right beside her doing my
protective bit. We both got a kick out of that personal stuff you mentioned,
you know the stuff like what to do about those grabby hands of my part, Kate
had my number on that although more than once we almost split when I didn’t
want to take “no” for an answer. Especially when she was teasing me too far
just too far in the days when her hormones were jumping out of her skin.
Jesus what we didn’t know about sex
then, how to do stuff without getting into trouble, how and when not to do
stuff, you know. We were both brought up to be Catholics and nobody, nobody
even came close to giving us any information about what was going on. Kids
today know by about ten what we didn’t know until we were married. I don’t know
about you, although I remember seeing you and Frankie sneaking into the side
chapel for Sunday Mass since that was where I was sitting too so I didn’t have
to sit with my mother and two sisters in the main section, but I learned
everything I knew about sex out in the streets from guys who said they knew
stuff. I am glad I didn’t listen to half of their spiel because it was flat-out
wrong although one thing that Kate and I used to do down at Adamsville Beach
proved to be exactly right. Like you said we survived the tough parts of high
school.
To answer your question even though you
really did not put it as a question who knows when or where it started for
others. I know for me it was that first fresh-eyed glance in Mr. Forrester’s
dreary English classroom looking at Kate until my eyes got sore. Kate said for
her it was spying me while waiting, endlessly waiting, for the always late bus when
I would be walking down the street after track practice (you remember Mr. Lewis
the gym teacher who used to be the junior high track coach I think) and she went
weak-kneed. (I swear that is what Kate said back then after we were “going
steady” and she said that was what she said when we talked it over last week.
For us it happened with big bang hearts, we were all over each other from the
beginning.
Did you used to hang around in the boys
“lav” on the second floor back at North Adamsville Junior High? Probably not if
you were one of Frankie Riley’s corner boys because you guys, Frankie anyway,
hung around the “lav” next to the cafeteria. The reason I ask is that before
Kate I used to be, well, all over all the girls whether they liked me or not.
And I would brag about it in boys’ lav. Lying like a crazy man, lying worse
than Frankie Riley, that this girl or that did everything known to mankind with
me. But with Kate I was like you said in your piece “formerly full of boasts
and bravados in that mandatory Monday morning before school boys’ “lav”
talkfest about who did or did not do what with whom over the weekend fell
silent, would not speak her name in such bluster.” Kate said you hit her right
on the nose too except I know you had never been in the girls’ “ lav” when you
said “She, she in that mandatory Monday morning before school girls’ “lav”
talkfest about who did or did not do what with whom just smiled, a private
smile, she had her man.” We laughed,
laughed about that one night down at the beach once we settled (kind of
settled) that issue of what was, and was not, appropriate when we were watching
the “submarine races.” That was the
first time we said we would stay together forever. Forever being, I think as
such things went, maybe the next year, or until the next best thing came
along
As it turned out the next best thing
was sitting right next to each of us and so we, maybe a little fearful, maybe a
little worried about whether we would last or not tied the knot right after
high school. I went off to the Vietnam War not long after and then to school on
the GI Bill and then got that job in the research department of Gillette. All
along Kate though would wait and worry, worry about how we would provide for
the coming children. They came, the three of them, Janice, Kenny, and Claudia.
They made our time a little easier (mostly).
Jesus you should have been a marriage
counsellor or something, what the heck with three marriages you would be a
natural, since you hit the point about the “bumps in the road, he, getting a
little thicker around the waist, looked off in the distance and she, well, she
went on an exercise regime as they both wondered in the night what had
happened.” Both of us, once the kids were older, almost, almost I said, had affairs
with people who were our friends, in my case a close friend and colleague at
work, and let me leave it at that, okay. We did not, believe me we did not talk
about that last week, but I know I then I was feverishly tossing in the night
with thoughts about leaving, thinking about after twenty-five years what would do
I without her (and maybe her me), about where would I go and how when we were
young we had loved each other so. Those fevers passed, although we lost good
friends and it was hard sometimes at work when I would see the gal looking kind
of forlorn when I came near her office. Funny later after the kids left the
house and had kids of their own and we became “empty nesters” I took up golf and
Kate shopping, shopping until she dropped which she used to hate, for the
newest grandchild and we both would have those night sweat dreams we had when
we were thinking about having our respective affairs. But those moments too
passed, remembering back to our old time pledges.
I, we, Catholic forever married or not,
could never figure out why in the modern world where everyone is supposed to
change spouses, partners, lovers with the changing seasons, we had to almost
defend ourselves because we decided to spend our time on earth together. Now we
know we marked our love with the flow of time.
I couldn’t understand in your piece who
that woman was up in Maine that you mentioned, other than that she was a
classmate of ours, do you know her, was she one of your affairs or flings it
seems like you knew a lot about her, Couldn’t understand why on a cold December
night she stood against a frosted window in a lonely dark room looking out with
a vacant expression at the swirl of the ocean before her. Couldn’t figure out
her being there alone while she stood thinking about that first marriage gone
wrong when that first husband went chasing after a younger woman. Also about that
second foolish marriage to some charming chameleon who had used her as a meal
ticket. And couldn’t understand why she thought about that short recent affair
that had held so much promise in the first days, felt like maybe he would be
her forever man but you see he was married, married all along to some other
idea. I (and Kate too) did understand why she sighed though.
Couldn’t understand either that
classmate, was that you disguising yourself as somebody out West when I know
you live near Boston, down in some Southern California town changing companions
with the seasons? From the sound of it and what you said in your piece it sure
sounded like your situation. There he was thinking about how he had raised holy
hell in his first marriage, had married out of fear, fear of being alone when
the hammer of his life went down. How he blushed at that horror of a second
marriage where he let his every addiction, affliction and predilection destroy
whatever good instincts he had left. Or
when he wondered if that short splendid recent affair that he had tried to make
work, make work out of a different fear, a fear of being left alone in his old
age when the hammer went down might not have worked out because he could not
commit, could not risk the return of those addictions. And about how he smirked
as he thought about that, thought about how his whole life revolved around two
women, the one that he was with at the moment and that one in his head, and in
his dreams just beyond his grasp who he wanted to be with. Sounds like he was
not built for forever stuff kind of like you.
We, Kate and me, think people should stand
in awe, definitely stand in awe of our steadfastness like you said. And our love. So thanks for agreeing with what we made of
our lives and sorry, very sorry, Frank to hear that you didn’t fare so
well. Your old classmates, Jeff and Kate
Turner
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