***You
Can’t Go Home Again, Can You?
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman, Hullsville Class Of 1964
No he, Peter Paul Markin, would not be going after all, not
going to the scheduled 50th Anniversary North Adamsville Class of
1964 reunion to be held at the swanky Adams Hotel Deluxe over Thanksgiving
weekend. Apparently that holiday weekend
a very usual occasion for such events across the country, a time when old-time
rooted families might still gather together in the old hometowns or just to
take advantage of the generally taken long weekend. He announced the news to
me, to the candid world as he called it (or me) in his usual odd-ball
historical literary snarl, something that I have grown used to, grown to deeply
discount, to block out okay, so maybe I did not get the full import of his
screed. I had met Markin, let’s eliminate the “Peter Paul” since nobody, except
his mother, and I think he said his first wife, first of three, Anne, when she
wanted to taunt him to do something, some task he did not want to do, and she
mercilessly went after him with that three-name moniker attesting to why wife
number one did last the course, down at the Surf Ballroom in my hometown of Hullsville
the summer after we graduated from our respective high schools. We met while
pursuing the same young woman (then called a girl but we have learned a thing
or two since then) on the dance floor while the great local cover band , The
Rockin’ Ramrods, played the Kingmen’s Louie, Louie and we practically sparred
to get her to dance with us. For the curious since we have very different
versions of the way things went after the dance she subsequently dumped us both
in turn (me first) but our friendship remained and hence I can say with a straight
face that I do not have to listen to all of Markin’s screeds to get whatever historical
or literary point he is trying to drive home. The only different from the days
when we first met, and officially could not do so, is that when he has something
on his chest that just will not stay submerged we talk it over at some local
watering hole and I can get a couple of shots under my belt as he rants on.
That spot these days, the days since we have both returned
to the Boston area and have re-ignited our old-time friendship that as we lived
on different coasts faced periods of inactivity, is Jimmy’s Bar & Grille
over in Centerville a few miles south of the respective towns where we grew up,
and about thirty miles from downtown Boston if anybody is asking. We had been
talking about the old days, the old high school days when we had met, and that
is where we started cutting up old touches about how we met down at a rock and
roll dance at the Surf Ballroom in my hometown of Hullsville mentioned above. But
our friendship, close or faraway as times changed, lingered on. Now in the
great scheme of things, the great mandala of life out in the real world such a
decision as Markin made naturally would take a back seat to serious matters
like the fight against war and pestilence, the struggle to keep body and soul
together that preoccupies most minds most of the time, and being mindfully thoughtful
about the three great tragedies of human existence-hunger, sex, and death. (Jesus,
I now remember too that I did, once again, get mad at him when he started that Peter Paul Markin thing that only his mother
and, I think, that one prissy ex-wife called him, like he was some Mayflower swell rather than to the
“projects” born)
Notwithstanding those heavy precedent- takers, no,
emphatically no, Markin would not be going back to his old hometown that
weekend to see the old gang. See the old gang collectively for probably the
last effective time that clan would be able to gather on a significant occasion
what with death, disability, forgetfulness and just plain fright at the idea of
a next time taking their toll. That the next significant milestone, the 75th,
assuming that the mania for oddball celebration years like 30th , 45th
, and 60th , or worst 38th ,48th or 68th
has no taken root they would all be at or approaching ninety-three. A very
scary thought, the thought of holding a reunion at some assisted living site or
nursing home. No thank you then either he can safely be quoted as saying that
night as well.
Strangely, and I quizzed him on the subject that night,
several years before, I can remember Markin telling me, that under the influence of some old town family
members passing he had returned to North Adamsville after many years absence.
As a result of roaming around the old neighborhoods, around the old memory
sites, or places that triggered memories he had exhibited a spurt of old town patriotism,
some old bleeding of school colors red and black, some old time nostalgia for
sacred youth places and quirky roots memories. More, a fervent desire to put
together some occasion, not necessarily a tradition-filled full-blown official
reunion like has been done since Horace Mann’s time, maybe before, but a
collective gathering of those in the area to mark the passing of time, mark
some memory mist youthful occasions and, frankly to gather some information,
insights, observations on what they had been through back in the day, back in
those hectic angst and alienation-filled school days.
Markin had told me at that time, and we had had several good
laughs about his answers, that he had actually answered (patiently answered,
believe me, unusual for him when it is not his own project), extensively
answered a series of questions posed through an Internet classmates site by the
chairwoman of the Class of 1964 45th Reunion Committee (see what I
mean by odd-ball year celebrations) to her fellow classmates about a whole
range of questions. And no, he would not be going, did not go to, had had no
intention of going to that odd-ball year reunion unlike the 50th
that he was really aiming at with his answers. You know the usual suspect
questions about work history, family history, any distinctions creditable to
old North, and the role played by the old school in keeping you off the
streets, off welfare and out of prison (sorry). He waved those questions off
out of hand in maybe a sentence, no more. After all three divorces, a checkered
work history, and half a dysfunctional family not speaking to you for many
years, and maybe wishing you were in jail can be summarily written off with few
words.
What he did respond to were more thoughtful questions about
dreams and ambitions (Jesus, right up in Markin’s wheelhouse), disappointments,
thoughts on mortality, and most importantly, questions directly related to the
old days like what did you think of certain school clubs, sport teams, school
dances (particularly the annual Fall Frolics and the Spring Follies), and
several other school- specific events that I have forgotten about and I did not
think important before I decided to write this screed, He went wild, went
crazy, “stopped the presses,” he said. He wrote sketch after sketch, some long,
some short, about the school dances, his wall-flower status before he got his
courage up, his girl shy courage, at some last dance trigger moment. About his
lackluster running career, and the stellar performances of his running mate,
Bill Brady, and their mutual jock-inspired devotion to the football team
neither could ever come close to making. About his befuddlement over the
segregated, boy-girl segregated, bowling teams, the vagaries of the mythical
Tri-Hi-Yi, the inanity of white socks and white shorts for gym garb, the sex
question, circa 1960 and the role that Adamsville Beach played in resolving
that question. Endlessly as well about corner boy life in about twelve
varieties, the place of rock and roll in the teenage universe then. Fluff but
answered.
Here is the beauty of his answers though, the beauty of
Markin really. He answered, or he told me he answered everything put before him
by that relentless chairwoman, even making stuff up if he did not remember, or
could have cared less about something back then, like Glee Club or the Chess
Club. Here was the best one, and I can attest to this one because I was
actually present with him that night down at the Surf Ballroom at one of those
frequent rock and roll dances we both attended. He felt compelled to write
about the senior year Thanksgiving Football Rally in 1963 held the night before
the game against the hated cross-town rival blue and white Adamsville High
since he really did bleed Red Raider black and red around the football team. He
wrote this long screed that several people thought was an excellent description
of the event, said that it had brought back some nice memories especially from
someone who remembered so many details. Of course as you now will know this sketch
was made out of whole cloth since he was not within twenty miles of the event, although
he defended himself by saying that he had gone to the 1962 Thanksgiving rally
and said if you have if gone to one rally you have gone to them all. That’s
Markin
Some answers though were actually thoughtful, another aspect
of Markin as well, his beauty if you will. He movingly, if briefly, wrote about
the John F. Kennedy assassination that
cast a dark shadow over that senior year, over the fresh breeze brought down
that Camelot represented in his mind and that I had also felt bereaved by down
in my hometown. About missing out on the Great Books Club because they were,
uh, nerds, about the odd-ball class photographs, before and after, about some
teachers, English teachers I think, that he sent delayed kudos too, about his
love of the sea (me too). About like I said before, dreams and ambitions. The
best one, at least the one I remember him showing me at the time was simply
entitled, A Walk Down Dream Street,
which dealt with Billy Brady and his habit, penniless, no cars, no girls,
sitting on the granite steps of the high school on warm, sultry nights talking
about their dreams for the future, their jail-break from the unhappy homes they
came from, about how they were going to do this and that to make their marks in
the world. Small dream stuff as he recalled, but dreams, nicely written, with
the virtue (if it can be called that) that he, they, actually did do that
talking as Billy confirmed when I met him for the first time a few years
ago.
So you can see that Markin was clearly at peace with himself
and ready to go to that reunion based on that box full of memories. Moreover,
Markin had put together his own survey at that time looking for more in-depth
information although that project kind of died on the vine due to apathy, poor
response from classmates, and his own need to push on to a more pressing
project at the time. Last year in another spurt of old town devotion he pulled
that survey together with much better results since he really worked hard to
contact, through the beauty of the Internet, as many classmates as possible
working off of the 1964 Magnet
yearbook.
Then one night in December, as we sat down at Jimmy’s, the local watering hole I mentioned
that we frequent of late, he laid out to me the reasons why he was not going,
could not possibly go, what did he say, oh yeah, he empathically could not go.
Later I got to thinking about his long trail of reasons and came to agree with
his conclusions. You know things having been alienated from his family, from the
old town for so long he would not know anybody and would feel uncomfortably shy
in that situation, especially since his long-time companion, Sarah, had refused
his request to go to the reunion with him. Reasons along that line.
Here is the kicker though. One that I would not have thought
of now but knowing Markin back in the day would have had no trouble believing
then. As part of the build-up to the reunion the reunion committee had put
together a class website on the Internet. One way or another Markin got cyber-friendly
with a woman classmate whom he did not know in high school but admitted (to me
and her) that he had had a going-nowhere “crush” on back then. One thing led to
another as they compared notes about their lives, interests and desires. That “one
thing led to another” wound up with a face-to-face date, then several others, then
under the satin sheets (yeah, this is definitely old days Markin, no question).
But back up a minute-remember Sarah the longtime companion (and a woman who I
would have grabbed in a minute if she had ever left Markin but she never did).
That, in the end, that not wanting to be the “other woman” left that woman classmate
no choice but to call off the short affair before it got too serious, and too complicated.
Of course, since Markin wanted to burn both ends of the candle the break-up was
horrendous (another Markin trademark, unfortunately) and so there was nothing
but ill-feelings between the pair as a result. An emotion that I agreed would
not be dissipated by reunion time as Markin also feared and so he made his
unworthy decision that put all the other reasons in the shade.
When I thought about Markin’s reasons, especially that
bombshell last one later (although I would not have cried had he left Sarah because
I would have been there to pick up the pieces so some things between us haven’t
changed-damn), I found that my recollections of that night’s conversation,
maybe not quite the way he put the matter but close, followed under our agreed
upon common sign that, unfortunately, you cannot go home again.
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