***50 Years Of Togetherness -In Honor
Of The Class of 1964 High School Sweethearts Wherever You Are -“Written In The
Stars”-Take Two
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Here is an early Valentine for those
who spied their fate mates early, early in life in the early 1960s, a true
marvel of the modern social world. A post-World War II coming of age world with
all its own set of teen distractions and mis-directions, angsts and alienations,
in the days when we did not know whether there would be a tomorrow never mind
fifty years when we faced the red scare Cold War night and came ever so close
to fifty minutes when that old Cuban Missile Crisis got everybody’s attention
even the lovebirds who only had eyes for each other and did not know where Cuba
was, or care.
Moreover survived the trials,
tribulations, traumas and traps of high school romance which in comparison made
staying together for fifty years easy. You know how he felt when those
seventy-six other guys, hungry for love guys or maybe just hormonally-charged,
were “hitting” on her and she maybe was taking the bait or so he thought in his
green-eyed world, and in his forever
world once he caught a whiff of that bath soap she used that drove him crazy
when she came within ten feet of him (or maybe it was a whiff of “stolen” perfume,
some mother’s perfume from her bureau calculated to drive him crazy. And she had
it right even then. How about reverse? How did she feel when those seventy-six
girls were “hitting” on him. Yeah, he wished, she knew he was from hunger, knew
that whiff of perfume (where did he ever get the notion that it was bath soap,
Ivory soap or something, Jesus, wake up brother) was all she needed to set the
trap, and knew, that scraggly, pitiful, ragamuffin scruff he, was not drawing
eye-power from seventy-six girls not even seven. Worse though Sally telling a
tale to her about how she saw him looking twice at a certain other she in Math
class. Ben telling him who she was seen in the school cafeteria, Jesus, the
cafeteria, talking to over lunch. And then those personal points, you know the
stuff like what to do about those grabby hands of his or how she had teased him
way too far one wind-swept Saturday night. But you know he/she/they survived the tough
part. Enough said.
By the way the details of this sketch
are totally fictional-although any honorees are welcome to give us their real
stories. The sentiment however is real, very real…
…who knows when or where it started.
Maybe it was that first fresh-eyed glance in Mr. Forrester’s dreary English
classroom looking at her until his eyes got sore, or she spying him while
waiting, endlessly waiting, for the always late bus walking down the street and
went weak-kneed, or he sitting forlornly on the seawall at the old beach as she
walked by took a second glance, or one of a hundred other possibilities but it
happened. It happened with big bang hearts or with quietly growing on each
other but it happened.
He, 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. (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.) And they laughed, laughed one
night down at that foreboding beach in his father-borrowed car once they had settled
that issue of what was, and was not, appropriate in the grabby hands/tease beyond
endurance watching, as the local lore had it in North Adamsville hard by the
bay, the “submarine races” saying they would stay together forever. Forever
being, as such things went with most time calculated in minutes, hours, days,
and weeks, 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 them, and so they, maybe a little fearful,
maybe a little worried about whether they would last or not tied the knot
(although truth to tell that knot had already been tied long before). He went
off to war, school, or work and she waited and worried, worried about how they
would provide for the coming children. And worry or not the children came and
made their time a little easier (mostly, but that is a whole story on its own).
But there were inevitable bumps in the
road, he, getting a little thicker around the waist, losing a little hair,
feeling a little antsy, looked off in the distance, gave off that glazed eye
look when she beckoned, and she, well, she went on an exercise regime, read
more books than one would think possible about keeping him attracted as they
both wondered in the night what had happened. Both separately feverishly
tossing in the night with thoughts about leaving, about what one would do
without the other, about where they would they go and how when they were young
they had loved each other so. That fever passed. Later he more interested in
Sunday afternoon football point spreads and she in shopping, shopping until she
dropped, for the newest grandchild had that recurring dream. But that too
passed, remembering back to mist of time fogged car window beach night
pledges.
So they, maybe mocked in a modern world
where everyone is supposed to change spouses, partners, lovers with the
changing seasons, spent their time together. Marked their love with the flow of
time. Made it last.
Somewhere up in Maine, somewhere along
the coast, the white-capped waves ominously splashing against other seawalls,
seawalls far removed from youthful high school beach frolics, on a cold
December night a woman stood nose almost pressed against a frosted window in a
lonely dark room looked out with a vacant expression at the swirl. Stood there thinking
about that first forever marriage gone wrong when he went chasing after a
younger woman, or maybe just the idea of another woman once he felt that he had
gone beyond what she had to offer. He could never commit and she would,
admittedly, withdraw first sex then love when she sensed that lack, and knew, knew
from her bumpy sad childhood that she needed that and so the whole thing turned
to ashes. After a while thought about that second foolish marriage to that
charming chameleon who had used her as a meal ticket. He had vowed commitment,
maybe even tried for a while but they were so different and wiser then in love’s
thickets cut him loose. She thought as well, that thought crowding out those marriage
moments, of that short recent affair that had held so much promise in the first
days, had the feel of written in the stars just like she wished for, felt like
maybe he would be her forever man but you see he was married, married all along
to some other idea and so as that first blush faded, she dismissed him out of
hand, and he turned into her never man. She sighed.
Down in some Southern California town,
one of those endless beach towns complete with surfers and woodies, a man who
had changed companions with the seasons, pensively looked out at the moonless
night, the foam-flecked ocean waves swirling against the waiting shore his sole
companion. He thinking, as he often did these days, 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. What did he know, knowing little of love
from childhood. Blushed at the thought
of that horror of a second marriage where he let his every addiction,
affliction and predilection destroy whatever good instincts he had left, the
wretched remnant of his search for a newer world. Left too in those hellish second
marriage days his best friend lying face down with two slugs in him in some
dusty back street in Sonora after a drug deal went south on them. Those two things
would always be linked in flashing forward to newer sorrows 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. 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 e
wanted to be with. Maybe he was not built for forever, maybe.
They, we, I, stand in awe, stand in awe
do you hear, of such steadfastness by those classmate sweethearts. And love,
but you knew that already.
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