***50 Years Of
Togetherness -In Honor Of The Class of 1964 High School Sweethearts Wherever You
Are -“Written In The Stars”
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
Here is an early
Valentine for those who spied their fate mates early, a true marvel of the modern
social world with all its teen distractions and mis-directions, and survived
the trials, tribulations, traumas of high school romance which in comparison made
staying together for fifty years easy. You know those seventy-six other guys hitting
on her, or the reverse shes on him (yeah, he wishes). 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 just so
far. You 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 last 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 foreboding beach once they settled that
issue of what was, and was not, appropriate watching the “submarine races,”
saying they would stay together forever. Forever being, 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 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 there were 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 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.
Out somewhere up in
Maine, somewhere along the coast, the waves ominously splashing against other
seawalls far removed from youthful high school beach frolics on a cold December
night a woman stood against a frosted window in a lonely dark room looking out
with a vacant expression at the swirl. Stood thinking about that first 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.
Thought about that second foolish marriage to that charming chameleon who had
used her as a meal ticket. Finally she thought as well of 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
and so as that first blush faded he turned into her never man. She sighed.
Down in some Southern
California town 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. Blushed at that horror
of a second marriage where he let his every addiction, affliction and predilection
destroy whatever good instincts he had left. 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 too 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. Maybe he was not built for forever, maybe.
They, we, I, stand in
awe, stand in awe do you hear, of such steadfastness. And love, but you knew
that already.
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