COMING HOME
James R. Fisher, Jr.,
Ph.D.
© March 24, 2014
On August 27, 1990, I had just completed a book that had
been germinating in me for many years. I
called it “Work Without Managers,” and it was published later that fall.
But on this date, my mind was not one of satisfaction or relief. It was a call from my sister, Pat Waddell
that my boyhood friend, Bobby Witt, had died.
He was in his fifties, a Hall of Fame high school basketball coach, and
a high school all-stater in the same sport, playing with me. We played high school football, baseball,
and ran track together. We also lived
three houses apart in the shadow of the Clinton County Courthouse.
I, also in my fifties, had retired for the second time, the
first time in my mid-thirties. Life had
always been a chore for me, which had nothing to do with success after
success. Perhaps that was because success also meant stress after stress, which for me led to distress.
I’ve always been a bit of a grind. I suppose because I’m not too confident,
always felt that I was one great big phony, putting on a front to being what I
wasn’t and pretending to feel what I didn’t.
My happiest times have always been alone, not with people, yet my many
careers have always put me in the center of a lot of people doing what people
in such centers do, which is pretend.
It got to me so badly when I was in my mid-thirties that I
turned my back on what was considered a “brilliant career” and financial
security to sit around and read books, write poetry, play tennis, watch the
ships come into port and leave, watch the people frantically rushing about,
thankful that I was no longer on that freight train.
Late in life, in my early fifties, I discovered something
that I thought only existed in books, love.
I met a creature that was so real she was surreal, and I have spent
these many years since with her. I was
married to her when my friend died, she a generation younger than I am, had
little sense of why I was so blue. At
least, that is what I thought. She said
simply, “Jim, your mind is just going home.”
That was a most kind way of saying I was thinking of my mortality. No doubt I was thinking of my beginnings
because I was moving towards my end. The
death of my friend was a stark reminder of that fact. My beautiful Betty didn’t say that because
she is far too kind, but that was the essence of her comment.
Philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer points out that when we reach
an advanced age, and that age can be in our 40s, 50s or beyond, the mind is
given to looking back over one’s lifetime, as I was doing and didn’t know
it.
I was with Bobby Witt again, he was pitching and I was
catching, I was handing the baton off to him in a relay race in track, he was
going around end with the football in a key game with Davenport, that we won, and
I was his lead blocker, we were sneaking into the professional baseball game,
going over the fence, we were hanging out at Rastrelli’s having a chocolate marshmallow peanut sundae with a cherry on top. We were at the movies seeing our fighting G.I.’s
in Iwo Jima or Bataan during the war, watching Dean Burridge, our coach at St.
Patrick’s, star in football and basketball at Clinton High, serving
Mass together for Father Harvey Finefield, or listening to Sister Cecile
read “Brass Knuckles” to the class, or letting us listen to a couple innings of the
World Series with broadcaster Red Barber.
Bobby would never go to the YMCA because “Father Finefield said that
was not a place for Catholic boys,” but I went there all the time. Bobby was equally poor as I was but he never
worked, and I always did, with a newspaper route, or stacking shelves at the
A&P Supermarket. Bobby was also
brighter than I was, but he never read books, and I was always reading. He found it funny with my head always in a
book, and told me so. But he always had
his head in some sporting magazine. He
wanted to be a Major League Baseball Player, but he had two things working
against him, living in Iowa where we had eight months of winter, and seemingly
two weeks of summer, and what baseball scout would ever think of coming to
Clinton, Iowa?
Bobby went to college on a basketball scholarship that paid
everything. I went to college working
five summers in a chemical plant, and on a merit academic scholarship that only
paid tuition. He became a coach and didn’t
leave the Midwest, not even when he was in the army. I became a chemist, which was not a good fit,
went into the navy and spent two years on active duty in the Mediterranean, and
that changed everything for me. While
most guys hit the beach and got drunk and laid, I went on tours, finding myself
something of a culture vulture. I wanted
to know everything about everything that ever happened to my native continent,
the home of my ancestors in Ireland and Norway.
In the process, I wrote copious letters finding that my da was right
– I didn’t write a very good letter – but passion doesn’t always burn with good
sense. I wanted to be a writer! But of course, without any talent, only this
strange passion.
Since I couldn’t write well, and had to work, I had to substitute
reading successful authors and their biographies as surrogate for my writing
aspirations, finding that many writers, perhaps most, were as confused about
their talent or lack of talent as I was about mine. I found most writers wanted desperately to
connect with other people so that they could in turn connect with
themselves. I never read a serious writer
who was not plagued with that malady.
All of this strange thinking was tripping through my head as
I thought about my boyhood friend who was no longer with us.
Schopenhauer claimed everything that happens in our lifetime
-- everything! – has a consistent order even when it seems it doesn’t, and that
in that order there is a plan, and that plan is as if it were composed by a
novelist.
Things that seem accidental, hurtful, shameful,
discouraging, regrettable, surprising, he said, things that seem to have little
moment are indispensable factors in the composition of our own unique
plot.
Aspects of ourselves of which we are conscious, that become
conscious to us when we think of our dreams, are part of a grand design that is
recorded in our unconscious and composed by the will within us.
A shock to our system finds us going home, as my wife Betty
suggested, which was obvious to her when I was mooning over the loss of my
friend. It was my mortality coming to
the fore. It was also the process of coming home
surfacing to take charge of my attention.
Life constantly blows us off course and into troubled waters
that are of little consequences in the scheme of things, but alas, we make them
momentous when they are only moments.
Coming home reorients us back to ourselves recapturing the
essence that has made us unique from everyone else, a uniqueness that cannot be
dissuaded by someone saying “you have no talent,” or “you don’t even write a
good letter,” or “you’ll never amount to anything,” or any number of other
discouraging things, things, unfortunately, that our minds are so ready to
accept as fact when they couldn’t be more fictive.
Three years ago last February I lost a daughter to a
hit-and-run driver as she was crossing a street in Pinellas County,
Florida. That was different than my
reaction to my boyhood friend's death. He was a friend. My daughter was part of the chemistry of my
soul.
Some writers would turn that pain into a book, but I instead
savored it then as I do now, as it is a connection that has no
interruption. Bobby was my past, and my
mind drifted to those halcyon days of that quiet time. Jeannie was my life with another face. She was never quiet, not in her mother, and
never during life, and she is not quiet in my soul now.
There was no pretend in that girl. As my granddaughter, Rachel, might say, “Jeannie
had no filter.” She said what was on her
mind without editing. There wasn’t an
expletive that she didn’t know, and couldn’t bring to the fore creatively at a
moment’s notice. She could make a sailor
blush.
Strangely, I had an unease with who I am and who I purport
to be with Bobby, but not with Jeannie.
Any parent who has lost a child knows exactly what I am
talking about. Only the real is
remembered, and it is in more than three dimensions.
There are no words to describe the hurt or the joy or the
love that reverberates in your soul. There
is no language to remind you of coming home again to nestle that child in your
arms.
With Bobby Witt there are coherent moments but
with Jeannie there is only loss. Memory
of Bobby moved me to eventually write IN THE SHADOW OF THE COURTHOUSE (2003)
about our days as children. Jeannie death
recaptured something that was missing in my memory of that childhood, that is,
my life with her moment to moment in joy and sorrow, frustration and disappointment,
but always, love. Bobby gave me eyes to see
my childhood self. Jeannie circled
deeper into my soul to reveal the child in the man, and the adult in the child
with eyes that looked down from above on us both.
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