Yesterday I learned via
a Facebook post by his wife that a friend of 30 years has Altzheimer’s. We attend
the same church, and Gary was a school board member in our small town when I
was the high school principal. From time to time, he and I would lock horns
over school matters, as opinionated men tend to do. But we got past those disagreements
out of respect for each other.
What made things
fun was that Gary and I look alike, so much alike, in fact, that sometimes
we’d each be spoken to by someone who thought we were the other. We both
enjoyed those mix-ups, because invariably that confused person would talk about
school, bringing both of us a few “Ah Hah!” moments.
Dementia is one of
the cruelest diseases I can imagine, and it is heart-breaking to learn that
someone is afflicted. The best I can do is “pass the peace” as we do each
Sunday at the beginning of our church service. So, “Peace and Grace be with
you, Gary.”
Speaking of high
school, my 50th high school reunion is this summer. I don’t know if
I’ll go, but just a few minutes ago, I saw on Facebook a color photo snagged
from our senior yearbook. The photo was taken at an after-football game dance
at the Round-up Club, a teen spot in our East Texas town.
I smile now at the image
because I’ve always pretty much been a wallflower in social scenes. I’m a
sideline guy. Yet, there I am in the middle of this mob, the short guy sideways
to the camera with the light-blue jeans and shirt, and a navy-blue dickie. Yes,
a dickie. I was indeed Howard Wolowitz in the flesh in 1967, even if my hair cut was better.
That embarrassment
aside, in the picture I’m talking to a girl named Polly who reads this blog,
but whom I haven’t seen in several decades.
Two of my good
friends from the day are also near me in the image. Garland is the big blond guy
dancing with his back to the camera, wearing a blue and grey sweater. Gar died of
heart problems two years ago after a career as a Navy officer.
Next to me, also
facing away from the camera, is a tall, skinny drink of water named Wesley.
He’s wearing a red plaid shirt, and was my best friend since we were twelve.
Wes died a suicide victim in 1987, was an Army veteran, and a deeply troubled, but gentle soul.
So, the image is also sad to me, since I still mourn for both those guys, and for other friends from my
younger years like Kenny, Greg, and Melanie, who’ve gone on to “their great
waking-up day” ahead of me.
I’m learning that in
spite of the joy of grandchildren and a long happy marriage to my beloved Nita, life is
fragile, and sometimes gets a little melancholy, the older we get.
Moving on: I’m determined
to link this post to my novel writing experiences of the past week or two, so
here goes. If you look at the faces and arms in that 1967 high school photo,
you should notice how very white everyone is. 1966-67 was still during the era
of segregated schools in Longview, Texas. I led a very white teen-age life,
rarely ever encountering African-Americans, Hispanics, or Asians. Not a point
I’m proud of.
However, in my new
novel that is set in central and south Texas in 1855, the cast of characters is
a delightfully varied. Texas was a huge mixing pot of cultures in the 1850’s,
as three major ethnic groups and multiple sub-groups violently wrestled over
control of the vast landscape. Cheap land that was more or less empty did draw
attention.
Milo Macleod, Jesse
Gunn, and James Callahan are the main characters, all inspired by real men who
were white Texans, having immigrated from Alabama and Georgia. But, the three
are constantly encountering, in no particular order: Native American Indians,
African-Texans, Mexican-Texans, German-Texans, Irish-Texans, and a visiting New
Yorker who knows he’s in a “different country entirely.”
I’ve pledged to keep
my blog posts non-political. I want this space to be my voice as a writer of
historical fiction--and a grandpa. There are ample folks fussing about politics
without me adding to the cacophony. Nonetheless, sometimes, old history
stretches its long arm into today’s world.
I’ve not been able to
escape that my book plot of 1855 parallels today’s political issue of building
a bigger, longer wall in South Texas between us and “them”--our neighbors in Mexico. In 2017, it seems
the wall will be a 30-foot-tall concrete edifice, challenging China’s great
wall in scale.
Back in 1855, the South
Texas “wall” was comprised of mobile companies of heavily-armed, mounted white men. Their job was to seek out Mexican bandits and hostile Native American
terrorists to “punish” them for their unwelcomed incursions. (Punish meant killing as many as
possible.)
My new book is a fictionalized
account of Captain James Callahan’s mounted volunteer company, one of the more
infamous ranging company adventures. Captain Callahan did not buy into the idea
of Texas being a cordial neighbor to Mexico. He would have liked today’s great
wall plan.
To be sure, in the
1800’s, the savagery of the Apaches and Comanche’s deserved that terrorist tag.
Yes, they were fighting to defend their own homeland from the ever-increasing
waves of a foreign race of immigrants. Yet, savagery is savagery, regardless of the
reason for it.
We still use companies of roving armed men--and women—in the US Border Patrol and Texas
State Troopers, but today’s “mounted ranging companies,” apparently are not
enough. So, this year we’ll start building a bigger, better border wall just on
our side of the international border with Mexico, to protect the same ground
from new bandits perceived as a threat to our
homeland. Texas is now our homeland, because after all, back in the 1800's we took Texas from
the Mexicans and the Native Americans by force of arms, fair and square.
All of which makes me sigh. Sometimes, even after
162 years, we look up and see things haven’t changed all that much, and realize
that finding the path to peace and grace, and neighborliness, is oh so slow.
Always an interesting read, even if I'm not sure of the concept of "fair and square." I love hearing (and seeing) bit of what makes up Phil McBride. Thank you again for the insight and provocation.
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