Story of the Day
"A
Childhood Passion Strikes A Cord"
I waited until my mother had driven away. Then, after opening the front
door, peeking down the road and seeing her white Ford Falcon disappear, I lined
up my eight-iron shot. Standing smack in the middle of the living room,
with a plastic golf ball sitting on the carpet, I took dead aim through the
small opening that skirted the chandelier and led through the back door to my
target, a square of screen at the back of the porch.
At 13, I had been
hitting balls inside for well over a year. Eight-iron shots were my
favorite - even plastic practice balls zipped off the clubface at an ideal
trajectory. I loved the unique contour of that particular club, its
braveness as it stood distinguished from the rest of the set. It had none
of the angular assertiveness of the seven-iron (which reminded me of a proud
slice of pie), or even the bulbous, bloated roundness of the wedges. No,
the eight-iron, viewed at address, appeared to be exactly what it was: a
jewel-like machine of measurement.
Over the past year,
a small worn spot had begun to appear on the carpet, and while the blemish
didn't please my mom, perhaps some thought that one day I would make millions on
tour and buy her a dream house had made her overlook it.
My next swing,
however, would prove a swipe no one could ignore. The backswing seemed
ordinary enough, a decent little turn. And the transition was good too.
Other kids had dogs; my swing was my faithful servant. The club dropped
into the slot just as it was supposed to, and with a well-timed release I
squared the blade forged out of steel.
Next to my living
room practice tee sat the family piano. Now, a plastic practice golf ball
yields a soft, light sensation when struck reminiscent of patting a balloon.
On that fateful swing, I felt that little whiff, all right, which was followed
by a most unexpected THUD. I had caught the side of the piano solidly with
my eight-iron, which had gone on to bury itself deep within the instrument's
chamber, leaving only the silver shaft exposed. With my grip horrifically
frozen in place, the image must have resembled a tableau in a French farce.
I didn't like to
think of myself as a delinquent child. I was a good student, a good
athlete. I ate my vegetables, didn't smoke and felt compassion for kids
less fortunate than myself. But knowing that I had done something wrong,
the criminal instinct took over.
Off I went on my
bicycle to the candy store, then the art supply shop across the street. I
saw my mom's car parked in the supermarket lot, and recalled her saying she was
going to stop by her friend Phylis's house after shopping. So I figured I
had an hour and a half to carry out my plan.
Back home there
wasn't time to lose. I chewed a wad of gum and stuck it in the vertical
"divot" slashed in the piano. Then, with the ecstatic freedom of
Van Gogh, I painted the pink gum brown, hoping to match the hue of the
instrument.
The end of this
unfortunate escapade came swiftly. Mom walked in, groceries in hand,
spotted the oozing gum dripping cheap watercolor paint on the side of the family
treasure and threw a fit. My dad, who on the golf course crooned over
every great golf shot I hit like a tenor warbling "Sonny Boy" with a
pint of Guinness in his hand, suddenly rejected the idea that golf encompassed
spiritual values. My backside made the abrasion on the piano seem like the
surface of a mountain lake at dawn. The scar in the piano never healed,
but mine did, and I grew up to be a golfer. I even played to scratch for
many years while teaching school in Memphis.
My passion for
golf, though, goes beyond the mere enjoyment of the game. It penetrates to
the root of the word passion itself, with its base in the idea of suffering.
From the recognition of the pain of others, we develop compassion. Every
time I play golf, I see my own frustration mirrored in the exasperation of my
partners, and I remember what I learned when I was a kid swinging in the living
room - that the world is not a stage by a golf course.