A Wonderful Life

With today being the 72nd anniversary of the end of World War 2, I think it’s appropriate I’m reading reading the book Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe by Robert Matzen. Dan Fordice suggested the book to me and I immediately picked up a copy. I’m thankful I did.

Jimmy Stewart has always been my favorite actor (I like Tom Hanks for many of the same reasons). He played the “Everyman” in his movies and he played it well. But there was always a flash of anger in him after World War 2. Watch some of his westerns. See pain he feels when he’s at the bar in It’s a Wonderful Life and realizes he is about to lose it all. He came back from the war with an edge.

Now I understand why.

Stewart had already won a Best Actor Academy Award by the time he was drafted before the war started. He could have slid into a Hollywood film-making unit and avoided combat. But Stewart was a pilot and like his father and grandfathers before him, he chose to serve. Clark Gable told him that his career would be over. Jimmy Stewart did not care.

He was a commander of B-24 bombers at a time when bombers were being knocked out of the skies like flies. He saw Hell up close, was intimate with death and experienced carnage that most of us will never understand. But he repeatedly strapped on his parachute, climbed into his bomber and performed admirably each mission. He, like thousands of Americans like him, sacrificed and came home changed.

Jimmy Stewart did his job, didn’t brag about it and even his children never realized the extent of his service. When World War 2 started, he left Hollywood behind. We’re fortunate that he survived and returned to the big screen.

Like I said, I’ve always been a fan of Jimmy Stewart. But after reading about his time in the service, I’m an even bigger one now.

He truly did live a wonderful life. And we’re better off for it.

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Outrunning the Alligator

The darkness and the humidity worked in tandem on my soul this morning. My breathing was labored and my mind troubled — it took all I had to keep running. At a half mile, I veered onto the abandoned golf course (now a green space) and headed toward the little pond. I fired up my light on my phone and it struggled to burn through the ink-like darkness. I didn’t want to trip over the alligator that has taken up residence in the pond. The alligator is a good metaphor for all that has been happening in the world. The news these days could eat you alive if you let it.

I thought about my friend Nathan. He and his wife will be mourning the loss of their grandson Jack a year ago Sunday. I thought about another friend who is struggling with the loss of his son. I can’t imagine their pain. My sisters and I have had to sort out our feelings and emotions about the loss of our parents and all the pain that went along with their illnesses. But we had them for a long time in our lives. Losing a child or grandchild is so incredibly unfair.

I thought about my anxiety I always feel while waiting for my biopsy results. I’ve done this so many times over the past 17 years that I can usually control my fear. But this morning it weighed a little deeper on my soul than usual. Sweat poured into where my moles were removed. The sting reminded me that I still have to wait for that phone call.

And I thought about the news and then my kids. On most days I want to leave a better world for them than the one I was left. But these days, you wonder if we’ll have a world at all.

All pretty dark stuff for 5 a.m. in the morning.

But then I began to focus on my labored breathing. I felt the pain in my legs. I noticed a slight hint of a sunrise off toward the reservoir. It was like a natural version of the Serenity Prayer. I can only control what I can control. That’s where I need to put my energy — not worrying.

I began to live in the moment.

I can be a better friend. I can be ready to deal with whatever the biopsy results are and not worry about them now. I can be a better father and husband.

Worry steals all that. Worry is a thief that is like the alligator in the pond. When you trip over it, you’ll most likely get bitten — or you’ll use all your energy up trying to get away from it.

So I chose another route and felt joy at the finish line.

My soul was alligator-free.

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Pip, the master of thunder

There’s a big bucket at Geyser Falls that repeatedly fills up and then dumps hundreds of gallons of water on your head. Mother Nature just did that at our house. We got .71 of an inch of rain in just a few minutes.

Right as the rain started, lightning struck nearby. And right behind it was a massive clap of thunder. The house shook and the dishes rattled. And Miss Pip was not pleased. She began barking loudly (and she is quite loud even on a normal day). It wasn’t that she was scared. She was just pissed off.

Banjo used to not really care much about storms. Then Katrina hit. He really wasn’t the same after that day (who was?). He’d shiver, freak out and make a weird little bark. We finally figured out what was bothering him so badly. We’d open the door and he’d pace in front of the boys’ rooms. He was the alpha dog and he was worried about his pack.

Pip’s way of dealing with storms is more confrontational. She will attack the evil thunder and scare it off by being louder than it. She’ll get lots of practice this week. Which is a good thing: A good guard dog much always stay at the top of her game.

The thunder will soon realize who is the boss.

P.S. The sun is now out. Welcome to Mississippi — if you don’t like the weather, just wait five minutes.

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The Back-to-School Photo

Every year we line the boys up in front of the back door and take a picture that would make most photographers cringe. It isn’t art, but to us it’s a masterpiece.

It’s the “First Day of School” photo.

The cast? Our three boys. And every year we watch as they change, grow taller and get more and more grown up. This year will be the last year we have the three of them in the shot — our oldest will be a senior. It’s a feeling Amy and I share with so many of my friends on Facebook. We’re watching our kids prepare to leave the nest. Which of course raises the question, “Where did the time go?”

While I don’t know where it went, I do know it went quickly. I remember seeing my oldest’s little face in my car’s rearview mirror as I took him to preschool. I remember him standing next to me as I signed his elementary school’s mural I designed. I remember seeing him play his first band concert. I remember…

I will soon remember his senior year in high school.

His school has a countdown to graduation on their electronic sign at their entrance. Each day I’ll watch the days tick away until it ticks down until zero. And each day, I’ll desperately hang onto every second.

I am so proud of him and the man he is becoming. I am proud of his dreams and how he is working hard to achieve them. I was once just like him. I couldn’t wait to get away. I’ll soon know how my dad felt when I did.

Wednesday we’ll take that picture. It may turn out a bit blurry — but then again, that may just be my eyes.

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Friday Night Light’s power source

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, I played high school football. It was an education in itself and has given me lots of skills — like being able to tell when it is going to rain. But it also taught me the value of teamwork, gave me the gift of resilience and showed me that even when you are down, you don’t quit until the clock says 0:00. Tonight I’ll be the speaker at Madison Central High School’s Playbook and Pearls event. I have about 15 minutes or so to talk — I need to make every second count.

Like my old high school coach (Coach John Paty) always used to tell us, “I need to get my mind right.”

So what will I say? Not sure yet. But I do know I’ll remind the parents how damn important they are to the success of their kids. Sure, I’ll be preaching to the choir. But the choir needs to know how important they are to the congregation’s spiritual well being!

For every football player, cheerleader, dance-team member, manager, band member and any other student out on the field on a Friday night, there is someone who loved them enough to get them there. Sit in the stands and you can feel the pride wash over you like a wave. That pride is the fuel that takes a kid to practice everyday, carts a student to the doctor when a bone needs to be x-rayed, propels a hand when writing a check or inspires a shift in the concession stand.

I wrote yesterday that I now understand why my dad loved watching me play football so much. It wasn’t just his love of the game. It was his love of me. I watch my kids passionately perform and my heart bursts out of my chest (and I don’t breath for 15-20 minutes, either!)

Soon, the lights will blaze brightly on Friday night. I hope parents remember how important they are in making that happen.

Maybe I’ll say this. I dunno. Whatever, I look forward to evening. And I won’t quit until the clock says 0:00.

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Like dreams, airplanes require a lot of work to take flight

Some of my earliest memories were going to the old ATL airport and waiting for dad to fly in from a business trip. My mother would take me up to the observation area and I’d watch the parade of planes take off and land. I remember the first time the “new” ATL airport opened. We rode the underground trains to go to and from our flights — it was like Disney World without the Mouse. Recently I flew through Hartsfield-Jackson and remembered those trips as I was running like a bat out of C-Concourse so I could make my flight. Atlanta is no longer where I live and the airport is no longer my final destination. Home is another flight away.

As I waited for the tiny plane to Jackson to board, I stood at the end of the concourse watching the world’s busiest airport in action (there wasn’t a ground stop because of thunderstorms — I was grateful). Planes clawed up into the air like overweight pelicans while others glided gently back to earth like hungry gulls. The concourse looked like someone had kicked over a human ant nest. Soldiers traveled to far off destinations. Parents drug their protesting kids along. People quickly drug their suitcases behind while beeping carts parted the mass of humanity like Moses. Yes, it was chaotic — but there was a visual poetry behind it all. Everything worked because of its purpose. It wasn’t confusion for confusion sake.

I looked out the window at the control tower. Its domain is the five runways before it. Like a conductor at frenetic symphony, they kept things in order. If they didn’t — well, there’d be twisted wreckage watered by tears.

As I was sitting there eating my grossly over-priced airport burrito, I thought about what a great metaphor the ATL airport is for life. It’s what makes your destination and plans possible. It’s chaos, but it works because of purpose. There is a healthy dose of faith and action. Planning behind the scenes makes everything work. Well, planning plus execution. I’m sitting here this morning, thinking about where I want to go in the next few years. Like the big screens on the wall, I’m thinking about my arrivals and my departures.

Like airplanes, dreams require a lot of work to take flight.

They say you have to go through Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport to get to heaven or hell. There’s probably more truth to that old joke than we all know.

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A Marriage Is Like A Book

A marriage is like a book. Some end happily. Others end only a few pages in. Its contents are written by two people who change throughout the story. Sometimes they end up on the same page — other times, well, that’s when stuff gets divided and tears flow. People from the outside try to tell the story for the writers, but honestly, they are the only two people who can tell it. The setting sometimes changes over time. The plot is linear and ever-changing. It’s illustrated with joy, tears, laugher and occasional anger.

Amy and I are now 24 chapters into our book. There have been great moments and not-so-great moments. We’ve tested “for better or worse,” several times. I know there have been days when she has been sick of me. And there have been days when I’ve been smart enough to keep my mouth shut (and other days when my mouth has been my worst enemy.) We started as the two main characters. Now we are the supporting cast to three new characters. They are currently the stars of our story.

I’ll never review another person’s story critically — I know how hard it is to write. Yet I will tell everyone who’ll listen that I’ve been lucky. I picked a great co-author. She, thankfully, has agreed to continue writing the remaining chapters with me.

How will it end? I don’t know. But what I do know is that I hope the last chapter ends with these six words: “And they lived happily ever after.”

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Blurred Shades of Green

There were no bars on my phone and the Avett Brothers were blaring from my SUV’s speakers. The rural Mississippi countryside whisked by me, blurring the various shades of green. God prefers a two lane road. The Devil prefers a two-lane road with traffic. Today was heaven-sent. It was just me and the road with no tractors or log trucks in sight. My foot pressed down on the accelerator; my speedometer teased the speed limit sign that I had just passed.

I was on my secret shortcut to the Neshoba County Fair. The line leaving Leake County welcomed me to Neshoba with orange dirt. Neshoba is a county that has produced some of Mississippi’s most frightening history. It also is the home of some of the nicest people I know. In the past 20 years, I’ve discovered this one simple truth –nothing is ever simple in Mississippi. As I turned right down another country road; I heading toward the dust-covered parking lot. It would be the 20th year of political speeches I’ve covered. I knew the drill: I’d catch up on political gossip and see people I haven’t seen in 365 years.

Like the blurred countryside, time has passed quickly.

That same rapidly moving time didn’t allow me to spend my normal amount of time this year. But I caught up with Dan, my editor and friend from Conroe, Texas days. I visited with Kate, who’s a master lemon cake maker and the daughter of one of the finest men I know. Billy and Martha welcomed me into their cabin once again. I listened to the speeches, had a few pictures taken with fans and then headed back home.

The Avett Brothers were blaring once again as I left the Fair behind in a cloud of red dust. The song ‘The Once and Future Carpenter’ sonically wrapped itself around me.

I smiled as these lyrics played:

Forever I will move like the world that turns beneath me, And when I lose my direction I’ll look up to the sky.
And when the black dress drags upon the ground, I’ll be ready to surrender, and remember
We’re all in this together.
If I live the life I’m given, I won’t be scared to die.

Amen.

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Beneath one roof

My parents moved into their house in June of 1968. It was a four-bedroom ranch with a full basement — Dad liked that it had a steel beam that supported the second floor. He believed in strength over flash. And it’s safe to say that he made a good choice — nearly five decades later, it is still solid as a rock.

Dave and Virginia Ramsey lived their lives, raised three children in that house and buried numerous pets in the backyard. When talk came of moving, they’d build on (they did in 1976 and then again in the late 90’s). It was well over 3,500 sq. ft — big for that time.

Soon it will be put on the market and sold. As I walk through it for the last times, I look around and hear the whispers of ghosts and memories. There are marks on the doorframe that show my growth. Each room tells its own story. There’s the fireplace where I cracked my head open as a child (explains a lot, you know). Footprints in the concrete mark the size of my sisters’ and my feet in 1976. First dates. Christmases. Birthdays. Celebrations. Arguments.

There were many happy moments there. And many not-so-happy moments. Living in that house shaped who I am — for better and for worse. It was my home for a long, long time (I have now lived in my home here longer). My sisters and I have cleared out the things that accumulated over a lifetime. But that really wasn’t my parents’ legacy after all. (Sometimes I think my mom thought it was.) No, their legacy wasn’t stuff that can be sold for pennies on the dollar at an estate sale — it is their three children. That fact has helped me redefine how I view my own life and family.

Soon, my sisters and I will no longer have a house that connects us. But we have a common bond that is so much stronger. We have lives forged by genetics and a shared experience under one roof.

I hope whomever buys the house has an equally amazing run as my parents did. It should serve them well.

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Oh the humidity: One man’s struggle with exercise in the summer

Complaining about humidity in Mississippi in July sounds a bit like this:

That water is too wet.

I can’t believe that sugar is sweet.

I’m shocked the sun came up in the east.

I’m stunned that pure-grain alcohol make me drunk.

It’s humid in Mississippi in the summertime. Always has been. Probably always will be.

But this morning was super special. By the end of my one-hour boot camp, I looked like Niagara Falls during the rainy season. We were outside on the football field. The humidity was steamy dog breath. And I was melting like the Wicked Witch at a water park.

We’re on our 12th week of the bootcamp. At one point I looked at one of my teammates and gasped, “How is this still kicking our butts?” I can tell you how. The air is super thick. My body, which spends way too much time sitting and in A/C likes the remind me that I spend way too much time sitting and in A/C. You just deal with it and move on.

So you’re thinking to yourself, “Marshall, why would you give up a comfy bed to turn into a human puddle?” My answer — not to be sexy during a workout, I can tell you that much. No, this the real reason: This morning, at 4:04 a.m., I read a story about an unfortunate soul who died three miles up Alum Cave Trail (one of my favorite trails in the Great Smokey Mountains). He was going up to spend the night at Mt. Leconte Lodge and never made it. He had a cardiac event. He was two years younger than me.

That hits home.

I have a 10-year-old. He (and his brothers) need dad around for a while. So get up early and push my heart, soul and body.

And I sweat. A lot. Also, I nearly puked — well at leastI did this morning.

But I’m so ready for Fall now. Bring on cooler weather before I melt away.

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