Saturday Free-For-All

Good morning! What’s up?!? It’s good to be home today. Will be emceeing the Dragon boat regatta today at the Reservoir.

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Falling from the Delta Sky

Deltasky

This is sequel to the short stories “Above the Delta Sky” and “Beneath the Delta Sky” From the book, Fried Chicken & Wine.

A tiny lone yellow crop duster soared above the dark green fields of the Mississippi Delta.  Its pilot pulled back on the plane’s stick and finished its daily aerial ballet. The crops below were now sufficiently dusted; his day’s work was done.  He loved the flight home.  It was when he could just let his mind go and fly. No worries about power lines or trees. It was just him and his Air Tractor 301.  And Angie.

Angie was the love of his life, his wife and the mother of their son. Cancer had taken her physically from him years ago. But her spirit protected him every time he flew.  He smiled as he looked at her picture taped to the instrument panel.  Next to it was a picture of the another girl who held his heart — their granddaughter Angie. She was named for the woman she so closely resembled.

And he had named his plane Angie, too.  Some felt he loved the plane more than people. He wouldn’t argue. Planes were more dependable than people anyway. Besides, he had aviation running in his veins — He had flown since he was a small boy. A long career in the military and commercial aviation had taken him around the world.  But his family brought him back home to Mississippi.  After a long estrangement, he and his son could now almost tolerate each other. Almost.

He smiled as he thought of his granddaughter.  His mind drifted off again as the setting sun cast haunting shadows across the fertile land.

And then it happened.

Sputter. Cough. Sputter.

His mind snapped back to reality. The Air Tractor’s Pratt and Whitney radial engine died.  It’s loud roar suddenly fell silent, turning the plane into a 7,800 lb. gliding brick.  He had crashed twice in his life — once when he hard-landed his father’s Piper Cub and rolled off the end of the runway. He spent most of his sophomore year in a cast after that adventure.  The other was when he had nursed his shot-up A-1 Skyraider back to Pleiku Air Base in South Vietnam.  Rescuers had pulled him unconscious from his burning aircraft. His arm looked like pork rinds from the painful burns.  Now, he was about to experience his third crash.

He probably should have panicked, but he didn’t have time. He spend his remaining seconds airborne looking for options.  There weren’t many, though. He was too low to the ground. His mind raced as he tried to figure out where he could put the plane down. To the left was a tree-line that he couldn’t clear. To the right was the river.  Straight ahead was another tree-line — but did he have enough altitude to clear it? On the other side of the trees was a soybean field. If he could just keep the plane from stalling. The silence in the cockpit allowed him to hear his beating heart.

“Protect me, Angie.”

“I’m going to make it,” he thought as the plane grazed the tops of the trees. And he was almost right. But right as he reached the edge of the field, the landing gear snagged a giant oak. He heard the snapping of limbs and groan of metal. The plane flipped and fell like a stone to the waiting dark soil below. The pilot screamed as the plane tumbled and then crashed. There was a bone-crushing crack. And then blackness.

The yellow plane fell from the Delta Sky.

When he awoke, he felt the sting of blood in his eyes. What was left of the plane’s crumpled cockpit was covered in his blood.  He looked down at this arm.  It was gray from  his loss of blood.  His eyesight began to blur. He looked down at his leg and saw his femur sticking out of his pant leg.  The world went gray and then black.  Then he saw a brilliant light.

He had seen specials about near-death experiences and figured that he must be having one.  He felt a peace like he had never felt before. And then he saw her.  Glowing brightly with white flowing robes, Angie came out of the light. She was more beautiful than he remembered. She looked like she had the day they married.  He heard her voice, yet her mouth did not move.

“Will you stay here or come with me?”

This was the moment he had dreamed about for  years. He had been tempted to fly his plane into the ground so many times just so he could see her again. So he could get this choice.  Now he had gotten it. He started to head toward the light.

But he could see little Angie, too. He could see her crying at his funeral. He saw her flying to be closer to him. She saw her marriage. Her baby boy named for him.  He saw the life he’d miss if he died.

And then he looked back at the love of his life. He felt her warmth radiating from her glow. He felt a peace he had not felt in so many years. His heart melted thinking of her love.

Then saw little Angie again.

He made his choice.

————————

He opened his eyes again and wasn’t familiar with his surroundings. He blinked, tried to adjust to the whiteness of the room and then heard beeping and whirring.

“He’s awake.  Daddy, Grandpa’s awake.”

“I thought we had lost you, old man.” His son looked down at his father. “And as much as this might shock you, I’d have been devastated. I know Angie would have been, too. She needs her grandfather. I mean, c’mon — who will teach her to fly?”

“Oh, and sorry about your plane.  There’s not much left of it — but that was a heck of a piece of flying you did, dad. Doctor said it was nothing short of a miracle that you survived the crash. Your guardian angel was working overtime, that’s for sure.”

The pilot then saw his wife’s spirit standing in the corner of the hospital room. He began to talk quietly under his breath. “I’m sorry honey. I promise I’ll spend eternity with you. But right now, our little girl needs me. I know you understand.”

His wife nodded quietly and turned around. She faded into mist, revealing a little girl standing at the foot of his bed.

“I’m glad you’re OK, grandpa.”

“I’m better than OK,” he rasped. “I’m with you.”

For years he dreamed of seeing and being with his beloved Angie again. But he made the choice to keep on living. All after falling from the Delta sky.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Friday Free-For-All

Thank God it’s Friday. And that we made another sunrise.

Here’s the sun coming up over the Mississippi Sound.

Hard Rock, Deer Island and the Mississippi Sound,

Hard Rock, Deer Island and the Mississippi Sound,

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 7 and 8

IMG_7356Since I’ve  now worked out at Jackson State and Madison Central, I’m qualified to ask the age-old question: What’s worse, TOWELS (JSU Walter Payton Center gym) or BOARDS (Madison Central Football field)?

TOWELS: You push a folded bath towel the length of a basketball court while bent over.  Sometimes you do half-court and back. Other times you go the whole length of the court and back.

Advantages: A basketball court is about 30 yards in length. If you only do two sets, you “only” do 120 yards.

Disadvantages: If the floor is sticky, the towel will suddenly stop — causing you to faceplant. My friend Jenny did it and had to have stitches over her eye. I’ve joked that us pushing towels was how the floor got cleaned.

BOARDS: You push what looks like a 2×4 plank down the artificial turf of a football field while bent over (same exercise as the towels).

Advantages: If the field has dew on it, the boards glide across the turf (if it is dry, not so much).

Disadvantages: A football field is MUCH longer, meaning they distances you push are much longer. Yesterday, we pushed for 220 yards. I’m much better at this than I was when I started but that was tough for me.

So what’s your opinion? What’s tougher — towels or boards?

 

photo copy 5Day 8: I am speaking this morning so I ran 7.5 miles (and burned 1,190 calories) along the walking/bike trails in Sandestin. I know, I know, don’t pity me. Got some amazing photos as the sun rose over the bay and Gulf and my first real taste of humidity.  It was a spectacular morning. Now to go speak for an hour!

 

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Thursday Free-For-All

Doing a little speaking today. How are you?

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Wednesday Free-For-All

Good morning! Another opportunity to make dreams come true has arrived. Hope you have a good day.

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 6

title-8-week-lrgI can tell you one thing: I will be darn good at bear crawls before the end of PLS.  In fact, I may run my marathon on my hands like a monkey. Just because I can.

Today involved a lot of running. I was winded most of the time — which is exactly what I wanted to happen.  We did P and W drills.(and did bear crawls through the W drills). We did a four-corner drill as we ran around the track (you stop on the corners and do pushups, run in place, burpees and mountain climbers.) We have tired legs.

When I say we, I mean line four. My line.

Everyone finished together with a fast lap around the track (1/4 of a mile), ran a giant W drill (the length of the field, crossing to the 20, 40, 40, 20 and then end zone.) and then the gauntlet up and down the stadium stairs (I had flashbacks to running up and down the stadium stairs at Sprayberry High School nearly 30 years ago.) And then it was back to the end zone to cool down.

Two weeks into the program and I can tell you the intensity has been raised up a notch. That’s good — because I needed that.  If I am going to get to the next level, I have to push myself. Hard.

This week will be a long week of travel. My schedule is as full and I’ll be speaking frequently.  Because I push myself in the morning, I can push myself on the stage.

This morning’s workout was excellent.  It was a Triumphant Tuesday.

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Tuesday Free-For-All

Good morning! We start the MCT2’s around the Ramsey house today (State tests). The kids are already preparing to turn into Zombies.

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Hills near Noxapater.

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Perspective

MF-Car-Battery-DIN55MF-1It was late Sunday afternoon and my son and I were headed to the high school. I was tired but had promised him I would take him to go run sprints on the track. We got in the car and I turned the key.

Nothing.

I turned it again.

Nothing again.

Two dashboard lights blinked. And then they died.

We were dead in the water.

I looked at my watch: 6 p.m. on Sunday. Ridgeland, Mississippi has several auto parts stores. But thanks to the city’s blue laws, guess what time they had to close — You guessed it, 6 p.m. I called Walmart. Their auto department had closed at 5 a.m.

I looked at my son and could see he was disappointed. I looked at him and apologized. “Life happens, buddy,” I said as I patted him on the back.

My blood pressure began to rise as I figured out how I was going to jump the car off and get it to the dealer in the morning. My wife teaches school and has to be there at zero-dark thirty. It wasn’t an option.

I checked my phone again for other auto parts stores in the metro area. There was one in Flowood that was open until nine. I tried to see if I could jump the car off to start it. But the battery on the van was too far away for the jumper cables to reach my car.

I stopped and took a deep breath.

With the hood up, I saw that it was easy to take the battery out. So I did and took it to the auto parts store. I was 95% sure it was just the battery and not the starter — although the battery had shown no signs of being bad. So I had them test it anyway.

It was so dead that they couldn’t even get it to read on the meter.

To make a long story short, I bought a new battery, went home and installed it. I turned the key again and my car started right up.

Here’s where the perspective comes in:

The previous night, I had driven home from Oxford, Mississippi. Late. Very late. I had stopped in Grenada and Canton to buy energy drinks to wake up. We could have had the battery die at either place at midnight. And we would have been up the proverbial poop creek without a paddle.

But instead, my car luckily died in my garage. I had the knowledge and funds to fix it. And I did.

It’s not what happens to you. It’s how you react to it. A younger Marshall would have freaked out. “I can’t believe I’m missing a chance to go to the track! It’s not fair my car broke down! How dare the stores close at six.”

Instead I chose to methodically go through my options. I then fixed it and had a nice evening with my family.

It’s about solving the problem. It’s all about perspective.

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 5

title-8-week-lrgToday was Mental Monday.  No, I’m not going crazy, but it was a tough, tough workout.  Paul wasn’t there and the other coaches worked extra hard to make sure we didn’t miss him.  Why I call it Mental Monday is that to quote my old coach John Paty, I needed to get my “mind right.”

It was a long weekend. Saw my nephew graduate (good) and then saw my mom carted off to the emergency room (bad). Mom’s doing much better now but I came into this morning tired and brain-dead.  I started with Clark’s coreapalooza. Lots of sit-ups, six-inches and planks seasoned with gassers (running across the width of the field twice and doing more core work).   Next station was Wayne’s in-between the ladder drills. The cherry on the top of that little dessert was doing bear crawls through the ladders. That’s when I started to falter. The last round I hit my knees waaaay too many times. Morgan’s session was a cluster-truck. I didn’t do well on it. My arms were tired and my brain was more tired. I got through it, but it wasn’t work I’m particularly proud of.  By the time we got into the weight room, my arms hated me.  But soon, we were done.

Or so I thought.

We all gathered in the end zone — where we normally do our post workout stretch. But no, we did 100-yard sprints with a twist. We broke them up in 40-yard, 20-yard, and 40-yard segments. The 20-yard was where we did bear crawls, inchworms, crab walks (which I can’t do very well) and walking pushups.

Life is tough. It will throw physical and mental challenges at you. I hear people say that I’m crazy for working out like this in the morning. But overcoming the impossible is great practice for when life throws you a curve ball.  Like this weekend for me. Like any day for all of us.

It’s more about become physically fit. It’s also about becoming mentally fit. It’s about working out your drive and your will.

Mine received a great workout today.

 

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