The real Superman

He flew through the air over 100 feet and landed in a nurse’s yard. He saves lives. Sorry Clark Kent, Dewayne Morgan is Superman.

His story begins like this: Morgan was riding his motorcycle around 3 p.m near Booneville, Miss. on that fateful afternoon.  He looked ahead and saw a car swerve into his lane. He had a moment to react. He almost made it.

But he didn’t.

His motorcycle impacted against the drunk driver’s front fender at 50 mph in a horrible crash.  His arm went through the motorcycle’s windshield, shattering both. He then flew through the air, landing in a broken mass in a yard.  Over 200 bones were broken in his upper body. His leg was nearly severed. And so was his arm. He nearly bled to death on the side of the road. Fate stepped in and he just happened to land in a nurse’s yard.  And luckily, the helicopter ambulance was only five minutes away.

Months of rehab and over million dollars in hospital bills later (neither Morgan or the drunk driver had insurance), Morgan beat the odds. (His doctors gave him a 2% chance of survival.) The hospital settled on his bills and his church family helped him pay them off.  He is now piecing his life back together.

A woman made a choice. She chose to drink and get behind the wheel of her car.  That choice destroyed her life (she is in prison) and her family’s. It forever altered Morgan’s and his family’s, too. He lost his leg.  He faced a crushing debt. He went through painful rehab. But his spirit remains intact.

Morgan made a choice as well. He isn’t allowing the drunk driver’s bad choice to ruin him. He is now making sweet lemonade out of a pretty sour lemon by touring the state as part of  the Department of Public Safety’s Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over campaign. Like he said, “If one person decides not to drink and drive after hearing my story, this is all worth it.”

Dewayne Morgan is a hero. He is a man of steel. He truly is Superman.

Posted in Writing | 9 Comments

Wednesday Free-For-All

Good morning! Have a great day!

Posted in MRBA | Tagged | 58 Comments

Changing Course

She sailed on the sea of anger for over a year. Churning waves tossed her vessel around, tearing at its hull and mast.  The very sails that would have saved her were tattered.  Those she loved were tossed around: The smell of vomit and fear permeated the cabin.  There was no course charted — she just allowed her direction to be dictated by the churning sea.  The whitecaps boiled and whirlpools threatened. Her craft and her compass spun in circles.

She decisively and firmly grasped the ship’s wheel, cutting into the wind and sailing for the calmer seas of forgiveness.  She then charted a new course —  one based on discipline and love.  She scrubbed the cabin, cleaning up the messes she had created.  The ship rocked gently. The angry dark seas turned into rolling blue waves.

She changed course and became the captain of her own destiny.  And her journey was only just now beginning. Hurricane Anger had dissipated into a calm sea.

Posted in Writing | 4 Comments

The Harvest

Dreams that occur when your eyes are open are sometimes the hardest to grasp.

He kicked the dry Delta dirt with his boot. The resulting cloud of dust floated across the field of soybeans.  A rag from his pocket wiped the sweat off his brow and from his burning eyes. August’s afternoon sun was brutal and unforgiving.  It was just him, his dog and his talent in the middle of  1,000 acres of nothing — a strange place to search for a dream.  But that’s what he was doing. He was going to be a singer.  And sometimes, the pursuit of dreams takes you on the most unusual route.

He had prayed every night for his dream to come true.  He quickly learned that God didn’t answers prayers like a genie.  No, instead God put him places for him to achieve what he prayed for.  The smoke-filled lounge.  The county fair.  His church. The political picnic.  At times he questioned it all.  Why? Why can’t it be easier?

For 10 years he struggled to be an overnight success.

There were setbacks along the way. Lots of them. As he looked across the Delta, he thought of the people who didn’t believe in him.  They were like insects that ate the grain: The people who discouraged his talent.  The  bosses who didn’t understand his abilities. The well-meaning family members who urged him to settle down. The time he was laid off and had to take three jobs to make ends meet.  The anger caused acid to bubble up from his stomach and damage his throat. He remembered when it all made sense to him: When his sister gave him the puzzle that could only be solved by taking two steps back for every three moves forward. That was a hard lesson for him to learn: The road to success wasn’t a straight line.

Right now, that road was a Delta dirt road.

He climbed into his truck next to his dog and turned on the radio.  A familiar song came on — it was one of his.  He pulled over, put his head down and prayed a quick prayer of thanks.  The local radio station had given him some airplay. You never knew who might be listening. People always asked him who is best friend was. He quipped, “Chance.”

He looked out at the field and realized his talent like the rich Delta soil. If no seeds were planted, nothing would grow.  But each performance was a seed. And the more he planted, the bigger crop he would have.  His insistence on excellence; his discipline was him hoeing the weeds out.  Him taking care of himself physically provided the fertilizer his crop would need.  Like a farmer, he knew he could not scatter a few seeds and be an overnight success.  Farmers didn’t plant seeds and reap a harvest the very next day.  His crop would come in. The good Lord would determine the length of the growing season.

He got out of his truck and scooped some rich, black Delta soil into a Mason Jar.

He had to keep planting.  The law of probabilities only works if you’re in the game.  So plant he did. He kept singing at honky-tonks. He sang on a statewide radio station.  A local gig in the state capitol led to another bigger gig. He hit the pillow every night exhausted.

One night he was singing in the Capitol City and a man in the back of the bar made a call. On the other end, a man in Nashville  listened to the sweet song coming through his phone.

A prayer was answered.

The man in Nashville offered him a record deal.  Several concerts led to a TV appearance.  The TV appearance led to more record sales and radio airplay. Fans loved his down-home, no-nonsense style.  He was called talented and refreshingly honest.  People admired his work-ethic and discipline — the very discipline that allowed him to tend to his most important crop of all: His dream of being a singer. People asked him his secret of success. He replied honestly, “I’m a farmer.”

A year later, he stood on the stage of the Grand Ol’ Opry.  He sang sweet songs that made momma’s cry.  As he strummed the last chord on his current #1 hit, the camera panned out.There, by his foot, was a Mason Jar full of dark Delta soil.

His crop had come in. And it was a bountiful harvest.

Posted in Writing | 5 Comments

CARTOON: Changing Times

Posted in Cartoon | 2 Comments

CARTOON: Hurricane Barbour


Posted in Cartoon | 1 Comment

CARTOON: Sixth anniversary of Katrina

Posted in Cartoon | 2 Comments

Tuesday Free-For-All

Good morning? Have a great day!

Posted in MRBA | Tagged | 48 Comments

The Cathedral

The morning’s cool, crisp air was a finisher’s medal.  It had been a long, hot summer  — and it had seemed more like a marathon than a season.  Waking up to a taste of fall was a reward.  A gift for enduring all the previous muggy mornings.

Muggy. That was a funny word.  It sounded more like “to be mugged,” which really wasn’t that inaccurate.  Lately if you walked outside, it was like someone throwing a hot, wet towel thrown over your head.  (And then try to breathing).  But not this morning.  Her lungs filled with cool, crisp air.  It was like a movie preview.  Just a few more weeks before Fall weather would arrive for good.

She walked up to the main gate of cathedral, the giant stadium where the masses worshiped college football every Saturday in the fall. Crowds were beginning to gather around it, eating their pregame meals and visiting before the big event. All were dressed in their Saturday finest.

She looked up at the cathedral. The Romans would swoon in envy if they had seen the nearly 100,000-seat monster.  And cathedrals just like this one dotted the Southeastern U.S. landscape. Each would been full to capacity today.  Saturday.  The sixth day.

She handed the lady her ticket and walked inside. She could see through the tunnel that the grass  on the field was perfectly trimmed and marked; it was waiting for the modern day gladiators to do battle. The aluminum seats shined in the sun. Football was a secular religion in these parts. The fans in their brightly colored clothing started to file in.

It was time for S.E.C. football season to start. She grabbed a program, a Coke and a bag of peanuts and found her seat.  Kickoff was in 20 minutes. Football season had begun. And she gave thanks.

Posted in Writing | 3 Comments

Katrina’s truth

For the past six years, I’ve been inspired by my friends on the Coast. They are proof that when things get bad, we get good.

Posted in Writing | Leave a comment