Revenge of the Football Gods

267877-3In the South, there are two types of religions. In one, the faithful worship in churches on Sunday. And in the other, fans worship the football gods in stadiums on Friday and Saturday night. It’s a religion based on pride, violence and achievement. And one of its biggest gods was an 18-year old quarterback from the small town of Cochran, Mississippi.

Tommy Lawrence stood over 6’5″ tall. He had blonde hair, blue eyes and very little body fat — in fact, he looked like a football god.  He had a big smile and a laid back personality. The son of an accountant and a kindergarten teacher, he was an unlikely success story. Playing his very first game as a Junior, Tommy was now on the cusp of leading the Cochran Bears to their first state championship one season later. Scouts from Alabama, Oregon, Ohio State, Tennessee, Ole Miss and Mississippi State practically lived with the family. Tommy Lawrence had a very bright future.

One strange thing about Tommy was that no one had ever seen his father, Thomas Sr., at one of his football games.  His mom, Sue, faithfully sat in the stands, wearing a big button with Tommy’s picture on it. But his dad was no where to be found.  Thomas Sr. was a mild-mannered man who seldom raised his voice.  The only time anyone had heard him angry was the night when Sue put her foot down and screamed, “I don’t care Thomas — Tommy is not going to carry your baggage. He is going to use his God-given talent and play ball.”   The neighbors could hear Thomas Sr. yelling a block away.

For two seasons Tommy had looked for his dad in the stands and for two seasons, he wasn’t there.

The morning of the big game, Tommy confronted his dad.  “You will be there tonight, right?” His father just grumbled and grabbed his briefcase. Tommy repeated louder, “YOU WILL BE THERE TONIGHT, RIGHT?!?”

Thomas Sr. turned quickly and glared at his son. He then screamed, “YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND!”  Tommy picked up an old trophy off the bookshelf and threw it at the door where his father had just exited. The brittle trophy shattered like broken dreams as it hit the wall.

“You’re right,” Tommy mumbled. “I don’t understand.”

His mom walked out of the kitchen and said, “Don’t be so hard on your father.  He has a very good reason for not wanting to be there.”

“Why don’t you share it with me, then,” Tommy snarled.

“As soon as you drop that tone.”

Tommy walked over to his mom, hugged her and said,” Sorry.” He then sat down on the couch as his mother began to tell the tragedy of Thomas Sr.

“Your dad was as good as you were, if not better.  He started his Freshman, Sophomore and Junior years. And then Coach Papa Bull was hired.”

“Papa Bull? He’s the coach of the team we’re playing tonight.”

“That’s right. And he was a monster to your father. No one is really sure why. He said your dad was cocky and overrated. And he wanted his son to play quarterback.  He’d tell your dad he was no good, would bench him randomly.  He had to do extra conditioning.  He rode your father and tried to make him quit.  He verbally abused him every practice.”

“What did grandpa do about it?”

“Nothing.  Your grandfather was a workaholic.  He was never there to defend your dad. Anyway, one practice, right before the biggest game of your dad’s Junior season, Coach Bull shoved your dad down on the ground.  Your dad snapped and came back up off the ground and Coach Bull punched your dad in the face.”

“OMIGOD.”

“It gets worse. Coach Bull forced the players and the other coaches to take his side. Even your dad’s best friend Matthew was forced to lie by the coach. Your dad got expelled. So his family had to move to another school district.  Your dad never played football again. In fact, he has never stepped foot in another stadium.  This is hard on your dad, Tommy. Cut him a little slack.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

Tommy picked up a piece of the broken trophy. It read, “All-State Team, 1986 Thomas Lawrence.”  He put it in his pocket.

He vowed to get revenge for his father.

The setting sun cast an orange glow in the sky over Memorial Stadium in Jackson.  Colorful signs read, “We love you Papa!” “Win Papa’s Last GAME!” “Win one for the PAPA.”  “One last retirement gift for the PAPA!” Tommy felt his stomach churn as he saw the huge coach standing on the other sideline.  He knew the coach knew his name. Now it was time to show him who he was.

And for three quarters he did just that.  Tommy chewed up the Gaffney Giant’s vaunted defense. The score at the beginning of the fourth quarter was Cochran 28-Gaffney 7.  But Coach Papa wasn’t going to be denied his last State Championship.  He started sending in blitz after blitz. And he told his players that there would be a bounty for the first one to put Tommy out of the game.  Tommy got punched in the groin. He got his eye gouged. Blood trickled out of his nose.  With two minutes left in the game, Gaffney tied it 28-28.

Tommy looked over at the other Coach and mouthed, “I’m taking you down, you son of a…..”

And then he did it.

Sportswriters call it “The Drive.” Although there were 22 players playing, one person singlehandedly moved the ball 100 yards down the field.  The football gods couldn’t have touched their chosen son.  With no time remaining, Tommy ran a bootleg into the endzone and scored the winning touchdown.

Coach Papa Bull had fallen at the hands of the son.

As the two teams mingled on the field, Coach Bull walked over to Tommy. “You have more courage than your old man. But you’re still nothing. You’re a loser.”

Tommy said, “Get away from me, coach. I said what I needed to say on the football field.”

And then, without warning, Coach Bull punched Tommy in the face, knocking him down.

Before Coach Bull could turn around, he felt a crushing blow against his chin.  He saw a flash and then hit the field face first.  As he faded in and out of consciousness, he heard a voice he had not heard in 27 years.

“You don’t hit my son.”

Tommy swung around to see his father standing over his old Coach.

He ran over to his father and nearly knocked him to the ground. “YOU CAME TO THE GAME!”

His dad just smiled and put his arm around his son. “I wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”

And as the two men walked off the field together, the football gods smiled.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Plate

katrinaFour months after “The Storm,” Regina Robbins sifted through the remains of her home.  The Mississippi Sound had surged inland, reducing the small brick house into a pile of broken dreams and debris. She and the workers from St. Anthony’s Episcopal Church sifted through the rubble, looking for pieces of her past.  Like the Portkey in Harry Potter, each random object would take her to another seemingly random memory.  But they weren’t random to her. They were mental bandages helping her heal. A ribbon from her daughter’s swim meet. An award from her job at the VA.  Regina stood in the middle of the debris field and slowly sank to her knees.  Four months of strength had worn her out.  While the politicians in Washington had forgotten her, thankfully the parishioners at St. Anthony had not.

A light rain began to fall, chilling her and the volunteers.  She looked out at the now still water and it reminded her of a sleeping killer. The water was still, seemingly toothless. But she knew better. The Sound would strike again.  She was planning on moving north.  She had had enough death and destruction for a lifetime.

“The Storm,” had, with all its brute power, changed the Coast forever.  It had reduced well-built structures to scrap. And what previous storms had taken away, this one had given back. There was a rusty 1965 Chevrolet pickup truck at the end of her street.  It had been sucked out to sea during Camille.  Now the sea gave the old truck back.  And the storm surge also performed other little oddities and miracles.  It had reduced all the sheetrock into her house into little gooey balls.  Furniture was obliterated into small scraps of wood.  Cars were crushed like giants had beaten them with baseball bats.  But as she stood in the cold mist, she saw something white in the mud.

It was plate.

It was a piece of her mother’s China.

The waves had taken the plate off the armoire and gently carried it.  And then it, with equal gentleness, laid it down safely onto the debris.

Something so beautiful and delicate had survived hell. Like the devil himself had been repelled by the plate’s beauty.

Regina picked up the plate and wiped it off with her shirt.  She felt another round of tears beginning to rise.  Soon her face was as salty as the Sound itself.  But the plate was a reminder to her.  A reminder that would serve her through the rest of her life.

Even in the times of most radical change, Regina held on tightly to what was fragile and beautiful. Because  after “the Storm,” she learned that while the strongest institutions could be washed way, beauty and grace are forever.

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 28

title-fall-fitness-12-weekThe alarm went off and I looked at the radar on my phone.

No rain. All clear.

I had to get out of bed. Actually, even if it had been pouring, my conscience would have pushed my feet to the floor.  The day I start randomly sleeping in is the day I weigh 250 lbs. again.

Today is Thursday. Today is the last day of boot camp for the week. Today is leg day.  And today my legs were tired.  But I got ready and drove to the track anyway.

I got there 20 minutes early and ran a mile on the track. I’ve started doing that every day to get in a little more running.  I probably will increase it as time goes on — so far it hasn’t affected my workout.

Coach Clark’s starting had the infamous wall-sit/pass-the-ball exercise.  But what really hurt was standing on my tip-toes 100 times. My calves nearly cramped. But they didn’t.

Coach Morgan had stations so we did everything from chips-and-salsa (where you walk on your hands while your feet sit on a chips-and-salsa tray) to hopping up and down on the box.  We did lots of leg extensions and hopping, too.  I worked out with Liz — whose athletic ability and constant good attitude I really admire.

Stanley was the star of the line today, though. He really put in a lot of effort this week. He made me work a step or two harder as well.  Leadership comes from action not words.  I can usually tell when Stanley is in pain, though. He has a special word that starts with SH and ends with IT that he mutters when things are getting tough.

The weight room’s exercise today was dead-lifting.  They call it dead-lift because when you are done, your back is dead and you can’t lift yourself off the toilet for the next three days.  Coach Chaz had all the men do two sets of 135 lbs. 20 times. Conner and I survived it — although I will admit, I got really winded.  My back and legs are tired.

We did a modified version of four-corners with Coach Richard today. Run the length of the field and then do Russian walks, prisoner walks, etc. in the end zones. How much fun is that?

Well, not as much fun as pushing boards at the end.  And running 50-yard dashes to break them up. Which is fine.  If I push I board 20 yards, I don’t mind breaking it up. I breathe better standing up.

As you might guess, I am tired. But it is a good tired. A tired that comes from the fact that you got out of bed and did the work.  There is a sense of self-satisfaction when you put on your clothes and they are a little bit loose. That makes the pain in my legs and back much more tolerable.

Seven weeks done. Five to go.

 

 

 

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Mural sketch for a stairwell

ColorMural2

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Inkspots Blog: 10/16/13

20091199361854677801The State Fairgrounds after the fair reminds me of the 26th of December: Nothing remains but some paper and a few left over decorations.  Once again, the Mississippi State Fair has come and gone. Another year has nearly passed. It seems like the fairs are getting closer and closer to together.

Maybe it is just the illusion of time speeding up as I get older.

Once again, I judged the Pretty Cow Contest. We lost a judge this year. Meteorologist Tony Mastro is no longer with WJTV and I missed his cow-judging experience.  Actually, I just missed Tony.  The Cow Contest is like a family reunion.  I look forward to seeing old friends. Funny how specific events get to be like that. I’ve judge cows for over a decade now.

It never gets old.

But the bearded lady, rat boy, angry drawf and donut burger stand have gone on to where ever they go next.  The paper will be picked up and the last of the decorations will be put away. Halloween is next on the calendar and then in will be CHRISTMAS! CHRISTMAS! CHRISTMAS! with one day to celebrate Thanksgiving thrown in for good measure.

2013 is nearly in the can.  Time needs to slow the heck down.

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: 10 Truths About Exercise

title-fall-fitness-12-week1. Burpees never get easier. Ever.

2. Ibuprofen and ice are your friend.

3. Getting up early to exercise gives you more energy (which you need to get up early and exercise.)

4. If we could see ourselves doing bear crawls, inchworms and pushing a board, we would laugh hysterically.

5. We do run because something is chasing us — things like obesity, heart disease and diabetes just to name a few.

6. No pain, no gain. But pain is still a pain.

7. If sweat is your fat crying, mine must be throwing a hissy fit.

8. Money spent on good shoes is cheaper than knee surgery.

9. Money spent on exercise gear is cheaper than heart surgery.

10. Exercise is like bacon: It makes everything in life better. (Bacon, of course, means you have to exercise more.)

 

 

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Monsters

My son and I were watching the local news and he turned to me and said, “All the news has on it is one shooting after another. I guess monsters really do exist.”

I looked at him and felt a wave of sadness crash over me.  A part of my heart wants my child to remain a child forever.  I wanted him to think that monsters are something that just come out on Halloween. But he sees the world for what it is — a beautiful place that is at the same time vicious and cruel.

Sunday’s cold-blooded murder of a visiting professional fisherman Jimmy Johnson has rocked this city once again.  It was senseless and random — and very frightening.

It’s frightening because it reminds us that monsters really do exist. And you never know when one will cross your path.

Bless the friends and family of  Mr. Johnson. I pray the police catch the monster and swiftly bring him to justice.

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 26

title-fall-fitness-12-weekI had an epiphany while in the weight room this morning. Of course, it was nearly 30-years too late for my football career, but I think it’s a pretty astute observation (particularly for 5 a.m.) :

Football games are won in the weight room.

I know, I know, football games are played on the field.  Obviously game-day effort is the final decider of the final score. But it’s the little things done before hand that makes the difference. The sweat you pour into preparation waters victory.

It’s a good metaphor for life, too.

Every morning when I work out, I become more disciplined. More focused. I have more energy. I learn to give maximum effort. I learn to fight on and not quit.  Exercise sharpens the blade.

When Clark tells me to do an exercise correctly, I listen. If Paul is unhappy I don’t do a curl correctly, I adjust.  If we are running sprints, I bust it and try to come in first (I don’t because I am slow, but I finish respectfully.)  Putting in effort at 5 a.m. is my warm-up for the rest of the day.

In my career, I compete against people who are equally (or more) talented than I am. But if I do the work beforehand, I will come out ahead.  Exercise teaches me how to prepare.

Life is won in the weight room. And while running the stands, doing planks, burpees, mountain climbers, Indian runs, sprints, bear crawls, inch worms, and ladder runs.

 

 

 

 

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Fit2Fat2Fit Blog: Day 25

title-fall-fitness-12-weekWell, it’s halftime and time to review our fitness game plan. After some reflection, I’m making a few alterations to my plan. I’ve suffered from fatigue this time around (just being dead-dog tired all the time) and need to change a few things in my life.

1. Cut out sugar.  Eating clean is important and sugar is my crack cocaine.  But it’s basically poison and my body pays for the instant high I get from it.

2. Run more. I only ran four times last month. I need to up my mileage. One way I’m doing that is running three laps before the workout.  I’m going to start doing some evening runs along the way.

3. Push even harder on the stations.  I’m in good enough shape to do the exercises. Now I need to focus on doing them right.

4. Drink more water. I think part of my fatigue is that I am constantly dehydrated.

 

Today was a good workout. Clark gave us the killer core combo with lots and lots of sit-ups. I did everything.  Then we moved to Morgan’s station.  Managed to chips and salsa all the way to the hash successfully.  Ran with the weight, flipped the tractor tire and ran and did my pushups. My shoulder held up.  In fact, today was a shoulder-intense day (with lots of bear crawls). But the real test for the shoulder was the weight room.

And it passed. In fact, I normally take a couple of ibuprofen before I workout. I forgot this morning and while the shoulder popped and was a little sore, it held up good.

It was a great way to start a Monday!

 

 

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MRBA Free-For-All

Good morning! Let’s start off another week strong!

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