THE
YOGA CHRONICLES: CONFESSIONS OF A RELUCTANT YOGI
“THE
LONG GOODBYE, PART TWO: THE LONG RUN”
It is thirty-six years
later and I find myself again on a synthetic track in the oppressive Texas summer
sun, the heat still emanating from the ground in its familiar amoeba pattern. I
am now at Woodrow Wilson High in Dallas and the ghosts of its two Heisman
Trophy winners, Davey O’ Brien and Tim Brown, are keeping me company as I complete
my run.
At 57, I now have an
entire complement of ghosts- living and dead- to guide me through my day.
But today my heart is
racing in an unfamiliar way and feel a slight skip every now and again, which
will give a man my age a moment’s pause. My breath is choppy, my legs are
wooden, and my back hurts with literally every step.
It is so much harder now.
But I push on, step by
step, if for no other reason than I have absolutely no idea what else to do.
Just like 1981, I am
running to fat again, undisciplined, and totally lacking in focus.
And I am scared to death.
I am fearful in a way I have not been fearful before- not of the unknown but of
the known.
I hate the things I know
now.
I’m back to where this
journey began, in the fervent and prayerful hope that I can reclaim some
clarity and purpose.
For ten days now, I have
been in what could only be called the mother of all existential funks, sleep
-walking through days before falling, exhausted and usually drunk, into a
fitful and dreamless sleep.
So, I’ve decided to go
back to First Principles, to see if I could summon the courage to put myself
together one more time from the scattered jigsaw pieces of fifty-seven years.
You see, ten days ago, I
went to see my best friend.
He didn’t recognize me.
Before when I would visit,
there would be hesitation and then recognition. I would sometimes actually see
him mouth the words “Tom Barron” or “TC” and there might even be a slight
glimmer of mischief in his eyes, as if he were remembering the nights he put
the alligator in my bed or taught me to drink beer at the Deep Eddy Cabaret or
found me naked on the floor of my apartment looking for a joint.
There were even those
cherished moments when he could reconstruct entire episodes from our life, including
several that alcohol has hazed over in my own memory.
In those moments, I thought
I could see him digging into the deep recesses of his memory because it seemed
important to him, as if he knew our lives were intertwined and that to know me
was somehow to know himself.
But not this time. He
looked at me with a vacant stare.
In one instant, thirty
-nine years simply vanished- not just misplaced but gone forever.
Worse than that, it
seemed as if he could no longer conjure the Herculean effort it took to try.
I made it through less
than five minutes of idle chatter before I had to excuse myself. I stood in the
bathroom, begging for the tears to come and cursing when they wouldn’t. I
reached for everything I had in the arsenal: anger, humor, logic, prayer.
Nothing.
The last five minutes
with him were a blur. I tried everything to garner some recognition. I felt
like I do when I am trying to get my adorable but Buddha-like neighbor child to
giggle, using whatever clownish expression I can muster without any sense of vanity.
Still nothing.
I couldn’t even find my
own way out the door of his new facility, one which specializes in “memory
care.”
There’s a little irony
for you.
The tears found me on the
way home. They were neither comforting or cathartic.
I’ve been a mess ever
since, falling into fine but rigid patterns of hard-wired behavior: withdrawal, isolation, and fear. And I have
been drinking far much more than I should.
It was time to break those
patterns. So, I went back to the track.
First Principles: Those
things that are the hardest are best for you.
As I schlepped through
the first lap, I had my first epiphany: Like him, I will never get better, only
worse. Not only will I never be young and strong again, every slight memory
lapse or moment of indecision will cause my heart to skip a beat.
And I feel guilty as
hell- not just for the fact that I cannot do anything for him or that I don’t
see him as often as I should or even that I am still whole- but for something
far more selfish and cowardly.
It is the fear I might be
next.
I hate the things that I
know.
It took only another lap
in the hot morning sun to have another sunburst: It is not going to get easier,
only harder. The drive to Austin will get longer and my visits will get shorter
and decidedly less satisfying. Do I have the strength to keep doing it? What if
it was me? Wouldn’t I want him to be there? Would he be? If he doesn’t know me,
why go? If he doesn’t remember I’m there, why go? Does it help him? Does it
hurt him? What purpose does it serve for him? For me?
I also hate the things I
don’t know. And I hate the fact that I don’t know them.
I am at that point in my
life where I am supposed to be wise and I am not. I am supposed to be at that
point in my life where I am supposed to be able to help others and I cannot.
I hate things the things
I know.
And is all this about a
friendship which was- as Bill Hurt said in The
Big Chill- for a short period of time a long time ago?
Or is our friendship
truly enduring? Were we, in fact, born kindred souls? And does this moment
define that friendship separate and apart from all that preceded it? If I fail
him now, is that the legacy of my friendship?
I choose to believe in
our friendship because to deny it is to truly erase those thirty-nine years.
But I also make that
choice because of those people who have done the yeoman work for him, who have
shouldered the load in ways I cannot imagine. Those who have been there for him
are not always those who are the most demonstrably
warm or open. Oftentimes, they appear just the opposite. But they have been
there nonetheless, doing the hard things.
I have spoken to
literally hundreds of his friends about his plight and all their pursed lips
and false frowns of compassion together don’t add up to a bucket of warm spit.
Their furrowed brows and mock whimpers are the same as they would have reserved
for a crying baby or a dying aunt who had never been altogether civil to them.
They are like those
people who form committees to absolve themselves from further moral
responsibility, who are in fact providing moral relief for themselves but very
little practical relief to those who actually need it.
Epiphany number three:
You never know who will who will be there for you.
This is how this one
ends, my desperate attempt to understand karma and interconnectedness and that
there is a tenderness in seemingly the most ostensibly hardened of us.
On Sunday, I will try to
run the Too Hot to Handle 15k in Dallas, folly for even the most hardcore
runner. At the 7:30 start, it will be 77 degrees and, when I finish (presumably
sometime before mid-afternoon), it will be in the 80s.
Heart Attack City.
Maybe I am running
precisely because it is hard, pushing my outer limits again because I owe it to
him to do what is hard. Maybe I am
punishing myself. Maybe I am doing it because I need to know I can still push my own limits, that I can summon
the will to get off the mat one more time.
Maybe this track is
somehow a road back to a place where something good started years ago. Just
because the track is a circle doesn’t mean it doesn’t go somewhere.
Or maybe I am just a lost
pilgrim staggering toward redemption.
I don’t pretend to know. I
know only that I am sad.
I hate the things I know.
© Thomas C. Barron 2017
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteOh Tom, I'm so sad for you and your friend. Your writing tears at my soul. You're running may be cathartic but certainly your writing is as well. Love, thoughts and prayers seems so inadequate. But nonetheless, you have them.
ReplyDeleteYou are dear. Thank you so much. T
DeleteThis was beautifully written and your pain is evident. Though in my 32 years I have had blessedly little in the way of struggle, I have found that sharing even a portion of the burden with my inner circle helps to alleviate some of the stress. That circle grows ever smaller as time goes by, so I can't imagine what a tremendous loss it is to have someone who knew you so intimately no longer able to access that recognition. It's like losing part of yourself. I have run across a bit of platitudinal wisdom that I'd like to share. Relationships don't end, they simply change form. Like matter, they are not destroyed, but are modified to new circumstance and purpose. I cannot begin to fathom what you have learned from your dear friend in the past and what lessons he has yet to teach. By the look of things you are getting to an expressive place where you can hash out those lessons with humility and grace. I'm here for you, friend. Reach out whenever you need.
ReplyDeleteB- You already have been there for me, most often when you didn't know it. You also never know when you are there for others. I am presumptuous enough to consider you guys my friends in a very real sense, as you have demonstrated right here. Thank you, my friend. - T
DeleteWhen I think of our friend, the very first thing I think of is him saying your name with great delight, "T.C. Baron," he would boom.
ReplyDeleteHe delighted in your friendship and all the stories of your time together.
You have no idea how good that makes me feel, Virginia. I genuinely needed to hear it. T
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