THE
YOGA CHRONICLES: CONFESSIONS OF A RELUCTANT YOGI
“FAMILY
REUNION”
(TO
THE ROBERT E. LEE CLASS OF 1978)
“And if grandpa
was here,
you know he’d be
smiling from ear to ear,
to see what he had
done,
from the offspring
of his daughters and sons.”
-The
Ojays, Family Reunion
In a
time not so long ago in a place not so far away, black kids and white kids went
to separate schools.
And
while my generation did not invent integration, I would like to believe we
perfected it early on.
In retrospect, it is
almost inconceivable that I began my education in a segregated environment, not
because of the historical abnormality of it, but because it simply does not
jive with my own personal experience.
My memories and
experience were borne out last weekend at my fortieth high school class
reunion, where cowboy hats did the “Bump” with (albeit much shorter) afros, and
we celebrated our lives together.
For many of us, those
lives together began almost literally in the womb: Bert Taylor Pfaff and I were
born hours apart in the same hospital and on the same floor in April, 1960.
John Wayne Wickware’s grandmother grew up in Rusk, not so far from my own
grandmother. Our families knew one another long before we were born. The
Justice of the Peace there is another classmate, the Honorable Rodney Paul
Wallace, whose first trip to Rusk was to spend the weekend with my
grandparents.
And
while that does not make us appreciably different from any other graduating
class, we were, in short, not at all like any other class.
Because
time and fate foisted integration upon us.
To which we basically
said, Okay, watch this.
Because in the fall of
1973, a very short four years after the riots over court-ordered integration, my
beloved Hubbard Huskies won the city championship in football, the first
integrated team in school history to do so.
That night, the rafters
of the school gym shook as together we whooped, hollered, hugged, cried, and
danced our way out of the darkness into the light.
From that point forward,
we were never the same. The subsequent victory party was obviously integrated,
perhaps one of the first to be so. There would be so many others that it became
routine.
After that, other traditional
barriers began to erode. Even as we awkwardly navigated our way into our teen
years, we managed the uncharted waters of integration and assimilation with
remarkable speed and admirable poise.
As we spent time in one
another’s homes, our mothers began trading favorite recipes. Sports teams were
coached by both black and white fathers. Mothers commiserated over the utter
funk of fifteen year-old boys of all colors.
And, of course, boys of
every conceivable size, shape, and color had a crush on Cheryl Cicero.
Our tastes in music
naturally converged. As much as I cringe at the word disco, it now seems a joint enterprise between black and white
cultures, seemingly designed to incorporate both equally. It was a form of
dance we learned together, did together and one which, ultimately, brought us
together.
Whatever it was, it was
ours.
Although I could have
done without the polyester.
I watched as the blood,
sweat, and tears of sports helped forge a high school class that was too busy
trying to win to be preoccupied with color.
So, for those who would
like to quit keeping score in kid’s sporting events, I call upon that
experience to say, oh, hell no.
So two years later, when
the Robert E. Lee Red Raiders made their run at the state 4-A basketball state
championship, we were ready. We traveled
together, rooted together, agonized together, and, ultimately cried together as
the great Virdell Howland and our Raiders came up just short.
Just as
the Huskie’s win consolidated our common hopes and dreams, the Raider’s loss
annealed our common frailties and failures.
And
while you may think that sounds a tad melodramatic, those are your hopes and dreams when you are sixteen years old.
Hopes
and dreams have to start somewhere.
I have coached basketball
for almost twenty-five years, not only because I love the game but because of
what the game has given me, the insight that people tend to play basketball the
way they live their lives.
Some are selfish
ball-hogs, others know their role as part of the team. Some play better than
their physical talents, while others don’t live up to their potential. Some do
the dirty work of rebounding and playing defense, still other others play only for
the adoration of the crowd.
I offer it as my humble
opinion that these character traits transcend sports and may offer deeper
insight into the human condition than all those Russian novels put together.
Those traits are also
color-blind.
Basketball taught me
that.
That’s why you keep
score.
Thirty years later, my
daughter and her friends took pictures at our house before her junior prom. I
watched (no, positively beamed) with
pride as her inner circle of friends posed in their prom dresses with pimply-faced
boys in ill-fitting tuxedos.
It looked like the United
Nations, except that their interaction was seamless and without any recognition
whatsoever that there was any difference in skin tone.
They took it for granted.
Her picture from that
night is –and will remain- on my desk. It is not only my favorite picture of
her, it is a constant reminder of how far we have come.
My son’s best friend
happens to be black. He is not my son’s best friend because he is black, he is
my son’s best friend because he is my son’s best friend.
I could have hoped for
nothing more and would have accepted nothing less.
Last night, there were
not one but three interracial couples who beat me at Monday night trivia at my
local watering hole.
They were lovely and
natural and seemed completely unaware that forty years ago it would have been
absolutely impossible to sit together holding hands in a public place.
Believe me, I know.
But last night I saw a
future for my country that was no longer black and white but multiple shades of
beige and brown, offering the best we have to offer, without unnatural
boundaries.
I wanted to say to them: On
behalf of the Robert E. Lee Class of 1978, you’re welcome.
My, how far we have come.
Or have we?
I offer this preface to
the following words not out of snowflake timidity but out of genuine respect
for all of my friends who might read
this, whose friendship I cherish and whose own attitudes and outlooks deserve
that respect, especially if they may differ from my own.
By
historical accident, we were on the front lines of integration. As a result of
that experience, I do not fear the seismic shift of social change.
Because forty years ago, I
watched a bunch of pimply-faced kids grow out of puberty with one hand, while
pushing aside the historical tides of two hundred years of race relations with
the other.
And look good in doing
it.
It
seems extraordinary that we were able to pull this off in one generation.
And I
see that slipping away. All
our hard work. All our memories. All our love.
And I
don’t want to waste that.
© Thomas C. Barron 2018