January 1968
Week Two: 278
Â
Even though he wonât
admit it, I blew up my
dadâs football career.
Â
They say he had a
future in the NFL,
but his senior year
Â
at the U of A
he quit football because he
got my mom pregnant.
Â
Momâs parents disowned
her, and to them, she and I
no longer exist.
Â
She has a scrapbook
filled with photos and clippings
of Dad when he played
Â
defensive back for
the Arizona Wildcats,
and my favorite
Â
action photo shows
him leaping and reaching for
an interception.
Â
The camera had caught
him right when he snagged the ball.
His headâs back, and you
Â
canât see his face, but
you can see his taut forearms
knotted with muscle
Â
and the big number
seventeen on his jersey.
Even as a kid,
Â
I recognized the
strength and grace in that picture,
and I knew heâd been
Â
special, talented,
and I made up my mind to
be like him one day.
Â
Maybe Iâd never
be as good as he was, but
I thought that if I
Â
worked hard and became
a great athlete, somehow that
would make up for his
Â
loss. It turned out I
was wrong. I never had to
prove anything to
Â
Dad. His love for me
was as sure and solid as
the U.S. Marines.
Â
Too bad he didnât
feel that way about Mom. He
resented her for
Â
the mistake that killed
his football career, the same
mistake that forced him
Â
to marry her. Back
in 1950, things worked
that way: if a guy
Â
knocked up a girl, he
married her to make it right.
It doesnât happen
Â
like that nowadays.
Itâs 1968, and
young people believe
Â
in free love, and there
are plenty of ways to take
care of a mistake.
Â
By getting married,
Mom and Dad did the right thing,
and they have been good
Â
parents to me, and
Iâm grateful to them both for
putting up with each
Â
other for my sake.
I wish there was some way I
could make it right, make
Â
them
right, but ending
the long, cold war between them
was as likely as
Â
a black man being
elected president of
the United States.
Â
Itâs not going to
happen, but, man, wouldnât it
be great if it did?
January 1968
Week Three: 218
Â
Mr. Ruby, my
U.S. history teacher,
wrote a number on
Â
the board to begin
every class. Today it was
âtwo hundred eighteen.â
Â
His gray hair was slicked
back, like always, and his shirt-
sleeves were rolled up, like
Â
always. The faded
Marine tattoo inside his
wrist showed while he wrote
Â
on the board. Then he
asked, âWhatâs the significance
of this number?â I
Â
didnât respond, but
I knew exactly what it
meant. I read the news.
Â
Every Thursday,
The
Phoenix Gazette
reported
the casualties
Â
from the previous
week. But nobody in class
knew that. They guessed all
Â
kinds of dumb answers,
and no one even came close.
They donât like thinking
Â
about dead soldiers
in Vietnam; neither did
I, but I couldnât
Â
help looking for that
news article every week
and skimming it for
Â
the casualty
report. Usually itâs
just numbers, but if
Â
some guy from Tempe
or Mesa or Phoenix was
killed, theyâll mention his
Â
name and maybe print
a photo of him dressed in
his uniform and
Â
staring like heâs dead
serious. Well, now heâs just
dead. Looking into
Â
his steely gaze made
me feel hollow, sick, and sad.
I looked anyway.
January 1968
Week Four: 471
Â
Things mellowed out at
home. Motorola kept Dad
busy, and Mom stopped
Â
attending rallies
at ASU. Sheâs not a
hippie or some kind
Â
of freak, she just feels
too much. Whatâs going on in
Vietnam sickens
Â
her, and whatâs going
on in America makes
her sick, too. Well, it
Â
doesnât really make
her sick, it makes her
mad.
And
when sheâs mad, sheâs